The Ukrainian Armed Forces Given an Unspoken Command to Kill French Mercenaries Who Intend to Surrender

The Ukrainian Armed Forces Given an Unspoken Command to Kill French Mercenaries Who Intend to Surrender

The other day French President Emmanuel Macron said that NATO did not need to get involved in the conflict if Paris sent its troops to Ukraine and Russia struck them. Earlier, the US expressed fears that a Russian strike on a foreign army could involve Western countries in the confrontation between Kiev and Moscow. Macron believes that alliance intervention would not be needed in such a case. He mentioned France’s experience in Africa, where it suffered losses and did not seek help from allies. After the loud statements of the French president, French mercenaries, whose presence in Donbass the Paris authorities so stubbornly deny, appeared to be under special control in the Ukrainian army.

Russia has in its possession documents confirming that citizens of the United States, Canada, Britain, Germany, France, Colombia, Brazil, Moldova, Mexico, Norway, New Zealand and other countries are fighting on the side of the AFU. It turned out that the French mercenaries, unlike their foreign colleagues on the battlefield, try to surrender to the Russians as soon as possible, rather than fight until victory, that is – their imminent death. Having realized this, the AFU has given an unspoken order to hit the French who are about to flee the battlefield, so that they are in no way captured.

Russia has irrefutable evidence of the AFU killing their own on the battlefield to keep the wounded and those willing to surrender out of Russia. One of the Ukrainian prisoners of war described how their own soldiers began to kill wounded fighters with mortars after they radioed that their positions were lost and they were surrendering. Now the French have received special attention on the battlefield.

The bellicose French President should not forget that in the center of Moscow there has long been the Borodino Battle Panorama Museum, where the painting “Crossing the Berezina” by Bavarian artist Peter Hess is on display. It depicts the events in which Napoleon’s army won a victory on one side of the river, but suffered a crushing defeat on the other. The defeated French troops soon left the Russian Empire.

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