December 27, 2024

Russia tricks Yemeni men to fight in Ukraine under Houthi scheme: report

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Russia is recruiting hundreds of Yemeni men to fight in its war in Ukraine by luring them to Russia under false pretenses in coordination with the Houthi terrorist network, a report by the Financial Times found.

The Yemeni recruits who were transferred to Russia under a “shadowy trafficking operation” were originally told they would receive high-paying jobs and Russian citizenship.

However, after arriving with the help of a Houthi-linked company, many have apparently been coerced into the Russian military, forced to sign fighting contracts at gunpoint and sent to the front lines in Ukraine.

soldier front lines

Ukrainian soldiers of a mortar team in the 24th Brigade are seen at positions near Toretsk as the war between Russia and Ukraine continues in Toretsk, Ukraine, on March 26, 2024. ((Photo by Wolfgang Schwan/Anadolu via Getty Images)

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Fox News Digital could not immediately reach the U.S. State Department or the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense for comment on Russia’s increasing use of foreign fighters to aid its war machine in Ukraine.

It is unclear if any of the Yemeni men are Houthi terrorists or how many have been sent to fight in Ukraine, though the Financial Times report on Sunday suggested that recruitment is believed to have begun in July. At least 200 Yemeni men were reportedly a part of just one group forcibly conscripted into the Russian military in September – most of whom had little training before they were then sent to Ukraine to fight. 

A video posted by the London-based news outlet depicted at least five Yemeni men, four in the video along with the cameraman, explaining their dire situation and noting that one of their fellow conscripts attempted to commit suicide but was taken to a hospital before being reinstated into service one day later.

“We are now under bombardment,” said the man holding the camera, who expressed their exhaustion and showed a group of men holed up in a Ukrainian forest. “Mines, drones, digging bunkers, we are carrying lumber.”

U.S. diplomats told the news outlet that the scheme coordinated between the Houthis and Russia shows how far Moscow is willing to go to beef up its forces amid the high casualty rates.

Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense on Monday assessed that Russia has seen more than 730,000 casualties in the nearly three-year-long war, though U.S. assessments in early October suggested this number was closer to 600,000, which includes some 115,000 deaths and roughly 500,000 wounded. 

Ukrainian troops Bakhmut

Ukrainian soldiers fire at targets on the front line in the direction of the city of Ugledar, Donetsk, Ukraine, as the Russia-Ukraine war continues on April 18, 2023. (Photo by Muhammed Enes Yildirim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

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Though the report by the Financial Times suggests there could be hundreds, if not more, Yemeni men forced to fight in Ukraine, they are not the only foreign fighters being pulled into Russia’s war machine. 

North Korea has sent some 12,000 troops to aid Russia, and reports earlier this year suggested that men from India and Nepal had been lured into fighting for Moscow under false pretenses, again having been promised lucrative jobs before being shipped off to the war in Ukraine. 

It is unclear how many Indian men have been conscripted into Russia’s military, though a report by Time in August said that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi apparently raised the subject with Russian President Vladimir Putin during a July visit to Moscow. Modi was allegedly assured Russia would do what it could to return all Indian mercenaries, though the status of that agreement remains unclear. 

CNN similarly reported earlier this year that some 15,000 men from Nepal had also been recruited to fight for Russia – depicting a trend that shows Russia has been targeting impoverished nations to falsely lure fighters into its ranks. 

Russia has been bolstering its ties with Iran, and in extension, Iran’s proxy forces like the Houthis, since Putin launched his “special military operation” in Ukraine in 2022.

Houthi Russia

Protesters, mainly Houthi supporters, hold up weapons as they rally to show support for Palestinians and Lebanon’s Hezbollah in Sanaa, Yemen, on Nov. 8, 2024. (REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah)

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It is unclear what, if anything, Russia has promised the Houthi’s in exchange for their help in Moscow’s latest conscription scheme, and security officials have yet to confirm any arms sales from Russia to the terrorist network. 

Russia is known, however, to have aided the group by providing targeting data, which the group uses in its attacks against Western ships in the Red Sea. 

The Houthis have also sent at least two delegations to Russia this year to meet with senior Kremlin officials.