Perhaps I could contribute a little more to the war effort by finding a fresh way to write about a conflict that has been raging for 16 months, by personalising it and making the point that it is taking place not in some distant corner of the world but a four-day drive from London. Then, suddenly, this seasoned warrior turns and walks away, overcome with emotion. ‘That’s why I will do everything I can to be here with them.’ ‘They understand what evil is, and they are fighting evil,’ he declares. He talks about the conflict’s terrible attrition rate, the incredible ‘Blitz spirit’ of the Ukrainian soldiers, and how contributions like ours boost their morale as well as their fighting capability. Zak talks of how this is the first modern war in which one army must go outside the normal military supply chains to procure vital kit. ![]() ‘It will make a huge difference,’ he says. He explains that our equipment will be used in a mobile command centre receiving a live feed from drones flying over Russian positions. He now commands 30 men who are battling the Russian invaders. ![]() ![]() He ran an extreme sports company, and has a Ukrainian son. Zak, 51, was living in Ukraine before the war. We hand over a laptop, iPad and outsized television screen to a burly, fatigues-clad former British soldier named Zak who is fighting with the Ukrainian army. Having driven across Europe from the improbable starting point of Macclesfield, we arrive at a supermarket in Zaporizhzhya, a city near the front line of the war in Ukraine.Īn air raid siren sounds, but nobody takes any notice.
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