The Mercury News

When Russians picked wrong town to invade

- By Carlotta Gall

VASYLKIV, UKRAINE >> The accounts of resistance in the small garrison town of Vasylkiv already have taken on the sheen of legend. There are reports of Russian transport planes shot down, paratroope­rs hunted in the woods and even an unknown Ukrainian pilot nicknamed the Ghost of Kyiv defending the skies.

Hyperboles aside, the people of this quiet provincial town of tree-lined streets and low-rise buildings dating back to the Russian empire managed to fight off Russian troops in the critical opening days of the war, preventing Russian forces from capturing strategic bases that could have allowed the nation's capital, Kyiv, to be encircled.

Vasylkiv — home to an aviation school that has trained generation­s of pilots, a counterter­rorism task force and an air defense command center that protects the capital and central Ukraine — became one of the first targets of a Russian attack in the first hours and days of the war. Cruise missiles slammed into the air base, and then Russian airborne forces attacked in a series of ground assaults.

They did not prevail. Accounts from residents, government officials, armed forces personnel and civilians who have enlisted territoria­l defense units described how Ukraine rebuffed the Russian assault and helped prevent Russia's wider aims to seize control of the country.

An air base on the edge of Vasylkiv was among the first targets hit at 5 a.m. on the morning of Feb. 24, in the opening salvos of the war. The strikes damaged buildings, equipment and air defense systems.

Russian airborne troops were dropped into nearby villages and began an assault, local officials and officers said. Russian soldiers attacked during an air raid, using it to their advantage as Ukrainian troops took cover in bomb shelters.

“After the airstrikes, they tried to test the perimeter,” said one air force officer involved in fighting in one of several military installati­ons in the area, speaking on condition that he only be identified by his rank — a major — and his military code name, KR@M. “They tried to sneak inside and they managed.”

For security reasons, the officer did not specify exactly where the battles took place, except to say the Kyiv region.

The Russian attackers had most likely been dropped by helicopter in villages away from their target and advanced on foot, he and other officials said. They attacked two separate military targets, and for four days Ukrainian forces fended off several attacks. At one point, he said, the Russians succeeded in entering one compound but retreated again after taking casualties.

Officials said that some of the Russian attackers were already present in the town, and had been living as sleeper cells for months. The city mayor, Natalia Balasynovy­ch, said some had even bought apartments in a new residentia­l complex and moved in with their families for cover.

The Ukrainian military claimed at the time that one of its fighter jets had shot down a Russian transport aircraft that same night. There were also media reports that two military cargo planes headed for Vasylkiv were intercepte­d and downed by Ukrainian air defenses.

But the wreckage of any downed planes has proved elusive. Members of the territoria­l defense units, many of them ex-military volunteers as well as local hunters, said they have combed the woods and surroundin­g countrysid­e but have not found wreckage of any planes.

But Ukraine's skies were full of Russian helicopter­s in the first nights of the war, said Yuriy Ignat, public relations officer at the Ukrainian Air Force Command. “We do not think they came in big planes, but there were many saboteur groups in many places.”

By the fourth night of the war, the Russian attackers had regrouped and were better organized, said KR@M, a member of the quick reaction unit that was involved in the battle.

He said the Russians were equipped with assault rifles, silencers and night vision goggles, enabling them to attack in the dark.

“At 4 a.m., when the fighting started our guard was shot silently, in the head, in full darkness,” he said.

A fierce firefight broke out as the Russians entered the compound, he said. The Ukrainians swiftly lost six men killed, with two wounded. But with accurate fire and hurling grenades, he said they managed to kill five of the attackers and wound a sixth, forcing the remaining Russians to retreat.

He said he was the only Ukrainian with thermal imaging night vision and was able to shoot three of the attackers. He mourned his lost comrades, who he said did not have the same advantage. “The hardest thing, as always, is to lose your friends,” he said.

The attackers had left a sign on the asphalt of the territory, suggesting they were members of Alpha, Russia's elite special forces unit, he said. He showed a photograph on his cellphone of a chalked sign on the asphalt with the symbols “A” for Alpha and a “Z,” the letter used by the main Russian battle group fighting in Ukraine. The sign was 2 yards wide, he said, possibly intended to be visible from the air.

After that battle Feb. 26, the Ukrainians spotted scouts conducting reconnaiss­ance around the perimeter of their bases, but the Russians did not mount any further attacks. Then, about a week ago, they disappeare­d altogether.

Inside the bases, the effort was underway to repair and reactivate some of Vasylkiv's air defenses damaged the first night.

The airstrikes were “very painful but not deadly,” said Konstantin, an air defense serviceman who spoke on condition that only his first name be published, with no mention of his rank.

Buildings and equipment were damaged, but they managed to salvage a working system within days, Konstantin said. “If we have two destroyed cars, we can build one,” he said.

Neverthele­ss, Ukraine's air defense equipment dated from the 1970s and 1980s, and was far less sophistica­ted than the systems being used by the Russians, he said. A single missile would show on the Ukrainian radar, but when they shot it down, he said, they found a second missile was behind it that would hit the target.

Vasylkiv has been targeted repeatedly in missile and rocket attacks in the weeks since, as has the capital, Kyiv, and Ukrainian defenses have struggled to intercept them all, he said.

“It is important to say that with modern equipment we could stop all the airstrikes,” Konstantin said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY IVOR PRICKETT — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A Ukrainian air force major in March in Vasylkiv, a town on the southern outskirts of Kyiv that fought off Russian troops in the critical opening days of the war.
PHOTOS BY IVOR PRICKETT — THE NEW YORK TIMES A Ukrainian air force major in March in Vasylkiv, a town on the southern outskirts of Kyiv that fought off Russian troops in the critical opening days of the war.
 ?? ?? Mayor Natalia Balasinovi­ch, second from right, meets with civic and military leaders in Vasylkiv, Ukraine.
Mayor Natalia Balasinovi­ch, second from right, meets with civic and military leaders in Vasylkiv, Ukraine.

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