Daily Press

Ill-prepared volunteers dying far from home

- By Megan Specia

RUDNE, Ukraine — Yurii Brukhal, an electricia­n by trade, didn’t have a very dangerous role when he volunteere­d for Ukraine’s territoria­l defense forces at the start of the war. He was assigned to make deliveries and staff a checkpoint in the relative safety of his sleepy village.

Weeks later, his unit deployed from his home in the west to a front-line battle in eastern Ukraine, the center of the fiercest fighting against Russian forces. He was killed June 10.

Andrii Verteev, who worked in a grocery store in the village, spent the first months of the war guarding a small overpass after work and returning home to his wife and daughter at night. Then he, too, volunteere­d to head east. He died in battle in Luhansk, only weeks before Brukhal.

Their deaths have driven home the extent to which the war is reaching into every community across the country, even those far from the front. It has also underscore­d the risks faced by volunteers, with limited training, who are increasing­ly heading into the kind of battles that test even the most experience­d soldiers. Their bodies are being returned to fill up cemeteries in largely peaceful cities and towns in the country’s west.

“He was going over there to protect us here,” said Vira Datsko, 52, Brukhal’s older sister, praising her brother’s patriotism. “But it’s a tragedy for us — so painful — that the best of our nation are going to die in this war.”

After the start of the war in February, Ukrainian men ages 18-60 were barred from leaving the country but were not automatica­lly conscripte­d, and many volunteere­d to fight. Volunteers to the country’s territoria­l defense forces, reserve units of Ukraine’s

armed forces, were initially assigned unglamorou­s but safe tasks in relatively tranquil regions like western Ukraine, where the Russians did not invade. But severe losses of manpower in the Donbas region, where Russia is grinding forward with ferocious bombing and shelling, has forced Ukraine’s military to draw reinforcem­ents from the country’s west.

Many of the fighters like Brukhal, who had no previous military experience, are simply unprepared for that escalated level of fighting. And the training they receive is limited — sometimes two weeks or less.

Volunteers to the territoria­l defense group are not forced to redeploy with their unit, but many do, spurred by patriotism or a sense of duty, and perhaps a desire not to let down their comrades. And while they know it will be bad at the front, there is little to prepare them

for the violence of frontline engagement, veteran soldiers say.

“These are people of peaceful profession­s, people from peaceful territorie­s,” said Col. Valeriy Kurko, the commander of the 103rd Brigade of the territoria­l defense, where Brukhal served.

Kurko said that most people who joined his group had never served in the army. The notion that people could simply spring to action when the war crept closer is wrong, he said. By then, it is too late.

His brigade, currently stationed in the eastern Donetsk region, is made up of men from the Lviv area in western Ukraine. Several of the men have died in the past month, Kurko said, with at least three buried in Lviv in early June.

Despite having limited time, they receive basic skills and training, he said, but acknowledg­ed that the

unit’s morale had undoubtedl­y shifted.

“I won’t hide from you the fact that some people were not ready to leave the territory of their region,” he said in an interview, but added that there were no soldiers from his brigade who refused to go east.

He acknowledg­ed that the relentless artillery shelling was “a challenge not everyone can cope with,” and added that some families had asked why their husbands and sons were being asked to deploy outside their home regions with no training.

Efforts to move more territoria­l soldiers with limited training to the east have devastated some units.

One territoria­l defense company made up of 100 soldiers from around Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, suffered 30% losses on its first day on the eastern front, around the town of Bakhmut in late spring, according to soldiers

from the unit.

Territoria­l defense soldiers did not expect that kind of fierce engagement, said one soldier, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive topics. “And here we ended up on the front line, as infantry that sit in the trenches,” he said.

Accounts from a halfdozen territoria­l defense soldiers interviewe­d for this article have been largely the same: They were trained as glorified guards during the war’s early months and then, as casualties mounted, were sent to the front.

The Kyiv unit was also given the choice to go east, and those men were quickly attached to a regular Ukrainian army unit. The territoria­l defense soldiers said they only had rifles, machine guns and a few Western-supplied anti-tank weapons.

These kinds of deployment­s have begun to draw small protests as wives, mothers and daughters of some of the those who died express their discontent.

But others, like Brukhal’s family, said they supported their family members’ decisions, despite their grief.

Before he left for the war, Brukhal had been building a home for his two daughters. At a memorial two weeks after his death, villagers gathered in prayer around a long table inside the house, its cinder block walls still exposed, a spread of food laid out in front of them.

It was the first meal in the still unfinished home, said Datsko, his sister.

“It’s just horrible when you see what’s happening in the cemetery, and you don’t know when it will stop,” she said, reflecting on the rows of new graves appearing in Lviv’s military cemetery since her brother’s burial. “We are going to have lots of women without husbands and children without fathers.”

Oksana Stepanenko, 44, is also dealing with grief, along with her daughter Mariia, 8. Her husband, Andrii Verteev, was killed May 15.

Like Brukhal, he had been a volunteer, tasked with protecting an overpass just up the road during the early weeks of the war. Then he joined an anti-aircraft unit of the military and was redeployed to the east.

His death added a new level of pain to the family. Stepanenko’s son, Artur, died of an illness at age 13 three years ago. Now a corner of their small living room has become a shrine to the boy and his father.

Despite the losses, families of fighters sent to the east said they viewed it as their patriotic duty to defend their nation.

Stepanenko said she found solace in her faith and the fact that it was her husband’s choice to go to the front lines. But like so many others in Ukraine, she asked, “How many guys have to die before this ends?”

 ?? EMILE DUCKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Soldiers carry the coffin of fallen soldier Yurii Brukhal last month in Lviv, Ukraine. Brukhal, like many other members of Ukraine’s western territoria­l defense units, had been redeployed to a front-line combat zone.
EMILE DUCKE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Soldiers carry the coffin of fallen soldier Yurii Brukhal last month in Lviv, Ukraine. Brukhal, like many other members of Ukraine’s western territoria­l defense units, had been redeployed to a front-line combat zone.

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