While relatives of fighters from the 14th Separate Mechanized Brigade were filming videos of empty ration packs and posting them on social media, the command was quietly replacing leaders. The General Staff was responding to public pressure rather than to internal inspections—and this is perhaps the most accurate diagnosis of the situation.
What is known about the incident itself
In units of the 14th SMB, fighters had been in positions for a long time without proper nutrition, water, or rotation. Following public outcry, the General Staff made personnel changes: Colonel Taras Maksimov became the new brigade commander, and command of the 10th Corps was transferred to Brigadier General Artem Bohomolov. Food supplies were delivered to positions—the staff called this "scheduled provision taking into account security conditions."
Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Sirsky instructed a review of the logistics situation in units on the front line. Control measures are being carried out by the commander of the Joint Forces grouping, Major General Mykhaylo Drapaty.
The Office knew—but stayed silent intentionally
Military Ombudsman Olha Reshetylova confirmed: the Office received information about the critical situation in the 14th SMB before public outcry—approximately one and a half weeks earlier.
"They were trying to solve the problem with the new commander without publicity to avoid endangering the fighters. In parallel, the command was taking measures, personnel changes occurred"
— Olha Reshetylova, Military Ombudsman, interview with Ukrayinska Pravda
Reshetylova also cautioned: the spread of such videos could directly harm military personnel who found themselves cut off from logistics. This is a real operational risk, not an attempt to cover up the problem.
Second complaint in 1.5 years—but what lies behind the number
A key detail easily lost in news noise: according to Reshetylova, this is only the second complaint about absolute lack of logistics during the entire period of the Office's operation. The first one remained without public attention.
At the same time, in an interview with Radio Free Europe, the ombudsman gave another example that went almost unnoticed: a commander of one of the units reported that he managed to rotate a military serviceman who had been in position for 502 days. This is not the 14th brigade. This is a parallel reality that became no scandal only because relatives did not film a video.
Systemic problem or management failure
Reshetylova links such situations to untimely rotation decisions—not to intentional mistreatment of fighters. But she herself notes a structural limitation: 20 employees of the Office review thousands of complaints. This means that most problems are filtered out before they reach the public sphere.
- The Military Ombudsman's Office is an advisory body without the right to enforce decisions
- Investigations in the 14th SMB case are ongoing; those responsible have not been officially named
- There is no publicly known mechanism for systematic rotation monitoring at the brigade level
The ombudsman called on the media and public sector to help "properly rebuild communication"—a hint that viral videos from the trenches create both reputational and security risks simultaneously.
If the investigation determines that commanders made consciously delayed decisions about rotation rather than simply made errors in assessing the situation—will the Ombudsman's Office have real tools to hold them accountable, rather than just the right to recommend?