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Why fighters from post-Soviet world flock to Ukraine’s banner

People from around the world have joined the fight against Russia in Ukraine, but for those from Chechnya and former Soviet republics Belarus and Georgia, the stakes feel especially high: their own freedom.

The exact number of battalions and fighters of such origin has not been officially divulged. But testimony from commanders and soldiers suggests thousands have flocked to Ukraine driven by a sense of shared responsibility.

Why We Wrote This

What motivates foreigners to fight and die for Ukraine? Those from Chechnya, Belarus, and Georgia say their countries will never enjoy freedom or democracy unless Russia is defeated. And so Ukraine’s war is their war.

“Former Soviet Union countries have been captives of Russia for 70 years,” says Commander Mamuka Mamulashvili, who has some 1,800 men under his command, 65% of them battle-hardened Georgians.

In a Kyiv apartment used by Chechen fighters to store weapons and rest between front-line missions, French-speaking Maga says he would prefer to have the chance to decide his country’s future at the polls rather than fight in a foreign country. “We don’t want to kill anyone. But we want to be free,” he says.

“We need to stop Russian aggression,” says Tor, a stocky English speaker. “If we don’t do it today, it will never stop. And the stronger Russia gets, the smaller our chances of freedom.”

On Kriposnyi Lane in central Kyiv, captured Russian military vehicles stand in front of the National Museum of Military History. Just up the street, a bronze plaque affixed to a wall pays tribute to Imam Shamil, a 19th-century leader of the Caucasian resistance to the Russian Empire, and inspiration for subsequent Chechen resistance to Moscow’s rule.

The proximity of the two signs of defiance hints at a sense of common cause for fighters from across the post-Soviet world, thousands of whom have come to Ukraine’s aid since the Russian invasion.

“We need to stop Russian aggression,” says Tor, a stocky English-speaking Chechen fighter resting in Kyiv between rotations to the front line in Bakhmut. “If we don’t do it today, it will never stop. And the stronger Russia gets, the smaller our chances of freedom.”

Why We Wrote This

What motivates foreigners to fight and die for Ukraine? Those from Chechnya, Belarus, and Georgia say their countries will never enjoy freedom or democracy unless Russia is defeated. And so Ukraine’s war is their war.

People from around the world have joined the fight against Russia in Ukraine, but for those from Chechnya and former Soviet republics Belarus and Georgia, the stakes feel especially high. They say their countries will never enjoy freedom or democracy unless Russia is defeated in Ukraine. And so Ukraine’s war is their war.

The exact number of battalions and fighters of such origin has not been officially divulged. Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense and the Security Service both declined to answer questions on the subject. But testimony from commanders and soldiers suggests thousands have flocked to Ukraine driven by a sense of shared responsibility.

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