Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Military Power

Russian Forces Suffer Radiation Sickness After Digging Trenches and Fishing in Chernobyl (independent.co.uk) 177

The Independent reports: Russian troops who dug trenches in Chernobyl forest during their occupation of the area have been struck down with radiation sickness, authorities have confirmed.

Ukrainians living near the nuclear power station that exploded 37 years ago, and choked the surrounding area in radioactive contaminants, warned the Russians when they arrived against setting up camp in the forest. But the occupiers who, as one resident put it to The Times, "understood the risks" but were "just thick", installed themselves in the forest, reportedly carved out trenches, fished in the reactor's cooling channel — flush with catfish — and shot animals, leaving them dead on the roads...

In the years after the incident, teams of men were sent to dig up the contaminated topsoil and bury it below ground in the Red Forest — named after the colour the trees turned as a result of the catastrophe... Vladimir Putin's men reportedly set up camp within a six-mile radius of reactor No 4, and dug defensive positions into the poisonous ground below the surface.

On 1 April, as Ukrainian troops mounted counterattacks from Kyiv, the last of the occupiers withdrew, leaving behind piles of rubbish. Russian soldiers stationed in the forest have since been struck down with radiation sickness, diplomats have confirmed. Symptoms can start within an hour of exposure and can last for several months, often resulting in death.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Russian Forces Suffer Radiation Sickness After Digging Trenches and Fishing in Chernobyl

Comments Filter:
  • by TJHook3r ( 4699685 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @06:01PM (#63487328)
    It's a shame that the Russian forces missed out on the excellent HBO series 'Chernobyl', about an incident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, in Chernobyl. I mean, surely they've heard of it?
    • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @06:28PM (#63487382)

      Possibly not. Cannon fodder aren't normally noted for their broad education.

      • by Retired Chemist ( 5039029 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @06:36PM (#63487402)
        And Putin and the high command could not care less.
    • by test321 ( 8891681 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @06:29PM (#63487386)

      Something like 20 years ago I watched a TV documentary about the state of Russian/Soviet nuclear things (probably on European cultural channel Arte). One old guy interviewed concluded the documentary with something like: "they (Russian military) are so uneducated (or incompetent), if a nuclear reactor parts appeared in front of their home door, they'd just shrug their shoulders and walk over it." It could have been just badmouthing but experience showed he was right.

      • by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @07:33PM (#63487486)

        Something like 20 years ago I watched a TV documentary about the state of Russian/Soviet nuclear things (probably on European cultural channel Arte). One old guy interviewed concluded the documentary with something like: "they (Russian military) are so uneducated (or incompetent), if a nuclear reactor parts appeared in front of their home door, they'd just shrug their shoulders and walk over it." It could have been just badmouthing but experience showed he was right.

        Back in '93(?) I was working in a steel mill in Magnitogorsk, in Siberia. There was a digital display in the in center of town that showed the time, the temperature, and .. the radiation count. While I was there, there was a nuclear accident somewhere near Chelyabinsk (about 100 miles NE of us). We only found out from people back in the West telling us. It wasn't mentioned on any of the local news.

        Given the state of their steel mills at the time I wouldn't be surprised about the quality of their nuke programs.

    • Why is this marked as funny? The answer is no, they don't have access to western media. Russia controls most sources of information, and anybody who challenges the government can be sent to prison.
    • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @07:34PM (#63487488)

      It's a shame that the Russian forces missed out on the excellent HBO series 'Chernobyl', about an incident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, in Chernobyl. I mean, surely they've heard of it?

      When we had reports last year of Russian troops actually dying from what they had done in Chernobyl, this question was asked. And the answer was that the Russian government doesn't allow Chernobyl to be taught in schools because it makes the Soviet Union, and by extension Russia as they actually ran the Soviet Union, look bad. So apparently Russian kids grow up never hearing about this.

      I can personally testify that Ukrainians definitely know about Chernobyl. I went to Ukraine multiple times in the 2000s and the subject came up some in my travels there.

      • by daniel23 ( 605413 ) on Monday May 01, 2023 @05:24AM (#63488298)

        When you talk about 'Russians' here, you may think of them as educated citizens from Moscow, St.Petersburg, Yekaterinburg,... and while their sources of information may have been reduced (certainly over the last year) you can expect them to know about the accidents and the dangers of exposure to nuclear radiation.
        But when you talk about 'Russians' in the sense of ru. soldiers you must realizes that many of those have been drawn from minority regions far off, colonies of the ru. empire. It's those guys who didnt know what a water closet is (and shat next to it into the drain after invading Ukrainian cities) and among them the knowledge about the Chernobyl accident may be scarce.
        The officers should have known but they apparently don't give so much for the life of the 'meat'.

        • It's those guys who didnt know what a water closet is (and shat next to it into the drain after invading Ukrainian cities)

          Ok, my first thought was.."WTF is a water closet"?

          I'm guessing from context, that is what you call a bathroom?

          I've never heard the term "water closet" before....

          May I ask what country you are from/reside in?

          Serious question....thank you in advance.

          • WC, the typical abbreviation for toilets in most countries in Europe.
            Bathroom is where you take a shower and brush your teeth or shave, toilet is the room where you dump your load and the thing you sit on is what I called the water closet (as opposed to just a hole in the ground.)
            WC even has it's own emoji button so it cannot be that unusual

          • by jbengt ( 874751 )

            I've never heard the term "water closet" before....

            "Water Closet" is the technical term for the plumbing fixture that is commonly referred to as a toilet. I work designing plumbing systems (among other things) in the US, and all plans and specifications I have seen in the last 42 years refer to it as a water closet. Any plumber, architect, engineer, or contractor in the construction business would understand what a water closet is, even though most lay people don't seem to know that term. I understand t

    • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @07:57PM (#63487542)

      Apparently even Putin himself does not use the internet at all, and does not watch TV or any western media. He only watches and reads his own propaganda in traditional format. He's as ignorant about what's really going on as he's causing ordinary Russians to be.

    • Surely they've heard of it?

      Sadly no. One of the correspondents I saw on the news mentioned that the whole thing is still taboo in Russia, as a stain on the national identity. It's not taught, it never existed.

    • Russian TV to air its own patriotic retelling of Chernobyl story [theguardian.com]

      Russian version will revolve around role of a CIA agent before the nuclear accident
      ...
      "There is a theory that the Americans had infiltrated the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and many historians do not deny that on the day of the explosion an agent of the enemy's intelligence services was present at the station," Muradov told the tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda, which said the show "proposes an alternative view on the tragedy in Pripyat".

      State-run television and Russian tabloids have accused the HBO series of bias by papering over the heroic acts of Soviet emergency workers, the so-called "liquidators".
      "Chernobyl did not show the most important part - our victory," ran one headline in Komsomolskaya Pravda, the country's most popular daily.

      Another article by the prominent war correspondent Dmitry Steshin in the same paper claimed the show was filmed in order to sabotage overseas sales of nuclear energy technology by the Russian state company Rosatom.

      https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1... [imdb.com]

      The action takes place from April to December 1986. The Ukrainian department of the KGB of the USSR becomes aware of the interest shown by foreign intelligence services in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
      To establish the whereabouts of an experienced CIA officer, Albert Lenz, who is suspected of espionage, on the territory of Pripyat, Lieutenant Colonel of military counterintelligence Andrey Nikolaev arrives in the city.

  • by Antique Geekmeister ( 740220 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @06:05PM (#63487340)

    US soldiers in hopeless wars, such as the Vietnam and Korea conflicts sometimes shot their own toes off or gave themselves other injuries to be sent home. If simply digging or drinking the water in these contaminated eras gets a medical discharge, it's a risk that a conscripted soldier might take.and consider it safer than deserting, and safer than remaining on the front lines.

    • by UpnAtom ( 551727 )

      The Russians were in Chernobyl at the start of the invasion and left when they failed to take Kiev.. These were professional soldiers long before there was a draft.

      • They may meet the dictionary definition of a professional employee, in that that signed a contract to the job.

        But they don't meet the definition of most in Europe, would consider a "professional soldier" .

        Even their "Special Forces" aren't even trained to the level of a western army.

        One of the biggest issues with the war in Russia, isn't that they are doing it, it's how poorly it's going. Russian citizens/bloggers and even some TV/radio people are asking the question, where did the trillions of Rubles go th

        • Even their "Special Forces" aren't even trained to the level of a western army.

          I saw a discussion by "Operator Starsky" on YouTube, who is a media officer with Ukraine National Guard, who has started blogging about the war. He was actually part of the initial force that ran into Russian "special forces" during initial fight for the Antanov airport [wikipedia.org] north of Kyiv the first day of the war. He gives a first-person account of the initial stages of one of the first and most critical battles of the war>/a>. [youtube.com]

          He wasn't very impressed with their "special forces". Fascinating listening f

          • by gtall ( 79522 )

            From what I gather, the extra money the Red Army got went mainly into materiel, not troop training. The Russkies didn't lose steam because they didn't have the right equipment, but because, to hear an American general tell it, the invasion was designed by spooks, not military men. So they put their troops on the roads which the Ukrainians blocked with burning Russian tanks and trucks. They also choose to do it during when winter was turning into spring. So when they got off the roads, they sank in the mud.

            A

            • The majority of the money went into materiel, but what kind is the question. Quite a bit went into yachts and whirlpools on them rather than into military hardware.

            • From what I gather, the extra money the Red Army got went mainly into materiel, not troop training.

              That's because you can't steal and resell troop training.

        • Russian citizens/bloggers and even some TV/radio people are asking the question, where did the trillions of Rubles go that were spend over the last 15 years to "modernize" the Russian military

          That is an unpatriotic question Friend Citizen, please fill out Form 201-Alpha-54-B and report to your nearest termination centre immediately. Perhaps your next clone will do better?

    • US soldiers in hopeless wars, such as the Vietnam and Korea conflicts sometimes shot their own toes off or gave themselves other injuries to be sent home.

      I think pretty much the entire population of South Korea and the UN troops who served there - mostly Americans, yes - would disagree with your assessment that it was a "hopeless war".

    • That might happen deep into the war when things are looking hopeless, not in the first week.

      • For non-Russian conscripts, they looked pretty desperate from the first day. Desertion has been a problem among them since they entered Ukraine, especially for the troops who are not ethnically Russian. It's hard to be sure of the numbers, but there are credible reports like this from western news agencies:

        https://www.cbsnews.com/news/u... [cbsnews.com]

        The soldier describes _precisely_ the "shoot yourself in the leg" approach used by his colleagues to avoid serving Russia in Ukraine, and wide

        • I think a key reason was that they were told, even well into the war, that they are going on a training mission in Belarus. There were soldiers who desperately reported that the "others" are apparently using live ammo and that the training lead should tell them to stop shooting immediately because they're using real ammo.

          Quite frankly, if you send soldiers into a battle with this kind of "preparation", do you really wonder why they are by no means emotionally and psychologically ready to fight?

    • A lot of the Russians being sent to the meat grinder are convicts and various forms of political prisoners pressed into service. Those kind of people don't get a medical discharge if they can still walk.

      I somehow doubt that many people would cripple themselves. And beyond that if they were digging trenches they were probably being ordered to dig trenches by their officers.

      Russia just doesn't know how to fight a war. This is what happens when you have a dictator in charge. Strong men are good at hold
      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        I think that the Great Putini was trying to kill two birds with one stone, i.e., taking Ukraine but emptying Russian prisons of miscreants that certainly are not assets to a modern Russia. And for the cherry on top, he's rounding up unbelievers and sending them to prison figuring if he makes their lives difficult enough, they too will agree fighting the Ukrainians is better than rotting in prison.

        • Only problem is that this last bit isn't working. Even the Russian soldiers noticed that yes, they'd only have to serve 6 months and their prison sentence is over... but it soon became obvious that the average life expectancy of such a piece of meat is less than a day. Not 6 months.

          And soon people stopped "volunteering" for the front lines. That's why they stopped recruiting in prisons: Even prisoners are not desperate enough to agree to this.

    • US soldiers in hopeless wars, such as the Vietnam and Korea conflicts sometimes shot their own toes off or gave themselves other injuries to be sent home. If simply digging or drinking the water in these contaminated eras gets a medical discharge, it's a risk that a conscripted soldier might take.and consider it safer than deserting, and safer than remaining on the front lines.

      Not likely. Chernobyl was practiced in advance of the invasion and was invaded mostly by regular Russian forces on day 1 of the invasion. Ukrainians at Chernobyl at the time were continuously attesting to persistent suicidal tendencies of the invaders.

    • This was at the beginning of the invasion when Russians believed they would take Kyiv quickly and the whole thing would be a walk in the part that was over in a few weeks. They didnâ(TM)t know at that point that they were going to get their arses handed back to them. These people werenâ(TM)t even on the front line and might not even have heard the bad news. So why would they be self mutilating at that point?

  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @06:20PM (#63487358)

    Couldn't happen to a better group of guys. Good luck with that.

  • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @06:26PM (#63487374)

    Not just from /., but from the Independent.

    This is the same story from last year [slashdot.org]. I can understand if it was an update with some new information, but it's just the same facts from last year.

    In fact, the latest update is:

    On 1 April, as Ukrainian troops mounted counterattacks from Kyiv, the last of the occupiers withdrew, leaving behind piles of rubbish.

    Of course, that's 1 April 2022, which you'd think they'd mention if the story was written in 2023.

    I suspect this was written in April 2022, sat in a publishing queue for over a year, and then some editor at the Independent saw it, misread the date, and hit publish.

    • I suspect this was written in April 2022, sat in a publishing queue for over a year, and then some editor at the Independent saw it, misread the date, and hit publish.

      Nope, the math doesn't work.

      The story refers to how Chernobyl "exploded 37 years ago" - on "26 April 1986". 1986 + 37 = 2023.

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        I suspect this was written in April 2022, sat in a publishing queue for over a year, and then some editor at the Independent saw it, misread the date, and hit publish.

        Nope, the math doesn't work.

        The story refers to how Chernobyl "exploded 37 years ago" - on "26 April 1986". 1986 + 37 = 2023.

        Somebody must have corrected the math without realizing that it was a year-old story. Chernobyl is north of Kyiv, near the border of Belarus. The entire northern front was abandoned more than a year ago on April 1, 2022, when Russia gave up trying to take over Kyiv, and unless all the war maps are wrong, they haven't been back.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          Also, the article itself says "On 24 February 2022, Russian forces crossed into Chernobyl from Belarus, where they remained for five weeks." So this is very much a late story....

    • [..] I can understand if it was an update with some new information, but it's just the same facts from last year.

      In fact, the latest update is:

      Well, you're scratching at the surface of propaganda and its methods here, but its not the same story-- they added that it was now confirmed by...checks notes..."the authorities", whose/what authorities? authority of what exactly and so forth is sort of important here, but that's the new part of the story and supposedly why its being re-run, they added "authorities have confirmed" and its a new story.

    • They might be forgiven their ignorance for the environment in which they were born, raised, and mostly isolated... but they were still happy to go kill their neighbours and take their land and property.

      As a consequence, you would find it very difficult to measure my empathy level for them. The only good Russian combatant in Ukraine is a casualty, and the ones who are alive but not only not combat capable but an actual drain on Russian resources due to their pain and suffering? Those are the best ones.

      • In any civilized army from the last 5k years or so, a live casualty would be evacuated and helped. But we're talking about Muscovy here. Those who can't go back into combat are shot by their own side.

  • Digging trenches I understand.
    If your supperior tell you to dig a trench and you do not do it, you end up in the military jail (or worse), and if you do not dig trenches and an attack comes, you may die.

    But fishing? In chernobyl? Really? And eating said Fish? Darwin at his peak!

    • Given the state of Russia's military equipment one can only imagine what their field rations are like.

    • They did not necessarily know where they were, ground troops often don't unless they can read local signs. And they were starving. From reports, those troops were very dangerously underequipped, under-supplied, and under-fed.

  • I guess being willfully ignorant about real dangers comes with some drawbacks.

  • You can take the Orc out of Russia under the threat of imprisonment or death, but you can't take the Russia out of the Orc.

  • by Lord Rust ( 8424069 ) on Sunday April 30, 2023 @10:55PM (#63487806)

    I'm pretty sure The Independent does not know what radiation sickness means. Although I guess they must be forgiven as the term is commonly misused to describe any ill effect of radiation.

    What they probably suffer from is chronic radiation enteritis. Radiation sickness in the fast & furious version, the stuff you suffer from when you are exposed to wild amount of radiation in a really short time. The firemen who fought the fires at Chernobyl in 1986 suffered from acute radiation poisoning aka radiation sickness. Today, you'd probably have to go and hug the actual core deep inside the concrete housing @ Chernobyl to get that level of exposure.

  • I can't help but wonder if bringing up such an old (and frankly barebones) story is meant to distract from the fact that this war has devolved into an attritional slug-fest, one in which Ukraine cannot afford to keep fighting as is. It has already been a year in, and while Russia has no doubt taken some quite serious blows they are still very well in it and killing Ukrainian troops daily. Plenty of articles abound discussing the serious casualties Ukraine has taken just trying to hold Bakhmut, on top of dwi

    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      So, to be clear, you're advocating for Western armed forces to go into Ukraine, set up a no fly zone and help them repel the Russians quickly to get this over and done with fast, right?

      • I mean, that is one way to do it. I understand however that doing so will incur various political risks, including the potential to escalate this conflict into an actual world war. Partaking in a war with the mentality that it will end quickly is peak arrogance that leads to more deaths.

        Alternatively, NATO is perfectly fine with effectively sacrificing Ukraine if it means a weakened Russia in the long-term. A small country for a big country is a good trade putting aside any and all moral objections to the i

        • by tragedy ( 27079 )

          I suppose my comment was prompted in part by all the pro-Ukrainians cheering on about Russian deaths, while being seemingly oblivious to the cost it is incurring to Ukraine. It is as though they are living vicariously through another people, wanting to kill Russians but without risking their own neck out. I would not be surprised if after the war ended most of them effectively forget about the country and leave it to die out via demographic collapse.

          Ultimately, Ukraine needs more help and faster and sooner, not less. The very slow process of approving each new stage of weaponry is maddening. There should have been HIMARS and tanks and fighter jets right at the start, but the US balked at sending them, and even blocked other countries from sending their own because they were scared of Russia's "red lines". Time has shown that Ruissia's red lines are just a load of Russian lies. There is no escalation they can realistically take in this war. When they se

  • Doesn't this strike everyone as being a bit light on details.
    Of course everyone wants to believe it but "Authorities" mentioned in the articles weren't named. Diplomats from where, can we assume Russia it doesn't state or name any sources.
    It might be true but I really can't tell.

  • Radiation exposure would not be the way I would like to go.
  • I believe that Ukrainian commanders have told us how they feel fortunate that their invaders are so stupid. I was not clear if they meant the grunts, the officers or their leaders!

  • I'm sure that the leadership in the army sat them down and outlined, with great care and sufficient detail, the zone involved and the ramifications of operating with in it.

    There's no chance somebody waved an arm, pointed, and said something like, "Don't go over there."

The optimum committee has no members. -- Norman Augustine

Working...