Patriot Defence reaches historic milestone in efforts to train Ukrainian military.

By Patriot Defence, IFAK + Combat Lifesaver Training for Ukraine
11.14.2014
Edited by Voices of Ukraine

Slava Ukrayini! [Glory to Ukraine!]

Yesterday the humanitarian initiative Patriot Defence reached a milestone: 10,000 soldiers trained in CLS!!! [Combat Life Saver training].

This would not have been possible without the help of hundreds of concerned people from all over the world, without the tremendous work of our instructors (modest and simply the best) and without the dedicated work of our volunteers (who have carefully packed almost 8,000 IFAKs) [Improved First-Aid Kits].

We will not rest, and promise to continue to do everything we can to educate Ukraine’s patriots [who are] defending the sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of Ukraine. Together, we can continue to train as many defenders of Ukraine as possible to arm them with the knowledge and techniques to save their own lives and the lives of their brothers-in-arms!

Tactical medicine or death!

Source: Patriot Defence FB 

Voices of Ukraine CONGRATULATES PATRIOT DEFENCE!
KEEP UP THE HEROIC EFFORT! 

 * * *

Please support the heroic efforts of Patriot Defence volunteers working to get Improved First Aid Kits and professional NATO combat medical training into the hands of Ukrainian soldiers to save lives. It’s needed now more urgently than ever.

http://patriotdefence.org

 Patriot Defence Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/patriot.defence.ua

Posted in "Voices" in English, English, English News, Help for ukrainian army, War in Donbas | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Yury Kasyanov: “How Is the Situation at the Front?”

By Yury Kasyanov, Armiya SOS volunteer activist
11.12.2014
Translated and edited by Voices of Ukraine

People ask the same questions. How is the situation at the front? What do our soldiers need?… I will answer everyone at once: the situation is crap; the enemy is building up forces, creating multiple numerical superiority in tanks and artillery systems at the directions of impact. The equipment, artillery and personnel are Russian, of course. There is no need to prove it to anyone anymore. The homegrown separatists are cannon fodder; the dissenters are sent in as meat. The enemy constantly shells our forces to wear out the fighters, to find gaps in the defense, to take more advantageous positions, to tie down the defending forces. At the same time the Russian army threatens us along the entire length of the national border – from Chernihiv to Luhansk; from the side of Crimea and Transdniestria.

Where and how the big war will start is only known by Putin and his general staff. Most probably there will be a large-scale provocation – a staged attack of Ukrainian troops on “Novorossia” with multiple casualties among the civilian population. In response to this, Russian “peacekeepers” will get the “legal” right to advance right up to Crimea… The current limitations on the use of force, when troops are allowed to open fire only in extreme situations, and only in response to an explicit attack, increase the risk of the implementation of such a provocation, because any intensification of military action from our side can be used as a pretext for the Russian offensive. And for now the situation at the front is like in that proverb – “they beat us, and we grow stronger,” and every day we lose people… 

In the war nothing is easy. But there is nothing worse than the never-ending “standing” at checkpoints, constantly waiting at your positions for the next shelling… Wounded and dead comrades, a sense of your own powerlessness, an undermining of confidence towards the command… The righteous war for independence, which has enlisted under its banners the best people, patriots of Ukraine, is becoming a mad farce, a bloody theatrical production with absurd negotiations, unnecessary elections, with former “dear friends,” with unsinkable Regionals, and with very strange debts before the aggressor country… on the political scene of the country, the collective madness of the so-called “elites” continues, as they try to steal in the old ways while lying in new ways…

You can talk endlessly about the shortage of uniforms and equipment at the front, about the completely disastrous situation with warm winter footwear… it is possible to spend days talking about the bad diet of the fighters, about the fact that the once-endless supplies of ammunition are coming to an end, that most of the armour on the front is defective, and there is still an acute need of surveillance and communication devices – binoculars, thermal imagers, radios… all this is true. But more than this, our army needs an adequate command – commanders, whose level of training, experience and responsibility corresponds to the current tragic moment in our history. The country needs a leader, the army – a commander. Otherwise it is impossible to win.

Source: Yury Kasyanov FB

Russian troops operating the newly-supplied 2A65 Msta-B in Donetsk, 11.13.2014. Howitzer Battery at work near Debaltseve:

 

Posted in "Voices" in English, Analytics, English, News summary, Others, South&Eastern Ukraine, War in Donbas | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Russia’s Second Invasion of Donbas is Well-Orchestrated

By Chris Dunnett, Ukraine Crisis Media Center
01.14. 2014
Edited by Voices of Ukraine

Russian tanks, heavy equipment, and soldiers are once again streaming across Ukraine’s now nominal border in the Donbas, reinforcing pro-Russian positions and greatly escalating the risks of new open conflict in Ukraine. To be clear, the ceasefire proclaimed in September has never been successful. The Minsk Protocol, signed on September 5 which was designed to bring peace to Ukraine, instead resulted in a ceasefire in name only. In reality, the fighting continued, albeit at a lesser degree, across much of the Donbas. At the city of Debaltseve, at the Donetsk airport, and at various other locations on the front lines, death and destruction continued unabated.

Hundreds of soldiers, pro-Russian militants, and civilians have died since early September at a rate of roughly ten people a day. Reportedly, there have been instances of indiscriminate and inaccurate shelling that killed civilians caught in the crossfire. The West’s indignant denunciations of Russia’s violations of Ukraine’s sovereignty and shattering of the ceasefire miss the mark entirely. Since late February, Russia has continually violated Ukrainian sovereignty with impunity. And given Russia’s past strategy toward Ukraine and recent signals, this escalation was perfectly predictable.

Ukrainian policy makers have long accused the Russian government of using its nuclear weapons to intimidate Ukraine and make Kyiv capitulate to the Kremlin’s demands. Ukrainian officials have long held that their Russian counterparts had threatened them with nuclear weapons behind closed doors, an accusation that is of course unverifiable. But Russian deployments and statements by Vladimir Putin, including those after the ceasefire, at least in part, back up Ukrainian officials’ accusations. During the Russian invasion of Donbas in August, Putin brought up Russia’s nuclear stockpile while speaking to a youth forum. “I want to remind you that Russia is one of the most powerful nuclear nations,” Putin said. “This is a reality, not just words.” It was a barely concealed threat against Ukraine on the one hand and NATO on the other.

Russia’s recent bullying and bluster are only continuing evidence that Russia never planned to honor the ceasefire, instead taking advantage of the relative lull in fighting in Ukraine. In a significant development that barely made news in the West during the October air campaign against ISIS and fears over the Ebola virus, Russia deployed a contingent of missiles in the occupied Crimean peninsula which have the capability to carry tactical nuclear warheads. Nuclear weapons are a central component of the Russian military arsenal, which is the world’s largest with over 2,000 operational weapons. Aside from serving the goal of shoring up Russia’s iron grip on the occupied Ukrainian peninsula, the deployment of missiles to Crimea with tactical nuclear capability opens up a new front for pressure on Ukraine.

The deployments, undertaken during a period that was supposed to promote confidence-building and peace in Ukraine, are instead reflective of the broader Russian strategy of intimidation and gradual escalation. Russia acts aggressively against Ukraine, prompting an often underwhelming response from the West and broader international community. Russia forces the international community to begrudgingly accept the new status quo, making artificial gestures toward stabilizing a situation that the Kremlin has always factitiously claimed it is not a party to. After playing the role of false peace-maker, the Kremlin once again escalates the tension. It’s a multi-faceted strategy that aims to cover up the Kremlin’s role in the conflict by falsely casting Russia as a great-power arbitrator interested in stability. It keeps NATO and the international community on their toes. The approach is especially designed to divide Europe on the sanctions policy, preventing the passage of sweeping sanctions in one move, and encouraging dissenters and Russia-dependent states from within the EU to oppose harsh measures at each stage of escalation.

The truth is that the West should have seen this escalation coming from the beginning and put the necessary policies forward to strongly deter further Russian aggression. Instead of hand-wringing, the EU and US should have, and still can, lay out a clear plan for responding to Kremlin aggression. Ideally, if proven, the deployment of tactical nuclear weapons should be the catalyst for an actual strategy. In fact, by such a move the Kremlin dispelled the belief in some analyst circles that Russia was interested in stabilizing the Donbas, having already successfully torn a chunk of eastern Ukraine out of Kyiv’s grasp. The EU needs to clearly state that new sanctions will be applied if pro-Russian militants or the Russian military act to retake more Ukrainian territory. This is clearly a difficult proposal, and one that is unlikely to be enacted, especially considering that a few EU members are publicly grumbling about the sanctions policy. Nevertheless, it should be done. If the Donetsk airport or Debaltseve or other flash points are captured, then sanctions should certainly be applied.

“We are in much bigger trouble than we recognize. And when someone says that it is time to loosen sanctions, because Putin has weakened his tone, it means that someone does not understand the situation. We should not agree to destroy the basics of security for a couple of euros,” the President of Estonia, Toomas Hendrik Ilves, recently stated.

Photograph by Yan Dobronosov.

Photograph by Yan Dobronosov.

Source: Sergio Malyarchuk

Posted in English, English News, South&Eastern Ukraine, War in Donbas | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Ukraine’s November 21 will be celebrated annually on the anniversary of Maidan

By Unian.net
11/13/2-14
Translated and edited by Voices of Ukraine

President Poroshenko signed a decree to mark November 21 – Day of Dignity and Freedom annually, and January 22 – Unity Day of Ukraine.

This was reported in the press service of the president. “Ukraine – is a territory of dignity and freedom. Not one, but two revolutions have made us like this – our Maidan in 2004, which was a Festival of Freedom, and the Revolution of 2013, the Revolution of Dignity. This was an extraordinarily difficult test for Ukraine, when Ukrainians demonstrated their Europeanness, their dignity, their desire for freedom. To me, as the President of Ukraine, it remains only to document it and sign the decree on the Day of Dignity and Freedom, which Ukrainians now and forever will celebrate on November 21, “– said the head of state.

According to Poroshenko, as before, on January 22 the country will celebrate Unity Day. “The Day of Ukraine’s solidarity, the day of unity,” – said the president.

[Editor’s note: On December 31, 2013, then President Viktor Yanukovych cancelled Freedom Day in November and said it would be moved to the January 22nd date for the Day of Unification of Ukraine, purportedly in response to “numerous appeals from the public.” Ukraine and the EU were to have signed an Association Agreement at a summit meeting of Eastern Partnership in Vilnius held from November 28-29, 2013. On November 21st, the then government of Viktor Yanukovych stopped the preparations for signing this agreement. Late at night of that same day, people began gathering on Kyiv’s Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) to protest against this government decision.]

Source: Union.net

Posted in "Voices" in English, English, English News | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Dmitry Tymchuk: Military Updates, 11/14

information_resistance_logo_engDmitry Tymchuk, Head of the Center for Military and Political Research, Coordinator of the Information Resistance group
11.14.2014
Translated and edited by Voices of Ukraine

Operational data from Information Resistance:

Over the past day, Russian-terrorist troops fired about 50 times at the positions of ATO forces.

The most intense – in the Luhansk, Donetsk and Debaltseve directions (18, 17, and 11 attacks, respectively).

Russian occupants and illegal armed groups applied fire strikes on the positions of Ukrainian troops and civilian objectives in the district of the settlements of Stanytsia Luhanska – 7 times, Pisky – 5, Krimske – 4, Krasnohorivka, Nikishyne, Chornukhyne – 3 strikes each.

Russian-terrorist forces strengthened their frontline positions in the Petrovsky, Kyivskyi and Kirovskyi districts of Donetsk, as well as in the area of Spartak. Virtually all of the “internal” checkpoints in these areas are removed and personnel redeployed “to the frontline.”

The same situation is observed in the district of Makiivka. As well, in the north-eastern outskirts of Makiivka, the enemy has equipped its emplacements for artillery, but most of the actual artillery units are located in the heart of enemy defenses and are moved forward only to apply fire strikes, after which they are led back. Involved in the strikes are 2-3 units (batteries) of conventional and rocket artillery.

As a result of the actions of Ukrainian troops, one of the foremost enemy positions in the district of Spartak was destroyed – and one between the settlements of Pisky and Krasnohorivka. After this, the enemy launched a massive bombardment of heavy infantry weapons onto the positions of Ukrainian troops in these areas.

By the left flank of the Debaltseve springboard (District of Chornukhyne), after a failed assault, the enemy brought in fresh formations. From the districts of Stakhanov and Alchevsk, armored vehicles were transferred (up to 6 tanks and 10 other armored vehicles).

In the district of Elenovka [Donetsk, Stanytsia Olenivka], Russian-terrorist troops continue to equip the area of concentration. In the destroyed base camp, they continue to carry out engineering activities.

Source: Dmitry Tymchuk FB

Posted in Dmitry Tymchuk, English, English News, South&Eastern Ukraine, War in Donbas | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments