London: Kremlin increasingly worried: Russian opponents of the war are sabotaging railway lines

Resistance to the Ukraine war is apparently forming in Russia - at least on a small scale.

London: Kremlin increasingly worried: Russian opponents of the war are sabotaging railway lines

Resistance to the Ukraine war is apparently forming in Russia - at least on a small scale. According to the British Ministry of Defense, acts of sabotage are increasing on rail networks, which are extremely important for the supply of troops. An anti-war group is responsible.

According to British intelligence services, Russian opponents of the war have repeatedly sabotaged the rail network in their own country in recent months. The damage to a railway line near a village not far from the Russian-Belarusian border earlier this week was the sixth act since June that a Russian anti-war group called Stop the Wagons has claimed responsibility for, according to the daily briefing of the British Ministry of Defence.

The actions are part of a larger trend towards increased attacks on the rail networks in Russia and Belarus. The Russian army is extremely dependent on the more than 33,000 kilometers of rail network in Russia to transport its units to Ukraine.

Since many routes led isolated through sparsely populated areas, it was difficult to secure them against sabotage, the British said. The Russian leadership will become increasingly concerned that even a small group of citizens are so opposed to the war that they are resorting to physical sabotage.

The British Ministry of Defense has published daily information on the course of the war since the beginning of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine at the end of February, citing intelligence information. In doing so, the British government wants to both counter the Russian portrayal and keep allies in line. Moscow accuses London of a targeted disinformation campaign.