UK intel explains reasons behind street protest by wives of Russian soldiers in Moscow

The apparently indefinitely extended combat deployments of Russian personnel without rotation is increasingly seen as unsustainable by both the troops themselves and by their relatives.

The relevant statement was made by the Ministry of Defence of the United Kingdom on the social media platform X, referring to the latest Defence Intelligence update, an Ukrinform correspondent reports.

On November 7, 2023, wives of deployed Russian soldiers conducted what was probably the first public street protest in Moscow since the invasion of Ukraine.

The protestors gathered in the central Teatralnaya Square and unfurled banners demanding the rotation of their partners away from the frontline.

Since February 2022, social media has provided daily examples of Russian wives and mothers making online appeals protesting against the conditions of their loved ones’ service.

However, Russia’s draconian legislation has so far prevented troops’ relatives from coalescing into an influential lobbying force, as soldiers’ mothers did during the Afghan-Soviet War of the 1980s, the analysts noted.

Police broke up the Teatralnaya Square protest within minutes. However, the protestors’ immediate demand is notable, according to the UK intelligence.

“The apparently indefinitely extended combat deployments of personnel without rotation is increasingly seen as unsustainable by both the troops themselves and by their relatives,” the analysts concluded.