On the night of February 28 to March 1, mobilized from the Irkutsk region were sent to storm the Avdeevsky fortified area, who complained about Putin and their governor Kobzev about the arbitrariness of the “Deenergic” commanders, forcing them to fight “Zhukov’s methods.” It became known that only the arrested political officer and several wounded survived from the entire 1439th regiment.
The Siberians complained that the command of the brigade of the so-called “DPR”, to which their regiment was attached, did not provide them with food and sent them into battle without reconnaissance and escort by artillery and armored vehicles. After the publication of the second appeal, the leadership of the region decided to bring them humanitarian aid and facilitate their transfer to a new duty station. But they didn’t. The soldiers were punished for complaints - the regiment’s political officer was arrested for stating that untrained civilians could not fight successfully, and the rest were thrown into the assault, where they were crushed by Ukrainian defenders.
As Sibir.Realii was told by the relatives of several survivors, almost the entire regiment was destroyed, several wounded were able to escape and ended up in the hospital, the rest either died immediately or were wounded and thrown onto the battlefield.
According to those who were lucky enough to survive, the “Deenergic” command takes from the battlefield only the lightly wounded, who can move on their own. “Heavy” and the bodies of the dead, for the evacuation of which it is necessary to use equipment, are left so that this equipment is not lost. Moreover, the dead are included in the lists of the missing - so the irretrievable losses in the reports are much lower, and there is no need to pay “coffin”.
See also: “The Russian army has run out of steam, the horde remains. Our hands will get tired of holding a machine gun,” military expert Roman Svitan
Source: Fakty
I am Joseph Zeman, a journalist who mostly covers world news for the Daily News Hack. I pride myself on being able to find and report stories that others might miss. I have a knack for being able to see both sides of every issue and this allows me to provide readers with well-rounded stories. In addition to my work as a journalist, I am also an author and have written several books on current affairs.

