Four exhausted soldiers in a photo published on Threads triggered a chain reaction: the removal of the commander of the 14th Separate Mechanized Brigade and the dismissal with demotion of the commander of the 10th Army Corps. However, the General Staff acknowledged: the problem was not just about food supplies.
What happened at the positions
The scandal erupted after a post by Ivanna Poberezhniuk — the daughter of a demobilized soldier from the 14th Brigade. Her father maintained contact with comrades who remained at positions as part of the 2nd Mechanized Battalion, attached to the 30th Brigade in Kharkiv region.
«The guys at the positions have no food or water. Command is not responding. Soldiers are losing consciousness from hunger, drinking rainwater. There are communication problems too»
— from Ivanna Poberezhniuk's post on Threads
According to her, delays with food, water, and fuel lasted from August 25. Anastasia Silchuk, the wife of one of the soldiers, simultaneously published an appeal on Facebook. The material was distributed by Ukrainska Pravda.
What the General Staff officially acknowledged
In a response dated April 24, the General Staff confirmed an objective factor: systematic Russian air and missile strikes on crossings over the Oskil River significantly complicated logistics in the Kupiansk area. Supply is now carried out by water vessels and heavy drones.
But alongside this came direct accusations against command: the previous leadership of the 14th brigade concealed the actual state of affairs, including facts about the loss of certain positions and supply shortages for personnel.
Personnel decisions
- The commander of the 14th brigade was removed from his position; Colonel Taras Maksimov was appointed as the new brigade commander
- The commander of the 10th Army Corps was dismissed and reassigned with a demotion; Brigadier General Artem Bogomolov took command of the corps
An important nuance: the rotation took place after the information became public — not as a result of internal audit or a vertical signal. This raises a separate question about how the system for early response to problems in units works.
If the new leadership of the 14th Brigade and 10th Corps does not restore logistics and fails to establish transparent reporting on the situation at the positions — the next scandal will again come through social media rather than through official channels.