Invasão da Ucrânia

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P44

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9990 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 09:06:39 am »
The tragedy of Zelensky’s Ukraine
November 20, 2025

Owen Matthews
Themes: Geopolitics, Russia, Ukraine

President Zelensky's stunning political rise promised to combat corruption and bring rapprochement with Russia. His administration is now mired in allegations of war-profiteering.

https://engelsbergideas.com/notebook/the-tragedy-of-zelenskys-ukraine/

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It’s hard to overstate the anger of ordinary Ukrainians – even former loyal supporters of Zelensky’s – at the implications of this case. ‘Every day people are killed, their homes burned to ashes, families give their last hryvnia to support the troops, yet the state cannot even guarantee basic, decent financial stability,’ says Iuliia Mendel, Zelensky’s Press Secretary from 2019-21. ‘Then, out of nowhere, hundreds of millions vanish into private pockets. During wartime. The pain is unbearable… Corruption is one of the key reasons why our heroic army suffers such catastrophic losses on the front lines. And it’s long past time to admit the uncomfortable reality: graft has become a convenient excuse to prolong the war under the banner of a “just peace” that never arrives.’


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In the Rada, Ukraine’s parliament, a major rebellion against the government is under way, involving many members of the Servant of the People Party. Many are calling for Yermak’s resignation. More disturbingly, senior members of the Azov movement, now integrated into senior positions in Ukraine’s army, but who still maintain the unit’s basic political and military cohesion, have called for blood. ‘Corrupt officials are enemies and traitors,’ stormed Dmytro Yarosh, a nationalist firebrand who threatened to hang Zelensky in 2019. ‘If you steal from the nation during a war you deserve liquidation.’



« Última modificação: Novembro 21, 2025, 09:10:13 am por P44 »
"[Os portugueses são]um povo tão dócil e tão bem amestrado que até merecia estar no Jardim Zoológico"
-Dom Januário Torgal Ferreira, Bispo das Forças Armadas
 

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ricardonunes

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9991 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 10:10:29 am »
The tragedy of Zelensky’s Ukraine
November 20, 2025

Owen Matthews
Themes: Geopolitics, Russia, Ukraine

President Zelensky's stunning political rise promised to combat corruption and bring rapprochement with Russia. His administration is now mired in allegations of war-profiteering.

https://engelsbergideas.com/notebook/the-tragedy-of-zelenskys-ukraine/

Citar

It’s hard to overstate the anger of ordinary Ukrainians – even former loyal supporters of Zelensky’s – at the implications of this case. ‘Every day people are killed, their homes burned to ashes, families give their last hryvnia to support the troops, yet the state cannot even guarantee basic, decent financial stability,’ says Iuliia Mendel, Zelensky’s Press Secretary from 2019-21. ‘Then, out of nowhere, hundreds of millions vanish into private pockets. During wartime. The pain is unbearable… Corruption is one of the key reasons why our heroic army suffers such catastrophic losses on the front lines. And it’s long past time to admit the uncomfortable reality: graft has become a convenient excuse to prolong the war under the banner of a “just peace” that never arrives.’


Citar
In the Rada, Ukraine’s parliament, a major rebellion against the government is under way, involving many members of the Servant of the People Party. Many are calling for Yermak’s resignation. More disturbingly, senior members of the Azov movement, now integrated into senior positions in Ukraine’s army, but who still maintain the unit’s basic political and military cohesion, have called for blood. ‘Corrupt officials are enemies and traitors,’ stormed Dmytro Yarosh, a nationalist firebrand who threatened to hang Zelensky in 2019. ‘If you steal from the nation during a war you deserve liquidation.’




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Kiev fez alterações no plano de paz proposto pelos EUA para evitar a verificação da ajuda internacional recebida e possíveis acusações de corrupção, informa o Wall Street Journal citando um funcionário americano.

Segundo ele, o projecto inicial previa a realização de uma auditoria completa de toda a ajuda internacional à Ucrânia para identificar possíveis esquemas de corrupção.

No entanto, na versão final do documento de 28 pontos, essa secção foi alterada: agora menciona uma "amnistia total para todas as partes por acções cometidas durante o conflito".

A ser verdade nao venham tentar convencer que os Ucranianos receberam o dito acordo sem o ter negociado...

Saem todos a ganhar, existe outro ponto.

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20. Programas educativos e sociais que promovem a tolerância multicultural serão obrigatórios em ambos os países:
– A Ucrânia adopta padrões da UE para direitos das minorias.
– Ambos os lados encerram leis discriminatórias.
– Direitos iguais de media para meios ucranianos e russos.
– Toda a ideologia nazi deve ser proibida

Como sao todos amnistiados, nao existem crimes de guerra, os grupos neo nazis, esfumam se e volta tudo ao normal, como se o período de 2014 a 2025 fosse eliminado da memoria.

 
Potius mori quam foedari
 

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P44

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9992 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 01:29:16 pm »
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Trump’s Full 28-Point Ukraine–Russia Plan

1. Ukraine’s sovereignty will be confirmed.

2. A comprehensive non-aggression agreement will be concluded between Russia, Ukraine, and Europe; all ambiguities of the last 30 years will be considered settled.

3. Russia will not invade neighboring countries, and NATO will not expand further.

4. A U.S.-mediated Russia–NATO dialogue will be launched to resolve security issues and promote cooperation.

5. Ukraine will receive “reliable security guarantees.”
Note: For the first time, the U.S. explicitly offers Ukraine a formal security guarantee, details unspecified.

6. Ukraine’s military will be capped at 600,000 personnel. (Current size: ~800–850k.)

7. Ukraine must enshrine permanent neutrality: it will never join NATO, and NATO will codify that.

8. NATO agrees not to station troops on Ukrainian territory.

9. European fighter jets will be stationed in Poland.

10. The U.S. security guarantee comes with conditions:
– The U.S. receives compensation
– If Ukraine invades Russia, the guarantee is void
– If Russia invades Ukraine, sanctions snap back and recognition of territory is withdrawn
– If Ukraine fires a missile at Moscow or St. Petersburg “without cause,” the guarantee is void

11. Ukraine becomes eligible for EU membership and receives temporary preferential access to EU markets.

12. A global reconstruction package is launched, including:
– A Ukraine Development Fund
– Joint U.S.–Ukraine energy projects
– Modernization of Ukrainian infrastructure
– Investment in mining and natural resources
– A World Bank financing package

13. Russia will be reintegrated into the global economy:
– Gradual lifting of sanctions
– Long-term U.S.–Russia economic cooperation
– Joint ventures in AI, energy, infrastructure, rare earths, and Arctic extraction
– Russia rejoins the G8

14. Frozen Russian assets will be allocated as follows:
– $100B used to rebuild Ukraine (run by the U.S.)
– The U.S. receives 50% of profits from reconstruction investments
– Europe contributes another $100B
– Remaining frozen assets go into a U.S.–Russia joint investment vehicle to deepen economic ties

15. A joint U.S.–Russia security working group will monitor compliance.

16. Russia will codify in law a policy of non-aggression toward Europe and Ukraine.

17. The U.S. and Russia will extend nuclear arms-control treaties, including New START.

18. Ukraine reaffirms its non-nuclear status under the NPT.

19. The Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant will be operated under IAEA supervision, and electricity will be split 50/50 between Russia and Ukraine.

20. Education and social programs promoting multicultural tolerance will be mandated in both countries:
– Ukraine adopts EU standards for minority rights
– Both sides end discriminatory laws
– Equal media rights for Ukrainian and Russian outlets
– All Nazi ideology must be banned
Note: Very similar to provisions in Trump’s 2020 Israel–Palestine “Peace to Prosperity” plan.

21. Territorial arrangements:
– Crimea, Donetsk, and Lugansk are recognized as de facto Russian, including by the U.S.
– Parts of Kherson and Zaporozhye become frozen “contact line” zones (also de facto recognition)
– Russia gives up other agreed areas
– Ukraine withdraws from remaining parts of Donetsk; the zone becomes a Russian-recognized neutral buffer
– Russian forces cannot enter the buffer zone

22. Both sides agree not to alter future borders by force; security guarantees void if Ukraine violates this.

23. Russia guarantees Ukraine access to the Dnieper River and free Black Sea grain shipping.

24. A humanitarian committee is created to:
– Exchange all prisoners and bodies (“all for all”)
– Return detained civilians and children
– Implement family reunification
– Provide aid to victims of the conflict

25. Ukraine must hold national elections within 100 days of the agreement.

26. Full amnesty for all parties for all actions taken during the war: no prosecutions, no war-crimes claims.

27. The agreement will be legally binding and enforced by a Peace Council chaired by Donald J. Trump.
Note: This is the same governing structure Trump’s Gaza peace plan uses, a Trump-chaired oversight body empowered to impose sanctions.

28. A ceasefire begins as soon as both sides pull back to agreed positions.
"[Os portugueses são]um povo tão dócil e tão bem amestrado que até merecia estar no Jardim Zoológico"
-Dom Januário Torgal Ferreira, Bispo das Forças Armadas
 

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ricardonunes

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9993 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 01:43:43 pm »
Dia 27 de Novembro, parece que é a data limite para o boneco comediante assinar o tratado de paz....

Dia de Ação de Graças nos USA, perfeito para Trump brilhar......

O timing não foi escolhido por acaso ...

Agora a ver se resulta.....

Potius mori quam foedari
 

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Duarte

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9994 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 06:03:45 pm »
Este é provavelmente mais um plano nado-morto. Tal como está não vai em frente. Cruza demasiadas linhas vermelhas.

A Rússia não está em posição de exigir muito. Tem a economia em ruínas, a capacidade de produção (e mais importante de vendas!) petrolífera muito reduzida, os cidadãos russos já estão a sentir na pele os custos desta guerra idiota...

https://www.history.com/articles/world-war-i-russian-revolution

A História repete-se.  c56x1

A Europa tem de continuar a apoiar a Ucrânia até o regime ditatorial fascista putiniano cair ou retirar-se. É um esforço e um investimento que valem a pena.

« Última modificação: Novembro 21, 2025, 06:05:47 pm por Duarte »
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"L'union fait la force."
https://www.paypal.com/donate?campaign_id=STAHVCFBSB66L
 
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Apone

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9995 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 06:36:34 pm »
Este é provavelmente mais um plano nado-morto. Tal como está não vai em frente. Cruza demasiadas linhas vermelhas.

A Rússia não está em posição de exigir muito. Tem a economia em ruínas, a capacidade de produção (e mais importante de vendas!) petrolífera muito reduzida, os cidadãos russos já estão a sentir na pele os custos desta guerra idiota...

https://www.history.com/articles/world-war-i-russian-revolution

A História repete-se.  c56x1

A Europa tem de continuar a apoiar a Ucrânia até o regime ditatorial fascista putiniano cair ou retirar-se. É um esforço e um investimento que valem a pena.

Sem dúvida, o colapso ruzzo é apenas uma questão de tempo.

Basta ver que grande parte dos 28 pontos envolvem o alívio económico; levantamento de sanções, voltar ao G8, reatar a cooperação económica, devolver bens congelados, etc, etc.

Estão com a corda ao pescoço.
 

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HSMW

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9996 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 06:45:07 pm »


Russian Invasion of Ukraine: Pokrovsk Offensive - Every Day [MAY 1 - NOV 18 2025]
https://www.youtube.com/user/HSMW/videos

"Tudo pela Nação, nada contra a Nação."
 

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Duarte

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9997 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 07:17:50 pm »
Alemania completa la entrega del sistema Skynex a Ucrania para contrarrestar los drones y misiles rusos.

https://galaxiamilitar.es/alemania-completa-la-entrega-del-sistema-skynex-a-ucrania-para-contrarrestar-los-drones-y-misiles-rusos/
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"L'union fait la force."
https://www.paypal.com/donate?campaign_id=STAHVCFBSB66L
 

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MMaria

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9998 em: Novembro 21, 2025, 11:04:48 pm »
Zelensky sobre o escândalo de corrupção.

"Eu não sabia o que estava acontecendo pelas minhas costas"


https://www.instagram.com/p/DRUkVWxlg-z/

« Última modificação: Novembro 21, 2025, 11:06:27 pm por MMaria »
 

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Duarte

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #9999 em: Hoje às 02:27:12 am »
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"L'union fait la force."
https://www.paypal.com/donate?campaign_id=STAHVCFBSB66L
 

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Duarte

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #10000 em: Hoje às 02:48:43 am »
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"L'union fait la force."
https://www.paypal.com/donate?campaign_id=STAHVCFBSB66L
 

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Duarte

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #10001 em: Hoje às 04:06:17 am »
слава Україна!
“Putin’s failing Ukraine invasion proves Russia is no superpower".
"Every country has its own Mafia. In Russia the Mafia has its own country."
"L'union fait la force."
https://www.paypal.com/donate?campaign_id=STAHVCFBSB66L
 

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Cabeça de Martelo

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #10002 em: Hoje às 02:58:10 pm »
Ukraine’s allies rush to counter Trump’s ‘non-starter’ peace plan
Leaders of the EU, Britain and other Kyiv allies voice ‘concern’ at U.S.’s proposed peace deal with Russia.

LONDON — Ukraine’s staunchest allies held emergency talks on the sidelines of the G20 summit in South Africa in an attempt to stop Donald Trump forcing Kyiv to hand swathes of territory to Russia in a lopsided peace deal.

Western governments were privately shocked and dismayed at the new 28-point outline for a peace deal from the U.S. president’s team this week, seeing it as an attempt to force Ukraine to give Vladimir Putin everything he wants.

European leaders are now frantically working up counter-proposals to put to Trump in an effort to mitigate the worst of the U.S. plan, according to multiple officials familiar with the matter, granted anonymity to speak candidly.

More than a dozen leaders including Germany’s Friedrich Merz, France’s Emmanuel Macron, the U.K.’s Keir Starmer, the EU’s Ursula von der Leyen and Canada’s Mark Carney met for an urgent discussion at the G20 summit in Johannesburg to coordinate their response with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

“The draft is a basis which will require additional work,” the leaders said in a joint statement after discussing Trump’s plan.  “We are clear on the principle that borders must not be changed by force. We are also concerned by the proposed limitations on Ukraine’s armed forces, which would leave Ukraine vulnerable to future attack.”

The leaders reiterated the “strength” of their continued support for Ukraine and insisted that any provisions in a peace deal that affected the EU or NATO would require proper “consent” from the members of these multinational blocs.

The main aim of Ukraine’s friends is to strengthen Zelenskyy’s position and ensure he has their public backing for whatever comes next. While none of Ukraine’s allies has been involved in drafting Trump’s plan or has said they think it is fair, they took care not to reject the 28-point blueprint outright, for fear of antagonizing the unpredictable American president.

Crisis talks

Instead, intense work is going on behind the scenes to devise alternatives that would better protect Ukrainian and European interests, the officials said. However, it is clear that none of Ukraine’s friends and allies believe the raw Trump plan is acceptable and some do not want to give it any credibility at all.

One EU diplomat said engaging with the U.S. proposal would “lend legitimacy to something that has been drawn up without Ukrainian or European involvement, while its impact would directly affect us. As such it’s a non-starter.”

The crisis talks in Johannesburg came as the Trump administration piled pressure on Zelenskyy to agree to the terms of the plan by a deadline of Thanksgiving, next Thursday. If Zelenskyy refuses, Trump could cut off access to U.S. intelligence on Russian activities, as well as halt American military support, both of which have been critical in keeping Ukraine in the fight for the past three-and-a-half years.

Then Ukraine would be left almost entirely reliant on aid from Europe, and EU leaders are already struggling to work out how to help.

“We have been working for a just and sustainable peace with Ukraine and for Ukraine together with our friends and partners,” European Commission President von der Leyen said after a meeting with Zelenskyy on Friday. “We have discussed the current situation and we are clear that there should be nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine.”


European leaders are now frantically working up counter-proposals to put to Trump in an effort to mitigate the worst of the U.S. proposals, according to multiple officials. | Pool picture by Henry Nicholls/WPA via Getty Images

Von der Leyen also spoke with Macron, Starmer and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. The British leader made clear that he and others would work to try to improve the Trump plan.

“Ukraine’s friends and partners will meet in the margins of the G20 summit to discuss how we can secure a full ceasefire and create the space for meaningful peace negotiations,” Starmer said. “We will discuss the current proposal on the table, and in support of President Trump’s push for peace, look at how we can strengthen this plan for the next phase of negotiations.”

Trump is intensifying his push for a peace accord at a particularly sensitive time for Zelenskyy — who is battling to contain a swirling corruption scandal — and that is part of the point. U.S. officials think Zelenskyy’s weakness at home will make it more likely that he will agreee to their terms.

...

https://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-allies-rush-counter-trumps-non-starter-peace-plan/

Contra a Esquerda woke e a Direita populista marchar, marchar!...

 

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #10003 em: Hoje às 03:59:38 pm »
Algo não bate certo nesta guerra, quanto mais a Europa assume o seu apoio e o encargo com a Ucrânia, menor é o seu poder para decidir alguma coisa.

https://www.kielinstitut.de/publications/news/ukraine-support-europe-largely-fills-the-us-aid-withdrawal-lead-byn-the-nordics-and-the-uk/

 

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Re: Invasão da Ucrânia
« Responder #10004 em: Hoje às 05:05:38 pm »
“I Know We Can Win”: Ukraine’s Most Famous Soldier on the State of War
by Jimmy Rushton



Former Azov Brigade commander Bohdan Krotevych.

KYIV – For Ukrainians, the man sitting opposite me in a small coffee shop in Kyiv needs no introduction. Bohdan Krotevych is one of Ukraine’s most famous soldiers. At age 20, alongside hundreds of thousands of other protesters, he took part in the 2014 ‘Revolution of Dignity’; later that year, he would join the volunteer Azov Battalion after Russia “annexed” and occupied his hometown of Simferopol along with the rest of the Crimean peninsula.

Initially a platoon commander, Krotevych proved himself a capable leader, rapidly rising through the ranks. By February 2022, he was a Lieutenant Colonel and Chief of Staff of the Azov Regiment, which by then had been officially incorporated into the Ukrainian National Guard. He was also stationed in Mariupol with the rest of his unit, where he took part in the Azovstal steelworks’ last stand, only surrendering when the Ukraine forces were ordered to do so on May 16th by the Kyiv government.

Months of brutal captivity followed, until he was exchanged in September 2022 as part of a prisoner swap. This deal saw 215 Ukrainian soldiers who had been captured at the Azovstal steelworks — including Krotevych and the Azov leadership — exchanged for Putin ally Viktor Medvedchuk and a number of high-ranking Russian officers who were captured during Ukraine’s Kharkiv counter-offensive.

After returning to Ukraine, Krotevych assumed acting command of the Azov Regiment, and oversaw its reconstruction. The unit was subsequently expanded to a brigade in early 2023, and later into a full army corps, with Krotevych directing the brigade’s combat operations in 2023 and 2024.

Now 32 years old, and a civilian for the first time in over a decade (he stepped down as Chief of Staff of Azov in February 2025), Krotevych has emerged as one of the most consistently outspoken critics of the country’s political and military leadership — particularly of the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ Commander-in-Chief, General Oleksandr Syrskyi. Krotevych has long been critical of Syrskyi’s style of command, previously alleging in an April 2025 interview that the Commander-in-Chief’s ‘micro-management’ of Ukrainian forces have put soldiers ‘in grave danger’ on the front.

As we meet, Ukraine’s soldiers are engaged in a fierce fight for the city of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast, while Russian forces push ever closer to Huliaipole in Zaporizhzhia Oblast. It is widely accepted that the Ukrainian military currently has a severe manpower problem, with kilometers of the frontline held by a small number of soldiers contained within isolated fighting positions. In August, Russian troops exploited a particularly weak section of the front, pushing 15 kilometers (9.5 miles) to the east of Dobropillia and threatening to comprehensively outflank the Ukrainian lines. Azov, Krotevych’s old brigade, were deployed to push the Russians back.

Though Azov has frequently been deployed to the most dangerous sections of the front line, it still has a waiting list to join, and rejects volunteers who fail to pass a rigorous selection process. Conversely, many other brigades often struggle to attract recruits at all.

”Azov uses people according to their talents. And also an important thing is that Azov keeps their promises,” Krotevych says. He explains that upon recruitment, servicemembers are assigned to the role they originally signed up for — no last-minute job swaps. “Azov is part of the National Guard of Ukraine, which is part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs […] It’s more security from generals like Syrskyi, you know.” “Even right now, those people that are being recruited to the air defence forces, they go there understanding that in three months, they may be transferred by Syrskyi to an assault unit,” Krotevych says.

Recent manpower shortages have led to numerous cases of highly trained specialists being transferred from air defence units and even mechanics and technicians from the Ukrainian Air Force to infantry units. “But when journalists ask the General Staff [of the Ukrainian Armed Forces] about such transfers, the General Staff says that this is not true,” Krotevych says. “They lie. But people talk to each other, to the military, and they know that it is true. And these lies just completely destroy the trust in the Armed Forces of Ukraine, in the command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. We spoke with other pilots, and they said that our brothers, our engineers, were transferred by Syrskyi. Our engineers, our staff were transferred by Syrskyi. So, General Syrskyi is lying. And he’s commanded to lie to others, his units and his commanders.”

For his part, Krotevych believes the “culture of lying” that once infected the Russian military has now become more prevalent on the Ukrainian side.

“I think that Russians stopped their lying culture in the army, maybe in the beginning of 2024,” he says. “They stopped lying, and we started lying.”

The practical manifestations of command mismanagement have become increasingly visible: officers are often discouraged from passing bad news up the chain of command, and similarly discouraged from questioning command orders which they believe are incompatible with ground realities on the battlefield. Krotevych claims Syrskyi’s penchant for micro-management, even issuing orders to individual platoons, means officers are often left without direct control of the forces they nominally command. Krotevych also accuses Syrskyi of a refusal to delegate sufficient subordinate authority, preventing officers from effectively performing their roles.

As an example, he cites current Joint Forces commander Major General Mykhailo Drapatyi, who resigned his former post as commander of the Ukrainian Ground Forces after a Russian missile strike hit a Ukrainian training ground on 1 June 2025.

“And the thing about Drapatyi is, when those missile strikes happened on that training ground, he resigned. Because he has a sense of honor […] And he resigned because when he became commander of the infantry, he tried to replace some commanders who made bad decisions. But Syrskyi didn’t let him do this,” Krotevych says. “Drapatyi can’t command his own units because they were under Syrskyi. He’s not delegated the authority to command. So Drapatyi says that ‘I resign. What can I do? You don’t let me make some decisions. You don’t let me command my own units.’”

Krotevych argues that the evolving nature of nepotism in the Ukrainian military is a serious problem, with officers considered “politically unreliable” being denied replacement recruits, allocation of Western military aid, and field promotions. “We have a nepotistic system, you know. Effective generals like Drapatyi, like Apostol [Air Assault Forces commander], like Prokopenko [1st Azov Corps commander], Biletsky [Third Army Corps commander] and others […] Syrskyi doesn’t give them some equipment, some vehicles, some artillery systems and others. He gives it to his ‘own’ assault units, like the 425th Assault Regiment, the 225th, the 33rd […] For example Manko [Assault Forces commander] was the commander of the 33rd Assault Regiment. And these commanders, bad commanders, do everything that Syrskyi asks them to do. But clever, good generals, good commanders, who might have questions about how we could carry out an operation; when there are a lot of such generals, commanders who ask questions, he just removes them and leaves his loyal friends. So it’s nowhere close to being meritocratic, it’s just that you are politically connected. If you are, you get resources, you get promotions.”

Krotevych believes Manko — Colonel Valentyn Manko, commander of the Assault Forces — is the latest example of an individual promoted due to political reliability and personal connections rather than talent. Manko was plucked from the 33rd Assault Regiment to head up the newly formed “Assault Forces” as a distinct arm of the Ukrainian military which answers exclusively to Syrskyi. The creation itself was controversial, with critics arguing that it effectively duplicated a role already assigned to the Air Assault Forces.

Manko’s appointment as head of the branch only compounded the controversy, especially after the revelation that he had published videos to TikTok of himself dancing in swimming trunks to Russian music. Far more serious were multiple cases where Manko posted photos and videos on social media, showing uncensored military maps. In one case, Manko was accused of posting a TikTok video with a map showing uncensored positions of Ukrainian troops — a claim he denied, instead asserting that the map showed only known settlements. Critics and analysts, however, were quick to point out that Manko had posted more photos on social media with uncensored maps showing various troop positions, and Krotevych believes this exposed the positions of Ukrainian soldiers. “He took a photo of the maps. And the General Staff says that officially it’s not a secret”, Krotevych says. “They said that they aren’t secret maps. We see them, it’s not a secret. “He took a photo of the maps. And the General Staff says that officially it’s not a secret,” he says. “They said that it’s not a secret map. We see them, it’s not a secret.”

Krotevych argues that Syrskyi’s favoured assault units — which answer directly and only to him — are frequently used for militarily useless and highly costly PR stunts, driven by political pressure from Kyiv. “In one assault regiment under Syrskyi, there were more losses in one month than [Azov] took in two years,” Krotevych says. “It’s too stupid to lose people so Syrskyi can say to the President, ‘Mr. President, I carried out the operations that you asked me to do’, it’s stupid. I know how many losses we got in other units to free some village and to make a Telegram post. And in a week, that village would be re-captured by the Russians. It’s so stupid, no, I don’t understand.”

The wasteful nature of Syrskyi’s favoured assault regiments seems even more inexplicable when regular brigades holding the line often hover at around 30% strength. “We get into an unpleasant situation where effective commanders – when they stop receiving weapons and soldiers – show poorer results,” Krotevych says. “Because they are not given people, they are not given equipment, they are not given anything. [Syrskyi’s] assault regiments are packed with artillery, Leopards [foreign-donated tanks], people – they are given 800 people a month in some regiments – at the time when frontline brigades are given only 30 people a month. So they do show results, but this result is due to the fact that absolutely all the provision of the General Staff goes only in their direction.”

The cavalier attitude towards losses extends to highly valuable pieces of military equipment, as Syrskyi’s chosen units can be sure more are always coming. “When they send equipment for a good corps and brigades, it will live longer,” Krotevych says, citing an example of one assault regiment which recently lost two Bradley infantry fighting vehicles to mines. The commander of the assault regiment’s response to the loss, Krotevych says, was flippant and dismissive: “The commander of that assault regiment said, ‘they’ll send us another one, It’s not a problem’. We don’t see them in our brigade!”, he says, explaining that Azov has not been given any of the highly prized American vehicles, despite their excellent combat record. Other Ukrainian brigades which operate the type, such as the Third Assault Brigade, which operate a small number of Bradleys, treat the powerful vehicles with appropriate reverence.   

Krotevych is also dismissive about the assessment of some (mainly Western) commentators, who argue that Ukraine can make up for the current shortfall in infantry simply by producing more drones. “This is so stupid, you know. Yeah, we have FPVs and robots and they will win this war and we will drink a coffee and look at this from a distance of about 100 kilometers,” he says. Krotevych does not believe in “game changers” and dislikes the term intensely. “War is about units, all types of units. It’s about logistics, it’s about defence, it’s about assault. Combined arms. Ukraine needs infantry […] just not under Syrskyi’s command.”

While Ukrainian mobilization efforts still produce (on paper) 30,000 new soldiers every month, desertions are at an all time high, with 21,602 recorded in October alone, according to former Ukrainian MP and current member of the 72nd Mechanized Brigade, Ihor Lutsenko. Krotevych believes such high numbers of desertions are a reflection of the average soldier’s lack of confidence in their commanders and the low quality of their basic training.

I explain that during a recent trip to the frontline, multiple soldiers from the 60th Mechanized Brigade, now part of the Third Army Corps and currently being retrained by their new commanders, described to me how their basic training consisted mainly of chopping wood.

“Yeah, that’s true”, Krotevych says. As with the other challenges the Ukrainian military faces, he believes the problems ultimately stem from the leadership. “You know, all our conversations become […] Because of Syrskyi”, he says. This is why Krotevych is keen to emphasize that simply recruiting more soldiers will not lead to victory unless accompanied by fundamental reform. “Even if the National Guard recruits more, and the Azov brigade and other brigades recruit more, they won’t win the war”, he says. “The army wins the war. That’s why I talk about this, that’s why I said that Syrskyi is very bad for the army. Because I’d like to live in this country, and I’d like this country to win, you know?”, he says, with a slight laugh. “And I have a lot of problems with the presidential administration and others, because I said that.”

In recent days, more and more figures have vocally criticized the army’s leadership, as news from the front continues to worsen. However, there are still few signs that the government in Kyiv will change the current Commander-in-Chief. “I think that maybe when we lose Pokrovsk and when Russians make this circle around Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, [and] Druzhkivka, maybe then the president thinks that Syrskyi is unsuitable. Maybe then. For now, I didn’t see the sign at all. But I don’t want to think about why he doesn’t let him go, why he keeps him […] I just want this decline to stop.”

Krotevych doesn’t want to explicitly endorse anyone for the role – possibly out of fear that this might damage the prospects of a proposed replacement. “When someone asked me who can become Commander-in-Chief, I said, ‘anyone’. A person from the street could. And it wouldn’t be worse. And it wouldn’t be worse than Syrskyi.”

I remark that it must be difficult to not find the situation depressing.

“I’m not depressed,” he says. “I’m always angry. I’m angry because I know that we can do better things on the front line. I know that we can win. Even now, we can win. But something must change. And that’s why I’m very angry.”

Additional reporting and translation by Liza Otroshchenko.

This interview was conducted on November 1st, and has been edited for length and clarity.

https://offbeatresearch.com/2025/11/i-know-we-can-win-ukraines-most-famous-soldier-on-the-state-of-war/
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