šØ REPORTS OF INCREASING RUSSIAN SURRENDERS IN UKRAINE… “I Want to Live” Program Sees Continued Activity! š„

šØ RUSSIAN SURRENDERS RISE AS āI WANT TO LIVEā STAYS ACTIVE šŗš¦š„

Reports of Russian troops seeking a way out of the war are growing ā and Ukraineās āI Want to Liveā program remains one of the clearest signs of pressure inside Moscowās ranks.
The program, run by Ukraineās military intelligence-linked structures, offers Russian soldiers a channel to request safe surrender and avoid being sent deeper into the battlefield. Its official site says troops can submit requests to voluntarily surrender and receive į“ssistance.

Ukrainian-linked data published in early 2026 claimed that more than 10,000 Russian soldiers had been captured, with 60ā90 surrendering per week on average through recent activity connected to the project.
This is not just about numbers ā it is about morale.

Every surrender sends a message across the front: fear is spreading, trust is breaking, and more soldiers are choosing survival over orders. Recent reports have also shown drones being used to guide surrendering Russian troops safely toward Ukrainian positions, turning battlefield technology into a path out of the war.
For Ukraine, the message is simple: lay down your weapons, live, and go home one day.

For Russia, the warning is much darker: when soldiers start searching for surrender instructions, the front line is no longer just cracking on the map ā it is cracking from within.
