
Innovative Ukrainian military program uses scary drones dronesnot for bombing or spying on enemy positions, but as loudspeakers calling Russian soldiers be delivered.
The idea came from an incident in late November when a Russian soldier dropped his weapon to the ground, raised his arms and followed the path of a flying drone that led him to Ukrainian positions. Two weeks later, the Ukrainian General Staff released a training video instructing Russian soldiers to safely surrender to Ukrainian drones. The program is called “I want to live” and includes a phone line, a website, and a Telegram network targeted at Russian soldiers and their families.
It is still too early to say with certainty whether this effort will attract a large number of Russian defectors. However, he offers another way to recruit the exhausted soldiers of the Russian army. Russia’s defeats on the battlefields have provided Ukraine with an opportunity to exploit the low morale of the Russian military, especially after the September call-up that sent thousands of recruits to the fierce battlefields with few supplies and inadequate training.

Petr Yatchenko, representative of the program “I want to live” Russian prisoners of warOn Monday, he said Ukraine had received more than 4,300 direct requests from Russian soldiers for information on safe surrender or desertion. Ukrainian intelligence agencies said they received 1.2 million requests for information about the program from internet users inside Russia. Most of the applications came from students or relatives of soldiers who were looking for ways to avoid war.
From February Russia and Ukraine they are waging an intense propaganda war, targeting soldiers and “arming” leaflets and publications on social media, radio and TV broadcasts, and even group text messages. During the Russian offensive in May, many Russian rockets did not contain explosives, but propaganda leaflets. Some of them read: “This is the last warning to the Ukrainian Nazis to surrender.” For their part, Ukrainian artillery also frequently uses Vampire multiple rocket launchers, firing rounds of 1,500 leaflets each.
Source: Kathimerini

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