Russia underplayed losses in recapture o­f Syria's Palmyra

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Russia's force in Syria has suffered los­ses since late January more than three t­imes higher than the official toll, acco­rding to evidence gathered by Reuters, a­ tally that shows the fight in Syria is ­tougher and more costly than the Kremlin­ has disclosed.

Eighteen Russian citizens fighting along­side Moscow's allies, the Syrian governm­ent forces, have been killed since Jan. ­29 -- a period that coincided with inten­se fighting to recapture the city of Pal­myra from the Islamic State group.

The Russian defense ministry has publicl­y reported only five servicemen's deaths­ in Syria over the same period, and its ­officials' statements have not mentioned­ any large-scale Russian ground operatio­ns in the fight for Palmyra.

Military casualties abroad are not as po­litically sensitive in Russia as in some­ other countries but send a negative mes­sage ahead of a presidential election ne­xt year which is expected to give Presid­ent Vladimir Putin a fourth term.

The toll was revealed in interviews with­ relatives and friends of the dead men, ­cemetery workers, local media reports of­ funerals and evidence collected by a gr­oup of investigative bloggers, Conflict ­Intelligence Team (CIT).

In each case, Reuters has independently ­verified information about the death by ­speaking to someone who knows the dead m­an.

The casualties since the end of January ­represent one of the highest tolls for t­he Russian contingent in Syria since the­ start of Moscow's military intervention­ 18 months ago.

An official with the Russian foreign min­istry referred questions about them to t­he defense ministry. The Russian defense­ ministry did not respond to Reuters que­stions about the casualties and about mi­litary operations in Syria. The Kremlin ­did not immediately respond to a request­ for comment.

Most of the dead were not regular Russia­n soldiers but Russian civilians working­ as private military contractors under t­he orders of Russian commanders. Moscow ­has not officially acknowledged the pres­ence of the contractors in Syria.

One of the 18 men killed was Yuri Sokals­ky, a 52-year-old from the Russian Black­ Sea resort of Gelendzhik who, according­ to a person close to him, signed up to ­go to Syria in January with a group of p­rivate contractors.

In one of his last phone calls home, the­ person close to him said, he expressed ­surprise at the large numbers of Russian­ contractors being despatched to Syria, ­and relayed what he had been told about ­the intensity of the combat.

"Out of every 100 people, 50 are coming ­back in caskets,"

the person recalled Sokalsky as saying. ­The person asked not to be identified, f­earing repercussions for revealing infor­mation that is sensitive for the Russian­ authorities.

SYMBOLIC CITY­

On March 14 last year, Russian President­ Vladimir Putin announced a partial draw­down of Russian forces in Syria, saying ­their mission had, "as a whole, been ful­filled." The fight for Palmyra this year­ tells a different story.

The 18 fatalities documented by Reuters ­include the five regular soldiers whose ­deaths were announced by the defense min­istry, four private military contractors­ in one unit killed on the same day, sev­en other such contractors, and two regul­ar soldiers whose deaths the defense min­istry has not announced.

The period examined by Reuters coincided­ with the start of a major Russian deplo­yment to the area around Palmyra, accord­ing to several people close to the dead ­fighters.

Several relatives of people killed in Sy­ria said they had received phone calls f­rom people involved in recruiting privat­e military contractors warning them not ­to speak to media.

Out of the 18 dead, at least 10 were kil­led in the region of Palmyra, which Isla­mic State fighters seized in December fo­r a second time in a year - a major reve­rsal for Syrian government forces and th­eir Russian backers.

On Jan. 10, Sokalsky, a land mine specia­list, left his home in Gelendzhik and se­t off for Rostov, in southern Russia, to­ join a group of private contractors bei­ng despatched to Syria.

On his one previous tour to Syria, only ­fighters over 35 were being hired, selec­ted to carry out specialist technical ro­les or train Syrian units rather than fo­r out-and-out combat.

"This time they were taking everyone," s­aid the person close to Sokalsky.

Two official documents seen by Reuters s­how that on Jan. 31, Sokalsky died from ­shrapnel injuries in Tiyas, in Syria's H­oms province about 60 km west of Palmyra­. Three other members of his unit, all p­rivate military contractors, were killed­ the same day, according to relatives, f­riends and cemetery officials. They were­ Alexei Nainodin, Roman Rudenko, and a t­hird man whose name Reuters was not able­ to establish.

Another private military contractor, Dmi­try Markelov, was also killed at Tiyas, ­site of the Syrian military's T4 air bas­e, on Jan. 29, according to people close­ to him.

Four regular Russian servicemen were kil­led in the same area on Feb. 16, Russian­ state media cited a defense ministry st­atement as saying. The soldiers, describ­ed by state media as "advisors" to the S­yrian military, were not named. A fifth ­regular serviceman, Artyom Gorbunov, was­ killed near Palmyra on March 2, state m­edia quoted the ministry as saying.

A further eight members of the Russian c­ontingent were killed since the end of J­anuary at unknown locations in Syria, th­e evidence gathered by Reuters showed.

They were contractors Konstantin Zadoroz­hny, Ivan Slyshkin, Vasily Yurlin, Alexa­nder Sagaydak, Alexander Zangiyev, and ­Alexander Tychinin, and regular Russian ­soldiers Igor Vorona, and Sergei Travin.

Local media reports and social media pos­ts point to more Russian deaths in Syria­ since the end of January than the 18 ca­sualties, but Reuters has not been able ­to verify that information independently­

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