Volunteers
or paid fighters? The Vostok Battalion looms large in war with Kiev
The
Vostok Battalion is shaping the direction of conflict in eastern
Ukraine as it grows in numbers and influence
6
June, 2014
At
the headquarters of the Vostok Battalion on the outskirts of Donetsk,
the rebel in command was ordering an attack on 30 Ukrainian soldiers
and two fighting vehicles in a nearby town. "Shoot to kill,"
he said, speaking with a subordinate over one of three mobile phones
he carries. "What negotiations? If they wave a white flag, then
of course that's different."
The
commander, a Russian army veteran – who like all the men in the
battalion is known only by a nickname ("Major") – told
his deputies to assemble 40 men and tank-busting weapons. A few
minutes later, a soldier ran in with six rocket-propelled grenade
launchers. Throughout the day, fighting vehicles and lorries loaded
with armed men roared in and out of the base.
As
the possibility recedes of a "Crimean scenario" – Russian
troops intervening in eastern Ukraine – the pro-Moscow Vostok
Battalion has emerged as the leading force in the fight against
Kiev's attempts to retake control of the east. Along with the Army of
the Southeast in Luhansk and a militia in Slavyansk led by Russian
citizen and alleged intelligence agent Igor Girkin, better known by
his nom de guerre "Strelkov," iIt is Vostok that will
define the course of the mostly low-level war with Kiev forces.
The
militia has about 500 men, according to its leader, Alexander
Khodakovsky, who was regional head of the elite Alfa special forces
unit under former president Viktor Yanukovych, and handfuls of new
recruits have been joining each day. Since it was formed in April,
some analysts have worried that Vostok is an incipient private army
directed by – or at least linked to – Russian intelligence. But
locals welcomed the fighters with cheers when they fired into the air
at an anti-Kiev rally during the recent presidential election.
Khodakovsky
and his commanders are vague about their goals, saying their
immediate task is to drive pro-Kiev forces from their region. But
they are vehemently opposed to the new pro-western government brought
to power following the Euromaidan protests in Kiev this winter –
during which Khodakovsky and his special forces unit participated in
violent clashes with the demonstrators.
"To
side with America now, at a time when the world is getting extremely
polarised, means to go against Russia. But how can the south-east be
against Russia? We are trying to prevent us from becoming an enemy of
Russia," Khodakovsky told reporters as his men showed off a
variety of weaponry at the Donetsk Botanical Garden on Sunday.
So
far, government forces have been unwilling or unable to take heavily
populated rebel strongholds, but pro-Russian forces have also failed
to achieve decisive victories. Ukraine's prosecutor general said this
week that, excluding rebel forces, 181 people have died, including 59
soldiers, and 293 have been wounded since fighting started in April.
On
Friday, Vladimir Putin briefly met Ukrainian president-elect Petro
Poroshenko at the D-day commemorations in France. A Kremlin spokesman
said the two leaders urged a "speedy end to the bloodshed in
south-eastern Ukraine as well as to fighting on both sides". "It
was confirmed that there is no other alternative to resolve the
situation than through peaceful political means," the spokesman
said.
On
Thursday, President Obama gave Russia a one-month deadline to stop
the flow of fighters and weapons into Ukraine after a string of
clashes at the border, which is now at least partially under rebel
control.
Fighting continued on Friday around a border post at Marynovka, where 16 rebels were killed after overnight air strikes, Kiev said. The major border crossing at Dovzhansk and another at Krasnopartizansk are reportedly under rebel control. The government has ordered the closure of the border in Luhansk and part of Donetsk regions but rebels say they control 150-200km of the frontier.
The
Vostok Battalion does include Russian fighters, and the bodies of 31
members were sent back to Russia last week after a battle at Donetsk
airport. But more than a dozen interviews over several visits by the
Guardian suggested Vostok is largely comprised of Ukrainian
volunteers with nicknames like "Forest Lord," "Psycho,"
"Wild Man" and "Beaver". Although its sources of
funding and weapons are not entirely clear, it does not seem to enjoy
large-scale Russian military support, with kit that ranges from
sophisticated surface-to-air missiles to battered hunting rifles.
On
a recent afternoon, members of the battalion's mechanical section
were welding an anti-aircraft gun to the back of a lorry to create a
vehicle straight out of Mad Max. "If we had Russian military
hardware, you would see it," said "Mamai," a garrulous
Vostok member from Russia's republic of North Ossetia. Vostok
commanders said they had taken their weapons mostly from captured
Ukrainian military facilities.
Some
members of the battalion look like professional soldiers, but Mamai
said he doesn't receive money to fight. Another Russian member named
"Varan" ("Monitor Lizard") said he received $100
(£70) a week for living expenses but maintained that the men were
volunteers, not mercenaries on Moscow's payroll. Yet Russian
authorities have at least tacitly encouraged volunteers to go to
Ukraine. Varan said a military enlistment office tipped him off about
a group of fighters forming in Rostov-on-Don who then walked through
a border crossing as civilians, receiving arms in Donetsk.
The
Vostok Battalion has taken part in most of the heaviest fighting in
eastern Ukraine in recent weeks, including a checkpoint battle near
Karlovka, the bloody attempt to seize the Donetsk airport and the
continuing struggle to break the Ukrainian encirclement of Slavyansk.
The unit truly asserted its dominance last week, however, when –
after a tense standoff – Vostok fighters kicked other rebel groups
out of the regional administration building, which was occupied by
the self-declared Donetsk People's Republic in April. A Vostok
commander said they were there primarily to bring looters to justice,
and the unit has since assumed a quasi-law-enforcement function in
place of the impotent police.
Alexander
Sheremyet, a protester who was involved in the administration
building occupation from the first days, said Vostok is now the most
powerful force defending the Donetsk People's Republic, but denied
they were controlling the fledgling government.
"They
gathered experienced veterans, they have the most strength, but their
tasks are only military," he said.
The
battalion's Russian members include men who served in previous wars
on its borderlands. Speculation began to swirl that the unit is
connected to Russian intelligence after fighters from Chechnya were
found to be fighting with it. Its name – which means "East"
– suggests a Chechen unit run by Russia's military intelligence
agency, which was active during the 2008 Russia-Georgia war.
Mark
Galeotti, a New York University professor who studies the Russian
security services, argued that the two are probably linked and said
the emergence of the Vostok Battalion could represent the Kremlin
tightening its control on the situation in eastern Ukraine.
"Moscow
needs an instrument," Galeotti said. "But also insofar that
they're going to try to assert their authority through the Donetsk
People's Republic hierarchy, they need to make sure those guys have
credible force at their disposable, not just a collection of thugs."
Chechen
fighters in Donetsk, one of whom said he served in the original
Vostok Battalion, denied that the current Vostok had any connection
with the disbanded Chechen unit. Other members said its name merely
reflected its fight in eastern Ukraine.
Pavel
Felgenhauer, a Moscow-based defence analyst, raised questions about
the unit's source of funding. "Someone's paying them; war
without money doesn't happen," he said. "Most likely
there's a lot of criminals involved doing different kinds of rackets,
but that's not a means for an operation of such magnitude to buy
weapons, pay bribes to get weapons in, for ammo."
While
it is unlikely Vostok is being financed directly by the Kremlin, it
could be supported by pro-Kremlin businessmen, as other separatists
have been. Konstantin Malofeyev, an oligarch known for his support
for Russian expansionism, reportedly financed Russian citizens
promoting separatism in Crimea including Strelkov and Alexander
Borodai, the recently declared prime minister of the Donetsk People's
Republic. Strelkov and Borodai have said they are friends and were
both previously employed by Malofeyev in Moscow.
Borodai
denied receiving funding from the Russian government and told the
Guardian he didn't know if the people's republic had taken donations
from Malofeyev or other Russian oligarchs.
Khodakovsky's
connections and allegiances are unclear. According to Konstantin
Mashovets, a Kiev-based defence analyst, he would have been appointed
Alfa head by either Yanukovych or his security service chief. The
former president was known to be closely allied with Rinat Akhmetov,
the most powerful oligarch in eastern Ukraine, who has seemed to
waver between Kiev and the east during the current uprising.
Khodakovsky
has denied receiving financial backing from Akhmetov or having
connections with the Kremlin, and Vostok commanders said they don't
know of any rich sponsors.
Dmitry
Durnev, a Donetsk journalist, said local rebel leaders have yet to
form permanent alliances and are probably "taking money from
everyone".
Meanwhile,
the unit continues to grow in numbers and influence. One commander
nicknamed "Lithuania," a coal miner who joined late last
month, said he enlisted because Vostok was the rebel unit with the
most discipline and "spirit and ability" to fight the "Kiev
junta".
"The
Vostok Battalion is actually engaging in military operations against
this scum; it doesn't just sit in its base," he said. "We're
hoping for Russian assistance, so our brothers will come to help us.
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