Ukrainian soldiers focus on keeping Russian advances at bay and brace
for storm to come from US
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[November 14, 2024]
By VASILISA STEPANENKO and YEHOR KONOVALOV
KHARKIV REGION, Ukraine (AP) — The four drones were designed to carry
bombs, but instead the men of Ukraine's Khartia brigade pack them with
food, water and handwarmers and launch them in darkness toward the front
line, a 15-minute flight away.
The unit commander who goes by the callsign Kit, or “cat,” pilots the
tiny uncrewed aircraft from a basement room he jokingly calls their
Airbnb. Guided by the drone's night-vision camera, he drops the
10-kilogram (22-pound) packages one by one as close as he can to the
position where as many as five infantrymen battle Russian forces in the
late autumn chill. The delivery will hold them for two or three days.
That's about as far as Kit dares look into the future. He knows that the
reelection of Donald Trump will change something in his life, but as far
as he and other Ukrainian soldiers on the front are concerned, trying to
figure out how is a game for politicians. For him, all that matters is
the distance he measures in the meters (yards) that Russian forces
advance or retreat in the front-line sector that is his responsibility.
“We are trying with all our might to destroy them and win back our
territories, so that it does not go any further, so that there are no
more destroyed cities and destroyed lives,” Kit said. “We need to focus
on the present in our work and try to do it effectively in the here and
now.”
But he cannot escape the sense of a gathering storm.
Russia is increasingly hitting the Kharkiv region with unstoppable,
building-leveling glide bombs and swarms of drones and chipping away at
territory there. Its troops are advancing in the Donetsk and
Zaporizhzhia regions. Up to 12,000 North Korean troops have been sent to
Russia's Kursk border region to help beat back Ukrainian forces there,
according to U.S., South Korean and Ukrainian intelligence assessments.
Trump, who has called President Vladimir Putin “pretty smart” for
invading Ukraine, has repeatedly criticized American backing of Ukraine.
He characterized Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as “the
greatest salesman on Earth” for winning U.S. aid.
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A soldier of Ukraine's Khartia brigade, callsign Tolstiy, inspects a
FPV drone in a drone repair workshop close to the front line in the
Kharkiv region, Ukraine, Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Efrem
Lukatsky)
Zelenskyy was among the first world leaders to publicly congratulate
Trump, and said the two discussed how to end “Russian aggression
against Ukraine” when they met in September.
Between now and Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration, the Biden
administration has said it will send as much aid to Ukraine as
possible to help hold back Russian forces and possess a strong hand
in any potential peace negotiations. But Russia is pressing just as
hard for an advantage in what most believe are crucial weeks to
come.
Aviator, a Khartia soldier launching the supply drones, said he can
only do his job and hope for the best. His attention is fixed on how
many hours remain before the coming dawn, when Russian forces will
be able to spot the uncrewed aircraft and shoot them down. If his
mission fails, he knows that the men he calls brothers will suffer.
“You feel you’re useful, that you are in the right place, that the
lives and health of our brothers depend on your work," said Aviator,
who returned to Ukraine from a job in Poland to join the army.
"We’re just doing our job, we don’t have time to worry about the
election.”
Tolstiy, who runs a drone repair workshop not far away, knows
firsthand what happens to territory captured by Russia. A former
infantryman, he fought in Bakhmut and watched the city fall to
Russian forces who bombed it to rubble. He confessed that sometimes,
reading the news makes him want to give up. But that's simply
unthinkable.
“It’s like we’re in another world here,” he said. “When you see that
your comrades are injured or killed, it motivates you.”
___
Lori Hinnant contributed from Kyiv.
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