After treatment at US military hospital, volunteers for Ukraine return
to fight
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[October 12, 2023]
By Andrew Hay
(Reuters) - After Russian drones dropped a mortar round and then a
grenade on an American volunteer fighting for Ukraine, the former U.S.
Marine thought he might lose use of his fingers.
Shrapnel hit the right leg and arm of the 28-year-old soldier, who asked
to be identified by his call-sign "Jumbo." He needed hand surgery and
Ukraine's overstretched medical system had only a bed in a cancer
hospital available.
Then in August, U.S. nonprofit group RT Weatherman Foundation covered
most of the cost for Jumbo and 12 other wounded foreign volunteers to be
transported to Germany for treatment at Landstuhl Regional Medical
Center, the United State's largest overseas military hospital. Within
weeks after undergoing surgery to help restore feeling to his fingers,
Jumbo was back in Ukraine.
He was among four foreign fighters treated at Landstuhl and interviewed
by Reuters who were planning to return to Ukraine to support comrades
and confront Russia.
"I didn't have a purpose before and this kind of gave me one again,"
said Jumbo, who joined the Ukrainian Army in February after feeling
directionless once he left the Marines in 2021. He was wounded with 26
other volunteers in a July operation in southeast Ukraine. Two died.
US COMMITMENT TO UKRAINE
Treating the wounded volunteers at Landstuhl represents another level of
U.S. commitment to Ukraine.
The Biden administration has had to turn to funds from a multi-billion
dollar accounting error to support Kyiv after a stopgap spending bill
passed by the House of Representatives to prevent a government shutdown
excluded new Ukraine aid.
Thousands of foreign volunteers headed to Ukraine after Russia’s
February 2022 invasion and are now fighting with regular Ukraine army
units and a foreign legion.
Among them are hundreds of Americans, around 30 of whom have been
killed, according to officials for aid groups Safe Passage 4 Ukraine and
Weatherman.
Dozens of foreign volunteers are wounded each month, according to the
four fighters interviewed by Reuters.
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U.S. military personnel and staff outside Landstuhl Regional Medical
Center (LRMC), Germany, the largest U.S. military hospital outside
the United States, which has begun treating groups of wounded
foreign volunteers from the Ukrainian Army, in this undated handout
picture. U.S. Military/Handout via REUTERS
Safe Passage 4 Ukraine, which funds evacuation travel, in just one
week paid for 14 injured foreign volunteers to fly home, said its
co-founder Rachel Jamison.
Weatherman spent around $30,000 in September on evacuations and
expected to spend the same again to get seven more cases to
Landstuhl, said the group's president Meaghan Mobbs.
Of 20 Ukrainian Army patients admitted so far, nearly all since
August, 16 have been foreign volunteers, according to Marcy Sanchez,
a spokesman for the hospital.
British charity ReactAid said it set up permission procedures to
evacuate foreign fighters from Ukraine and took one of the first
foreign volunteers to Landstuhl in July.
The hospital was authorized a year ago to allocate 18 of its 65 beds
to Ukrainian Armed Forces, but few soldiers arrived before August.
"The bureaucracy is just horrendous," said Craig Borthwick, lead
medic for ReactAid, explaining the many layers of military, medical
and government authorizations required.
David Bramlette and Nathan Chan, coordinators for RT Weatherman,
said their close ties with army units and doctors helped them gain
permission for Landstuhl transfers. Both are former volunteer
fighters.
"There's an element of triage we have to do here, we're not going to
take everybody," said Bramlette, a former U.S. Army Ranger and Green
Beret, who visits volunteers in hospitals to advocate for their
treatment and ease their isolation.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay, additional reporting by Phil Stewart;
Editing by Donna Bryson and Diane Craft)
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