In a sinister new front in the Ukraine war, Russia is systematically recruiting hundreds of Ukrainian children as young as nine on Telegram, turning them into saboteurs and bribing them to bomb their own schools, conscription offices, and police stations in a chilling campaign of child soldier recruitment.
The shocking strategy was revealed through the testimony of “Vlad,” a 17-year-old now facing terrorism charges after he was caught planting a bomb in a military van—a device he was told to live-stream so his Russian handler could remotely detonate it. “When I was connecting the wires, I thought it could explode then. I thought I might die,” Vlad told the BBC from his detention cell, a stark warning of how children are being manipulated into becoming pawns in a deadly information war.
Ukrainian security services (SBU) report that over 800 citizens have been recruited this way, with 240 being minors. The handlers, operating through seemingly innocuous Telegram channels, troll for vulnerable teens looking for work, then lure them with cash for small crimes before escalating to bombings and arson. The BBC verified these tactics, with one recruiter offering $3,000 for a bank attack and stating, “I need all the arson I can get.”

Why It Matters
By weaponizing the very platforms kids use daily, Russia isn’t just attacking Ukraine’s infrastructure—it’s attacking its soul, turning child against parent and neighbor against neighbor. The promise of quick cash for “simple jobs” is a trapdoor into a world of terrorism, where these kids are either blown up by their handlers, imprisoned by their own government, or killed by their own explosives.
The international community’s silence on this specific horror is deafening. While the world debates weapon shipments, Russia is launching a silent, digital invasion that corrupts youth and sows internal chaos. This is a war crime unfolding in plain sight, hidden behind phone screens and encrypted messages, and it represents one of the most morally bankrupt strategies of this conflict.















