The draft law on the participation of conscripts in peacekeeping operations was approved
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On Tuesday, the State Duma approved in the first reading a bill on the participation in peacekeeping operations not only of contract servicemen, but also of conscript soldiers. The bill was prepared by the Ministry of Defense in February. If the project is adopted as a law, the forces participating in peacekeeping operations will be formed “on a voluntary basis” by contractors and conscripts who have undergone special training.
Currently, the Russian armed forces participate in two peacekeeping missions – in the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh (about two thousand soldiers and officers and hundreds of pieces of equipment) and the self-proclaimed Transnistria (440 servicemen). These data are provided by TASS.
After the collapse of the USSR, the Russian Federation continued to participate in UN peacekeeping missions as a successor state. Representatives of Russia were part of UN military observer groups in the Middle East (Egypt, Israel, Syria, Lebanon, the border of Iraq and Kuwait), in the Western Sahara, Cambodia and Yugoslavia.
Since 1992, Russian military personnel have been part of the Collective Security Forces in the CIS, since 2007 – in the peacekeeping contingent of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).
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