What is the name given to the Russian death squads operating in Ukraine?

What is the name given to the Russian death squads operating in Ukraine ? What is their composition? Are they all Russian or mercenaires drawn from other countries?

I would interested in both the Russian and Ukrainian words for these death squads.

Most likely Pусская Aрмия.

I don’t think there are death squads as such. Just some Spetsnaz units getting some time in.

Thanks Silenus.

Is that what I think it says phonetically?

I’d imagine there’s no Russian name, since according to them there’s no such thing (or the only approximation to them are Ukrainian Nazis of the Azov battalion operating under a false flag)

In the interviews I’ve seen with Ukrainian civilians describing their experiences (these are very, very hard to watch, but necessary), they seem to distinguish between the groups according to their origin. For example, the Chechen fighters — a particularly brutal and bloodthirsty bunch, who are killing indiscriminately and would be described by outsiders as a death squad — are called “Kadrovyites” or “Kadrovites,” in reference to their warlord leader/organizer. This differentiates them from the Spetsnaz, for example. Obviously I’m going by the translations (dubbed or subtitled), but it seems to be fairly consistent.

The extent of their involvement in Ukraine is unclear at the moment but the private mercenary force Russia uses at times is called the Wagner Group. This force is useful for dirty operations.

Wagner Group - Wikipedia

My wife, who speaks some Russian, thinks you’re right: Russian Army.

My first thought when I heard this news was that it was some abberant group like Chechen fighters, or hardened Syrian theatre veterans, or special forces. But recent news reports suggest equally likely is the regular army types, acting sadistic and releasing frustrations on the enemy civilians while drunk to the gills on the pickings looted from the local stores and houses.

Well, there was one story in the news that in one of the very early days of the war a woman in a Kyiv suburb saw tanks rumbling down the street that she seems to have assumed were Ukrainian, so she went out to take a look. They killed her on the spot. It was too early for them to have boozed it up.

With the bombing attack on a train station in today’s news you have to assume this is deliberate policy.

There was a report in the Times yesterday on a telephone with a Russian who son had died in the fighting. He apparently believed that the Ukrainian resistance was fueled entirely by American weapons used to prop up the Nazi regime and thought that a nuclear bomb dropped on an American city would end the war right quick.

Wow. That sure illustrates the extent of the disinformation the Russians are being fed. I wonder how many of THEM actually believe it.

The NBC Evening News has had several reporting segments over the past couple weeks about how Putin’s approval rating is rising along with Russian nationalism. The disinformation seems to be working, sadly. They’ve shown ‘man /woman on the street’ type interviews where ordinary Russian citizens talk about how justified the war is, because of the atrocities the Ukranians have been committing.

If they say otherwise, the consequences may be quite dire.

Unfortunately, I fear it’s not just those Russian citizens toeing the party line, it seems like the disinformation campaign is working. Russian news sources have been claiming that the Ukrainian atrocity footage is staged. NBC News had a piece on how the Russian news programs show footage from Ukraine showing Russian atrocities, but with a big, rubber stamp style word “FAKE” superimposed over it. It’s how people are manipulated in the Information Age— you can’t suppress information, so you freely share it while discrediting it.

Every day a new Guernica:

As for names, I’ve seen reports that some Ukrainians are making distinctions between “regular” Russians and “Kadyrovites” (i e., Chechens controlled by Putin’s tame thug Kadyrov) - though other reports indicate brutality is not unique to any one grouping.