A French court ruled in 2023 that Russians who refuse to fight can claim refugee status, but most are not able to travel abroad to lodge an asylum application, said Ian Bond, a Russia expert and deputy director of the Centre for European Reform.

“It’s relatively easy for Russians still to get to countries in the former Soviet Union. Russians have two passports — they have an internal passport and some have a foreign passport. Particularly for people of military age or active servicemen, even getting their hands on a foreign passport is extremely difficult,” Bond told VOA.

…”There are a number of ways in which they could have gotten to France, and I think they’re not the first Russian deserters to get asylum in the West. But this seems to be a larger group — rather than in the past [when] I think there have just been some scattered individuals,” said analyst Bond.

…Many European nations will have security concerns, said Ian Bond of the Centre for European Reform.

“There will be some, maybe in eastern Europe, who will say Russians are always a security risk; we should not be encouraging this. There will be others, and I would be among them, who would say the more people that we can encourage to leave Russia, the more acute [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s shortage of manpower will be — not just for the armed forces, but also for the military industrial complex.”

“I think the fact that Russia has brought some thousands of North Korean troops to the battlefield is an indication that the manpower shortage is really starting to bite. But certainly, you’ll have to scrutinize these people quite closely to make sure that you aren’t importing Russian special forces disguised as deserters,” Bond told VOA.