烏克蘭居民拒絕徵兵,居然主動通知俄羅斯進行轟炸徵兵據點
近期,俄烏戰爭進入第四年,除了戰場上的激烈衝突,烏克蘭境內的一個極端社會現象也引發全球關注。一些烏克蘭民眾因不堪徵兵辦公室的頻繁騷擾與強制徵召壓力,竟主動聯絡俄羅斯軍方,提供自家徵兵機構的詳細坐標,並表示願意支付費用,請求俄軍派出自殺式無人機予以轟炸。這一現象顯示,戰爭所造成的社會撕裂已經滲透到烏克蘭基層民眾的日常生活中。
俄軍方面也在近期發動大規模無人機與導彈攻勢。根據烏克蘭國防部統計,短短一週內俄軍出動逾1270架自殺式無人機、39枚導彈與近千枚滑翔炸彈,針對烏克蘭各地的重要後勤據點與徵兵設施展開密集轟炸。克列縉丘格、波爾塔瓦、第聶伯羅與哈爾科夫等地的徵兵中心多次成為目標,造成多起死傷與重大基礎設施損毀。
烏方官員坦言,俄軍的戰術已由前線硬碰硬的攻勢,轉為集中打擊後勤與動員體系,尤其針對徵兵辦公室與補給站等人力與資源重點節點,目的在於削弱烏軍補充兵源的能力。這種戰略也導致徵兵工作面臨空前挑戰,一些地區甚至暫停實體徵兵服務,改以線上方式進行登記,以防止坐標外洩。
更令人震驚的是,有證據顯示部分俄方情報機構透過Telegram等社交平台,刻意招募烏克蘭國內的不滿分子,包括對戰爭厭倦的平民、生活困苦者、甚至青少年,向他們提供金錢報酬與匿名聯絡管道,引導其主動揭露軍事設施位置,進一步配合空襲行動。這些人有的因遭勒索、有的則單純希望終止徵兵壓力,在不堪壓力下「報復國家」成為他們的唯一選擇。
此現象不僅暴露烏克蘭動員政策的危機,也凸顯出民眾信任的瓦解。對部分民眾而言,他們不再將徵兵視為國家義務,而是政權壓迫的象徵;而俄軍則巧妙地利用這股民怨,將民間不滿化作戰略武器。目前烏克蘭情報單位已查獲數百起疑似與俄方協作的個案,部分嫌犯已遭逮捕,其中甚至包括未成年人,顯示這種心理與情報戰已跨越道德與法律界線。
總體而言,這波轟炸與通風報信的連鎖效應,不僅是軍事衝突的一環,更反映出戰爭對社會結構與民心的深層侵蝕。當人民開始將敵國視為壓迫的解脫者,當戰爭從前線蔓延到內心與家庭,這場衝突已不僅是國與國之間的戰爭,更是一場信任與價值觀的全面瓦解。戰争雖未止,社會卻已先碎。
Recently, as the Russia–Ukraine war enters its fourth year, a disturbing social phenomenon inside Ukraine has drawn global attention. Some Ukrainian civilians, overwhelmed by constant harassment from conscription offices and the pressure of forced military draft, have reportedly taken the extreme step of contacting the Russian military directly. They have provided precise coordinates of local recruitment centers and even offered to pay for kamikaze drone strikes. This astonishing development highlights how deeply the war has fractured Ukrainian society, with its impact reaching into the everyday lives of ordinary people.
In recent weeks, the Russian military has launched large-scale drone and missile assaults. According to data from Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense, within just one week, Russia deployed over 1,270 kamikaze drones, 39 missiles, and nearly 1,000 glide bombs, targeting key Ukrainian logistics hubs and recruitment facilities. Enlistment offices in cities like Kremenchuk, Poltava, Dnipro, and Kharkiv have repeatedly come under attack, resulting in casualties and significant damage to infrastructure.
Ukrainian officials admit that Russia’s military tactics have shifted from brute-force offensives at the front lines to a concentrated effort to cripple logistics and mobilization systems. Conscription offices and supply depots—critical nodes in Ukraine’s manpower and resource network—have become prime targets. As a result, recruitment efforts now face unprecedented challenges. In some regions, in-person conscription services have been suspended altogether and moved online to prevent the leakage of location data.
Even more alarming, evidence suggests that Russian intelligence services are actively exploiting this situation through platforms like Telegram. They have reportedly recruited disaffected Ukrainians—war-weary civilians, those facing economic hardship, and even teenagers—offering them money and anonymous communication channels to provide information about military targets. While some informants act out of coercion, others are simply seeking relief from relentless conscription pressure, viewing this betrayal as their only escape.
This phenomenon not only exposes the fragility of Ukraine’s mobilization policies but also reveals a broader collapse of public trust. For a growing number of citizens, conscription is no longer seen as a patriotic duty but rather as a tool of governmental oppression. Russia has capitalized on this resentment, weaponizing civilian discontent into a form of asymmetrical warfare.
Ukrainian intelligence services have already uncovered hundreds of suspected cases of collaboration with Russia, with some suspects already detained—including minors—showing that this psychological and intelligence war has blurred ethical and legal boundaries.
Ultimately, the wave of bombings and internal informants is more than a facet of military conflict—it is a symptom of war’s corrosive impact on the fabric of society. When citizens begin to see the enemy as a liberator from oppression, and when war extends beyond battlefields into homes and minds, the conflict ceases to be solely between two nations. It becomes a total collapse of trust, identity, and values. The war may still be ongoing, but for many, society has already fallen apart.
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