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Man Tells Full Story Of Being Recruited In Moscow And Sent To Invade

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  • Man Tells Full Story Of Being Recruited In Moscow And Sent To Invade

    MAN TELLS FULL STORY OF BEING RECRUITED IN MOSCOW AND SENT TO INVADE UKRAINE

    Washington Free Beacon
    July 14 2014

    July 14, 2014 1:47 pm

    A 24-year-old Armenian man that was recruited in Moscow to be part
    of the shadowy separatist force that invaded Ukraine says that his
    group was "betrayed" by nameless bosses in Russia and sent to certain
    death in the Donetsk airport, according to an interview with Radio
    Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

    Artur Gasparyan spoke in detail during the interview of his experience
    from the moment he was recruited to invade Ukraine to his long escape
    back into Russia after he "survived by a miracle."

    Gasparyan says that he was told to erase every scrap of his identity
    upon joining the force, and also that he was not given the name of
    a single person he was taking orders from, or fighting along side.

    Artur Gasparyan: About 10 guys showed up at a meeting somewhere near
    VDNKh [the All-Russian Exhibition Center in northern Moscow]. We spoke
    in the entrance arch of a residential building there. A Slavic man
    in civilian clothes who didn't give his name met with us. [...] They
    insisted that we destroy all our online accounts and, in general,
    remove any personal information from social networks. I deleted my
    accounts on [Russian social-media sites] Vkontakte and Odnoklassniki.

    Garparyan says he was taken to a military camp that he believes was
    near the border (all road maps were confiscated) and spent two weeks
    training. Everybody remained anonymous.

    They taught us to communicate using gestures and signs in order
    to recognize each other, to communicate silently at night, to give
    commands like back, forward, stop, get down, danger, and so on. Now
    I can speak with my hands like a deaf person. All this was taught
    by an instructor in civilian clothes. He, like all the other big and
    small bosses, didn't give his name. We didn't even know one another's
    real names--just nicknames. Even now I don't know the names of most
    of the guys who were killed beside me in that hell.

    Most of the individuals recruited had nearly no military training
    before being sent to invade the Donetsk airport in what Gasparyan
    explains as a poorly planned and even more poorly executed operation.

    What was the point of seizing a civilian airport in Donetsk?

    Gasparyan: To prevent them from sending in troops from Kyiv. They told
    us no one would fire at us. Just pose for the cameras and that's all.

    They would see us, get scared, give up. We'd disarm everyone and send
    them home. The airport would be ours.

    Who do you mean?

    The Ukrainian troops around the airport. There was gossip that
    supposedly we were so tough and everyone was afraid of us. But it
    turned out just the opposite. At 2 P.M. the helicopters came. Then
    the airplanes, and they started bombing the place. I was on the roof
    and with my aide, I managed to get to the sixth floor. It was a big
    attack--I counted four helicopters and two planes.

    They were completely unprepared for the battle that they found
    themselves in, due to a commander that "naively" thought that Ukraine
    "wouldn't use heavy weapons" on the airport that was newly built for
    the 2012 European soccer championship tournament.

    Eventually, the group was forced into trucks for an escape and told
    that they would be killed if they didn't follow the order.

    We made our way down to the first floor and were just sitting there,
    waiting to be killed. We couldn't go outside. Someone contacted the
    commander--a guy called Spark--and we were given the order to get
    into the trucks. It was nearly evening. The trucks were standing
    inside--in the terminal. I didn't want to get in. I knew how risky
    it was. Spark told me, "If you question the order, I'll shoot you
    here." I took my weapon and got in.

    There were two trucks with about 30-35 men in each one. A covering
    squad remained in the airport. They went out on foot at night--they
    all got away. Spark gave the order to drive out of the terminal
    and to fire in all directions at anything that moved. We lifted the
    covers--they were open trucks stuffed with volunteers. Our truck flew
    out of the terminal and we begin to fire on both sides, up in the air,
    everywhere. We proceeded along a road for about 4 or 5 kilometers. The
    trucks were about 500 or 600 meters apart. Two trucks speeding along,
    firing without stopping. It was terrifying.

    Gasparyan eventually ran away back towards Russia, and after avoiding
    a death squad that was sent to find him and many other travails, he
    has made it back. He had all his belongings and his identity returned
    to him and was sent home.

    We ended up at the same base where we'd been trained. They gave us
    back our clothes, documents, telephones, some money for the road,
    and sent us home.

    Gasparyan says that much of what is being said about the Russian
    invasion into Ukraine right now is a fiction, especially regarding the
    presence of a large group of separatist Ukrainians that are involved
    in the fighting.

    RFE/RL: Journalists who have been in the region say that about 20
    percent of those fighting are Russians and the other 80 percent are
    local militias.

    Gasparyan: I'd say exactly the opposite. Most of them are Russians,
    Chechens, Ingush. There are also Armenians like me. I spoke to some
    locals and they say that they did what they'd been told. I said,
    "What did they tell you to do?" They answered: "We voted. The rest
    is up to you." That is, they participated in the referendum on DNR
    independence but they don't intend to fight. One guy told me, "I want
    to get my pay and then drink until my next payday." In general, they
    have no experience. Don't know how to handle weapons. No one had been
    in the military. I'm talking about in Donetsk.

    The full interview with Gasparyan can be read here:
    http://www.rferl.org/content/ukraine-i-was-a-separatist-fighter/25455466.html

    http://freebeacon.com/national-security/man-tells-full-story-of-being-recruited-in-moscow-and-sent-to-invade-ukraine/

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