Urgently Needed Combat Lifesaver Training Courses for Ukrainian Soldiers Take It to the Frontlines (Eyewitness)

By Marko Suprun, Co-founder & Coordinator, Combat Lifesaver training for Patriot Defence
07.28.2014
Edited by Voices of Ukraine
(click on images to enlarge)

I wasn’t there.

Last week I didn’t visit a new base in the east with a group of Ukrainian medics, certified in Combat Lifesaver (CLS) training. We didn’t train them in critical lifesaving skills, run several combat and evacuation simulations, nor did we give them a few Improved First Aid Kits (IFAK).

For the moment, the base is a secret as is the unit stationed there. Ivan, one of the officers, told me that despite their efforts to dampen mobile communications they can do little to halt the flow of information. Cryptographic communication equipment would help in their protection as much as the IFAK.

The unit is tactically advanced, yet they have little to no training in life saving techniques and are minimally equipped with bandages and an old Soviet rubber tourniquet that breaks. Yuri, a member of the unit with some basic first aid training, invited us to the base through a friend of a friend to conduct the training.

There are many efforts underway to provide help to Ukraine’s patriots, yet not all are useful, despite their good intentions. A few months ago, we collected the IFAKs and gave them to a few units. They opened them and were impressed by the contents, but admitted to not knowing how to use it. We realized then, that they haven’t had the requisite training. And the training is as important if not more than the IFAK.

After speaking with people who have combat experience, we learned from them that not all training is the same. For example, EMT training is the right thing for civilian applications, but doesn’t quite fit in a combat environment. Yet, an EMT trained professional can certainly adapt their skills with Combat Lifesaver and become a huge asset to a unit deployed in the field. In other words, training the soldiers and training new trainers is what’s needed today.

Yuri told us about his brother-in-arms, Roman, who was wounded with what we understood to be a pneumothorax. He managed to hold on for a few hours, fully conscious as they waited for an evacuation that never came because of the situation. Roman talked with Yuri about his mother and family back home and how much he was looking forward to seeing them again. And then he died. After the course, Yuri was convinced that if they had the equipment in the IFAK, a decompression needle, a Halo Chest seal and the right training, things could have turned out differently.

I didn’t say good-bye to Ivan the next day when he was called into action. He told me to thank the diaspora for his IFAK and the training because now he feels that his odds of surviving this war are a little better. He said he might return home minus a limb, and that’s okay because dead men don’t need prosthetics.

I didn’t see or hear any of this because I wasn’t there.  Russia has undeclared a war against Ukraine, but the wounded and the need for lifesaving training and equipment is very real.

——————–

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.

http://patriotdefence.org

 Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/patriot.defence.ua

 

Posted in "Voices" in English, English, English News, Eyewitness stories, Help for ukrainian army, South&Eastern Ukraine, War in Donbas | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

‘Ukrainische Rebellen’ sind weder Ukrainer noch Rebellen

Foto: Maxim Zmeyev - Reuters

Foto: Maxim Zmeyev – Reuters

Von Casey Michael, Bischkek in “The Moscow Times” 28. Juli 2014 (Übersetzung)

So langsam kommen wir über den Abschuss des Malaysia Airlines Flugs MH17 hinweg, und nach und nach wird es immer klarer, dass die Wahrscheinlichkeit einer richtigen internationalen Untersuchung, die von externen Akteuren ungehindert durchgeführt werden kann, sich praktisch in Luft aufgelöst hat. Es gab zahlreiche Berichte über Manipulationen seitens der Separatisten an der Absturzstelle, über die Verhinderung des Zugangs der internationalen Ermittler zur Absturzstelle und sogar über Plünderungen der Leichen, wobei Bargeld und andere Wertsachen abhanden kamen. Continue reading

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Dmitry Tymchuk’s Military Blog: Summary – July 28, 2014

Dmitry Tymchuk, Coordinator, Information Resistance
07.28.2014
Translated and edited by Voices of Ukraine

Brothers and sisters!

information_resistance_logo_engHere’s the Summary for July 28, 2014 (for previous summary, please see Summary for July 25).

The bad news:

1. Nevertheless, “Putin’s distemper” is a very cruel thing. And it seems that the Head of the Russian Foreign Ministry Sergei Lavrov is somewhere at its penultimate stage.

It is difficult to say whether he still recognizes his wife or if he can defecate by himself, but he is absolutely sure that what is happening in Ukraine is directed against Russia. In particular, Lavrov claimed today that the Maidan that took place in Ukraine is a “geopolitical project against Russia.”

I understand that all the free-from-lying time Mr. Lavrov has, he spends shaking up cupboards and peeking under sofas looking for Banderites and CIA agents.

I think it is no longer possible to help him. It remains only to warn diplomats from other countries that they should be more careful with Lavrov at any international get-togethers. Fuck knows how this infection spreads.

2. Today, Aidar Battalion reported: for the past 24 hours, the battalion has incurred serious losses. Four of our border control guards died yesterday as a result of the artillery shelling from the Russian territory. Ukrainian Armed Forces soldiers and the National Guard keep dying.

These guys have fulfilled their duty to the very end. The freed land of Donbas must always remember this blood shed by patriots. Eternal memory to the heroes.

3. Russia continues to build up the number of its troops near the state border with Ukraine.

In addition to the units previously concentrated at the border, [new] units from other regions of Russia are currently being deployed. Earlier, the movement of the divisions of the 32nd Motorized Rifle Brigade and the 24th Separate Brigade of the GRU of the General Staff were recorded from Novosibirsk Oblast [region].

This weekend, we documented the redeployment of units from the Russian 200th Motorized Rifle Brigade [MRB] to the state border with Ukraine. It looked strange, given that the Brigade’s permanent place of deployment is in the Murmansk Oblast [region] of Russia [in the northwest]. Today, however, these data have been confirmed.

The 200th MRB has tanks, BM-21 “Grad” and BM-27 “Hurricane” MLRS, 2SZ “Acacia” self-propelled artillery at its disposal. That is everything that Putin’s troops have unleashed on Ukraine in recent weeks.

The good news:

1. The ATO forces took Debaltseve and the elevated Hora Savur Mohyla, and entered into Shakhtersk, Torez [Donetsk Oblast], and Lutugino [Luhansk Oblast]. Pervomaisk and Snizhne are currently being freed, Horlivka is next.

In fact, two strategic objectives are currently being resolved in the ATO. The first [objective] is to finally “separate” the DNR and LNR [Donetsk- and Luhansk People’s Republics]. The second [objective] is to fully unblock and fortify our divisions in the sector along the border, and to conduct the personnel rotation [in those units]. Not as fast as we would like [it to be], but still, these tasks are getting done.

 Photo source: https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=1468108620109546&id=100007312659855

2. The Russian version of the Malaysian Boeing-777 crash, born in the depths of a Russian propaganda office under the name of the “General Staff of the Russian Federation,” is crumbling before our eyes.

Experts from the international commission that is studying the causes of the airplane crash reported: the data from the flight recorders of the aircraft indicate that a rocket blow was the cause of the destruction and the crash. And today, the chief designer of the Su-25 fighter jet Volodymyr Babak (since it is well-known that Russia insists that the “Boeing” was shot down by a Ukrainian Su-25) announced that the passenger airliner could not have been brought down by this fighter jet–and clearly explained why this was extremely unlikely in the technical sense.

Thus, the circle closes. It is obvious that the plane got struck by a surface-to-air missile system [SAM], and there is enough data regarding who had this SAM in their possession.

We have no doubts as to whose fault this is, but the international community demands concrete evidence. And this evidence does not keep you waiting.

3. Five-party talks were held between the U.S., France, and the heads of government of Germany, the UK and Italy. The result–an agreement on new sanctions against Russia. Now, finally: sectoral sanctions. An informal assessment of the effect of these sanctions has already been publicized–up to 100 billion Euros over two years.

At the same time, Russia lost the court case at the Hague, initiated by former Yukos shareholders, and [it] will need to reimburse them $50 billion in damages.

In Russian literature, in these cases one uses the interjection, “Oh!”
In a Hollywood blockbuster [one uses], “Oops…!”

Source: Dmitry Tymchuk FB

Posted in Dmitry Tymchuk, English, English News, News summary, South&Eastern Ukraine, War in Donbas | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Combat Lifesaver training Doctor on the NATO-level combat medical training organized for Ukrainian troops by diaspora volunteers

By Dr. Ulana N. Suprun, MD, Patriot Defence Instructor, and Director of Humanitarian Initiatives at the Ukrainian World Congress
07.28.2014  Kyiv
Edited by Voices of Ukraine

“Every day we get reports from the front line that the training provided through CLS and the IFAKs are saving soldiers’ lives.”

The Ukrainian World Congress (UWC) project, Patriot Defence, was initiated in mid-May of 2014 in response to the urgent need for training in first aid on the battlefield, and providing individual first aid kits for Ukrainian soldiers. The soldiers had either no first aid kits at all, or were given an old Soviet rubber tourniquet and a bandage as their “kit.” Little if any medical training had been provided to them during their preparation for deployment. UWC began working with local Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) instructors from the Red Cross and the Ukrainian Center for Special Training, providing courses for Ukrainian soldiers in TCCC. However, the courses were geared more towards civilians and Law Enforcement, so we decided to bring in professional instructors to provide Combat Lifesaver courses for the soldiers, as well as to further train the local TCCC instructors.

Training on how to perform a pneumothorax procedure on a collapsed lung.

Combat Lifesaver (CLS) is a course taught to US and NATO soldiers in which they learn to treat the three main killers on the battlefield–catastrophic bleeding, blockage of the airway, and tension pneumothorax. CLS training takes into account the unique conditions of the battlefield and the primary responsibility of the soldier to first and foremost complete his combat mission. The Improved First Aid Kit (IFAK) given to each soldier provides the tools with which they can save their own (self-aid) and their fellow soldiers’ (buddy-aid) lives. UWC began providing this kind of training and IFAKs to Ukrainian soldiers beginning in June of 2014.

IFAK

IFAK

Once the professional trainers from ParamedCZ ran several courses in Ukraine and word got around, requests for more courses and IFAKs began pouring in. To date we have trained over 2000 soldiers, including those from the Armed Forces of Ukraine 25th Battalion, National Guard Second Battalion, SBU Alpha, Battalions Donbas, Myrotvorets, Kyiv II, Lviv, Zoloti Vorota, Ukrainian National Security Forces, Ukrainian Army Special Forces, and others in places ranging from the training base for the Armed Forces in Desna, for the National Guard and Battalions at Nova Petrivka, SBU Alpha base, Obukhiv, Vita Poshtova, Yavorivsky Polygon, to areas where soldiers are currently deployed in the ATO zone. After completion of training, the soldiers receive IFAKs.

Dr. Ulana N. Suprun training in the field

Dr. Ulana N. Suprun training in the field

The training course ideally spans two days-the first day in which the soldiers are taught the theory behind CLS and learn how to treat injuries using the CABC algorithm-Catastrophic bleed, Airway, Breathing, and Circulation. The second day is filled with simulations of battle conditions, where the skills learned on the first day are carried over into real life battle scenarios, with the students wearing full battle gear, performing the life-saving techniques under fire, surrounded by smoke and exploding grenades, so that they experience the true nature of “tactical combat first aid.” There is usually one trainer for 25 students, and a coordinator for the length of the training course.

Dr. Ulana N. Suprun handing out IFAKs at the completion of a training program

Dr. Ulana N. Suprun handing out IFAKs at the completion of a training program

Currently donations are coming in from all over the world, including Australia, Canada, the US, Austria, Germany, Great Britain and Ukraine.  We have provided 1250 IFAKs to the soldiers trained, and have 500 on the way.  We plan on reaching a goal of training 10,000 soldiers and providing each of them with an IFAK. There are 2-3 training courses happening every week, with a total of 25 Ukrainian instructors and visiting professional instructors from the US, Great Britain, Scotland, Czech Republic and Ireland, all with many years of experience as soldiers first, and combat medics second. Every day we get reports from the front line that the training provided through CLS and the IFAKs are saving soldiers’ lives. At the end of every training we hand an IFAK to each soldier-patriot, thanking them for their defence of Ukrainian independence and territorial integrity, and pass along the heartfelt support of the Ukrainian Diaspora, who through this program hope to give the soldiers the opportunity to save their own or their buddy’s life if injured in defense of Ukraine.

Patriot Defence Simulation video:

From the Staff of Voices of Ukraine: Please consider donating to Patriot Defence as a reliable, trusted and safe means for supporting Ukrainian troops with urgently needed, higher-tech Improved First Aid Kits and top level professionally certified combat medical trainers to help save lives now. Help them reach their goal of delivering 10,000 IFAKs to Ukrainian soldiers who are in trenches fighting daily to protect Ukraine.
http://patriotdefence.org

Posted in "Voices" in English, English, English News, Help for ukrainian army, Pictures, South&Eastern Ukraine, Video, War in Donbas | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Augenzeugenbericht vom Gerichtsverfahren gegen Nadja Sawtschenko

 

Nadja Sawtschenko in Woronesch

Von Iryna Storoschenko, Korrespondentin von Wikna-Nowynyi
Woronesch, 26. Juli 2014
Übersetzt und bearbeitet von Voices of Ukraine
Wir sind schon wieder zu Hause. Ich freue mich, an Nadja zu denken. Ich erinnere mich, was sie gesagt hat. So echt, aufrichtig, kategorisch [in ihren Antworten], entschlossen, sie scherzte machte sich sogar lustig über das Gericht und die Ermitlungen. Man konnte erkennen, dass ihr Geist ungebrochen ist. Continue reading

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