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The wretched state of the Russian military
Soldat, directed by Paul Jenkins
By Felix Kreisel
8 October 2002
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Soldat, directed by Paul Jenkins, presented at the Montreal
World Film Festival, August 22-September 2
Soldat is a documentary made by the British television
producer/director Paul Jenkins about the present state of the
Russian army. This is not the first film in which Jenkins has
treated this subject for British television viewers. Unfortunately,
I am ignorant of his previous works. Soldat tells the story
of a group of young recruits from Moscow, who end up in a motorized
infantry brigade in Saratov.
The film begins by showing us the search for and registration
of draftees in Moscow. A policeman and a draft board employee
scour their district for draft dodgers, who utilize all possible
means to avoid military service. A few parents are ready to rid
themselves of their thuggish or drug-dependent offspring. As in
the old days, they hope that the army will turn their sons into
men. But most families view the two-year service as a calamity,
and only advise their sons to avoid Chechnya, if at all possible.
The inductees passively bear their scalping by the army barber,
the coarse uniform, the repetitive training and barrack discipline.
We observe as a sergeant repeats the same exercise of dressing
and undressing, training the recruits for a rapid formation on
the parade ground. After a few weeks of basic training the recruits
take an oath to serve the Fatherland and are formally inducted
into the armed forces. They are then transferred to common barracks.
From now on, in addition to the general and lawful discipline
the young soldiers are subject to ruthless abuse by the so-called
grandfathers (a term denoting a soldier in his second
year of service). The filmmaker somehow got the armys permission
to allow him to do reality filming of raw and shocking
scenes. On the other hand, he somehow persuaded the soldiers not
to feel ashamed in front of the camera.
We observe shocking scenes of unconstrained bullying and degradation.
In the toilets and shower rooms the older soldiers abuse, beat
and punch the younger, getting them to perform various personal
services, providing them with cigarettes, money, vodka. Although
we are only shown such scenes in the toilets, it is clear that
abuse and humiliation pursue the younger soldiers everywhere:
in the barracks, on the parade grounds, on marches, during military
drill and exercises and, finally, in battle.
The director shows us scenes of everyday life in this Saratov
garrison. Two soldiers armed with a pick and shovel slowly, like
slaves, dig a hole. A junior officer oversees them, smokes and
spits to the side, and orders them to continue working. Later
we find out that these holes are intended for poles with barbed
wire ringing the base. A colonel in command of the base appears,
and reproaches a junior officer for leaving some holes in the
fence. That officer explains that there isnt enough barbed
wire at the depot, that there isnt even any colored paper
to hide the gaps in the fencing. Pervading everything is an atmosphere
of laziness and Potemkin villages.
Our colonel, the brigade commander, complains that new equipment
is unavailable, that the tanks, the troop carriers, everything
in general is getting older and needs repairs. A general arrives
to inspect the base, see a parade and reward some soldiers with
prizes: televisions, other electronic goods, money. The general
is upset at the bad discipline during parade, the bad uniforms,
the irregular marching.
What is the marching for? Why the fences? Why the barbed wire
around this Saratov base? Is it perhaps to prevent the soldiers
from deserting, to make more difficult the all-pervasive pilfering
and theft of equipment, weapons and uniforms? More to the point:
what is this entire army for?
We listen to one soldier complain that because of abuse by
the grandfathers he could not sleep for a few nights.
Then he fell asleep during guard duty and was punished with four
days in the stockade. He thought many times about turning his
submachine gun at the grandfather who abused and punched
him.
We are shown a major trained in the old school, who tries to
battle the system of dedovschina (abuse by the grandfathers),
searches for those guilty of physical abuse and demands that the
younger soldiers point out their tormentors. The soldiers are
silent, too cowed to speak up. Finally the major finds an abuser,
lines a squad of soldiers up and tries to explain the injustice
and illegality of these relationships. These explanations seem
so incongruous that the soldiers laugh in his face, one of them
is unable to stop and the major orders him to do 30 push-ups as
punishment. Abuse has penetrated into the bone and marrow of this
demoralized and beaten army. The major finishes by threatening
the abuser with calling in his parents. The absurdity of this
righteous major is highlighted when we see him get on his bicycle
to continue his tour of inspection.
Our soldiers are sent to the south to patrol an area neighboring
Chechnya. Guerilla war is continuing here; there are mines under
the roads. A truck driver is blown up by a mine and loses an arm
and a leg. The brigade commander lectures the officers that they
should not be negligent, that the sappers must not be lazy and
must continuously search for mines.
Everything is futile. The soldiers dream of returning home
and count the days until demobilization. We discover the system
of ranking in the barracks: the newly drafted, who are subject
to abuse; those who have served six months to a year, and who
are no longer subject to abuse by the grandfathers;
finally, the grandfathers who permit themselves to
exploit the young. This system in enshrined in custom and tradition;
there are rites of passage to seniority and to demobilization.
Those parents who hoped that their son would be turned into
a man will be disappointed. The military system of
violence, injustice, degradation and drunken binges destroys human
bodies and the human spirit.
See Also:
The sinking of the
Kursk and the crisis of the Russian military
[29 August 2000]
Putin's Chernobyl:
the tragedy of the Russian submarine disaster in the Barents Sea
[23 August 2000]
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