Russian defence minister Sergei Shoigu has visited the frontline in Ukraine, his ministry stated on Thursday.
Shoigu “checked the conditions of deployment of military personnel and equipment,” the ministry said on Telegram, accompanying its message with a video of the minister.
In the footage, Shoigu is seen walking around the trenches and inspecting the bedding in the sleeping quarters at one of the sites.
He is also shown being greeted by soldiers and walking around several military vehicles with the letter Z prominently displayed on the back.
The ministry has not revealed any further details, including the location or locations Shoigu supposedly visited.
Euronews could not independently verify the veracity of Moscow’s claims.
Shoigu’s trip to the frontline represents the second purported visit in less than a week and comes after Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskyy was reportedly in the frontline city of Bakhmut.
The Russian defence minister “flew across the spaces of deployment of troops and checked the complex positions of Russian gadgets” in the warzone, the ministry said on the Telegram messaging app on Sunday.
Similarly to Thursday, it was not clear where Shoigu went or when the visit took place.
Shoigu’s two alleged visits to troops in Ukraine come amidst reports that Russian soldiers and officers have become increasingly unhappy with the top brass and President Vladimir Putin.
In turn, Putin said on Wednesday that the Russian army must learn from and fix the problems it had suffered in Ukraine, promising to give the military whatever it needed to prosecute a war nearing the end of its 10th month.
In a speech to defence chiefs in Moscow, Putin said there were no financial limits on what the government would provide in terms of equipment and hardware.
“We don’t have any investment restrictions. The nation and the federal government are offering the whole thing that the military asks for,” he said.
Also, the Thursday trip took place less than a day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited Washington, where he met with his US counterpart Joe Biden and gave a rousing speech in front of Congress.
Zelenskyy received a hero’s welcome on Wednesday from the US legislators, thanking “each American” for helping to fund the war effort with money that is “no longer charity” but an “funding” in global security and democracy.
In his remarks to lawmakers, Zelenskyy harked back to US victories in the Battle of the Bulge, a turning point against Nazi Germany in World War II, and the Revolutionary War Battle of Saratoga, an American victory that helped draw France’s aid for US independence.
The Ukrainian leader predicted that next year would be a “turning level” in the conflict, “when Ukrainian braveness and American unravel will have to ensure the way forward for our not unusual freedom — the liberty of people that stand for his or her values.”