Russia’s Vladimir Putin sought to assuage the concerns of his country’s military moms Tuesday, 12 days into his invasion of Ukraine, while doubling down on the claim that his full-scale attack is a defensive move.

"I’d like to address the mothers, wives, sisters, brides and girlfriends of our soldiers and officers who are in battle now," he said in a televised address, according to a translation from Russian. 

"I know how worried you are for your loved ones," he continued. "You can be proud of them just as the whole country is proud and feels for them."

His speech came a day after a group of mothers accused the Russian military of using their sons as "cannon fodder" in the war with Ukraine.

Putin

Vladimir President Vladimir Putin ordered Russia’s all-out invasion of Ukraine only eight months after TIME magazine billed President Biden as ready to take on the Russian leader.  (Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

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"We were all deceived, all deceived," a woman shouted at Sergey Tsivilev, governor of the Kuzbass region in Siberia, on a video translated by the Telegraph and shared to social media. "They were sent there as cannon fodder. They are young. They were unprepared."

Putin claimed Russian troops, which he sent in last month in a stalled bid to topple the government in Kyiv, have deployed for a defensive "special military operation."

He also claimed that "conscripted soldiers" played no role in combat operations in Ukraine and vowed not to mobilize additional reserves. 

However, just days into the invasion last month reports emerged that conscripted soldiers had been forced to sign military contracts and were cut off from communications with their families.

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a news conference after his meeting with U.S President Joe Biden at the 'Villa la Grange' in Geneva, Switzerland in Geneva, Switzerland, Wednesday, June 16, 2021. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool)

Just days into the invasion last month reports emerged that conscripted soldiers had been forced to sign military contracts and were cut off from communications with their families. ((AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool))

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Olga Larkina, the director of Russia’s Committee of Soldiers’ Mothers, spoke to Russian investigative news outlet Meduza, describing how Russian conscripts – those fulfilling military enlistment requirements – had been pressured, or at times even forced to sign contracts to become soldiers for the Russian military.

"Mothers are telling us that their sons have been calling them and saying they’re being forced to sign contracts. We believe it’s wrong to force a conscript to become a contract soldier," Larkina said, according to the translated article. "The parents who have gotten in touch have told us their sons were just taken by military officers, stamped, and that’s it — now they’re contract soldiers."

Putin disputed those characterizations Tuesday.

Two men carry a woman as people flee from advancing Russian troops whose attack on Ukraine continues in the town of Irpin outside Kyiv

Two men carry a woman as people flee from advancing Russian troops whose attack on Ukraine continues in the town of Irpin outside Kyiv, Ukraine, March 8, 2022.  (REUTERS/Thomas Peter)

"The set goals will be achieved only by professional soldiers," he said. 

Last week, Ukrainian propaganda targeted Russian mothers as well – in a bid have them use their leverage to dissuade soldiers from fighting.

"Russian mothers are losing their children in a completely foreign country," Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a video. "Think of this number: almost 6,000 Russians died, Russian military, in six days of war."

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Separately, Ukraine’s Defense Ministry claimed it would return Russian prisoners if their mothers came to pick them up in the country’s besieged capital, Kyiv.

The number of Russian dead is disputed. U.S. officials said Tuesday it may be around 3,000, while Ukraine says it’s about four times that amount. The Kremlin said about 500 troops died as of last week.

Fox News’ Stephanie Pagones, Jon Brown and Louis Casiano contributed to this report.