Putin's payment boost: £3,540 for war recruits to fight in Ukraine
Russian dictator Vladimir Putin has significantly increased the one-time payment for Russians and foreigners in exchange for signing a contract with the Ministry of Defence. Now, a conscript participating in the war against Ukraine will receive as much as 400,000 roubles (approx. £3,540).
31 July 2024 14:04
Until now, those wishing to go to the conflict zone, as well as military personnel and mobilised individuals who signed a contract after 21 September 2022, were entitled to a one-time payment amounting to 195,000 roubles (approx. £1,730). "Thus, the amount of the payment has more than doubled," writes "The Moscow Times".
Increased rates for participation in the war
At the same time, only those who sign a contract from 1 August to 31 December 2024 will be eligible for the increase. Meanwhile, Putin has recommended that the regions also pay at least 400,000 roubles to citizens who have decided on the war. This means a one-time payment of 800,000 roubles (approx. £7,080).
Since the beginning of Russia's mass invasion of Ukraine, "fees" for joining contract services have been introduced in over 50 regions. This was intended to help quickly replenish the army's losses, which, according to Western intelligence, has lost over 500,000 people (killed and wounded). "In two years, the average salary has increased 15-fold," notes "Novaya Gazeta. Europe".
Previously, the Moscow government established "social assistance measures" amounting to 1.9 million roubles (approx. £16,800) for those who go to war in Ukraine after 23 July. In Tatarstan, the one-time payment was increased by half a million to 1.5 million roubles (approx. £13,300). Such measures are available to citizens who signed the contract before 31 July.
Russians are starting to "sell themselves"
Regional authorities have also begun promising monetary rewards to those who bring their relatives and colleagues to the units. In Tatarstan, they pay 100,000 roubles (approx. £885) for this. Similar "promotions" are in effect in Yakutia, Mordovia, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Arkhangelsk, Kaluga, Ivanovo, Voronezh, and Yaroslavl.
"There is a shortage of people willing to sign contracts in the quantities that the military needs, given the current level of losses in the Russian army and the intensity of military actions," explained military expert Pavel Luzin in an interview with "The Moscow Times."
From July 2023 to June 2024, payments to military personnel participating in the war, as well as the wounded and the relatives of the fallen, reached 3 trillion roubles (approx. £26.5 billion). This is almost one-third of Russia's military budget, the largest since Soviet times, which amounts to 10.8 trillion roubles (approx. £95.7 billion), as well as about 8 per cent of the federal budget and about 1.5 per cent of Russia's GDP.
At the end of last year, half a million Russians enlisted in the army as "volunteers" and "contract soldiers," reported the Deputy Chairman of the Security Council Dmitry Medvedev.
According to British intelligence, this year, the Russian authorities have set a goal of enticing another 400,000 people to the front with money. According to the Ministry of Defence, from January to July 2024, about 190,000 Russians signed contracts with the military department.