Thursday, February 23, 2023

OnPolitics special edition: One year since Russia's invasion of Ukraine

The beginning of Russia's war with Ukraine will be one year on Friday.
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On Politics

Thu Feb 23 2023

 

Kim Hjelmgaard  World Affairs Correspondent, London

Hello, OnPolitics readers! This is Kim Hjelmgaard. I'm an international correspondent for USA TODAY. On Friday, Ukraine will hit an unhappy milestone: one year since Russia launched its invasion.

Ukrainians are no strangers to war with Russia. They have been fighting one since 2014, when Moscow annexed Crimea, on the Black Sea, and started installing, arming and encouraging pro-Russian agitators in Luhansk and Donetsk, industrial areas in Ukraine's vast eastern Donbas region.

However, the last 12 months have been unlike anything most Ukrainians have ever experienced: Millions displaced. Families torn apart. Apartment buildings, schools, libraries and numerous other civilian spaces subjected to regular Russian rocket fire. The war has shown Ukraine's resilience and ingenuity. Polls show the vast majority of Ukrainians, a year later, are convinced they will win this war.

Of course, the war has also had a broader impact. It has re-invigorated the NATO military alliance. It has isolated Russia but also pushed it closer to China, India, Iran and other places in the so-called Global South -- exposing a long-simmering global divide that the U.S.-European bubble often obscures.

Surveys show most Americans still support Ukraine, even if the war turns out to be a protracted fight. But there are also increasing calls for more oversight over the tens of billions in military aid Washington is sending to Kyiv. U.S. taxpayers, in short, are all for rallying behind a fellow democracy that's been unjustly attacked. They also want to understand more about how their money is being spent.

It was with this in mind that I recently spent time on the front line in Ukraine. It's one thing to have a list of all the weapons the Pentagon has shipped to Ukraine, from missile systems to drones. It's another to see those weapons in action - to meet the soldiers operating them and to observe in real-time what they mean in the context of a battlefield. Ukraine is fighting a grinding ground war across a 600-mile front line. My story tries to give a detailed and intimate look at one spot on this front line, on one particular day.

More stories from the past year of war

Eugenia Emerald at her home in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 9. Her baby is due in April.

For Ukrainians, it's been 12 months of bloodshed, separated families, anger, confusion, anxiety, hope, and a lot of wondering how the war will end.

Viktoriia Sydorska, 33, and her daughter, Varvara, 7, evacuated to Lviv, Ukraine, after their hometown of Kherson was overrun by Russian troops. Varvara has been attending school online but misses her friends and her school work is disrupted by frequent air raid sirens.
 

Ukraine children struggle with school, stability as war hits one year

An estimated 5 million Ukrainian children are displaced inside the country by war with Russia. Many of them are struggling with school, mental health

In this handout provided by Led By Donkeys, activists pour paint onto the road to create a giant Ukrainian flag outside the Russian Embassy on February 23, 2023 in London, England.
 

Ukrainians overwhelmingly reject conceding land to end war, poll shows: Updates

An overwhelming majority of Ukrainians remain unwilling to concede any territory to end the yearlong war with Russia. Live updates.

Ukrainian servicemen prepare self-made rockets at the frontline in Donetsk region, Ukraine, Monday, Feb. 13, 2023.
 

Demands increase for more oversight of Ukraine military aid

A special inspector general and House Republicans have called for more oversight of the more than $100 billion in aid sent to Ukraine.

Children look through a car window as they and other refugees from the Kharkiv Region of Ukraine come to a temporary camp in Belgorod, Russia, Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2022. Thousands fled northeastern Ukraine to Russia amid the Ukrainian counteroffensive in the region.
 

A year after invasion, Ukrainian refugees unsure when they'll go home

How many refugees return is a question with important ramifications: For tensions in their host countries, and the likelihood of rebuilding at home.

What are tactical nuclear weapons and how many does Russia have?
 

What is a tactical nuclear weapon?

As Putin halts START treaty participation and inspections, we explain the difference between strategic weapons and 'tactical nukes'.

 

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