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I don’t want this state to even be on the map,” he said.

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The 34-year-old Bogdanov, who served as an FSB officer in the Russian Far East, in an interview with Radio Free Europe last year said he initially came to Ukraine to fight “for new Russia” against the Putin regime but his views have evolved.

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Mr Skachkov in the APC picture from Belgorod was posing next to Ilya Bogdanov, a former FSB officer who went to fight pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine 2014 and who has been compulsively updating his Facebook page with photos and videos from Belgorod. Despite the grave charges against him, Mr Skachkov was released on bail after spending a month in jail. He was arrested in 2020 for selling translated versions of the manifesto of the Christchurch shooter who killed 50 people in New Zealand in 2019.Ī photo distributed by the SBU in 2020 showed Mr Skachkov’s alleged living room with a swastika flag hanging on the wall.

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Just two years ago, the Russian national was under investigation in Ukraine for selling the translation of a New Zealand mass murderer’s manifesto.īefore he surfaced in the Belgorod region wearing a military patch with a Ku Klux Klan figure holding a rifle and proudly posing next to an allegedly captured Russian APC, Alexei Skachkov was described by the Ukrainian intelligence agency SBU as the “leader of a radical neo-Nazi group”. The Russian Volunteer Corps was founded by Denis Nikitin, a well-known owner of a neo-Nazi martial arts brand and a football hooligan involved in the brawl with British fans in Marseille in 2016.Īlexander Skachkov is one of the men seen grinning next to a Russian armoured people carrier allegedly captured.

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The band of fighters say they are from the Russian Volunteer Corps and The Liberty of Russian Legion, ostensibly pro-Ukrainian groups of Russians with suspected links to Ukrainian intelligence. As the social media posts came rolling in of the daring incursion, some of the faces posing with military kit were instantly recognisable. Similar fighters in other parts of Ukraine have been referred to as "TikTok soldiers". that they are much more interested in looking good and producing content online rather than achieving anything of actual military or strategic value for Ukraine,” Michael Colborne, an investigator for the Bellingcat organisation, told The Telegraph. While there did not appear to be any fighting in the sparsely populated area claimed to have been seized, several "soldiers" involved meticulously documented their journey, posting photos while local authorities scrambled to evacuate residents. But the fighters’ frenzied social media activity has raised questions about the mission’s true purpose. This week’s "invasion" has exposed Russia’s stunning inability to defend its own borders. The rag-tag bunch of fighters who rode into Russia this week on tanks and armoured vehicles in an extraordinary raid appear to have little in common.īut many of them are united by at least two things: the underground Russian far-Right scene and a desire for likes.

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One is a failed actor best known for TV commercials about chocolate nuts, one runs a hipster Korean restaurant in Kyiv and another is the frontman of a black metal band.















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