In a scathing post released on April 23th 2026 on her official Telegram channel, Ukrainian MP Mariana Bezugla has levelled explosive allegations against the leadership of the 58th Motorised Rifle Brigade. Describing a “typical” yet “tormented” state within parts of the army, Bezugla’s report paints a grim picture of systemic extortion, physical abuse, and high-level corruption reaching as far as the General Staff.
The “Feudal” System: Extortion and Luxury
- The “Hayabusa” Collection: Bezugla claims that battalions and companies were forced to “chip in” 50,000 UAH each to purchase a Suzuki Hayabusa motorcycle for Shnir’s birthday.
- Luxury Vehicles: While soldiers allegedly buy broken, used cars with their own money to survive, the leadership is reportedly brigade commander has already replaced his third Hilux.
- Procurement Schemes: The post identifies LLC “Armada” as a key contractor used to funnel money through suspicious drone and electronic warfare (EW) contracts.
Dungeons and Disappearances
A Crisis of Leadership
The “Illusion”: A Dangerous Collapse
The “Safari” of Drone Warfare: Why Training is Survival
Bezugla’s warning about the “illusion” of the army’s strength hits a breaking point when discussing training and mobilization. In the drone-saturated environment of 2026, the gap between a seasoned professional and a poorly trained recruit isn’t just about skill—it is the difference between life and a televised death. Specialized Russian drone detachments, such as “Rubikon” or the “Sudoplatov” unit, have turned the front line into a digital hunting ground. Using thermal imaging and AI-targeted FPVs, these units conduct what can only be described as a “safari,” picking off soldiers who haven’t been taught the complex art of drone-age survival. To an untrained soldier, a trench is a hiding place. To a modern drone operator, it is a coffin. Without intensive training in Signal Intelligence (SIGINT), knowing how to spot “drone-mother” signals, or mastering the use of portable Electronic Warfare (EW) “jammers,” a recruit is a sitting duck. The current system often sends the poor and the marginalized to the front with only basic 20th-century training. In 2026, this is a death sentence.
By the time an untrained soldier hears the hum of an FPV, it is often too late. In contrast, a trained fighter can rapidly assess whether to suppress the drone with concentrated small arms fire, rapidly dismount from an exposed Infantry Fighting Vehicle (IFV) to avoid becoming part of a catastrophic cook-off, or execute sudden, unpredictable changes in direction to force the drone to crash. Even when survival odds are razor-thin, calculated movement offers a fighting chance to walk away without a scratch. Above all, they know that running or panicking in the open only makes a drone pilot’s job easier. Only those who understand the “rhythm” of the electronic battlefield stand a chance of lasting more than a few hours on the front line.
The tragedy of the “illusion” Bezugla mentions is most visible during offensive operations. In modern warfare, attacking an enemy position is no longer just a test of courage; it is a high-stakes technical maneuver. The advantage on the battlefield doesn’t come from immortality, but from world-class training. It is the ability to coordinate movement, provide suppressive fire, and utilize cover while simultaneously monitoring the “drone-filled” sky. This level of synchronization cannot be taught in a few weeks; it requires a gradual “release” into combat duties, starting with support and moving slowly to the high-intensity “zero line.”
When the 58th Brigade or similar units send “poorly trained” recruits to storm positions, they are often walking into a slaughter. Without the skill to suppress enemy drone operators or the discipline to move in a way that relies on buddy-team rushes and sector overwatch, trusting the man to their left and right to cover them as they bound forward while still moving in a way that minimizes thermal signatures, these men are spotted long before they reach the enemy trench. While Western manuals emphasize “fire and maneuver,” the reality on the Ukrainian front in 2026 is “drone and maneuver.” If a soldier hasn’t mastered the integration of their own drone cover with their squad’s movement, they are essentially defenseless.
Procurement Under the Microscope: The “Armada” Connection
- Risk to Continued Funding: International experts from organizations like Chatham House warn that corruption scandals involving military procurement risk undermining the willingness of European partners to commit the roughly $60 billion in external financing Ukraine requires for 2026–2027.
- A “High-Stakes Business Model”: Some Western critics have already begun framing the conflict as a business model where funds are siphoned through sophisticated schemes. Allegations that critical battlefield technology is being routed through “loyalist” contractors like Armada provide fodder for those seeking to limit or pause foreign development assistance.
- The EU Accession Test: European governments and Brussels view the eradication of such “shadow management structures” as a non-negotiable prerequisite for EU accession. They require absolute assurance that funding for defense infrastructure is not being diverted into kickbacks or personal luxuries.
Source: https://t.me/marybezuhla/6422
The Myth of Heroism vs. The Reality of Exhaustion
Just day after exposing the 58th Brigade, Bezugla released a second, even more damning assessment of the military system, focused on the 14th Brigade. In this post, she pulls back the curtain on what she calls the “biggest lie” currently being sold to the public: the romanticisation of long-term deployment.
“The 14th brigade just became public. That’s why we’re talking about it. Hunger. Lack of proper supplies. People who can’t leave their positions for months. Exhaustion. Degradation of management. Lies upwards. Lies downwards. Lies to society. This is not an exception. This is the typical state of a significant part of the frontline.”
“Because the whole system is based on this: Not solving the problem, but properly framing it for the public. Not changing the decision, but changing the phrasing. Not admitting failure, but finding someone below to blame… Its ideologist is the top military leadership.”
A Verdict on the System
“…keeping people until the last moment, picturing a heroic image from a management failure, punishing for the truth, encouraging lies upwards, covering up failures with beautiful reports — that has become the official military culture.”
Source: https://t.me/marybezuhla/6425
Disclaimer: The following article is based on information retrieved from the official Telegram channel of Ukrainian MP Mariana Bezugla. I have used Telegram’s automated translation feature; therefore, I cannot guarantee 100% accuracy. I advise everyone to provide or seek their own translations for official or legal purposes.





