Berliner Boersenzeitung - In east Ukraine trench, soldiers dig in for 'total war'

EUR -
AED 4.102525
AFN 75.951783
ALL 98.569655
AMD 432.612393
ANG 2.012716
AOA 1053.823563
ARS 1078.462317
AUD 1.613869
AWG 2.01328
AZN 1.911012
BAM 1.956479
BBD 2.254955
BDT 133.446333
BGN 1.955887
BHD 0.42052
BIF 3227.950252
BMD 1.116938
BND 1.432581
BOB 7.717163
BRL 6.070223
BSD 1.116773
BTN 93.453559
BWP 14.59918
BYN 3.654569
BYR 21891.980945
BZD 2.251123
CAD 1.509098
CDF 3200.026485
CHF 0.939869
CLF 0.036441
CLP 1005.523489
CNY 7.831186
CNH 7.792473
COP 4669.983972
CRC 579.645366
CUC 1.116938
CUP 29.598852
CVE 110.856102
CZK 25.136018
DJF 198.502326
DKK 7.456705
DOP 67.518204
DZD 147.649178
EGP 53.967415
ERN 16.754067
ETB 133.141979
FJD 2.438834
FKP 0.850614
GBP 0.834693
GEL 3.037852
GGP 0.850614
GHS 17.613759
GIP 0.850614
GMD 76.539712
GNF 9641.966274
GTQ 8.638502
GYD 233.615753
HKD 8.682566
HNL 27.778026
HRK 7.594072
HTG 147.179007
HUF 396.765314
IDR 16893.684275
ILS 4.13105
IMP 0.850614
INR 93.506291
IQD 1463.188522
IRR 47028.665891
ISK 150.896156
JEP 0.850614
JMD 175.450917
JOD 0.791579
JPY 159.414389
KES 144.085121
KGS 94.048094
KHR 4540.352294
KMF 493.267675
KPW 1005.24339
KRW 1463.557121
KWD 0.340678
KYD 0.930698
KZT 535.674763
LAK 24664.775089
LBP 100077.626891
LKR 333.455777
LRD 216.434618
LSL 19.194543
LTL 3.298027
LVL 0.675624
LYD 5.294176
MAD 10.826757
MDL 19.44932
MGA 5083.183752
MKD 61.582295
MMK 3627.770416
MNT 3795.354606
MOP 8.942965
MRU 44.35921
MUR 51.32334
MVR 17.156451
MWK 1939.004263
MXN 21.960952
MYR 4.604577
MZN 71.34439
NAD 19.194616
NGN 1863.599768
NIO 41.13354
NOK 11.715265
NPR 149.522616
NZD 1.758222
OMR 0.429518
PAB 1.116758
PEN 4.187509
PGK 4.438156
PHP 62.65464
PKR 310.174875
PLN 4.275135
PYG 8717.026571
QAR 4.066492
RON 4.976067
RSD 117.174557
RUB 105.262964
RWF 1487.761154
SAR 4.189818
SBD 9.262144
SCR 14.801168
SDG 671.835225
SEK 11.263091
SGD 1.430267
SHP 0.850614
SLE 25.519016
SLL 23421.621523
SOS 637.771667
SRD 34.290551
STD 23118.35744
SVC 9.771393
SYP 2806.339668
SZL 19.194599
THB 36.15513
TJS 11.88267
TMT 3.909282
TND 3.394936
TOP 2.615979
TRY 38.172017
TTD 7.586211
TWD 35.283734
TZS 3049.239822
UAH 45.973062
UGX 4125.746442
USD 1.116938
UYU 46.826258
UZS 14226.990736
VEF 4046165.870217
VES 41.172491
VND 27487.83934
VUV 132.6051
WST 3.124592
XAF 656.234786
XAG 0.035124
XAU 0.000419
XCD 3.01858
XDR 0.826135
XOF 657.321865
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.597397
ZAR 19.10265
ZMK 10053.783038
ZMW 29.534105
ZWL 359.653517
  • RELX

    -0.5300

    47.56

    -1.11%

  • AZN

    -0.5600

    77.62

    -0.72%

  • RIO

    0.4800

    71.23

    +0.67%

  • RBGPF

    64.7500

    64.75

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    13.25

    +0.3%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    40.71

    -0.47%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.14

    +0.12%

  • BP

    0.6300

    31.42

    +2.01%

  • BTI

    -0.2369

    36.84

    -0.64%

  • BCC

    1.1800

    141.49

    +0.83%

  • NGG

    -0.3300

    69.73

    -0.47%

  • BCE

    0.3600

    35.19

    +1.02%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    10.09

    +0.5%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.05

    +0.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    25.08

    -0.12%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.58

    +0.88%

In east Ukraine trench, soldiers dig in for 'total war'
In east Ukraine trench, soldiers dig in for 'total war' / Photo: MIGUEL MEDINA - AFP

In east Ukraine trench, soldiers dig in for 'total war'

Down a trench in Ukraine's Donbas region, Dima admits it took him time to adjust to the sounds of war, to living with fellow soldiers and to the flies everywhere.

Text size:

Now, the 25-year-old soldier with an easy smile is quietly confident and says everything is fine, despite the constant boom of artillery.

His nickname "Moryak" (Sailor) is scrawled on his uniform, along with the slogans used by soldiers at war: "Born to Hunt" and "Si vis pacum para bellum" (If you want peace, prepare for war).

After serving on the frontline in the Sumy and Kharkiv regions in northern Ukraine, Dima was deployed to a position in the Izyum region.

This part of the frontline lies to the northwest of Kramatorsk -- the administrative centre of Donbas, an industrial region Russian troops are attempting to conquer.

Since he arrived, Dima has been digging into the black earth -- like everyone else in his unit.

Their trench measures several dozen metres -- a labyrinth littered with shovels and pickaxes and underground shelters where the men sleep.

"We hide when they shell, we dig when it's calm," says Dima.

- 'No pasaran' -

Russian forces are just a few kilometres away.

"No pasaran!", exclaimed the head of the unit, Ahil, an experienced soldier of few words.

Asked how many men are in the unit, he replies: "The number we need."

The situation? "It could be worse". Weapons? "We never have enough". Morale? "Good".

Ahil says he has been fighting in the Donbas since 2014 when Russia-backed separatists first seized control of part of the territory.

He believes the situation now is completely different.

"Today, there is total war," says the soldier, hoping to "rest when it's all over".

"If I get to that point," he adds.

Before saying goodbye to a group of journalists, Ahil removes his helmet to reveal a shaved head except for a large bunch of hair on one side.

"It's a Cossack haircut. It fits the moment," he laughs.

- 'Remained here forever' -

This part of the frontline has been one of the most active since Russia invaded on February 24 but it has become calmer in recent weeks as Russian troops attempt to advance elsewhere.

"This place has been one of the bloodiest," admits "Grizzly", another commander with a beard and tattoos who wears a woolly hat despite the heat.

"The previous unit lost many men. Up to 40 percent of them remain here forever," he says.

Dima has also seen his comrades fall in battle.

"It's sad of course when it happens to friends you share a life with in the trenches.

"But at the same time it motivates you even more to remove these bastards that nobody wants here," he says

Asked if he thinks about death, he replies: "Of course, I think regularly that it's maybe my last cup of tea or the last time I go to bed."

- Kilometre by kilometre -

Outside the trench, the countryside stretches out in a landscape that would be magnificent except for the vast scorched fields.

Unexploded ordinance lies on the roads, which are pockmarked with craters and lined with burnt out vehicles.

Some rare military vehicles can be seen. A T-72 tank kicks up a cloud of stones and dust as it turns.

A few kilometres back, the brigade's headquarters are set up in an abandoned farm.

Chickens wander through the ruins, a cat sleeps on an abandoned chair and bees fly out from their untended hives.

A Tochka-U missile lies in the courtyard.

At the bottom of a small staircase, the officer in charge is at work in a 15-square-metre room full of maps and radios to communicate with the positions.

Three men lie in the darkness of the room, staring at their phones absent-mindedly.

Oleksandr, the officer, a jovial man of 34, says the situation is "under control".

"We have been here since the end of April and, after several attempts by the enemy to advance, we are the ones advancing, kilometre by kilometre."

The aim? "Total victory". Asked if he could envisage a ceasefire, he replies: "No, no, no".

(T.Renner--BBZ)