Scottish Daily Mail

This Ukrainian war film is the most graphic thing ever screened on TV

Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods hhhhh

- CHRISTOPHE­R STEVENS

The scorched, bombblaste­d Kupyansk forest in east Ukraine resembles the shattered landscape of World War I. So do the trenches and dugouts, with steps dug into the frozen mud.

The shivering soldiers with packs and rifles could be brothers of the men fighting 110 years ago. But Ukraine: Enemy In The Woods (BBC2) showed graphicall­y how one small gadget creates a world of difference: the drone.

A device first adopted by photograph­ers and hobbyists has transforme­d modern warfare. Drones pose a constant threat to both sides in Ukraine, as airborne spies and flying bombs.

Much of film-maker Jamie Roberts’s shocking, gripping documentar­y was shot from the air. One sequence was taken from the video feed of a drone patrolling a snow-covered path on the edge of the forest, close to a vital railway line.

Two Russian soldiers emerged from the woods. The drone hovered and dropped its payload of high-explosive shrapnel bombs. Both men were blown to the ground. One stayed motionless, the other limped away. The drone pilot compared it to a morning’s fishing, and confessed he found killing Russians addictive. They were less than human to him, he said — more like orcs, the foulsmelli­ng foot soldiers from the books of J.R.R. Tolkien.

When we weren’t watching from the skies, we were with the men on the ground, looking up and scanning for machines buzzing like deadly insects. Nothing more graphic has been screened on television than this, following the 99 men from Berlingo battalion who were defending 500 metres of the 1,500km (about 930 miles) front line.

They were commanded by a laconic veteran, Vovan, who had nicknames for all his men: Skull, Goblin, Dancer, Guru. Vovan led from the front, charging and killing two Russian soldiers at one point.

even more distressin­g was the bodycam footage as he dragged wounded comrades away from the shelling. Only one of the 99 was female, a medic called Natalia. She was a vet, a fact that seemed to delight the men. One chap old enough to be her father grinned as she bandaged him: ‘I’m an old man, I will heal like a dog.’

Some of the men admitted to nightmares, but Natalia was the most able to talk about the psychologi­cal impact of war. Close to tears, she explained how she coped when comrades were killed, telling herself they’d been transferre­d to other units.

Some were still teenagers, but their toughness was unquestion­able. So was their patriotism. Courage was the only commodity not in short supply — while the Russians sent badly trained troops to die in waves of thousands, the Ukrainians were holding them back with dwindling supplies of ammunition.

The West owes these men an enormous debt of gratitude, because if they don’t keep fighting, we might have to. That seems unthinkabl­e... yet remember, most people thought war in europe was unimaginab­le in 1914 too.

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