Maligned in Western Media,
Donbass Forces are Defending their Future from
Ukrainian Shelling and Fascism
By Eva Bartlett
November
22, 2022:
Information Clearing House-- "Covert
Action" -
Smeared, stigmatized, and lied about
in Western media propaganda, the mostly
Russian-speaking people of the Donbass region
were being slaughtered by the thousands in a
brutal war of “ethnic cleansing” launched
against them by the neo-Nazi regime in Kyiv,
which the U.S. installed after the CIA overthrew
Ukraine’s legally elected president in a 2014
coup.
Although the Donbass people had been pleading
for Russian military aid to defend them against
the increasingly murderous military assaults by
the Ukraine government forces, which killed more
than 14,000 of their people, Russian President
Vladimir Putin declined to intervene. Instead,
he tried to broker a peace agreement between the
warring parties.
But the U.S. and Britain secretly colluded to
sabotage peace negotiations, persuading
president Zelenksy to ignore the Minsk III peace
agreement that the Ukraine government had
previously signed, and which had been
countersigned by Russia, France and Germany.
Realizing that the U.S. and its NATO allies
would never permit peace negotiations to
succeed, Putin finally sent troops into Ukraine
on February 24. Russian troops went in to
support and reinforce the outnumbered and
outgunned Donbass Special Forces who had been
defending their land against attacks by the Kyiv
government for nearly eight years.
Voices From the Frontlines of Former
Eastern UkraineRepublics
In the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) in
October, I went to a frontline outpost 70 meters
from Ukrainian forces in Avdeevka (north and
west of Donetsk), according to the Donbas
commanders I spoke with there.
To reach that position, I went with two other
journalists to a meeting point with two
commanders of Pyatnashka—volunteer fighters,
including Abkhazi, Slovak, Russian, Ossetian
and other nationalities, including locals from
Donbas.
From there, they drove us to a point as far
as they could drive before walking the rest of
the way, several minutes through brush and
trenches, eventually coming to their sandbagged
wood and cement fortified outpost.
It has changed hands over the years,
Ukrainian forces sometimes occupying it, Donbas
forces now controlling it.
One soldier, a unit commander who goes by the
call sign “Vydra” (Otter), was formerly a miner
from the DPR who had been living in Russia with
his family. In 2014, he returned to the Donbas
to defend his mother and relatives still there.
He spoke of the outpost.
“We dug and built this with our hands.
Several times over the years, the Ukrainians
have taken these positions. We pushed them back,
they stormed us…Well, we have been fighting each
other for eight years.”
There, artillery fire is the biggest danger
they face. “You can hide from a sniper, but not
from artillery, and they’re using large
caliber.”
His living quarters is a dank, cramped, room
with a tiny improvised bed, with another small
room and bed for others at the outpost.
A sign reads: “If shelling occurs, go to
the shelter.” The kind of sign you see all
over Donetsk and cities of the Donbas, due to
Ukraine’s incessant shelling of civilian,
residential areas. In a frontline outpost where
incoming artillery is the norm, the sign is
slightly absurd, clearly a joke.
An Orthodox icon sits atop the sign.
Ukrainian nationalists hang and spray Nazi
graffiti and slogans of death; these fighters
revere their faith.
A poster, with the DPR flag, reads: “We
have never known defeat, and it’s clear that
this has been decided from above. Donbas has
never been forced to its knees, and no one will
ever be allowed to.”
The only things decorating the space are tins
of tuna and canned meat, instant noodles, and
washing powder. Their existence is bare minimum,
nothing glamorous about it; they volunteer
because, as they told me, this is their land and
they will protect it.
Perhaps surprising to some, when Vydra was
asked whether he hates Ukrainians, he replied
emphatically no, he has friends and relatives in
Ukraine.
“We have no hatred for Ukraine. We hate those
nationalists who came to power. But ordinary
Ukrainians? Why? Many of us speak Ukrainian. We
understand them, they understand us. Many of
them speak Russian.
I’ve been involved in sports a lot of time,
wrestling. So, I’ve got a lot of friends in
Dnepropetrovsk, Kharkov, Kirovograd, Odessa,
Lvov, Ivano-Frankivsk, Transcarpathia.
I have relatives in western Ukraine, and we
still communicate. Yes, they say one thing on
the street, but when we talk to each other, they
say, ‘Well, you have to, because the SBU is
listening.’
Ukraine shouts about democracy, then puts
people in handcuffs for no reason. My aunt got
in trouble because they found my photo on her
Skype.
And I’m on the Myrotvorets [kill list]
website.” [As is the author, see
this article.]
He spoke of Ukraine’s shelling from 2014,
when the people of the Donbass were unarmed and
not expecting to be bombed by their own country.
“When the artillery hit the city of
Yenakievo, east of Gorlovka, we were
defenseless. We went with hunting rifles and
torches to fight them. Most of the weapons we
had later were captured from them. We had to go
to the battlefield without weapons in order to
get the weapons.”
When asked if he was concerned that Ukrainian
forces might take Donetsk he replied no, of
course not, they didn’t succeed in 2014, they
won’t now.
When asked whether he had a message for
soldiers of the Ukrainian army, Vydra replied
without hesitating, “Go home! We’ve been saying
that since 2014: Go home. Unequivocally, we
don’t want them here, but we don’t want to kill
them. I’m not speaking about nationalists, I’m
speaking about Ukrainian soldiers, who are
drafted or forcefully employed in the Ukrainian
army. Guys, go home, either surrender or go.
This is our land. We’re not leaving, we’re not
going anywhere.”
I asked how he felt to be treated and
described as sub-human, to be called
dehumanizing names, a part of the Ukrainian
nationalists’ brainwashing propaganda. As
I wrote previously:
“Ukrainian nationalists openly declare
they view Russians as sub-human. School books
teach this warped ideology.
Videos show the extent of this
mentality: Teaching children not only to also
hate Russians and see them as not humans, but
also brainwashing them to believe killing Donbas
residents is acceptable. The Ukrainian government itself funds
neo-Nazi-run indoctrination camps for youths.”
“It’s offensive,” Vydra said, “We are
saddened: There are sick people. We need to heal
them, slowly.”
I asked whether he thought friendship between
Ukrainians and Russians would be possible.
“It will take years for any friendship. Take
Chechnya, one region of Russia, it was at war.
But slowly, slowly…We must all live together. We
are one people.” Indeed, now Chechen fighters
are one of the most effective forces fighting
alongside Donbas and Russian soldiers to
liberate Donbas areas from Ukrainian forces.
He opened a zippered trousers pocket and
proudly brandished a small plastic sleeve
containing children’s drawings, also containing
icons of saints and Christ, and prayers…
“This is very personal, it’s like my guardian
angel. I put it in plastic, I don’t even keep my
ID in plastic. I’ve been carrying this one in my
pocket since February. I’ve been in all sorts of
hot spots. A child drew this, we receive letters
from children. It’s very nice to look at them
when it’s hard and we are under fire.”
He read one letter:
“We are waiting for you. Thank you for
risking your lives to defend Donbas. Yulia and
Ira.”
“I don’t even know who are Yulia and Ira,” he
said smiling.
Showing the icons, he said, “This is Saint
Ushakov, our great commander. This is Jesus
Christ, our Heavenly Protector. This Abkhazi
icon was given to me by the guys. This is a
prayer book. And here is a prayer,” he said of
one page prayer.
“These words are to support when times are
very hard. When there is heavy shelling, it can
go on for hours. So, while you’re sitting there,
you can read this.
Especially for the younger guys, 22, 23 years
old, just finished college. This is new to
them.”
Commanders Speak of Geopolitical
Reasons for Ukraine’s War
Outside, sitting in front of an Orthodox
banner and a collection of collected
munitions—including Western ones—two platoon
commanders, “Kabar” and “Kamaz,” spoke of the
bigger geopolitical picture. [See
video]
“America is running the show here,” Kabar
said. “It builds foreign policy on the basis of
how its domestic policy is built, which is
through conflicts with external countries. They
are accustomed to proving their power to their
people through terrorism around the world,
inciting fires in Syria, in the east. They
played the card of radical Islam there.
And now they are playing the card of fascism.
They do not see themselves on the other side of
good. They need wars, blood, cruelty, and they
signed Europe up for this.
However, they’ve missed one point: Russia,
since the days of the Soviet Union, has never
retreated in large scale wars. They took Europe
and pushed it to slaughter Russia, and they put
Russia in such a position that it must secure
its national interests. Europe needs to
understand this, to pay attention to history, to
stop being led by the United States.”
When asked about his feeling regarding
Ukrainians, “Kabar” replied similarly to Vydra.
“We don’t blame the whole Ukrainian people.
Ukrainians are our friends, they are our
relatives. They’ve been struck by evil, and it’s
not their fault, ordinary people are not to
blame for this. We will liberate them from
fascism, we’ll show them brotherhood, and we’ll
make friends.
This is a good opportunity for us to defeat
evil. God has honored us with this right to
fight evil.”
Kamaz, when asked why he is fighting, replied
that this is his homeland, he was born here, and
that he has a son who he doesn’t want to inherit
Ukraine’s war on the Donbas.
“I myself am Greek by nationality. Ukrainians
are Slavs, they are our brothers, their
grandfathers fought together shoulder to
shoulder with our grandfathers against Nazism
and fascism. We are here to finish it, so that
our children live a normal happy life. We are
fighting for the future.”
He spoke of America’s continuous need for
war.
“We’ve seen it in Syria and Yugoslavia, where
they destroyed everything and then set
everything up their own way, so the people must
submit, almost like slaves.”
I asked whether he thought peace between
Ukraine and Russia is possible.
“Yes, possibly, why not? But at the moment,
the President of Ukraine said there will be no
negotiations.
Negotiations are possible, but I think not
with this president. When he comes to his
senses, he will not be able to negotiate,
because he took a lot of money.”
Before leaving the outpost, we chatted a bit
with the commanders. A puppy sought the
attention of a young soldier. Another puppy ran
around our feet. The outpost commanders and
soldiers take care of the dogs. Their presence
added a somewhat surreal touch to the scene: an
outpost which is routinely shelled, where life
can cease to exist at any moment, and these
happy, well-cared for puppies running around
like dogs anywhere.
Western Media Inverted Reality,
Lauding Nazis and Demonizing Defenders
While many in the West think that this
conflict started in February 2022, those
following
events since 2014 are aware that, following
the Maidan coup and Odessa massacre, and the
rise of fascism in Ukraine against the Ukrainian
people, the Donbas republics wanted to distance
themselves from Ukraine’s Nazis and fascism.
The sacrifices which the people of the Donbas
republics have endured, particularly those
fighting to protect their families and loved
ones, have been and continue to be immense.
Just as
the heroes of the Syrian Arab Army were
maligned, so too have Donbas forces have been
maligned by Western media, though both are
defending their homelands from terrorist forces
trained and funded by the West. Terrorists given
the freedom to commit endless atrocities against
Donbas civilians.
These defenders, many living in dank trench
conditions didn’t choose war, they responded to
it, to protect their loved ones and their
future. In spite of more than eight years of
being warred upon by Ukraine, they retain their
humanity.
Views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House. in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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