Ukraine’s citizen soldiers ‘the last line of defence’ against Russia

Down in the trenches around Ukraine’s capital, Alexander Tolinov, a manager at a telecommunications company, aimed his Kalashnikov through a gap between sandbags.

“The is the last line of defence for Kyiv,” said Tolinov, the commander of the military post, who wore a camouflage rain poncho and ball cap with the Ukraine armed forces emblem.

“We don’t want Russian soldiers here.”

There were no Russian troops out beyond the coils of silvery barbed wire and the anti-tank barriers arrayed in front of the trenchline like giant toy jacks.

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Almost six weeks into President Vladimir Putin’s invasion, Russia was suffering heavy losses and appeared to be giving up on its scheme to seize Kyiv.

But Tolinov and the others building the outpost weren’t letting their guard down.

All of them are members of Ukraine’s Territorial Defence Force, the newly-formed citizen soldiers branch of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

Mobilized following the Russian invasion, their role is to take on tasks like operating checkpoints and patrolling cities, freeing the professional soldiers to fight.

More than 100,000 have joined since Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion, often sending their families abroad and staying to defend Ukraine.

For many of the volunteers, it’s their first military experience, but some are reservists or veterans of the armed forces, Soviet army or the 2014 conflict with Russia.

Territorial Defence Force member and commander Alexander Tolinov, right, in his trenches, April 1, 2022.

Territorial Defence Force member and commander Alexander Tolinov, right, in his trenches, April 1, 2022.

Stewart Bell/Global News

The maze of six-foot-deep trenches were dug by hand and reinforced with sandbags and wooden pallets to prevent cave-ins. (Tolinov asked Global News not to reveal their location.)

“Digging is easy but retaining the sand is difficult,” Tolinov said.

Every so often along the trench, log beams offered a place to take cover during airstrikes. Green netting was draped over top to hide the trenches from surveillance drones.

Energetic and enthusiastic about his responsibilities, even in the spring rain, Tolinov said his men began each day with running and exercises.

One member of the unit is an international martial arts champion, he said. Others run their own businesses. They have master’s degrees and PhDs, he said.

Alexander Positko, a Territorial Defence Force deputy-commander, Kyiv, April 1, 2022.

Alexander Positko, a Territorial Defence Force deputy-commander, Kyiv, April 1, 2022.

Stewart Bell/Global News

“There are a lot of people from different professions here. The common thing is we are eager to defend our country,” said a volunteer named Arkadii, who went by “Donbas.”

A member of a territorial defence mortar unit, he said his battalion included a teacher, driver, history professor, fisherman and YouTube blogger.

“Most of us just don’t want a Russian future for our kids,” said Kostya, who goes by “Colt,” and is also a mortar specialist who volunteered for the territorial defence.

Ukrainians are pro-Europe and reject Moscow’s un-democratic ways, he said. “It’s nothing close to freedom for me. And we value our freedom very much.”




Click to play video: Russia-Ukraine conflict: Touring the battle trenches in Kyiv

While Russian forces have been described as unmotivated, the Ukrainian volunteers defend their neighbourhoods.

“All of us are local, we have good knowledge of the city,” Alexander Positko, a deputy battalion commander, said at his base on the edge of Kyiv.

A reservist, he served during the war in Donbas in 2014 before taking a job in the environmental office of an agricultural company.

He said the Ukrainians were beating the Russians in town after town around the capital. “We are defending our territory and that’s why we want to go further and liberate our city,” he said.

Daniel Bilak, a former Toronto lawyer, is a member of Ukraine’s Territorial Defence Force.

Daniel Bilak, a former Toronto lawyer, is a member of Ukraine’s Territorial Defence Force.

Stewart Bell/Global News

The territorial defence force’s contribution to stopping the Russian invasion has been crucial, said Daniel Bilak, a former Toronto lawyer serving in the outfit.

Standing near the war memorial in his town, which he asked Global News not to identify except that it was on the outskirts of Kyiv, he wore a camouflage cap and olive jacket with his battalion patch.

An armoured vehicle driven by a ponytailed soldier revved its engine in the nearby intersection, across from the church.

“Frankly, I’ve been extraordinarily impressed, and I think it’s actually been one of the key reasons that we’re winning this war,” said the Ukrainian-Canadian, looking weary after his 10 p.m. to 2 p.m. patrol.

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Bilak moved to Kyiv in 1991 and was heading the Ukraine office of an international law firm when the war started. He could have flown to Canada to wait out the war, but he stayed to take his turn on four-hour patrols.

He is also involved in the procurement of body armour for territorial defence volunteers and works with the Ukrainian Freedom Fund to buy non-lethal military equipment and medical kits.

“I couldn’t even imagine sitting in relative safety of western Ukraine or abroad or Canada and watching this happen, I would lose my mind,” Bilak said.

“It wasn’t a surprise for me,” he said of the Russian invasion. “I was ready for this. I’d seen it coming a couple of months beforehand.”

To prepare for a possible war with Russia, his unit began putting volunteers through basic training, with the idea they would be ready if called upon.

Molotov cocktails and razor wire at a Territorial Defence Force position in Kyiv, April 1, 2022.

Molotov cocktails and razor wire at a Territorial Defence Force position in Kyiv, April 1, 2022.

Stewart Bell/Global News

The town has been largely emptied of mothers with children, who have left for countries like Poland, he said. Adult men are required to stay to defend Ukraine.

“Everybody who’s here is doing something to contribute,” he said.

The territorial defence force marks a significant shift in Ukraine’s defence from having a standing army to the concept of “total resistance,” Bilak said.

In a key battle north of Mykolayiv, the volunteers helped the special forces and regular army repel elite Russian troops trying to open a route to Odesa and Ukraine’s second-largest nuclear power plant in Yuzhnoukrainsk, he said.

“It showed how powerful it can be to harness the enthusiasm of people and the commitment and resolution of people to defend their land,” he said.

“For me, it was a crucial test.”

The Russian army has stalled outside Kyiv, and Ukrainian forces have been pushing them back and retaking towns they had occupied, finding evidence of possible war crimes.

Bilak was skeptical of Moscow’s claim it was withdrawing from Kyiv and said the Russians were simply trying to reposition their forces to Ukraine’s east.

But the Russian artillery and rocket fire that had become part of the soundtrack around Kyiv had quieted in recent days, Bilak said.

“Last night was the first patrol where there was no bombing, no rocket fire, nothing,” he said. “It was actually eery to hear that kind of silence.”

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