All images courtesy VICE News
Since the start of the conflict over Crimea in 2014, Vladimir Putin deployed his unidentified "Little Green Men," the term given to the armed soldiers without official insignia who showed up in the now Kremlin-controlled peninsula. And it's widely believed that those kind of Russian soldiers are among the separatists in the Donbass region.But the clandestine activity cuts both ways. On a recent trip to Avdiivka, VICE News was given rare access to Ukrainian commandos fighting on the front lines of the now two-year-old conflict. Bumping along Eastern Ukrainian roads in an old Brinks-styled armored vehicle retrofitted into a bulletproof iron cage with no seat belts, I interviewed these elite soldiers earlier this summer.We were there for an investigative documentary on the effects of Canada's training mission in Ukraine—but conversation quickly turned to their own missions, covert or otherwise.Wearing balaclavas and carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles, they spoke on the condition of anonymity out of fear Russian intelligence agents could identify them.These guys reminded me of other western special operators I've spoken to in the past. Much more existential with their thinking on war and killing than the average enlisted soldier, but with the added value of feeling like they've also done some seriously secretive, brutal operations before. The Ukrainian commandos constantly asked me what I thought of them and my answer was always the same: "You all look really tired of fighting."
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