Frontline report: How Russia’s Española brigade commander was shot and butchered in his sleep after defying top brass


(function(w,q){w[q]=w[q]||[];w[q].push([“_mgc.load”])})(window,”_mgq”);

 

Today, the biggest updates come from Russia.

In Russia’s prolonged war in Ukraine, paramilitary leaders like Wagner have occasionally built powerful independent formations through grassroots recruitment and battlefield success, only to face severe consequences when their influence grew too prominent. Stanislav Orlov’s rapid ascent to a warlord with the Española volunteer formation exemplifies this dangerous dynamic, where ambition meets unforgiving centralized control.

A deadly trajectory from football stands to the battlefield

The so-called second Wagner, Stanislav Orlov was a veteran of the 2014 Donbas conflict, being a member of the Russian-run self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic.

Screenshot from Reporting from Ukraine’s video.

He was also a member of CSKA Moscow’s Red-Blue Warriors ultras group, one of the biggest brigades in the stands of the CSKA Moscow soccer club. He drew inspiration from Yevgeny Prigozhin’s semi-autonomous force model with Wagner Group and in spring 2022, following Russia’s full-scale invasion, Orlov used football ultras connections to form a similar detachment under the Vostok battalion. It attracted fighters from clubs like Spartak, Zenit, Lokomotiv, Torpedo, and CSKA, emphasizing Russia’s patriotic volunteering in nationalist circles.

Screenshot from Reporting from Ukraine’s video.

Contracts routed through intermediaries like Redut private military company enabled rapid growth to hundreds of members, including foreign volunteers. By 2023, it gained independence via state-linked private sponsorship. In 2024, Española integrated as the 88th Reconnaissance and Sabotage Brigade in the Defense Ministry’s Volunteer Corps. Orlov’s approach built a loyal force bypassing rigid hierarchy, proving effective in battles around Vuhledar, Bakhmut, Avdiivka, and Chasiv Yar.

Rising influence, rising tensions

Española’s 4-fold expansion to brigade strength by 2024 provided Orlov with substantial resources and operational autonomy. The brigade was also helped by funding that was private in theory, although in reality it was just sponsorship from state-linked entities.

Screenshot from Reporting from Ukraine’s video.

This position made him think that like Prigozhin he could voice public criticisms of military command failures without any repercussions. Tensions rose in 2025 amid investigations into alleged financial irregularities and illegal arms trafficking linked to brigade members. In October 2025, authorities ordered the brigade’s disbandment, removing its unified structure and Orlov’s authority. However, those were simply ways for the Kremlin to target him because of his open criticism of the military high command.

Despite this setback, Orlov retained influence in nationalist networks and continued operating informally instead of backing off following those threats. 

Explore further

Russia’s “Española” military brigade of football ultras and far-right militants announces dissolution

Death in Sevastopol

Because of that, on December 4, 2025, masked security forces arrived at his residence in occupied Sevastopol’s Flotsky gardening cooperative for an arrest tied to the arms probes.

Screenshot from Reporting from Ukraine’s video.

Surveillance video captured vehicles pulling up midday, armed personnel entering, and gunfire ensuing shortly after. Eyewitnesses reported Orlov offered no resistance or return fire. An ambulance removed his body hours later, with associates later confirming his death amid ongoing probes into the incident.

A pattern of building and elimination

Yevgeny Prigozhin constructed the Wagner Group as a private entity recruiting convicts and volunteers directly, operating with considerable independence while securing state resources and contracts. Orlov similarly drew from personal ultras networks to form Española, fostering loyalty through volunteer appeals and achieving semi-autonomous status with external sponsorship.

Screenshot from Reporting from Ukraine’s video.

Both formations delivered combat effectiveness, earning influence that enabled open criticism of Defense Ministry inefficiencies in logistics and leadership. Prigozhin’s grievances escalated to the June 2023 armed mutiny advancing on Moscow before withdrawal. Orlov stopped short of rebellion but persisted in leveraging connections after his unit’s forced October 2025 disbandment amid misconduct allegations.

Following the Wagner crisis, Moscow intensified oversight of irregular forces, treating independent commanders as potential liabilities. That marked a turning point for the Russian state, which became a lot less lenient on mouthy commanders not directly under their control. Prigozhin perished in an August 2023 plane explosion widely viewed as retribution.

Screenshot from Reporting from Ukraine’s video.

Orlov died after being violently shot in the December 2025 security operation at his Sevastopol home, connected to trafficking inquiries. These outcomes reveal a consistent approach of initial tolerance of effective proxies shifting to elimination upon signs of unchecked power or disloyalty.

In our regular frontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war.

(function(w,q){w[q]=w[q]||[];w[q].push([“_mgc.load”])})(window,”_mgq”);


Source

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Recommended For You

Avatar photo

About the Author: News Hound