While Russia has turned a blind eye (with exceedingly rare exception) to widespread war crimes committed by its troops during its war against Ukraine, it apparently is now taking a stronger position at least for some, some of the time, regarding the corruption rotting its armed forces from within. Here's a recent detailed NYT piece on the Russian military fraud prosecution of a colonel whose unit is accused by Ukraine of numerous war crimes in Bucha at the beginning of the full-scale invasion. The colonel is apparently pleading guilty to fraud, bribery and weapons trafficking charges, though he protests that the charges are retaliation for his video "accusing a former Ministry of Defense official of incompetent leadership and forcing troops into mass-casualty missions known as 'meat grinder' assaults."
According to the Times, "[a]t least 12 high-ranking Russian military officials and generals, as well as dozens of lower-ranking officers, have been indicted on corruption charges in the past couple of years."
For more on the horror of serving in the Russian military today and those "meat grinder" assaults mentioned by the above-mentioned colonel, see this excellent and disturbing piece regarding Russian brutality vis a vis its own. I do believe how military treats its own has a correlation to how it treats its enemies and civilians .... brutality within encourages brutality to the external world.

