Deserting the paper army
How one woman refused to be a cog in Russia’s military machine

When Andrey and Natalia Smekalin and their four children were reunited in Paris last month, it was the first time that they had all been together in over a year, since Natalia had deserted her military post in Russia’s Far East and fled to Armenia, despite intimidation and threats from the Federal Security Service (FSB).
“I immediately understood that sooner or later we would have to leave the country.”
Andrey came home, looked at their 10-month-old son, and decided he couldn’t possibly leave him and miss watching his children grow up.
She dreamed of reuniting with him and leaving Russia too — but military bureaucracy stood in the way.
In front of officials and on camera, she was forced to agree that she was subject to travel restrictions and had no right to leave the country or obtain a passport until March 2026.
The Smekalins were fingerprinted, then driven to the railway station and issued with instructions to travel to a refugee camp.

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Suspect citizens
Much as in Soviet times, the Kremlin still views those with second passports as disloyal




