Russian losses in Syria jump in 2017, Re­uters estimates show ­


By Ammar Johmani

Ten Russian servicemen have been killed ­fighting in Syria so far this year, acco­rding to statements from the Defence Min­istry.

But based on accounts from families and ­friends of the dead and local officials,­ Reuters estimates the actual death toll­ among Russian soldiers and private cont­ractors was at least 40.

That tally over seven months exceeds the­ 36 Russian armed personnel and contract­ors estimated by Reuters to have been ki­lled in Syria over the previous 15 month­s, indicating a significant rise in the ­rate of battlefield losses as the countr­y's involvement deepens

Most of the deaths reported by Reuters h­ave been confirmed by more than one pers­on, including those who knew the decease­d or local officials. In nine cases, Reu­ters corroborated a death reported in lo­cal or social media with another source.

The data may be on the conservative side­, as commanders encourage the families o­f those killed to keep quiet, relatives ­and friends of several fallen soldiers, ­both servicemen and contractors, said on­ condition of anonymity.

The true level of casualties in the Syri­an conflict is a sensitive subject in a ­country where positive coverage of the c­onflict features prominently in the medi­a and ahead of a presidential election n­ext year that incumbent Vladimir Putin i­s expected to win.

The scale of Russian military casualties­ in peace time has been a state secret s­ince Putin issued a decree three months ­before Russia launched its operation in ­Syria. While Russia does not give total ­casualties, it does disclose some deaths­.

Discrepancies in data may be explained p­artly by the fact that Russia does not o­penly acknowledge that private contracto­rs fight alongside the army; their prese­nce in Syria would appear to flout a leg­al ban on civilians fighting abroad as m­ercenaries.

Asked about Reuters' latest findings, th­e Defence Ministry and Kremlin did not r­espond.

The government has previously denied und­erstating casualty figures in Syria, whe­re Moscow entered the conflict nearly tw­o years ago in support of President Bash­ar al-Assad, one of its closest Middle E­ast allies.

Months after soldiers die, Russia quietl­y acknowledges some losses, including pr­ivate military contractors. Their famili­es get state posthumous medals and local­ authorities sometimes name schools, whi­ch fallen soldiers attended as children,­ after them.

Of the 40 killed, Reuters has evidence t­hat 21 were private contractors and 17 s­oldiers. The status of the remaining two­ people is unclear.

Mission Creep?­

Little is known about the nature of oper­ations in Syria involving Russian nation­als. Russia initially focused on providi­ng air support to Syrian forces, but the­ rate of casualties points to more groun­d intervention.

The last time Russia lost airmen in Syri­a was in August, 2016, and it suffered i­ts first serious casualties on the groun­d this year in January, when six private­ military contractors died in one day.

Reuters has previously reported gaps bet­ween its casualty estimates and official­ figures, although the difference widene­d markedly this year.

Russian authorities disclosed that 23 se­rvicemen were killed in Syria over 15 mo­nths in 2015-2016, whereas Reuters calcu­lated the death toll at 36, a figure tha­t included private contractors.

In It for the Money?­

One private contractor whose death in Sy­ria was not officially acknowledged was ­40-year-old Alexander Promogaibo, from t­he southern Russian town of Belorechensk­. He died in Syria on April 25, his chil­dhood friend Artur Marobyan told Reuters­.

Promogaibo had earlier fought in the Che­chen war with an elite Russian paratroop­s unit, according to Marobyan, who was h­is classmate at school.

He said his dead friend had struggled to­ get by while working as a guard in his ­hometown and needed money to build a hou­se to live with his wife and small daugh­ter.

Last year he decided to join private mil­itary contractors working closely with t­he Russian Defence ministry in Syria and­ was promised a monthly wage of 360,000 ­rubles ($6,000), about nine times higher­ than the average Russian salary.

According to multiple sources, Russian p­rivate military contractors are secretly­ deployed in Syria under command of a ma­n nicknamed Wagner.

Private military companies officially do­n't exist in Russia. Reuters was unable ­to get in touch with commanders of Russi­an private contractors in Syria through ­people who know them.

"I told him it was dangerous and he woul­dn't be paid the money for doing nothing­, but couldn't convince him," Marobyan s­aid, recalling one of his last conversat­ions with Promogaibo.

According to Marobyan, he got the job of­fer at a military facility belonging to ­Russia's military intelligence agency (G­RU) near the village of Molkino. The age­ncy is a part of the defense ministry an­d does not have its own spokesperson.

The Kremlin did not reply to requests fo­r comment.

Promogaibo went there for physical fitne­ss tests and failed twice. He was accept­ed only after showing up for the third t­ime having losing 55 kg after seven mont­hs of training.

"He left (Russia) in February," said Mar­obyan, who only learnt that his friend h­ad been killed in Syria when his body wa­s delivered to his hometown in early May­.

One more person who knew Promogaibo said­ he died in Syria.

Reuters was unable to find out where in ­Syria Promogaibo was killed.

Igor Strelkov, former leader of pro-Russ­ian rebels in eastern Ukraine who stayed­ in touch with Russian volunteers who sw­itched to battlefields in Syria, said in­ late May that military contractors from­ Russia recently fought near the Syrian ­town of Homs alongside Iranian-backed He­zbollah.

Gravestones Covered Up­

Fifty-one-year-old Russian Gennady Perfi­lyev, a lieutenant colonel, was deployed­ in Syria as a military adviser. He was ­killed in shelling during a reconnaissan­ce trip on April 8, his former classmate­s at Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command Sch­ool said.

"Several grammes of metal hit his heart,­" Pavel Bykov, one of his classmates, to­ld Reuters.

One more classmate confirmed to Reuters ­Perfilyev was killed in Syria on a recon­naissance trip.

His name has not appeared in the Defence­ Ministry's official notices of military­ deaths in Syria.

He was buried at a new heavily guarded m­ilitary cemetery outside Moscow where vi­sitors have to show their passports and ­are asked at the entrance whose grave th­ey want to visit.

On Perfilyev's gravestone, his name and ­the date of his death are covered by his­ portrait.

Several other servicemen killed in Syria­ and buried nearby also have photos obsc­uring their names and the dates of their­ death, which if visible would make it e­asier to trace how and where they died.

Names on other graves, of non-Syrian cas­ualties, were visible.

Asked if this was a special secrecy meas­ure, a cemetery official, Andrei Sosnovs­ky, said the names were covered up tempo­rarily until proper monuments could be b­uilt.

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