In the Far East Ukraine, the “Artan” special operations unit has prepared for another raid. Volunteer soldiers wore high-tech equipment that seemed to come from the United States or Europe.
The unit carried out daring acts of sabotage against the invade the Russian forces – Often behind enemy lines. Their motto is: “We know, we see, we destroy.”
President Trump’s repeated complaint before taking office, according to which he could end in just 24 hours of war that Russia launched with his large -scale invasion in February 2022, fueled fear in Ukraine And through Europe That he could cut the vital supply of American weapons.
The commander of Artan told CBS News if it was happening, he and his men would continue to fight, even if their weapons are completely exhausted.
But after almost three years of exhausting war, everyone in Ukraine is not always as Gung-Ho.
The Ukrainian people resisted the invasive army of Vladimir Putin, and they paid the price of blood and sorrow.
A recent survey has revealed that a little more than half of Ukrainians now think that their government should negotiate a cease-fire with Russia-more than double the figure at the start of the war. But many Ukrainians have told CBS News that even if they wanted peace, this cannot come without conditions.
CBS News met Yevheniya Puzkiova in a therapy center led by TacklesAn organization founded in the United States to support the families of the soldiers who have fallen. She lost her husband Oleksandr and her eldest son Oleksiy in the fight against Russia.
“Otherwise they, then who?” My husband did not think twice before registering, and my son went because of his father’s example, “she said.
When asked if she would support negotiations of ceasefire with Russia, the widow in mourning and the bereaved mother said that she would, “but with guarantees of security for our people.”
“The simple fact of freezing the front line will do nothing,” she warned. “Because in a few years, Russia will invade again.”
The government of Ukraine shares this fear. The leaders of the country declared that they would only accept a cease-fire agreement which is accompanied by security guarantees, such as the European forces for peacekeeping on the ground, or the membership of NATO.
Ukraine is fighting for its very survival. It is a nation on a mission of life or death, as was the CBS News ambulance rolled as it headed for a hospital not far from the first line in eastern Ukraine.
The soldier at the rear was struck by bombing and suffered an injury to the heads of shells. He was unconscious and on ventilation.
The ambulance was managed by MoasAn international aid group founded by an American entrepreneur who operates a fleet of 50 vehicles along the front line of 600 miles from Ukraine.
Dr. Mykhailo Ilyk is a pediatric anesthesiologist, but he left the safety of his job in the hospital two years ago to use his skills to help the war effort.
When asked if it was worth the horrible suffering of the Ukrainian people, which he sees daily, to defend their country, Ilyk did not hesitate.
“Certainly,” he said. “It’s our land. We have to stand with it until the last. »»