Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Short of troops, Ukraine is recruiting, and drafting, reinforcements – The Washington Post

A Ukrainian armed forces mobilization campaign poster in central Kyiv reads, Turn your rage into a weapon. (Alice Martins for The Washington Post)

Updated April 11, 2023 at 3:43 p.m. EDT|Published April 10, 2023 at 1:00 a.m. EDT

KYIV, Ukraine The men in uniform could show up almost anywhere, anytime.

They knock on civilians front doors and randomly stop them on street corners, handing out draft papers that can turn lives upside down.

Ukraine needs more soldiers and fast. Kyiv is preparing for an imminent assault on Russian occupying forces, and while Ukraine does not disclose its casualty counts, commanders in the field have described large losses. In a trove of leaked classified files, the U.S. government recently estimated that between 124,000 and 131,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed or wounded since the start of the invasion more than five times what Kyiv has publicly disclosed.

We need to understand if the war lasts another year, were all going to be in the army, said Sasha, 35, a casting director and amateur kickboxer who is taking a private military training course in the capital in case he is drafted. He spoke on the condition that only his first name be used, because of concerns over publicizing his mobilization status.

The much-hyped counteroffensive will rely on both new soldiers and more experienced troops newly trained on donated Western equipment, including Leopard 2 tanks. And the pace and aggression with which officials are now calling on civilian men to report to military offices or sign up on their own are sowing panic among those who feel unprepared or unwilling to serve.

Previously, officials could only deliver draft papers to peoples homes, and some avoided the notices by staying at different addresses than where they are officially registered. But new rules have widened the scope of places where men can be stopped and questioned about their draft status.

Martial law in place in Ukraine since February 2022 bars most men between ages 18 and 60 from leaving the country. Under mobilization rules, any man in that range can theoretically be called to fight. Exceptions are made, including for students; parents with three or more children under 18; caretakers of disabled dependents; and those deemed medically unfit, among others.

Almost a quarter-million Ukrainians will turn 18 this year making them old enough to sign up to fight, or, if theyre male and still in the country, too old to leave.

The Ukrainian army has long relied on volunteers. But now many Ukrainian men even those working as volunteers or doing other useful jobs as civilians cannot escape the draft, or at least registering in military offices.

Oleksii Kruchukov, 46, a washing machine repairman waiting in line outside a recruitment office in Kyiv, said he was ordered to report there after police broke up a fight he got into on the street. He did not have any valid military exemptions and said he expected that the incident will result in him soon being sent to training, and then the front.

Oleksandr Kostiuk, 52, a road repairman who helped set up barriers against Russian forces around Kyiv last year, recently received his notice via his human resources department at work. He is willing to go to the front if he has to but fears for his safety. Now we understand whats going on, so Im more nervous, he said.

Thousands of other civilians are preempting such situations, instead signing up in droves for a force called the Offensive Guard made up of eight new assault brigades.

Some are responding to the posters plastered across the countrys highways calling on civilians to join and turn your rage into a weapon. The young men may have recently turned 18 and now qualify, or have cleared up family obligations that previously stopped them from joining. Others hope enlisting of their own accord will give them better training and prestige than if they were drafted.

Since early February, more than 5,000 people have applied to join what was formerly known as the Azov Battalion, a controversial former right-wing militia that was incorporated into Ukraines national guard. Last year, the battle-hardened group was hailed as heroic for withstanding a months-long siege of the southeastern city of Mariupol.

Then, in February, the Ukrainian Interior Ministry announced that Azov would be expanded into an assault brigade as part of the new Offensive Guard.

Under its rules, Azov only accepts those who sign up of their own accord not draftees and it reserves the right to reject people whom it does not believe will be a good fit, which it says allows it to select the most motivated soldiers. Azov has launched a massive recruitment campaign for its new status as a brigade, with many of its men who were captured in Mariupol last year and eventually released now training recruits.

Other civilians, unwilling to enlist just yet but preparing in case they are called up, are attending private trainings or workout sessions so that when the time comes, they are not starting from scratch.

Im 100 percent sure Ill be drafted sooner or later, Sasha, the casting director informally training with friends in the capital, said. Despite having taken a military course at university that would technically qualify him to serve as an officer in the army, he could barely handle a weapon until recently. Now he believes his civilian days are numbered, especially with the counteroffensive everyone is waiting for, and he has enrolled in training.

Im literally forcing myself because I understand it might happen, he said.

His worst fear, he said, is that even after attending basic training, he will not feel ready to fight.

That concern is not unfounded.

On a recent afternoon outside Lyman in eastern Ukraine, a seasoned enlisted leader vented about the quality of initial training among newly arrived troops, describing it as largely glossing over fundamentals needed in the field that have to be taught when they get to their units.

Theyre taught to sing songs and march in basic training, the leader said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with reporters.

Once deployed, the troops need instruction even on the most ancient practice of soldiering: how to dig, the leader said. They do not know how to hold their shovels or fortify trenches and fighting positions. For practice, a group of fresh troops dug their spades into a nearby trench line.

The leader walked an instruction line to teach four soldiers how to change their rifle magazines during a firefight, explaining that it wont be so easy to just stand there. You need to take cover, he explained. Often youll need to do it a prone position. The unloaded rifles clicked in discord as the trainees ran through the drills.

Some of them struggled to move quickly and smoothly through the steps of inserting a fresh magazine and sliding the bolt forward. The instructor singled out the worst performer and yelled.

Adjust your sling! he roared, as the soldier fidgeted with his weapon. How are you going to shoot with your sling twisted like that?

Meanwhile, at a training camp in the Kyiv region, Azov recruits lined up at a shooting range, learning to use C7A1 rifles. One of their trainers, a Russian-speaking former American Marine who joined Azov and goes by the call sign Frodo, said that the majority of these guys a month ago were civilians. One sat against a wall, studying a translated U.S. military handbook.

That they were motivated enough to sign up on their own means they act more like warriors than soldiers, Frodo said.

The training condenses the roughly three-month U.S. Marine Corps basic training into just four weeks, he said. During that time, the troops learn everything from marksmanship and cartography to radios and engineering. Its possible likely even that they could then be deployed almost immediately to the countrys hottest front lines.

In one tent, dozens of men sat in rows as an instructor went over the different types of mines they needed to be able to identify in the field. Outside, a group of men came jogging across the sand then all came to an abrupt halt and lit up cigarettes. They only get three smokes a day, Frodo explained, and during training, they are required to run everywhere they go.

Its a short period to build discipline, he said.

Its fear over this lack of readiness that pushed Sasha and eight other men to attend training at an abandoned warehouse in Kyiv on a recent Sunday. They ran up the stairs in twos and threes, rifles raised to their shoulders as they paused on each landing to check for Russian troops.

Bam! Bam! Bam! I made contact! one shouted. Then came a new threat from above: GRENADE!

They all hit the floor but nothing exploded. The grenade was plastic, the Russian soldier was cardboard, the warehouse was in an area under Ukrainian control and the consequences for mistakes were minimal. Whoever died stupidly, you do 30 squats! the commander yelled.

Their trainer an active-duty serviceman who trains the men in between assignments and spoke on the condition of anonymity because of security concerns said that days drills were intended to prepare these civilian men, who work in IT, advertising and project management, to clear an area of any Russian forces left over after a counteroffensive.

I can kill 10 Russians, but if I teach 10 others how to kill, they might kill 100 Russians, he said. When I see their motivation and their energy it gives me shivers. Their motivation is my motivation.

If they do end up on the front, he said, his main goal is for them to live for as long as possible.

Kamila Hrabchuk in Kyiv and Alex Horton and Anastacia Galouchka in Lyman contributed to this report.

Portraits of Ukraine: Every Ukrainians life has changed since Russia launched its full-scale invasion one year ago in ways both big and small. They have learned to survive and support each other under extreme circumstances, in bomb shelters and hospitals, destroyed apartment complexes and ruined marketplaces. Scroll through portraits of Ukrainians reflecting on a year of loss, resilience and fear.

Battle of attrition: Over the past year, the war has morphed from a multi-front invasion that included Kyiv in the north to a conflict of attrition largely concentrated along an expanse of territory in the east and south. Follow the 600-mile front line between Ukrainian and Russian forces and take a look at where the fighting has been concentrated.

A year of living apart: Russias invasion, coupled with Ukraines martial law preventing fighting-age men from leaving the country, has forced agonizing decisions for millions of Ukrainian families about how to balance safety, duty and love, with once-intertwined lives having become unrecognizable. Heres what a train station full of goodbyes looked like last year.

Deepening global divides: President Biden has trumpeted the reinvigorated Western alliance forged during the war as a global coalition, but a closer look suggests the world is far from united on issues raised by the Ukraine war. Evidence abounds that the effort to isolate Putin has failed and that sanctions havent stopped Russia, thanks to its oil and gas exports.

Understanding the Russia-Ukraine conflict

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Short of troops, Ukraine is recruiting, and drafting, reinforcements - The Washington Post

Russia-Ukraine war: Hungary signs new energy deals with Russia; UN tally of Ukraine civilian deaths approaches 8,500 as it happened – The Guardian

A spokesperson for the Ukrainian armed forces has denied a claim by Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of Russias private Wagner mercenary group, who said Russian forces now controlled more than 80% of Bakhmut city. I can confidently state that the Ukrainian defence forces control a much larger percentage of the territory of Bakhmut, Serhii Cherevatyi, a spokesperson for the eastern grouping of the Ukrainian armed forces, told CNN.

Russias lower house of parliament has voted unanimously to introduce electronic callup papers via an online portal for the first time. The State Duma gave its preliminary approval to changes in the law that are intended to facilitate mobilisation, as Russia seeks to make it harder to avoid the draft. Changes to the legislation would mean that once an electronic summons is received, citizens who fail to show up at the military enlistment office are automatically banned from travelling abroad.

Hungarys foreign minister, Pter Szijjrt, has announced new agreements to ensure the countrys continued access to Russian energy, a sign of the countrys continuing diplomatic and trade ties with Moscow amid the war in Ukraine. While in Moscow, Szijjrt met the Russian deputy prime minister for energy, Alexander Novak, and the chief executive of the Russian state nuclear energy company Rosatom, Alexey Likhachev.

The Russian-appointed leader of Crimea has said Moscows forces are ready for a possible Ukrainian assault, days after President Volodymyr Zelenskiy reaffirmed Kyivs intention to take back the Black Sea peninsula that Russia illegally annexed from Ukraine in 2014. Sergei Aksyonov said Russian forces in Crimea had built modern, in-depth defences and had more than enough troops and equipment to repel what may be an impending Ukrainian counteroffensive.

Almost 8,500 civilians are confirmed to have been killed in Russias invasion of Ukraine, a UN body has said, with many thousands more unverified deaths feared. The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has long described its figures as the tip of the iceberg because of its limited access to battle zones. The majority of the deaths were recorded in territory controlled by the Ukrainian government and under attack by Russian forces.

A Danish decision on whether to supply western fighter jets to Ukraine is likely to take place before the summer, Denmarks acting defence minister, Troels Lund Poulsen, has said. Discussions are taking time because countries have to act together, Poulsen said during a visit to Ukraine. Poulsen yesterday confirmed Denmarks intention to provide refurbished 100 Leopard 1 battle tanks to Ukraine.

The UN-brokered deal that enables Ukraine to export grain via the Black Sea is in a critical state because of Russias actions, a Ukrainian government minister told the Guardian on Tuesday. Yurii Vaskov, Ukraines deputy minister responsible for seaports and maritime, said: The Russians have violated the conditions of the Black Sea grain initiative. They decided to unilaterally change the plans of Ukrainian ports. Its unacceptable.

Canadas prime minister, Justin Trudeau, has pledged fresh military support for Ukraine after meeting with his Ukrainian counterpart, Denys Shmyhal. Canada will send 21,000 assault rifles, 38 machine guns and 2.4m rounds of ammunition to Ukraine and impose sanctions on 14 Russian individuals and 34 entities, including security targets linked to the private mercenary Wagner group, Trudeau said.

Leaked US intelligence documents appear to indicate that Egypt was planning to covertly supply Russia with rockets and munitions. A document dated 17 February is claimed to summarise conversations between President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi and senior Egyptian military officials in which Sisi instructs officials to keep the production and shipment of rockets secret to avoid problems with the west, and additionally references plans to supply Russia with artillery rounds and gunpowder.

Ukraine needs more long-range weapons and less contemplation on leaks, said the senior presidential adviser, Mykhailo Podolyak, referring to the recent leak of Pentagon documents. If we had time, we could watch the [Russian Federation] fall apart & its elites devour each other. But we dont have it, as our people are dying, he posted to Twitter.

The Kremlin, appearing to pre-judge any judicial hearing, said on Tuesday that the Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich had violated Russian law and been caught red-handed, after the US state department officially designated him as having been wrongfully detained by Russia. Russia has presented no evidence to support the case against Gershkovich. Next week, a court will hear an appeal from Gershkovichs legal team against an order that he be held in pre-trial detention at Moscows Lefortovo prison until 29 May.

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Russia-Ukraine war: Hungary signs new energy deals with Russia; UN tally of Ukraine civilian deaths approaches 8,500 as it happened - The Guardian

A reorganizational road map for DoD to deter China, win in Ukraine – Defense News

Today, the U.S. is supporting a proxy war with Russia while attempting to deter a China cross-strait invasion of Taiwan. Both are wake-up calls that victory and deterrence in modern war will be determined by a states ability to simultaneously use traditional weapons systems and rapidly acquire, deploy and integrate commercial technologies (drones, satellites, targeting software, etc.) into operations at every level.

Ukraines military is not burdened with the U.S. Defense Departments decades-old acquisition process and 20th century operational concepts. It is learning and adapting on the fly.

China has made the leap to a whole-of-nation approach. This has allowed the Peoples Liberation Army to integrate private capital and commercial technology and use them as a force multiplier to dominate the South China Sea and prepare for a cross-strait invasion of Taiwan.

The DoD has not done either of these. It is currently organized and oriented to acquire traditional weapons systems and execute operational concepts with its traditional vendors and research centers, and it is woefully unprepared to integrate commercial technologies and private capital at scale.

Copying Defense Secretary Ash Carters 2015 strategy, China has been engaged in civil-military fusion that employs a whole-of-government, coordinated effort to harness disruptive commercial technologies for its national security needs. To fuel the development of technologies critical for defense, China has tapped into $900 billion of private capital in civil-military guidance (investment) funds and has taken public, state-owned enterprises to fund their new shipyards, aircraft and avionics. Worse, China will learn from and apply the lessons from Russias failures in Ukraine.

But unlike Americas arch strategic rival, the U.S. has been unwilling and unable to adapt and adopt new models of systems attritable systems, autonomous systems, swarms, and other new, emerging defense platforms and operational concepts ones that threaten but look beyond legacy systems as well as incumbent vendors, organizations and cultures at the speed of our adversaries.

Concept art from the Air Force Research Laboratory shows a drone swarm that the service could potentially use. (U.S. Air Force)

Viewing the DoD budget as a zero-sum game has turned the major defense primes and K Street lobbyists into saboteurs for DoD organizational innovation that threaten their business models. Using private capital could be a force multiplier by adding hundreds of billions of dollars outside the DoD budget. The U.S. is on a collision course to experience catastrophic failure in a future conflict because of it. Only Congress can alter this equation.

For the U.S. to deter and prevail against China, the DoD must create both a strategy and a redesigned organization to embrace those untapped external resources private capital and commercial innovation.

A reorganized and refocused DoD could acquire traditional weapons systems while simultaneously rapidly acquiring, deploying and integrating commercial technologies. It would create a national industrial policy that incentivizes the development of 21st century shipyards, drone and satellite factories, and a new industrial base along the lines of the CHIPS and the Innovation and Competition acts.

Congress must act to identify and implement changes. These include:

National power is ephemeral. Nations decline when they lose allies, economic power or interest in global affairs, or when they experience internal or civil conflicts, or miss disruptive technology transitions and new operational concepts.

The case can be made that these are happening to the U.S.

The 1986 Goldwater-Nichols Act is a precedent for Congress reorganizing the DoD. It created the combatant commands. Today, Congress must view the conflict in Ukraine and Chinas actions in the South China Sea as a call for action. We urge it to establish a commission to determine what reforms and changes are needed to ensure the U.S. can fight and win our future wars.

While parts of the DoD understand were in a crisis, the DoD as a whole shows little urgency and misses a crucial point: China will not defer solving the Taiwan issue on our schedule. Russia will not defer its future plans for aggression to meet our dates. We need to act now.

We fail to do so at our peril and the peril of all those who depend on U.S. security to survive.

Joe Felter and Steve Blank are co-founders of Stanford Universitys Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation. Pete Newell, former director of the U.S. Armys Rapid Equipping Force, is the CEO of advisory firm BMNT.

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A reorganizational road map for DoD to deter China, win in Ukraine - Defense News

Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces and other troops deploy HIMARS to strike Russian jamming station – Yahoo News

Ukraines Special Operations Forces have tracked down a Russian Zhitel R-330Zh jamming station, and another defence unit has deployed HIMARS to strike it [Zhitel is Russian for "resident" ed.].

Source: Special Operations Forces

Quote: "Officers of the Special Operations Forces of Ukraine and units from the defence forces carried out a number of actions on the Donetsk front, which allowed them to establish the location of a Zhitel R-330Zh automated jamming station. The jamming station was quite far behind the front line.

The coordinates [of the jamming stations location] were promptly transmitted to a rocket artillery unit, which knows how to do its job very well.

The video captures the moment when a HIMARS M142 rocket hit the jamming station."

Details: The Zhitel R-330Zh jamming station is designed to automatically detect radio signals, establish the direction they are coming from, and analyse them.

Zhitel R-330Zh automated jamming station

ILLUSTRATIVE PHOTO FROM WIKIPEDIA

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Ukraine's Special Operations Forces and other troops deploy HIMARS to strike Russian jamming station - Yahoo News

Marine vet, not seen alive in a year, declared dead in Ukraine – Marine Corps Times

A Marine veteran who volunteered to fight in support of Ukraine is dead, the State Department confirmed to Marine Corps Times.

Retired Capt. Grady Kurpasi, 50, was last seen April 26, 2022, in southern Ukraine, The Washington Post reported in July 2022.

Working as part of a team of international volunteers, Kurpasi and a British man, Andrew Hill, went to investigate the source of gunfire, the Post reported. They radioed to their team that they were under fire.

Hill was captured by Russian-backed forces and reportedly charged with being a mercenary. Two other members of the unit were killed, according to the Post.

Loved ones had feared Kurpasi had been captured or killed, the Post reported.

We can confirm the death of a U.S. citizen in Ukraine, a Statement Department spokesperson said via email Wednesday in response to a Marine Corps Times request for confirmation of Kurpasis death. We are in touch with the family and providing all possible consular assistance. Out of respect for the familys privacy during this difficult time, we have nothing further to add.

A GoFundMe fundraiser organized by William Lee on behalf of Kurpasis wife, Heeson Kim, stated that the Marine veteran had been killed in action.

GoFundMe spokesman Jalen Drummond confirmed that the fundraiser is verified and that the funds will go to Kim.

Kurpasi, who grew up in New York City following his adoption from Korea, enlisted in the Marine Corps at the unusually late age of 29 following the 9/11 attacks, according to the GoFundMe.

He became an infantry assaultman and ultimately became a scout sniper, the GoFundMe states. He deployed three times to Iraq, according to the Post and the GoFundMe.

Kurpasi attended UCLA through a selective enlisted-to-officer commissioning program and then became an infantry officer, according to the GoFundMe. He retired in September 2021 as a captain.

Kurpasis awards included the Good Conduct Medal three times, the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal three times, the Purple Heart Medal, the National Defense Service Medal and the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, among other awards, CNN reported.

After retiring from the Marine Corps, Grady felt obligated to assist in Ukraine as they defended their country against the Russian invasion, the GoFundMe reads. Grady went to train soldiers but due to the intensity of the war and the need for combat-experienced leaders, Grady ended up leading a squad into battle and was killed in action.

He is survived by a wife and a 14-year-old daughter, according to the GoFundMe.

He led his Marines by example and loved his family - speaking of them often, the GoFundMe reads.

Marine Corps Times attempted to contact Lee, the organizer of the fundraiser, but did not receive a response. Military.com first reported news of the GoFundMe.

The confirmation of Kurpasis death comes a little more than two months after the death of Marine veteran Pete Reed, 33, who was killed in Bakhmut, Ukraine. Reed had reportedly been administering medical aid to civilians.

Irene Loewenson is a staff reporter for Marine Corps Times. She joined Military Times as an editorial fellow in August 2022. She is a graduate of Williams College, where she was the editor-in-chief of the student newspaper.

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Marine vet, not seen alive in a year, declared dead in Ukraine - Marine Corps Times