The decision
Ogarkov decided to go to war at the beginning of the year, and applied to the military for a contract. He had been thinking about enlisting to serve in the so-called “special military operation” for a while, he says, clarifying that he had wanted to do so “for the children”.
“I’d been watching broadcasts from Ukraine, with the constant calls to kill Russian children, so that’s what made me decide to go,” he explains, though when asked to cite a case in which Russian children had been slaughtered, he admitted he was unable to. However, there were many examples both on TV and social media, he added.
While awaiting a response from the local draft office, Ogarkov ran into a Wagner Group mercenary on leave. The two struck up a conversation and the mercenary warned him that the lack of discipline in the Russian military itself meant that it would be far preferable to sign up with a paramilitary group. Heeding his advice, Fyodor applied to Wagner, where he quickly discovered that a lack of discipline was definitely not a problem, recalling that a ban on drinking alcohol or using drugs had been enforced so rigorously in his unit that some people had “a finger cut off or were even shot” for alcohol abuse.