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How the Free Russia Legion Hopes to Put an End to Putin's Rule

How Putin's Rule Will Be Ended by the Freedom of Russia Legion

By Johnica LopinaPublished 10 months ago 10 min read
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How the Free Russia Legion aims to put an end to Putin's rule

Russia may have the distinction of being the only nation to have invaded another nation in contemporary times only to have that nation invade it back—by its own people. And numerous times, not just once or twice. Putin's dictatorship may not have been overthrown by the brief Wagner uprising, but another group of seasoned Russian combatants is committed to seeing it through. The Freedom of Russia Legion has a decent possibility of succeeding in its objectives. Shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine, the Freedom of Russia Legion, also known as the Free Russia Legion, was founded. Several Russians were enraged by Putin's decision to start thousands of people flocked to the streets as part of his "Special Military Operation," but they were swiftly subdued by severe police tactics.

Now in Russia, merely carrying a blank sheet of paper in the open may land you in jail, and kids have even been imprisoned for writing or drawing pro-Ukrainian statements. Wagner's uprising has only served to strengthen Putin's hold on the Russian people, and the Kremlin has been sluggish to revoke the emergency powers granted to its police forces, such as the authority to enter any home at any time and conduct a search inside.

Many Russians are now too afraid to oppose the ongoing conflict, but some are prepared to go farther and think that they must use lethal action to bring an end to Putin's rule once and for all. Although they are officially referred to as international volunteer legions, numerous all-Russian or primarily-Russian organizations have emerged in the wake of Putin's invasion. The Russian Volunteer Corps, which promotes certain troubling far-right ideals, and the Freedom of Russia Legion, which aims to bring true democracy back to Putin's corrupt kleptocracy, are the two most well-known of these.

However, my enemy's friend is my friend, and the two organizations have comparable goals—at least temporarily. However, they are not the only anti-government groups that have emerged since the invasion of Ukraine. A patchwork of anti-government groups have emerged as a result of Putin's stupid invasion; some have left the nation to fight alongside Ukraine, while many more have stayed to fight from within. All of these groups—from anarchist communists to pro-democracy activists—are working toward the same goal of ending Putin's rule and impeding the military's operations in Ukraine.

Since the beginning, a wave of sabotage has spread across the nation. hardly a week went by after the war without another unexplained fire bridges, factories, and even shopping malls in Russia. You only need to look to Russian media to confirm these high profile strikes, since Ukrainian intelligence documented around 100 acts of sabotage inside Russia in just the first few months of 2023. While many have merely caused minor disruptions to the war effort, others, like explosions and fires at industrial hubs directly in charge of supplying the troops on the front lines, have had major repercussions.

According to the Free Russia Legion, only around half of the attacks are coordinated between the various organizations, making the endeavor to unseat Putin and end the conflict mostly disorganized. The majority of anti-government actions have been conducted independently, and Ukrainian intelligence as well as Russian partisans by making manuals on making improvised explosives and guerilla tactics available to the public. Nothing makes the American CIA happier than watching Russian targets burn, and there are rumors that the Free Russia Legion and other organizations have received help from the country's most covert agencies. The current wave of strikes' decentralized character is precisely what has made it so challenging for Russia to put an end to them.

The country's internal security services have been frantically trying to track down and eliminate the organisations it now considers terrorists. has become a massive game of whack-a-mole for the Russian government. Attacking one group doesn't prevent another two from forming because there aren't many, if any, linkages between them. But the Free Russia Legion is a cut above these homegrown rebel organizations. Although the exact number is unknown, it is estimated to be between 500 and 1,000 fighters, and the group asserts that it has thousands more in the pipeline for training and equipping.

The has also been bragging about its arsenal, displaying armored vehicles, man-portable air defense missiles, anti-tank weapons, and artillery—and they aren't lying either, as at least two tanks have been confirmed to be leading the Free Russia Legion and Russian Volunteer Corps' assault on the Belgorod region in late May. Many are curious as to how the Free Russia Legion, a group of Russian rebels, came into possession of American anti-tank missiles and vehicles.

The Free Russia Legion has spent the majority of its time battling along the Bakhmut axis since August 2022, but at the end of spring, it abandoned the area to prepare for an invasion into itself, Russia. What is known is that Russia has departed its borders with Ukraine, regardless of whether they planned this on their own or were encouraged by Ukrainian or western intelligence. unable to defend themselves against criminal charges. This is so that Russia can rely on Ukraine to avoid upsetting its western friends, who have made it clear time and time again that they oppose any military actions on Russian land and have donated weapons with the condition that they not be used inside Russia.

Naturally, there is concern that these attacks will lead to further fictitious escalation, but there Apparently, Russia is so reliant on Ukraine's assurance that it won't violate its boundaries that it isn't even protecting it. The Russian Volunteer Corps and the Freedom for Russia Legion staged a daring assault into the Belgorod region in late May, while other organizations had carried out cross-border incursions before. An estimated two or three tanks, a dozen or so armored vehicles, plus additional unarmored vehicles like American humvees made up the Kremlin's battle force, which caught them completely off guard. By the time a reaction was organized, the groups had already occupied several Russian settlements, causing a widespread panic in the area that even the Kremlin's strict control over Russia's media wasn't able to fully contain.

The pushes it many Russian soldiers publicly or on social media about being badly defeated because of a lack of training, equipment, or support after being thoroughly defeated by the far better equipped and trained Russian partisans. One soldier asserted that up to 80% of his unit's members were killed. Although it is challenging to see through the fog of war to confirm any of this information, the fact that the two groups managed to escape with a few Russian armored vehicles and remained in occupied territory for several days before retreating across the border once more lends considerable credence to the claims that Russian forces were soundly defeated. Since Wagner's uprising, we also know that Russia maintains a very small number of combat-ready units close to its own border.

As a result of the grave state of affairs in Ukraine, almost all of the men and vehicles on hand have been directed into the eastern front. The only remaining options are territorial defense forces, They were no match for skilled partisans like the Free Russia Legion and Russian Volunteer Corps, who were conscripted to protect territory inside of Russia itself. The Free Russia Legion achieved two objectives with its audacious attack and seizure of Belgorod. First, we directly assisted the Ukrainian counterattack. The group has declared publicly that they have two ultimate objectives: the first is to build a buffer zone on the Ukrainian border, Thus, Ukraine's western allies prevent Ukraine from invading any land from which Russian forces could launch long-range attacks into the country. By establishing a buffer zone along the northern border of Ukraine, Russia would be substantially less able to launch shorter-range missiles against Ukrainian cities like Kiev, which would significantly reduce the number of civilian casualties.

Additionally, it would give Ukraine the chance to relocate more of its western air defenses closer to the front, where they are most required. The group's second objective is to march into Moscow, although they do not yet have enough members to do so. The Free Russia Legion only requires a few thousand more soldiers to accomplish their objective, though, judging by Vladimir Vasylivich Putin literally pleading with Wagner on Russian television to halt their march on Moscow. However, the invasion of Belgorod was intended to assist in obtaining those forces because the savage multi-day occupation put The legion asserts that recruitment has surged since the attack. The assault on Belgorod was also intended to directly support the ongoing Ukrainian counteroffensive its initial phases. As we've already said, Russia has essentially left its borders with Ukraine undefended, allowing it to concentrate weaponry along the front inside Ukraine while leaving its own frontiers undefended.

However, the invasion on Belgorod by the Russian Volunteer Corps and Freedom of Russia Legion demonstrated that the border was permeable and that some organizations existed that were prepared to engage in combat inside Russian territory. The Kremlin's priorities were significantly altered by the public response to the occupation, and each soldier transferred from the front to protect the border means that Ukraine won't have to deal with them on the front lines. Although no one is really sure why Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin actually canceled his march on the capital, it is generally acknowledged that he had more than enough weaponry to succeed. Wagner's mutinous march on Moscow nevertheless demonstrated to Russia just how weak it was inside. Wagner's columns contained a large number of tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, but in our own views of the alleged coup, we saw that the heaviest combat vehicles we saw along Moscow's defenses were armored personnel carriers, which would have been The nation is currently being forced to face the need to remove equipment and troops from the frontlines in order to safeguard the homeland. of heavy military equipment and forces inside its own boundaries. After its success in May, the Free Russia Legion promised more bigger operations, and it now looks that they are gearing up for those operations owing to an influx of volunteers.

For its part, Ukraine has made an effort to keep details about the Legion mostly under wraps in order to safeguard the names of its members and their relatives back home from retaliation by the government. Even though Ukraine has been reluctant to give the organization much credit, the battalion has been fighting there since August. Russian volunteers at the front indicate a rising level of willingness on the part of disgruntled Russians to enter Ukraine through third countries and engage in armed conflict with their allies. There are various reasons why Russians fight for the Ukrainian side, but many of them were already residing there when the conflict began and considered Ukraine to be their new home. They don't want Putin to spread his influence into their new home,

At the start of the invasion, they volunteered to fight and picked up arms. However, as the combat started, some people crossed the border into Ukraine to join the burgeoning foreign legion fighting within the nation. These volunteers claim that contributing to the war effort isn't simple either. They must first travel there physically, and look for alternate routes that pass through neutral nations to reach Europe and then western Ukraine. Each volunteer is put through a number of background checks and polygraph examinations after entering. Russia is a legitimate concern for Ukraine. The wrong individual in the wrong position and sabotage operatives infiltrating the international volunteer groups fighting on its side might be disastrous for Ukraine. Distrust is rampant, it has been revealed that Russian agents made many attempts to infiltrate the volunteer services.

Putin should be most concerned about the fact that an increasing number of Russian soldiers fighting for Ukraine are actually deserters from the Russian army. The brutality and senseless nature of the conflict they are fighting in, as well as the demoralizing effects it has on these soldiers, frequently leave them feeling hopeless. must escape at all costs—even if it meant battling their fellow soldiers. We have multiple verified accounts of Russian deserters joining Ukraine's side with tanks and other armored vehicles they bring with them, and sometimes these deserters even bring gifts. The Freedom of Russia Legion and other organizations are expanding as Vladimir Putin's disastrous war turns against him. The Wagner uprising demonstrated how many Russians would be extremely willing to back a coup against Putin's rule. The Free Russia Legion's upcoming operation could very well be the one that ends the war by assassinating Putin. Go ahead and watch Top General Reveals Why Russia Failed In Bakhmut or choose this alternative video.

Thank you for watching and always

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Johnica Lopina

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