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In order to recruit voluntary soldiers, Russia uses vehicles and high salaries.

In order to recruit voluntary soldiers, Russia uses vehicles and high salaries.

Russia turns to trucks and big wages to woo volunteer soldiers

The Russian army is employing mobile recruiting trucks to find contract soldiers for what it refers to as the “special military operation” in Ukraine and is providing roughly $2,700 a month as an inducement.

On Saturday, a special squad parked one of these trucks in Rostov, a city in southern Russia, and took the sides off to show a mobile office.

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Armed men in camouflage and black masks displayed their weapons to curious bystanders and distributed color booklets with the heading “Military service on a contract – the choice of a true man.”

Neither Russia nor Ukraine discloses their military losses, which Western intelligence agencies estimate at tens of thousands on both sides.

Moscow has not updated the official death toll since March 25, when it said 1,351 Russian soldiers had been killed and 3,825 wounded. The Kremlin said last week there was no discussion of a nationwide mobilisation to bolster its forces.

In order to recruit voluntary soldiers, Russia uses vehicles and high salaries.

But the recruitment drive shows Moscow needs more men. The officer in charge of the Rostov truck said Russians and foreigners aged from 18 to 60 with at least a high school education would be eligible.

“Patriotically-minded citizens are choosing to sign contracts for three or six months to take part in the special military operation,” Major Sergei Ardashev said, promising training for everyone.

The minimum monthly wage on offer is 160,000 roubles ($2,700), which is almost three times the national average.

One potential recruit was musician Viktor Yakunin, who said he had always been attracted by the idea of military service and was now collecting necessary documents.

“I would love to serve in the airborne troops,” he said. “My parents brought me up since childhood to love my homeland, to protect the Russian world. I believe the power is with us.”

Inside the truck, Yakunin sat down with Ardashev, who told him the next step would be a mental examination. If he passed that, there would be a physical test of speed, strength and endurance.

If all went well, Yakunin would “arrive at a military unit, enrol in a specific division, [and] from that moment you begin military service”.

Outside young men, some with families, looked at a temporary exhibition showing pictures of official heroes of the conflict, alongside a big sign that read “Tradition of victory”.

SOURCE: www.ghnewslive.com

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