'Never saw such hell': Russian soldiers in Ukraine call home
Audio intercepts obtained by The Associated Press of conversations between Russian soldiers in Ukraine and their loved ones give an intimate glimpse of how ordinary men found themselves condoning atrocities and turning into killers
How do people raised with a sense of right and wrong end up involved in terrible acts of violence against others?
Thatās the human mystery at the heart of 2,000 intercepted phone calls from Russian soldiers in Ukraine. These calls obtained by The Associated Press offer an intimate new perspective on Russian President Vladimir Putinās year-old war, seen through the eyes of Russian soldiers themselves.
The AP identified calls made in March 2022 by soldiers in a military division that Ukrainian prosecutors say committed war crimes in Bucha, a town outside Kyiv that became an early symbol of Russian atrocities.
They show how deeply unprepared young soldiers ā and their country ā were for the war to come. Many joined the military because they needed money and were informed of their deployment at the last minute. They were told theyād be welcomed as heroes for liberating Ukraine from its Nazi oppressors and their Western backers, and that Kyiv would fall without bloodshed within a week.
The intercepts show that as soldiers realized how much theyād been misled, they grew more and more afraid. Violence that once would have been unthinkable became normal. Looting and drinking offered moments of rare reprieve. Some said they were following orders to kill civilians or prisoners of war.
They tell their mothers what this war actually looks like: About the teenage Ukrainian boy who got his ears cut off. How the scariest sound is not the whistle of a rocket flying past, but the silence that means itās coming directly for you. How modern weapons can obliterate the human body so thereās nothing left to bring home.
We listen as their mothers struggle to reconcile their pride and their horror, and as their wives and fathers beg them not to drink too much and to please, please call home.
These are the stories of three of those men ā Ivan, Leonid and Maxim. The AP isn't using their full names to protect their families in Russia. The AP established that they were in areas when atrocities were committed, but has no evidence of their individual actions beyond what they confess.
The AP spoke with the mothers of Ivan and Leonid, but couldn't reach Maxim or his family. The AP verified these calls with the help of the Dossier Center, an investigative group in London funded by Russian dissident Mikhail Khodorkovsky. The conversations have been edited for length and clarity.
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In a joint production on Saturday, Feb. 25, The Associated Press and Reveal at the Center for Investigative Reporting will broadcast never-before-heard audio of Russian soldiers as they confront ā and perpetrate ā the brutality of Russia's war in Ukraine.
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LEONID
Leonid became a soldier because he needed money. He was in debt and didnāt want to depend on his parents.
āI just wasnāt prepared emotionally for my child to go to war at the age of 19,ā his mother told the AP in January. āNone of us had experienced anything like this, that your child would live in a time when he has to go and fight.ā
Leonidās mother said Russia needs to protect itself from its enemies. But, like many others, she expected Russia to take parts of eastern Ukraine quickly. Instead, Leonidās unit got stuck around Bucha.
āNo one thought it would be so terrible,ā his mother said. āMy son just said one thing: āMy conscience is clear. They opened fire first.ā Thatās all.ā
In the calls, there is an obvious moral dissonance between the way Leonidās mother raised him and what he is seeing and doing in Ukraine.āÆStill, she defended her son, insisting he never even came into contact with civilians in Ukraine.
She said everything was calm, civil. There was no trouble at the checkpoints. Nothing bad happened. The war didn't change her son.
She declined to listen to any of the intercepts: āThis is absurd,ā she said. āJust donāt try to make it look like my child killed innocent people.ā
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ONE: Kill if you donāt want to be killed.
Leonidās introduction to war came on Feb. 24, as his unit crossed into Ukraine from Belarus and decimated a detachment of Ukrainians at the border. After his first fight, Leonid seems to have compassion for the young Ukrainian soldiers theyād just killed.
Mother: āWhen did you get scared?ā
Leonid: āWhen our commander warned us we would be shot, 100%. He warned us that although weād be bombed and shot at, our aim was to get through.ā
Mother: āDid they shoot you?ā
Leonid: āOf course. We defeated them.ā
Mother: āMhm. Did you shoot from your tanks?ā
Leonid: āYeah, we did. We shot from the tanks, machine guns and rifles. We had no losses. We destroyed their four tanks. There were dead bodies lying around and burning. So, we won.ā
Mother: āOh what a nightmare! Lyonka, you wanted to live at that moment, right honey?ā
Leonid: āMore than ever!ā
Mother: āMore than ever, right honey?ā
Leonid: āOf course.ā
Mother: āItās totally horrible.ā
Leonid: āThey were lying there, just 18 or 19 years old. Am I different from them? No, Iām not.ā
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TWO: The rules of normal life no longer apply.
Leonid tells his mother their plan was to seize Kyiv within a week, without firing a single bullet. Instead, his unit started taking fire near Chernobyl. They had no maps and the Ukrainians had taken down all the road signs.
āIt was so confusing,ā he says. āThey were well prepared.ā
Not expecting a prolonged attack, Russian soldiers ran short on basic supplies. One way for them to get what they needed ā or wanted ā was to steal.
Many soldiers, including Leonid, talk about money with the wary precision that comes from not having enough. Some take orders from friends and family for certain-sized shoes and parts for specific cars, proud to go home with something to give.
When Leonid tells his mother casually about looting, at first she canāt believe heās stealing. But itās become normal for him.
As he speaks, he watches a town burn on the horizon.
āSuch a beauty,ā he says.
Leonid: āLook, mom, Iām looking at tons of houses ā I donāt know, dozens, hundreds ā and theyāre all empty. Everyone ran away.ā
Mother: āSo all the people left, right? You guys arenāt looting them, are you? Youāre not going into other peopleās houses?ā
Leonid: āOf course we are, mom. Are you crazy?ā
Mother: āOh, you are. What do you take from there?ā
Leonid: āWe take food, bed linen, pillows. Blankets, forks, spoons, pans.ā
Mother: (laughing) āYou gotta be kidding me.ā
Leonid: āWhoever doesnāt have any ā socks, clean underwear, T-shirts, sweaters.ā
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THREE: The enemy is everybody.
Leonid tells his mother about the terror of going on patrol and not knowing what or who they will encounter. He describes using lethal force at the slightest provocation against just about anyone.
At first, she seems not to believe that Russian soldiers could be killing civilians.
Leonid tells her that civilians were told to flee or shelter in basements, so anyone who was outside must not be a real civilian.āÆRussian soldiers had been told, by Putin and others, that theyād be greeted as liberators and anyone who resisted was a fascist, an insurgent ā not a real civilian.
This was a whole-of-society war. Mercy was for suckers.
Mother: āOh Lyonka, youāve seen so much stuff there!ā
Leonid: āWell ... civilians are lying around right on the street with their brains coming out.ā
Mother: āOh God, you mean the locals?ā
Leonid: āYep. Well, like, yeah.ā
Mother: āAre they the ones you guys shot or the ones ... ā
Leonid: āThe ones killed by our army.ā
Mother: āLyonya, they might just be peaceful people.ā
Leonid: āMom, there was a battle. And a guy would just pop up, you know? Maybe he would pull out a grenade launcher ... Or we had a case, a young guy was stopped, they took his cellphone. He had all this information about us in his Telegram messages ā where to bomb, how many we were, how many tanks we have. And thatās it."
Mother: āSo they knew everything?ā
Leonid: āHe was shot right there on the spot.ā
Mother: āMhm."
Leonid: āHe was 17 years old. And thatās it, right there.ā
Mother: āMhm.ā
Leonid: āThere was a prisoner. It was an 18-year-old guy. First, he was shot in his leg. Then his ears were cut off. After that, he admitted everything, and they killed him.ā
Mother: āDid he admit it?ā
Leonid: āWe donāt imprison them. I mean, we kill them all.ā
Mother: āMhm.ā
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FOUR: What it takes to get home alive.
Leonid tells his mother he was nearly killed five times. Things are so disorganized, he says, that itās not uncommon for Russians to fire on their own troops ā it even happened to him. Some soldiers shoot themselves just to get medical leave, he says.
In another call, he tells his girlfriend he's envious of his buddies who got shot in the feet and could go home. āA bullet in your foot is like four months at home with crutches,ā he says. āIt would be awesome.ā
Then he hangs up because of incoming fire.
Mother: āHello, Lyonechka.ā
Leonid: "I just wanted to call you again. I am able to speak.ā
Mother: āOh, thatās good.ā
Leonid: āThere are people out here who shoot themselves.ā
Mother: āMhm.ā
Leonid: āThey do it for the insurance money. You know where they shoot themselves?ā
Mother: āThatās silly, Lyonya.ā
Leonid: āThe bottom part of the left thigh.ā
Mother: āItās bullāā, Lyonya. Theyāre crazy, you know that, right?ā
Leonid: āSome people are so scared that they are ready to harm themselves just to leave.ā
Mother: āYeah, it is fear, what can you say here, itās human fear. Everybody wants to live. I donāt argue with that, but please donāt do that. We all pray for you. You should cross yourself any chance you get, just turn away from everyone and do it. We all pray for you. Weāre all worried.ā
Leonid: āIām standing here, and you know what the situation is? I am now 30 meters (100 feet) away from a huge cemetery.ā (giggling)
Mother: āOh, thatās horrible ... may it be over soon.ā
Leonid says he had to learn to empty his mind.
āImagine, itās nighttime. Youāre sitting in the dark and itās quiet out there. Alone with your thoughts. And day after day, you sit there alone with those thoughts,ā he tells his girlfriend. āI already learned to think of nothing while sitting outside.
He promises to bring home a collection of bullets for the kids. āTrophies from Ukraine,ā he calls them.
His mother says sheās waiting for him.
āOf course Iāll come, why wouldnāt I?ā Leonid says.
āOf course, youāll come,ā his mother says. āNo doubts. Youāre my beloved. Of course, youāll come. You are my happiness.ā
Leonid returned to Russia in May, badly wounded, but alive. He told his mother Russia would win this war.
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IVAN
Ivan dreamed of being a paratrooper from the time he was a boy, growing up in a village at the edge of Siberia. He used to dress up in fatigues and play paintball with friends in the woods. A photo shows him at 12 years old, smiling with a big Airsoft rifle and a slimy splotch of green near his heart ā a sign of certain death in paintball.
Ivanās dream came true. He entered an elite unit of Russian paratroopers, which crossed into Ukraine the very first day of Putinās Feb. 24 invasion, one year ago.
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ONE: Ivanās road to war.
Ivan was in Belarus on training when they got a Telegram message: āTomorrow you are leaving for Ukraine. There is a genocide of the Russian population. And we have to stop it.ā
When his mother found out he was in Ukraine, she said she stopped speaking for days and took sedatives. Her hair went gray. Still, she was proud of him.
Ivan ended up in Bucha.
Ivan: āMom, hi.ā
Mother: āHi, son! How ā¦ā
Ivan: āHow are you?ā
Mother: āVanya, I understand they might be listening so Iām afraid ā¦ā
Ivan: āDoesnāt matter.ā
Mother: āā¦ to ask where you are, whatās happening. Where are you?ā
Ivan: āIn Bucha.ā
Mother: āIn Bucha?ā
Ivan: āIn Bucha.ā
Mother: āSon, be as careful as you can, OK? Donāt go charging around! Always keep a cool head.ā
Ivan: āOh, come on, Iām not charging around.ā
Mother: āYeah, right! And yesterday you told me how youāre gonna fāāā kill everyone out there.ā (laughs)
Ivan: āWe will kill if we have to.ā
Mother: āHuh?ā
Ivan: āIf we have to ā we have to.ā
Mother: āI understand you. Iām so proud of you, my son! I donāt even know how to put it. I love you so much. And I bless you for everything, everything! I wish you success in everything. And Iāll wait for you no matter what.ā
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TWO: Love and fear.
Russian soldiers had been told by Putin and others that theyād be welcomed by their brothers and sisters in Ukraine as liberators. Instead, Ivan finds that most Ukrainians want him dead or gone. His mood darkens.
He calls his girlfriend, Olya, and tells her he had a dream about her.
Ivan: āFā-, you know, itās driving me crazy here. Itās just that ... You were just ā¦ I felt you, touched you with my hand. I donāt understand how itās possible, why, where ā¦ But I really felt you. I donāt know, I felt something warm, something dear. Itās like something was on fire in my hands, so warm ā¦ And thatās it. I donāt know. I was sleeping and then I woke up with all these thoughts. War ā¦ You know, when youāre sleeping ā and then youāre like ā¦ War ā¦ Where, where is it? It was just dark in the house, so dark. And I went outside, walked around the streets, and thought: damn, fā- it. And that's it. I really want to come see you.ā
Olya: āI am waiting for you.ā
Ivan: āWaiting? OK. Iām waiting, too. Waiting for the time I can come see you ... Letās make a deal. When we see each other, letās spend the entire day together. Laying around, sitting together, eating, looking at each other ā just us, together.ā
Olya: (Laughs) āAgreed.ā
Ivan: āTogether all the time. Hugging, cuddling, kissing ā¦ Together all the time, not letting each other go.ā
Olya: āWell, yeah!ā
Ivan: āYou can go fāāā crazy here. Itās so fā- up, the sā- thatās happening. I really thought it would be easy here, to tell you the truth. That itās just gonna be easy to talk, think about it. But it turned out to be hard, you need to think with your head all the time. So thatās that.ā
Ivan: āWe are really at the front line. As far out as you could be. Kyiv is 15 kilometers (about 10 miles) from us. It is scary, Olya. It really is scary.ā
Olya: āHello?ā
Ivan: āDo you hear me?ā
The line drops.
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THREE: The end.
As things get worse for Ivan in Ukraine, his motherās patriotism deepens and her rage grows. The family has relatives in Kyiv, but seems to believe this is a righteous war against Nazi oppression in Ukraine ā and the dark hand of the United States they see behind Kyivās tough resistance. She says sheāll go to Ukraine herself to fight.
Mother: āDo you have any predictions about the end ...?"
Ivan: āWe are here for the time being. Weāll probably stay until they clean up the whole of Ukraine. Maybe theyāll pull us out. Maybe not. Weāre going for Kyiv.ā
Mother: āWhat are they going to do?ā
Ivan: āWeāre not going anywhere until they clean up all of these pests.ā
Mother: āAre those bastards getting cleaned up?ā
Ivan: āYes, they are. But theyāve been waiting for us and preparing, you understand? Preparing properly. American motherfāāā have been helping them out.ā
Mother: āFāāā fāāā. Fāāā kill them all. You have my blessing.ā
Death came for Ivan a decade after that boyhood paintball game.
In July, a local paper published a notice of his funeral with a photo of him, again in fatigues holding a large rifle. Ivan died heroically in Russiaās āspecial military operation,ā the announcement said. We will never forget you. All of Russia shares this grief.
Reached by the AP in January, Ivanās mother at first denied sheād ever talked with her son from the front. But she agreed to listen to some of the intercepted audio and confirmed it was her speaking with Ivan.
āHe wasnāt involved in murders, let alone in looting,ā she told the AP before hanging up the phone.
Ivan was her only son.
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MAXIM
Maxim is drunk in some of the calls, slurring his words, because life at the front line is more than he can take sober.
Itās not clear what military unit Maxim is in, but he makes calls from the same phone as Ivan, on the same days.
He says theyāre alone out there and exposed. Communications are so bad theyāre taking more fire from their own troops than from the Ukrainians.
He has a bad toothache and his feet are freezing. The hunt for locals ā men, women and children āwho might be informing on them to the Ukrainian military is constant.
Maximās mood flips between boredom and horror ā not just at what he has seen, but also what he has done.
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ONE: Gold!
The only reason Maxim is able to speak with his family back in Russia is because theyāve been stealing phones from locals. He says theyāre even shaking down kids.
āWe take everything from them,ā he explains to his wife. āBecause they can also be fāāā spotters.ā
Stuck just outside Kyiv, bored and unsure why theyāre in Ukraine in the first place, Maxim and a half-dozen other guys shot up a shopping mall and made off with all the gold they could carry.
Back home Maxim has money troubles, but here his hands are heavy with treasure. He gleefully calculates and recalculates what his pile of gold might be worth.āÆHe says he offered a wad of money the size of his fist to Ukrainian women and children.
āI wanted to give it to normal families with kids, but the people out there were drunks,ā he tells his wife.
In the end, he handed the cash off to a random, cleanshaven man he thought looked decent. āI told him: āLook here, take it, give it to families with kids and take something for yourself. Youāll figure it out, make it fair.āā
On calls home, the high sweet voice of Maximās own young child bubbles in the background as he talks with his wife.
Maxim: āDo you know how much a gram of gold costs here?"
Wife: āNo.ā
Maxim: āRoughly? About two or three thousand rubles, right?ā
Wife: āWell, yeah ā¦ā
Maxim: āWell, I have 1Ā½ kilograms (more than three pounds). With labels even.ā
Wife: āHoly fā-, are we looters?!ā
Maxim: āWith labels, yeah. Itās just that we fāā- up this ā¦ We were shooting at this shopping mall from a tank. Then we go in, and thereās a fāāā jewelry store. Everything was taken. But there was a safe there. We cracked it open, and inside ā¦ fā- me! So the seven of us loaded up.ā
Wife: āI see.ā
Maxim: āThey had these fāāā necklaces, you know. In our money, theyāre like 30-40,000 a piece, 60,000 a piece.ā
Wife: āHoly crap.ā
Maxim: āI scored about a kilo and a half of necklaces, charms, bracelets ... these ā¦ earrings ... earrings with rings ā¦ā
Wife: āThatās enough, donāt tell me.ā
Maxim: āAnyway, I counted and if itās 3,000 rubles a gram, then I have about 3.5 million. If you offload it.ā
Wife: āGot it. Howās the situation there?ā
Maxim: āItās fāāā OK.ā
Wife: āOK? Got it.ā
Maxim: āWe donāt have a fāāā thing to do, so we go around and loot the fāāā shopping mall.ā
Wife: āJust be careful, in the name of Christ.ā
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TWO: Propaganda.
Maxim and his mother discuss the opposing stories about the war being told on Ukrainian and Russian television. They blame the United States and recite conspiracy theories pushed by Russian state media.
But Maxim and his mother believe itās the Ukrainians who are deluded by fake news and propaganda, not them. The best way to end the war, his mother says, is to kill the presidents of Ukraine and the United States.
Later, Maxim tells his mother that thousands of Russian troops died in the first weeks of war ā so many that thereās no time to do anything except haul away the bodies. Thatās not what theyāre saying on Russian TV, his mother says.
Maxim: āHere, itās all American. All the weapons.ā
Mother: āItās the Americans driving this, of course! Look at their laboratories. They are developing biological weapons. Coronavirus literally started there.ā
Maxim: āYeah, I also saw somewhere that they used bats.ā
Mother: āAll of it. Bats, migrating birds, and even coronavirus might be their biological weapon.ā
Mother: āThey even found all these papers with signatures from the U.S. all over Ukraine. Bidenās son is the mastermind behind all of this.ā
Mother: āWhen will it end? When they stop supplying weapons.ā
Maxim: āMhm.ā
Mother: āUntil they catch (Ukrainian President Volodymyr) Zelenskyy and execute him, nothing will end. Heās a fool, a fool! Heās a puppet for the U.S. and they really donāt need him, the fool. You watch TV and you feel bad for the people, the civilians, some travelling with young kids.ā
Mother: āIf I was given a gun, Iād go and shoot Biden.ā (Laughs)
Maxim: (Laughs)
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THREE: War and peace.
The Ukrainian government has been intercepting Russian calls when their phones ping Ukrainian cell towers, providing important real-time intelligence for the military. Now, the calls are also potential evidence for war crimes.
But phones have been dangerous for the soldiers in another, more personal sense. The phone acts as a real-time bridge between two incompatible realities ā the war in Ukraine and home.
In Maximās calls with his wife, war and peace collide. Even as she teaches their daughter the rules of society ā scolding the child for throwing things, for example ā Maxim talks about what heās been stealing. His wifeās world is filled with school crafts and the sounds of children playing outside. In his, volleys of gunfire crack the air.
One night last March, Maxim was having trouble keeping it together on a call with his wife. Heād been drinking, as he did every night.
He told her heād killed civilians ā so many he thinks heās going crazy. He said might not make it home alive. He was just sitting there, drunk in the dark, waiting for the Ukrainian artillery strikes to start.
Wife: āWhy? Why are you drinking?ā
Maxim: āEveryone is like that here. Itās impossible without it here.ā
Wife: āHow the fā- will you protect yourself if you are tipsy?ā
Maxim: āTotally normal. On the contrary, itās easier to shoot ... civilians. Letās not talk about this. Iāll come back and tell you how it is here and why we drink!ā
Wife: āPlease, just be careful!ā
Maxim: āEverything will be fine. Honestly, Iām scared sā-less myself. I never saw such hell as here. I am fāāā shocked.ā
Wife: āWhy the fā- did you go there?ā
Minutes later, heās on the phone with his child.
āYouāre coming back?ā the child asks.
āOf course,ā Maxim says.
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FOUR: The end?
In their last intercepted call, Maximās wife seems to have a premonition.
Wife: āIs everything all right?ā
Maxim: āYeah. Why?ā
Wife: āBe honest with me, is everything all right?ā
Maxim: āHuh? Why do you ask?"
Wife: āItās nothing, I just canāt sleep at night.ā
Maxim is a little breathless. He and his unit are getting ready to go. His wife asks him where theyāre going.
āForward,ā he tells her. āI wonāt be able to call for a while.ā
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Solomiia Hera and Anna Pavlova contributed to this report.
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Follow the APās coverage of Russiaās war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine