Английская Википедия:501st Separate Naval Infantry Battalion
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox military unit The 501st Separate Marine Infantry Battalion (military unit A1965) was an independent Marine Battalion that was part of Ukrainian defenses of Crimea and later part of the Ukrainian forces in the Siege of Mariupol, where the units commanders switched sides and tricked most of the battalion to surrender to Russian forces.[1]
Russian annexation of Crimea
Шаблон:Main From Ukraine's independence in 1992 to 2003, the defense of the Crimean Peninsula was tasked to the 32nd Army Corps, numbering 12,000 troops. However, in 2003, Ukraine re-prioritized the defense of Crimea due to good relations with Russia, disbanding the 32nd Army Corps and tasking the Ukrainian Navy with the defense of Crimea. The navy fielded 5,600 men in three units on the Peninsula, the largest, the 36th Separate Coastal Defense Brigade, was based in Perevalne, the 1st Marine Corps in Feodosia and the 501st Separate Naval Infantry Battalion the closest to the Russian border in Kerch. In February 2014 the Russian Federal Security Service organized anti-Ukrainian meetings and convinced several local anti-Maidan supporters to seize a series of ferry docks which in turn allowed 30,000 unmarked Russian personnel to cross the Kerch strait at night. When the 501st woke up in the morning they found their barracks surrounded, as well as the barracks of the nearby 127th battalion of the Ukrainian Coast Guard, along with the mayor Oleh Osadchy being arrested, deposed, and a new Russian mayor installed in his place. The personnel of the unit where given three options, remain loyal to their oaths to Ukraine and surrender their weapons to be escorted to unoccupied Ukraine, disband and return home, or break their oaths and swear new ones to Russia. Of the 300 personnel of the Battalion, only 64 returned to Ukraine.[2] The battalion was reconstituted in 2023 and fought on the Donetsk front,[3] The defecting personnel of the 501st, along with the 1st Marine Corps, formed the Russian 501st Naval Infantry Battalion. Personnel loyal to Ukraine from the 501st, 1st, and 36th were merged to form the 36th Marine Brigade, with the 501st preserving their identity, command and logo as a highly autonomous battalion based out of Berdiansk.[4][1]
Russian invasion of Ukraine
Siege of Mariupol
Шаблон:Main During the outbreak of the Russian Invasion of Ukraine, the 501st, as part of the 36th, was tasked with the defense of Mariupol. As the battle developed into a siege, the unit was tasked with the defense of the Illich industrial works.[5] The unit operated independently and had a runner sent from the 36th for status reports. However, when the runner arrived in the Illich works, the 501st was nowhere to be found. Their weapons, food, personal affects and other items were left and it was like the entire Battalion disappeared. It wouldn't be until April 4 when Russia reported that the 501st surrendered. The loss of the 501st meant that the defenders of Mariupol could no longer defend the entire perimeter of the city, and instead had to rely on a series of strongholds throughout the city.[6]
The State Bureau of Investigation (DBR) opened an investigation into the battalion's commanders, uncovering that Kostiantyn Bezsmertnyi was spreading pro-Russian propaganda to his men, received payments from Russian intelligence, and defected with the condition that the battalion and officers would be transferred to the Donetsk People's Republic.[7] Bezsmertnyi continues to operate as a collaborator, visiting Ukrainian POW camps near his hometown of Berdiansk to try and coerce POWs to sign with the Russian army.[8] Initially, Ukraine treated all 277 members of the unit as defectors, cutting off payments to their families. However, this policy would be reversed after the release of Ukrainian POWs that interviewed members of the 501st and shared that the personnel where duped by their commanding officers, namely Bezsmertnyi and Mykola Biriukov, as well as several junior officers, and where told that they were evacuating via a humanitarian corridor, and wouldn't realize they were being sent to POW camps until after they were on busses.[9]
After Mariupol
Despite 277 of the 300 person battalion surrendering in Mariupol, the unit's drone operators and anti-air unit continue to operate, attached to the remains of the 36th that was able to fight out of the city. On April 14, 2022, the unit shot down a Russian Orlan-10 Drone.[10] On June 29, 2023, the Battalion's "Gryphon" unit released a video of them using western anti-tank weapons to destroy Russian tanks.[11]
References
- ↑ 1,0 1,1 Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ https://ukranews.com/en/news/933341-sbi-reports-suspicion-of-treason-to-marine-who-surrendered-277-afu-soldiers-to-russia
- ↑ https://rubryka.com/2023/04/22/ukrayinski-morpihy-na-donechchyni-vydovyshhno-znyshhyly-vorozhi-miny/
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
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