Zaporizhzhya, Ukraine July 14 2025. Russian soldier eliminates fellow comrade for trying to surrender



by HistoryOfViolence504

22 comments
  1. “you dont leave the millitary, the millitary leaves you.”

  2. Russians Currently: This is what a strong army looks like

    Everyone Else: who in their right fucking mind kills their own brother in arms and then leaves the body to rot

    Edit: Russians will claim his body as Ukrainian during next swap

  3. His hands were already tied it seems, could it be a UA PoW?

  4. His hands look like they were tied together at the wrist and if you look closely it seems like he has a bleeding wound on his chest.

    I’m really curious about the whole backstory here.

  5. Honestly most of these videos shows barely any indication of who’s who, we really just gonna have to take the title’s words for it

  6. His hands are tied, he has a wound on his chest, he looks exhausted. Definitely not what the title says… almost sure this person tried to escape somehow. We need more context.

  7. post this in r/ukrainerussiareport and watch the bots try and come up with a billion excuses

  8. Look at the difference in uniform color this could be a UA pow that snuck away? He seems to have been shot while walking, couldn’t move, and instead of dragging him back the (darker green is usually rus coloration) he shot him

  9. I certainly did NOT have on my bingo card hoping that a vatnik is hunted down for killing one of his comrades but here I am.

  10. I really hope they found him and blew his legs off and let him die miserable. What a horrible army and shows how barbarian the people are.

  11. Looks like buddy surrendered several times before getting domed.

  12. There’s just not much more left to say. Conscripted, bound, beaten, executed, left to rot, all by his own side.

  13. Killing your own troops who surrender is a war crime, right? Like, i know this sub often deteriorates into people screaming warcrime at everything, but im genuinely interested in how the law works in this case.

    Killing enemy troops who have surrendered is very clearly against the Geneva Convention, but do those protections extend to their own troops who surrender? Is there another rule altogether covering it? Obviously, it’s morally wrong, but im curious what international law says.

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