Putin's defence minister should consider suicide, Russian-installed official says
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu attend a ceremony opening the international military-technical forum Army-2022 at Patriot Congress and Exhibition Centre in the Moscow region, Russia August 15, 2022. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/File Photo
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A Russian-installed
official in Ukraine on Thursday suggested President Vladimir Putin's defence
minister should consider killing himself due to the shame of the defeats in the
Ukraine war, an astonishing public insult to Russia's top brass.
After more than seven
months of war in Ukraine, Russia's most basic war aims are still not achieved
while Russian forces have suffered a series of battlefield defeats in recent
months, forcing Putin to announce a partial mobilisation.
In a four-minute video
message, Kirill Stremousov, the Russian-installed deputy head of the annexed
Kherson region, followed suit, publicly lambasting the "generals and
ministers" in Moscow for failing to understand the problems on the front.
"Indeed, many
say: if they were a defence minister who had allowed such a state of affairs,
they could, as officers, have shot themselves," Stremousov, 45, said.
"But you know the word 'officer' is an incomprehensible word for
many."
Such public - and
insulting - censure of Putin's military chiefs from within the system used to
be extremely rare in Russia, but a series of defeats on the battlefield in
Ukraine has prompted some of Putin's allies to rebuke top generals.
Chechen leader Ramzan
Kadyrov and Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner Group of
mercenaries, ridiculed
generals, saying the military was riddled with nepotism and that senior
officers should be stripped of their ranks and sent to the front barefoot to
atone for their sins.
Defence Minister
Sergei Shoigu, one of Putin's closest allies, was appointed in 2012. So close
was their relationship that the two men regularly spent holidays together in
the forests and mountains of Shoigu's native Tuva.
It was not clear if
the criticism was being coordinated, though it poses a problem for Putin during
a crucial juncture in the war: sacrifice a close ally and admit the military
has failed, or keep Shoigu and risk taking the blame himself.
The defence ministry
did not respond to a written request for comment.
Many Russian nationalists
have repeatedly criticised Shoigu and his top generals for everything from poor
planning and shallow logistics to ruinously outdated tactics and losing the
information war despite massive investment under Putin.
In the last week, two
retired generals now serving as members of the State Duma from Putin's United
Russia party have added their voices to the chorus of criticism, accusing the
defence ministry of corruption and dishonesty.
Most of all, though,
critics blame Shoigu's ministry for losing the key battles for Kyiv, Kharkiv,
Lyman and the Kherson region.
Stremousov laced his
criticism with words of praise for the soldiers who stood to the death to
defend their country, contrasting their heroism with the "incompetent
military leaders" in Moscow.
"The ministry of
defence does not consist only of ministers, generals, corrupt looters and other
various scum, but all those heroes who gave their lives to defend Russia.
"Let's say this:
The ministry of defence does not only consist of ministers, generals, corrupt
marauders and other various scum, but all those heroes who gave their lives
today, who stand to the end," Stremousov said.
Stremousov praised
Kadyrov and said he felt that Moscow would soon sort out the problems.
"I agree with
Ramzan Akhmatovich Kadyrov, who raised this issue. Well done," he said.
"In Moscow, I
think they will sort this out as soon as possible." Stremousov said.
"We'll sort it out. We'll put things in order and, believe me, everything
will be under our full control."


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