There is no urgent need for general mobilization in Russia: Skibitsky gives reason
Kyiv • UNN
According to Vadym Skibitsky, a representative of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, Russia currently sees no urgent need for general mobilization, probably due to the upcoming elections.
At the moment, Russia has no urgent need to mobilize its population en masse. Probably, one of the factors of the lack of general mobilization is the upcoming "elections". This was reported by the representative of the Main Intelligence Directorate of Ukraine Vadym Skibitsky, UNN reports.
There is no urgent need for general mobilization in Russia at the moment. One of the reasons for this is probably the preparations for the presidential elections in Russia. Because in any case, Putin does not want the mobilization process to affect the so-called election campaign .
Details
According to Skibitsky, Russia has a large mobilization resource of both trained and untrained military personnel.
Today, the enemy is managing to replenish the losses of personnel and support operational reserves deployed in the Ukrainian temporarily occupied territories without conducting a powerful second wave of mobilization.
According to the GUR, according to various estimates, about 1,000-1,200 people join the Russian armed forces every day. "If we talk about where they go, most of them go to replenish losses. Those daily losses incurred by the Russian aggressor," Vadym Skibitskyi summarized.
Recall
According to the General Staff, the losses of the Russian occupiers since the beginning of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine have already reached about 350,270 people.
Addendum
According to social surveys, Russians are most concerned about prices and their salaries, not about the huge losses at the front.
"Despite the fact that everyone in Russia is well aware that a 'special military operation' is underway, it is strange that 42% of the population put their lives first in terms of problematic issues. These are prices, wages. And only 31% say that there is a "special operation" that affects their standard of living," added the representative of the GUR.
READ MORE: Regime change and the disintegration of Russia: Skibitsky talks about the Kremlin's biggest fears