Kiev’s forces were communicating in English and Polish on military radios, a captured soldier has said
An interview with a Ukrainian soldier who was captured in Kursk Region amid Kiev’s cross-border offensive has added more evidence that foreign mercenaries are fighting for Ukraine on Russian soil.
Footage of the interview was released by Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) on Monday. The agency claimed that the man shown in it was captured with the help of local residents in Kursk Region. The Ukrainian man identified himself as a 26-year-old member of Ukraine’s 80th Air Assault Brigade, which is taking part in the offensive.
Ruslan Poltoratsky, as he introduced himself, said he first heard foreign radio chatter when crossing the Russian border and initially thought it was some kind of interference.
“They spoke in English, Polish, maybe French. I did not understand them, called on the radio to repeat, and only heard gibberish in response,” he said.
He later concluded that the communications were local, since Ukrainian military officials were responding.
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“There was something about houses and gunshots in the background,” he claimed.
Poltoratsky also mentioned that a brigade “made up of those who used to be in jail” was taking part in the Kursk Region offensive. He was apparently referring to a unit composed of convicts who volunteered in exchange for early release from prison.
Ukraine has been using foreign fighters to bolster its military since the early days of the conflict with Russia, creating the ‘International Legion’ for these volunteers. Moscow has described them as mercenaries and has accused Western nations of facilitating the recruitment of their citizens with combat experience.
The practice of embedding foreign fighters into the Ukrainian military predates the ongoing hostilities, as evidenced by a group known as the Georgian Legion. It has Georgian citizens in its ranks and was created in 2014. The unit is present in Kursk Region, according to a source cited last week by military news outlet The War Zone.
READ MORE: Mercenaries from Georgia fighting in Russia’s Kursk Region – media
The legion is known for videos in which members are shown torturing and executing Russian prisoners in March 2022. Russia considers the Georgian Legion a terrorist organization and a tool of Ukrainian military intelligence.