25-04-2023
KYIV: The 33-year-old son of Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov says he served with the Wagner mercenary group in Ukraine for nearly six months.
Nikolai Peskov said “it was my duty… I couldn’t sit to one side watching as friends and others went off there.”
Wagner is called a “private military company” in Russia and now has international notoriety for alleged war crimes and other abuses in Ukraine.
It has recruited thousands of convicts from prisons after taking heavy losses.
It is rare for a member of the Russian elite to choose to join Wagner – many have gone abroad to avoid conscription into the regular army.
Nikolai Peskov is also known as Nikolai Choles, and speaks fluent English, having spent several years as a youth in London. He has worked as a correspondent for Russian state broadcaster RT.
Both he and his father are under US sanctions.
In an interview with the pro-Kremlin daily Komsomolskaya Pravda, he said it was his own decision to join Wagner, but he did not know how to do it, “so I had to turn to my dad… and he helped me with that”.
He said he used a false ID so that his Wagner comrades would not learn of his Kremlin connections. He did not reveal that assumed name in the interview because, he said, he might need to use it again.
Media was unable to verify his claim about serving with Wagner, whose troops have been engaged in intense fighting for months in Bakhmut. Ukraine says its Bakhmut defenders have killed thousands of Russian troops.
Nikolai Peskov’s claim coincides with a major new army recruitment drive, with Russian state ads urging men to do their “patriotic duty” in the Ukraine conflict.
Tens of thousands of men fled Russia last September to avoid being conscripted, after President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization”.
Nikolai Peskov did not reveal where exactly he had served in what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine.
In comments to the Russian media, Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin did however give more details.
After joining the group with fake documents, he said, Peskov’s son underwent a three-week training course.
“After that, when he left for Luhansk, it was necessary to expand the combined artillery battalion, and he was sent to join an Uragan [multiple rocket launcher] crew,” Prigozhin said, adding that he “showed courage and heroism, just like all the others”.
According to Prigozhin, Dmitry Peskov had asked him to “take (Nikolai) on as a simple artilleryman”. (Int’l News Desk)