“You do not have enough time to deepen the basic principles in these children. You have to make the moves and hope that they will live and learn, but it is scary to see that they are sending these men to the forefront with these issues. “ Mykhailo Podolyak, a senior presidential adviser, said the soldiers had received proper training and denied allegations that the front-line soldiers had no armor, although he had repeatedly stressed the horrific death toll from the Russian artillery shelling.
The Ukrainian defense was devalued
Experts also present a more complex overview of the current state of Ukrainian forces, stressing that despite the chaos in time of war, the country has retained an overwhelmingly powerful enemy. “It seems we have been underestimated and they have been overestimated,” said Ruslan Kavatsiuk, a Ukrainian adviser to Spirit of America, a US non-profit organization that is one of many groups and governments delivering non-lethal military equipment to the Ukrainian front. The organization has hired a network of military commanders to donate nine buses and 155 tonnes of supplies, including bulletproof vests, ballistic helmets and first aid kits to the Ukrainian armed forces, which are transported “invisibly” by truck and car where needed. There was no single picture of a war effort that had to embrace recruits with very different ranges of experience, he said. But despite the mistakes, inaccuracies, lack of planning and supplies, “their [Russian] “The professional army is losing all these people,” he said, noting the deaths of several high-ranking Russian officers, including 12 generals. “The Russians do not understand how bees work. “It looks like chaos, but in the end, they do the job,” he said. Matt Dimmick, regional director of the Spirit of America regional program for Europe and former director for Russia and Eastern Europe at the US National Security Council, said that while the Russians were bleeding the Ukrainians with artillery, Moscow was also deteriorating. “The Russians have put everything they have into the struggle,” he said. “They have no renewable resources when it comes to their own troops and capabilities.” Although they could be consolidated and difficult to uproot, they may have reached their limits to move on, he said. They could make limited gains in some areas where they concentrated their artillery power, but “they would probably suffer equal or more losses” where they did not have similar resources. “The Ukrainians will smell it and make the Russians pay for it,” he said.