> Fortunately, I had a friend in the city who has contacts in the police, so four police officers with assault rifles found me in the dark of the train station, marched me to a police car, and drove me through eerily empty streets for fifteen minutes to my friend’s apartment<p>> St. Michaels, one of Kyiv’s major churches, was closed, but I talked my way inside past a rather nice soldier.<p>Ah, "extremely nice" people, this is absolutely not a corruption.<p>> Most of these outlying towns were deserted, but some had a handful of people left who had lived without electricity, internet, or a reliable food supply for months.<p>Well, two months is not one month.<p>> Here’s one particular item I’m sure they will miss:<p>Shows a calendar with the month name spelled in Ukrainian<p>> We saw a destroyed school (seemed to be a lot of those)<p><a href="https://youtu.be/ncV7yFIrZUA" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/ncV7yFIrZUA</a><p>> one major unexpected paradigm shift revealed in the Russian invasion which has benefited Ukraine<p>Being supplied by a constant flow of intelligence, including satellite and electronic surveillance.<p>> Ukraine’s military strength has also been augmented by public and not-so-public support. NATO and the US have been funneling money and equipment into Ukraine for years, most of which is superior to the old Soviet weapons of Russia. More controversially, the US has probably sent military personnel to train at least part of the Ukrainian military, particularly in how to use its fancy new weapons<p>Probably? 1 search away:<p>>> The big picture: Beginning in 2015, after Russia's annexation of Crimea, the U.S. invested about $126 million to train more than 23,000 Ukrainians troops at the Yavoriv military base in western Ukraine, Hilbert said.<p>Even more:<p>>> By January, the role of the Americans had evolved from "hands-on training" to advising on Ukrainian-led strategy and preparing for "large-scale combat operations."<p>>> <a href="https://www.axios.com/2022/05/05/pentagon-details-us-training-of-ukrainian-forces" rel="nofollow">https://www.axios.com/2022/05/05/pentagon-details-us-trainin...</a><p>> This turned out to be a huge miscalculation on Putin’s part.<p>Now this one is correct. Sadly his grip is too tight and hopes for the internal forces to take the opporunity vanished after a month.<p>> This freaked out the Ukrainian government. They are heavily reliant upon foreign support, not really for ground soldiers, but for money, equipment, and morale. It’s a bad look when the very first foreigners to arrive get blown up before they even reach the front.<p>> The soldiers I talked to were part of this wave. About 200 of them were sent to this base where they did nothing for a few weeks.<p>The handling of this is borderline hilarious.<p>> then digging trenches in the woods and waiting for an inevitable Russian ground attack. They both said that they knew for certain they were about to get “run over by tanks” and die.<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yavoriv_military_base_attack" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yavoriv_military_base_attack</a><p>"run over by [Russian] tanks". It is near Lwow. Look at the map.<p>> then spent the next 1.5 months trekking around empty regions of northern Ukraine, and eventually settled in to guard what all of them swore was the farm and hunting lodge of a rich friend of their commander.<p>"extremely nice" people again.<p>> On a typical day, they were given two meals consisting of one piece of chicken (though they guessed it was probably pigeon)<p>Oh my. I doubt it was a pigeon, probably it's just wasn't an <i>American size</i>.<p>> On more than one occasion, they saw their rations being taken away, again, either to be used by other units or to be sold off<p>"nice people"<p>> One had been in the Marines, another the U.S. Army, the others in other various Western militaries (I don’t want to give too many specifics)<p>Why?<p>> Probably my favorite of the many soldiers they described was the Glowie. For those not in the know, a “glowie” is internet slang for an undercover federal agent who does a bad job at blending into online communities. In the Legion’s case, the glowie was a 30-something American with a vague background who anomalously spoke four languages and asked everyone questions about everything.<p>Pfft.<p>> Cats on Leashes<p>> Is this a Ukrainian thing? An eastern European thing?<p>Never heard this. Though when I had a cat if I brought him out I would have hell of a time to even find him.<p>Overall this was an interesting read, not without a bias, of course, but author tried to be as neutral as he can be.