Volunteers in Ukraine: War brutality shocks foreign fighters

Volunteers in Ukraine
War brutality shocks foreign fighters

Hundreds of people from countries like Georgia, Britain and Canada have volunteered to fight in Ukraine since the war began. But many don’t last long. They were surprised by the “brutality of the warfare,” they say.

They have fought in Afghanistan or Iraq, and yet many volunteer foreign fighters are shocked by the brutality of the Ukraine war. “Sometimes after the first skirmishes they say: ‘We are not prepared for that’ and go home,” says Polak. He is one of the volunteers and talks about his experiences in the International Legion for the Defense of Ukraine in a supermarket cafĂ© in Kramatorsk in eastern Ukraine.

“To be honest, there are quite a lot of cowards,” says Polak, whose nationality is being kept secret for his own protection. He estimates the number of foreign fighters at “perhaps several hundred”. The volunteers come from many different countries, among them “Canadians, Georgians, Croats”. Apparently they are not trained for a war with artillery fire.

The deaths of a German, a Dutchman, a Frenchman and an Australian recently showed how dangerous voluntary work is. The pro-Russian separatists also sentenced to death two Britons and a Moroccan fighting for Ukraine. Since the beginning of the invasion, Russian forces have killed “hundreds” of foreign fighters, Moscow said in early June.

International Legion spokesman Damien Magrou of France admits that foreign fighters – many of them from NATO countries – are surprised by the brutality of the warfare. “An American who fought in six wars told me it was the worst thing he had ever seen,” reports the 33-year-old. “Missiles, bombings – on the ground it’s very different from what you might have expected.”

Deployment causes problems for some in their home country

Between 10 and 30 percent of the recruits laid down their arms after a short time, says Magrou. “Almost all the participants are ex-soldiers, a third of them come from an English-speaking country.” Colloquial language in the Legion is therefore also English. According to the spokesman, the rest come mainly from Central and Eastern Europe.

The reasons for voluntary combat use are different. “The Americans are fighting for freedom and Western values, while the Poles say they want to defend Ukraine because they are also defending their country,” says Magrou. “I wanted to come here after seeing the pictures on TV,” says Mika, a German. “I was in the army and I thought I could help. If we don’t stop the aggressor in Ukraine, he will invade one country after another.”

Legion volunteers sign a contract with the Ukrainian Armed Forces. However, they are free to leave at any time. Many a deployment in Ukraine brings problems in their home country. In countries like Italy or South Korea, “you risk a lawsuit,” says spokesman Magrou. London advised British soldiers and veterans against taking part in the conflict.

Magrou himself had been working in a law firm in Kyiv for two years when Russia attacked Ukraine. During the interview in the capital, he wears a military uniform and speaks French. When an elderly woman sees him like this, she waves to him. “We are held in high esteem by the Ukrainian civilian population,” says Magrou. “People feed us and thank us for our work.”

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