The Borneo Post (Sabah)

In Chernobyl ghost town, Ukraine forces train for combat

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PRIPYAT, Ukraine: Machine gun fire echoed through the abandoned buildings of Pripyat in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, as Ukrainian National Guard troops on Friday staged urban combat exercises.

The live-fire training – carried out in one of the most radioactiv­e places on earth – came as warnings swirl over a potential Russian invasion.

Moscow has massed over 100,000 troops along Ukraine’s border – including deploying personnel to Belarus, which lies just 10 kilometres (six miles) to the north for joint drills.

For Ukraine’s forces, the deserted streets and apartment blocks of Pripyat – empty since residents were evacuated following the nuclear reactor disaster in 1986 – made an ideal training ground.

Troops in winter camouflage practised clearing armed attackers from buildings, targeted mortar fire and took on snipers in urban conditions.

Emergency service workers staged evacuation­s – a speaker on a drone telling residents to clear out – and fought fires caused by fighting.

“As there are no civilians around here we can conduct exercises with real ammunition in a situation as close to actual urban warfare as possible,” said one National Guard serviceman, giving only his call sign Litva.

But conducting exercises inside the exclusion zone has its own risks. Ahead of the training – the first of its kind staged in Pripyat – workers with Geiger counters had to scan the route to check there were no radioactiv­e hotspots.

“It has all been checked and it doesn’t present a danger,” Litva said confidentl­y, as he clutched his automatic rifle to his chest.

Some Western leaders insist the threat from Russia’s massed forces is real and urgent – but authoritie­s in Kyiv have cautioned against stirring “panic”.

Ukraine’s defence minister Oleksiy Reznikov played down the likelihood of an incursion by Russian forces sent to Belarus for joint drills.

While the US has said that their number could reach 30,000 – Reznikov insisted that the “several thousand” Russians currently across the Belarusian frontier were not enough to attack.

He also pointed to difficult terrain as a major obstacle

– and the threat from radiation if they tried to push through the exclusion zone towards the capital Kyiv.

“This area is very hard to get through – forests, swamp, rivers – it’s complicate­d enough to move by foot let alone with a tank,” Reznikov told journalist­s, who had been ferried into the exclusion zone on a press tour to see the exercises.

“And don’t forget that still since the disaster there remain some highly radioactiv­e areas on the route from Belarus.”

Ukraine’s interior minister Denys Monastyrsk­iy said that due to the spike in tensions security had been stepped up around all nuclear reactors – including the Chernobyl site, now covered by a mammoth protective sarcophagu­s.

“We’re absolutely sure that the nuclear plant in Chernobyl is not under threat,” Monastyrsk­iy said.

But the National Guard troops in Pripyat were not training to counter a full-scale Russian invasion.

They were instead preparing for the threat from ununiforme­d infiltrato­rs who might seize buildings and stir unrest across the country.

That was what happened when Russia seized the Crimean peninsula in 2014 and began fuelling a separatist conflict in the east of Ukraine. Ukraine’s authoritie­s insist that type of internal destabilis­ation remains their biggest worry.

“We have to show our readiness to react to all events,” said Monastyrsk­iy.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Servicemen take part in a joint tactical and special exercises of the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ukrainian National Guard and Ministry Emergency in a ghost city of Pripyat, near Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant.
— AFP photo Servicemen take part in a joint tactical and special exercises of the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ukrainian National Guard and Ministry Emergency in a ghost city of Pripyat, near Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? This photo courtesy of the US Army shows pallets of ammunition, weapons and other equipment bound for Ukraine loaded on a plane by members from the 436th Aerial Port Squadron during a foreign military sales mission at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware.
— AFP photo This photo courtesy of the US Army shows pallets of ammunition, weapons and other equipment bound for Ukraine loaded on a plane by members from the 436th Aerial Port Squadron during a foreign military sales mission at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware.
 ?? AFP photo ?? This photo courtesy of the US Army shows the arrival of XVIII Airborne Corps Soldiers on Feb 4 in tiesbaden, Germany. These are the first of 2,000 Soldiers to arrive in Europe following the Pentagon’s announceme­nt of additional forces moving from the United States to Europe in support of our Nato allies. The XVIII Airborne Corps, which serves as America’s Contingenc­y Corps, will provide a Joint Task ForceJcapa­ble headquarte­rs in Germany, as N,T00 Paratroope­rs from the 82nd Airborne Division deploy to Poland. These moves are designed to respond to the current security environmen­t and reinforce Nato’s eastern flank.—
AFP photo This photo courtesy of the US Army shows the arrival of XVIII Airborne Corps Soldiers on Feb 4 in tiesbaden, Germany. These are the first of 2,000 Soldiers to arrive in Europe following the Pentagon’s announceme­nt of additional forces moving from the United States to Europe in support of our Nato allies. The XVIII Airborne Corps, which serves as America’s Contingenc­y Corps, will provide a Joint Task ForceJcapa­ble headquarte­rs in Germany, as N,T00 Paratroope­rs from the 82nd Airborne Division deploy to Poland. These moves are designed to respond to the current security environmen­t and reinforce Nato’s eastern flank.—

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