ladbible homepage
ladbible homepage
  • Home
  • News
    • UK
    • US
    • World
    • Ireland
    • Australia
    • Science
    • Crime
    • Weather
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity
    • TV
    • Film
    • Music
    • Gaming
    • Netflix
    • Disney
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Originals
    • FFS PRODUCTIONS
    • Say Maaate to a Mate
    • Daily Ladness
    • UOKM8?
    • FreeToBe
    • Citizen Reef
  • Videos
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
Snapchat
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content Here
  • GAMINGbible
  • LADbible Group
  • UNILAD
  • SPORTbible
  • Tyla
  • FOODbible
  • UNILAD Tech
Russian Soldiers In Ukraine Are 'Shooting Themselves In The Leg' So They Can Go Home
Home>News
Updated 08:07 18 Mar 2022 GMTPublished 02:43 18 Mar 2022 GMT

Russian Soldiers In Ukraine Are 'Shooting Themselves In The Leg' So They Can Go Home

Ukraine officials intercepted calls from Russian troops where they reportedly revealed how far they're willing to go to get out

Rachel Lang

Rachel Lang

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover

Morale is so low for Russian forces in Ukraine that soldiers are reportedly searching for discarded Ukrainian ammunition in order to shoot themselves so they can be sent home.

An intercepted call, shared by Eastern European news service Nexta, revealed Russian soldiers are apparently willing to injure themselves with their own weapons just to get out of Ukraine.

In a translation of the intercepted audio, a man can be heard calling his mother back in Russia.

Another intercepted conversation of the #SBU shows how demoralized and broken the invader army is: #Russian occupiers look for "#Ukrainian ammunition" to shoot themselves in the legs and go to the hospital. pic.twitter.com/jL2LJALjIm

— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) March 17, 2022

The call was intercepted by the Ukrainian Security Service, who decided to broadcast it to show what the situation was like on the warfront.

In the call, he told her they are searching for 7.62 bullets fired by Ukrainian soldiers, instead of the 5.62 ammo fired by their Russian AK-74s to make it seem they were injured in battle.

Advert

The man, clearly desperate to escape the battlefield horrors of Ukraine, explained to his mother that he can't just return home as those who refuse Putin can face prison sentences for roughly eight years.

So, he alleges some troops have started giving each other flesh wounds 'so they would put some bandages on and sent us to the hospital in Budennovsk' in southern Russia.

The soldier claims at least '120' people have already been 'sent back to the hospital with wounds'. However, he also warned the Ukrainian military has blown up all their equipment and he's now fearing for his life.

In another intercepted conversation made public last weekend, a Russian soldier could be heard describing how there are 'corpses everywhere'.

"They've been shooting at us for 14 days," the soldier can be heard saying in the audio.

Alamy

"We're scared. We're stealing food, breaking into houses. We're killing civilians.

"Russian officers shoot themselves in the legs to go home. There are corpses everywhere. They collected eight wagons of cargo 200."

According to conservative US estimates, over 7,000 Russians have been killed during the three weeks of fighting, reports the New York Times.

That number is already larger than the number of US troops killed over 20 years in Iraq and Afghanistan combined.

The grim phone intercepts come only days after footage was released of a sobbing Russian soldier slamming Vladimir Putin for slaughtering civilians and children in Ukraine.

Speaking at the Interfax Ukraine News Agency, Galkin Sergey Alekseevich apologised to media for Russia's action in Ukraine.

UPI/Alamy Live News

"I apologise for myself, for my squad to every home to every street to every citizen of Ukraine, to the elderly, to women, to children for our invasion of these lands," he said, according to a report by The Mirror.

"I gravely apologise for our treacherous invasion."

In the footage, the Russian soldiers can be seen tearing up, bowing their heads into their hands.

Alekseevich, 34, went on to beg his fellow Russian solders to lay down their arms and issued a plea to Putin to 'stop sending soldiers' to kill in Ukraine.

If you would like to donate to the Red Cross Emergency Appeal, which will help provide food, medicines and basic medical supplies, shelter and water to those in Ukraine, click here for more information.

Featured Image Credit: Mohammad Javad Abjoushak / SOPA Images/Sipa USA/Alamy

Topics: Vladimir Putin, Russia, Ukraine, News

Rachel Lang
Rachel Lang

Rachel Lang is a Digital Journalist at LADbible. During her career, she has interviewed Aussie PM Malcolm Turnbull in the lead up to the 2016 federal election, ran an editorial campaign on the war in Yemen, and reported on homelessness in the lead-up to Harry and Meghan’s wedding in Windsor. She also once wrote a yarn on the cheese and wine version of Fyre Festival.

X

@rlangjournalist

Recommended reads

British holidaymaker issues desperate plea as he's thrown in Turkish jail for having an asthma attackSWNSHarry Kane speaks out England's emotional loss as he opens up on how team will 'get better'Richard Pelham/Getty ImagesLindsey Vonn makes emotional promise on career as she gives health update five months on from horror crashInstagram/Lindsey VonnScientists explain 'super-earth' finding that could be best chance at discovering alien lifeCFA/Harvard

Advert

Choose your content:

an hour ago
2 hours ago
3 hours ago
  • Richard Pelham/Getty Images
    an hour ago

    Harry Kane speaks out England's emotional loss as he opens up on how team will 'get better'

    It might be the captain's last World Cup

    News

    breaking

  • Instagram/Lindsey Vonn
    an hour ago

    Lindsey Vonn makes emotional promise on career as she gives health update five months on from horror crash

    There were fears that her leg could be amputated following the crash

    News
  • CFA/Harvard
    2 hours ago

    Scientists explain 'super-earth' finding that could be best chance at discovering alien life

    It's the planet most likely to support alien life that we've found

    News
  • Paul ELLIS / AFP via Getty Images
    3 hours ago

    Argentina's Leandro Paredes explains why he held Falkland Islands banner as team's expected punishment revealed

    UK prime minister Keir Starmer has called for FIFA to investigate

    News
  • Ukraine Signs New Law Allowing Citizens To Kill Russian Soldiers Without Punishment
  • Captured Russian Soldiers Warn Vladimir Putin They Will 'Rise' Up Against Him
  • Captured Russian Soldiers Claim They'll Face Death By Firing Squad If They Return Home
  • Russian Oligarch Turns Back On Putin By Calling For Immediate End To Ukraine Invasion