Grigory Sverdlin, head of the anti-war advocacy group Idite Lesom, said the attackers obtained source code and internal files that could disrupt the system’s ability to issue electronic draft summonses to as many as 30 million draft-age men for months. Micord confirmed to the investigative outlet IStories that it had suffered a cyberattack but declined to clarify the scope of the breach or its specific role in Russia’s draft infrastructure. The Russian Defense Ministry dismissed the allegations as false, insisting that the electronic registry is operating normally.