The reasons why someone with no ties to a country he likely
couldn't place on a map six months before he came to fight for it vary so
widely that almost any statement made about him will be equally overbroad. But
from a searching of my own reasons, and careful listening to the stories and
apologia of others, I have developed what I think is a good and workable
taxonomy: rational and irrational. Most of the guys and girls here from Western
countries - Canadians, Americans, Brits, the odd Aussie, Kiwi or South African
– are almost all veterans of their country's military. Some people come because
they are Ukrainian-whatevers, and feel the need to defend their people, even if
it is at some remove. Are there some war junkies, people wanted to join the
Peshmergas with the Kurds, or whomever they could? There are, but in truth,
there are simply some people born for war and not much else, and although in
society such people are rare, in a battlespace they are not: it is their
natural home.
So, reserve judgment, for even if you have walked in their
boots two months' time, you cannot understand the processes unfolding deep
inside them. You can listen with empathy to their stories, and you can try to
understand, but ultimately other people are an unknowable country, despite how
much you might love them or feel close to them. We are all the wardens of our
own souls, and try as we might to corral them, they are wild, be they wild up
front, or be the wildness hidden in some desperate pocket tucked deep in the
guerilla folds, down in the most visceral regions of even the most insurgent
heart.
That said, the death of another American and the continued
incarceration and death sentences for the two Brits and the Moroccan, and the
recent capture of the Marine and the US soldier, and their due process-free
death sentences, have brought things home a bit to even the most swaggering of
Western soldiers. We have enjoyed somewhat of a special status; speaking English,
looking a particular way and holding up a US or Commonwealth passport generally
acts as a social anodyne. Case in point – I was driving blissfully down Svobody
Prospekt on Sunday, which I now know is closed on the Lord's day. A Ukrainian
cop, about 17, looked at me like I had just escaped a mental institution and
asked permission to date his sister as he waved me over. I put the window down
and was greeted by a blast of Ukrainian.
“Ummm….bud laska (please)” I replied, and pulled out my passport and the unit
patch. Immediately he softened, and he wasn't a hard man to begin with. “You
come fight Ukraine for? Throw Russians?”
“Da,” I replied, “yes” and “no” and “coffee” and a few other
essentials being in my tiny panoply of Ukrainian words.
He beckoned, hopped back onto his bicycle, and led me out of
the area prohibited to cars on weekends.
“You go. Don't gets killed. Ok,” he said, opening the
barrier. Any Ukrainian would have been spoken to extremely forcefully…not
ticketed, because in a war, small errors are thrust aside. “Putin a d*&^,”
he said, and then made a Ukrainian gesture called “the fig.” It is not meant in
compliment. As I drove back onto the street that I was allowed to drive on, I
saw him say something to an older bike cop, who semi-saluted in the rear mirror.
So back to the place we have gotten for the guys – the lads,
more properly, since most are Brits, or Commonwealth soldiers, to take a
respite. As I wrote above, everyone has a reason for being here, and although I
opened this by saying those reasons were unknowable viscerally, I have heard
what people say, and will try to put down the reasons some have, to try to
bring to the reader what is meant by our small crusade here. And I do not say
that tongue in cheek, for I have begun to believe that Putin is a monster,
despite finding him sort of amusing before.
The following were obtained with the permission of the
person described, although I have changed their names. Truthfully, most guys go
by a nom de guerre anyway, with the best one being Pegleg Actual, who,
quite reasonably, has one leg. Despite this handicap, he is out there every
day, although remains mounted.
Scouty is an American from Pennsylvania, one of two from the
Keystone State, and neither has seen combat before. Scout seems to have reasons
which I would consider, from my older and ostensibly wiser perspective, on the
border of rational and irrational. He is going home for a bit, and I wish he
would remain there; I spoke to him hard about how much life has to offer to a guy
who gets up early to work and stays the path, and I think he understood,
although he admitted, when I asked, that he didn't have a girl and hadn't known
the love of one yet. He still intends to
return. That being said, he might be too broke to come back and has asked me to
loan him what he needs for his ticket. I have to speak to the unit commander, a
very steady and experienced Brit, before doing that, but it is unlikely. If
Scouty returns on my dime and catches a cold from a bullet, or shrapnel, I would
not know what to say to his parents, myself, or St. Peter, and almost five
decades has given me sufficient to explain. I can't bear the weight of his
soul, should it be torn free from his body; it would kill me. It is said at
death a body loses six ounces, as perhaps the accumulated emotional and mental
cargo remains, but in light or truncated form. Certainly most people, depending
on age, have more baggage than that. Even so, those six ounces, if added to my
sixteen stone, would drive me to my knees, and they might break…I need them,
because the older guys bear the rest on our shoulders, at times.
Philly Dog is the other American from Pennsylvania. His
reasons for being here are quite rational, and reflect his thirty-some years to
Scouty's twenty. He is a Ukrainian-American, and speaks it fluently, if with
the occasional hitch here and there. He has no military experience, but is
useful and at the same time accumulating the experience necessary to be a
proper soldier. His family is a well-heeled group of professionals from a
wealthy suburb of Philadelphia, although for some years he suffered from his
internal demons, and spent time in the most louche area of that colonial town,
where brotherly love is scarce, if non-existent. He said, in sum, “These are my
people. I have cousins in L'viv, in Kyiv, and I am here to help them. I knew
with my language skills I could help, and I could get the military training I
needed.” He was right, for with the
language, he is essential to practically everything we do.
The last is Tex. Despite the gunslinging name, Tex is a
young woman, a former US Army medic, now retired, with a tour of Afghanistan
and one in Iraq under her belt. She is a medic, and is prized for that. She has
the somewhat cocky bounce of the veteran, and described how hard it is to find a
spurting femoral artery over breakfast. Thinking about it did not help my
digestion, for I feel responsible for about thirty femoral arteries. But all of
them with the exception of Philly's belong to ex-soldiers or Marines, of the
Royal or US variety, and all bear blood that is damnably red. She was married
to a now-dead Ukrainian fighter, who did not succumb to the Russians, but to
the great Crab cancer. She declined to expostulate, and just said “I have
skills they can use.” She is right, for no one is valued more highly than the
medic or corpsman.
Ukraine means “borderland,” and has served as that for many
years. Many have died here, as it was the route in for those who wanted not
only Ukraine's loamy and fertile soil but the access it provides to the Black
Sea and then to Mother Russia. Some are heroes to the Ukrainians; some are not,
or are no longer, for revisionist history is not the solitary province of
Russia. After serving several months, I can say this: I feel responsible for my
people and at a remove these people. No one asked me to shoulder this burden;
rather, it is simply what my watch provided for. The Ukrainians can help
themselves, but the help of Western fighters, particularly in the area of
training, our assistance has been invaluable. The notion that anyone from west
of the Vistula is here as a mercenary is absurd; the pay is about $70 US a
week. Even some Ukrainians, while being grateful think we are nuts. But let me
close by saying this: the storm clouds appear to be gathering. The death
sentences, if carried out, might find their way into the history books along
side of Gavrilo Princip's killing of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Things seem
to be set on a hair trigger, and that is palpable here, even if in the west it
seems to be at some remove.
We will know soon. Until then, and likely henceforth, I give
Mr. Putin the fig. I always wanted to see the Hermitage, and the dock where the
battleship Potemkin was moored, to say nothing of Red Square. With the Ukrainian
entrance and exit stamps, I think it unlikely. I am ok with that, because I see
that for every Tolstoy there are a thousand Butchers of Kandahar.
The fig to you, sir.
The writer is a former military man, now researching and writing about the Ukrainian Conflict. Questions can be sent directly to lhaesten@gmail.com.
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Welcome to the discussion.