The Sunday Telegraph

‘If we don’t help, how can we ask others later?’

Two Taiwanese volunteer fighters explain why they signed up to help Ukraine despite the horrors of war

- By Sophia Yan CHINA CORRESPOND­ENT in Taipei

When Tony Lu made the long journey from Taiwan to Ukraine two weeks after war broke out, he planned to give out aid only.

“As I handed out aid packs, I realised that I could contribute much more on the front lines,” he said. “That’s where many people, like the elderly and young, needed the most help.”

Immediatel­y, he signed up as a volunteer foreign fighter.

The horrific images on the news had called him to action. To him – and many others he knew – the war in Ukraine was an ominous warning for his homeland of Taiwan, an island nation that China claims as its territory and has threatened to take by force.

“I really wanted to understand what was happening between Russia and Ukraine. Like China and Taiwan, the two countries have a lot of shared ties and history,” Mr Lu told The Sunday Telegraph.

“This is not a war anybody wanted; it is Putin’s own war,” he said.

Just as Russia did to Ukraine, he added, “China is threatenin­g and intimidati­ng us. One day, missiles really might rain down here [in Taiwan].”

Another recruit, Jack Yao, 29, signed up at around the same time as Mr Lu, though the two have not crossed paths.

Inspired by President Volodymyr Zelensky’s plea for internatio­nal support, he helped with reconnaiss­ance, supply transport and evacuating the wounded.

“In Taiwan, we’re always talking about whether the US would come to our aid if China invaded,” he said. “Now that this has happened in Ukraine, well, shouldn’t we go there to assist, too? If we don’t help them now, how can we ask others to do that for us later?”

Mr Lu, 35, agrees. “We must train, we must be ready – we’re an island nation; we can only rely on ourselves,” he said. “Neighbouri­ng countries like Japan and the Philippine­s are worried about China’s military build-up, too.”

He and Mr Yao are among about 10 Taiwanese who have fought in Ukraine over the past year. So far, one is known to have died – Tseng Sheng-kuang, 25, thought to be the first soldier from east Asia killed in action.

Before being deployed, Mr Lu trained for about 20 days with hundreds of others in Kyiv, rising at 5am for daily workouts, learning how to handle sniper fire and administer emergency medical care.

It was familiar – at 22, he served for a year in the Taiwanese military, as conscripti­on is mandatory for men, given the long-running tensions with China. But he had to retrain on Soviet weaponry, rather than the US equipment Taiwan uses. Evenings were filled with Ukrainian lessons so that the foreign legion could understand basic orders.

“Slava Ukraini!” – long live Ukraine – is among the few words he remembers. On the battlefiel­d, he and other foreign soldiers held the line as Ukrainian troops launched counter-offensives.

“The Ukrainians driving the tanks, charging into certain death, are the true heroes,” said Mr Lu. “We were so exhausted that any of us could have toppled over and fallen right asleep.

“But we were never able to sleep; you were always startled awake by constant shelling and gunfire.”

Gruesome carnage was everywhere. When Mr Yao arrived in March, the Russian military was still trying to take Kyiv. “There were so many dead bodies,” he recalls of his visit to Bucha, a town near Kyiv where Russians massacred citizens before retreating.

“Anybody seeing that would be filled with rage.” Moments like that boosted morale in his unit, with soldiers from Norway, Chile, Romania and Georgia, even though everybody was freezing and worried they would die far from home.

“That’s somebody’s husband, somebody’s child – inside, we are all the same,” said Mr Yao.

Sometimes, people he met in Ukraine would challenge him, thinking he was Chinese and therefore on the side of the “Russian enemy”, because Beijing and Moscow have strong ties.

“I’d show my passport – unfortunat­ely, it says ‘Republic of China, Taiwan’ so it took some explaining, but I also had the Taiwanese flag, clearly different from the Chinese flag.”

For protection, he carried a small Ukrainian bible in his pocket, even though he is a Buddhist.

In June, Mr Yao decided to head home, worried that conflict was about to erupt in Taiwan.

China was becoming increasing­ly bellicose – last year there were a record number of incursions across the Taiwan Strait, with more than 1,700 Chinese warplanes and drones encroachin­g on the island.

To Mr Yao, it felt eerily similar to the Russian military build-up along Ukraine’s eastern border in the months before the invasion.

Since then he has been preparing for the worst, while running his coffeeroas­ting business.

He has stocked food and water for his family of nine, three generation­s of which live under one roof in Taipei. He consults the journal he kept in Ukraine, as he maps out where best to shelter neighbours if under attack.

Mr Yao frequents the gym to stay in shape and plans to sign up for additional reservist training programmes announced in January by the Taiwanese government.

“I’m not a profession­al soldier, but I should refresh these survival skills, to know what to do in an emergency,” he said.

“You have to keep training, so actions like loading gun cartridges become muscle memory.”

Mr Lu has also returned home to a job in the meat industry, while mourning the deaths of others in his unit.

Friends and family only learnt the extent of what he did in Ukraine after he got back.

It was dangerous, but now with combat experience, he says he’s more than ready to act at home if necessary.

“There was a chance that I wouldn’t be sitting here today,” said Mr Lu.

“I don’t think I’m particular­ly brave. We all did this so that others could have their freedom and democracy.”

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 ?? ?? Tony Lu went to fight in Ukraine after being inspired by Volodymyr Zelensky’s plea for internatio­nal support, but admits he was struck by the parallels with Taiwan’s plight
Tony Lu went to fight in Ukraine after being inspired by Volodymyr Zelensky’s plea for internatio­nal support, but admits he was struck by the parallels with Taiwan’s plight

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