
‘That idiot Putin wants to take it all': Russia's kamikaze tactics fuel a slow advance in Ukraine
Velykyi's home is at No 18 Petrenko Street, in the small agricultural village of Maliyivka. It is located on the administrative border between Dnipropetrovsk and Donetsk provinces in central-eastern Ukraine. Once Russian troops were far away. Latterly, they have crept nearer, besieging the city of Pokrovsk and capturing one grassy meadow after another.
Europe's biggest war since 1945 continues to rage. Its scale is epic: battles are fought across a 600-mile (965km) frontline. In recent months, the Kremlin has stepped up its bombardment of Ukraine's cities and towns. Most nights it sends hundreds of drones and ballistic missiles. A weary population has got used to the wail of air raid sirens and the kettle drum boom of explosions.
In May, fighting engulfed Maliyivka. It became a Russian target. First, the house by the old bus stop was destroyed. Then everything got hit. The village's 300-odd residents left, with the exception of Velykyi and his equally stubborn neighbour Mykola. For a while volunteers dropped off food and water for the pair. Eventually, when it got too dangerous, they stopped coming.
Last week, Velykyi went to call on his friend, bringing tea and sweets as usual, only to discover that Mykola had vanished. Dead chickens lay in the yard. 'I called Mykola's name but he'd gone. I thought: 'My God, is it really true that our military is going to retreat,'' he said. He spent the next day hiding in a dugout made by Ukrainian soldiers, venturing out in the evening to fetch water from Mykola's well.
While he was away a missile fell on his house. 'I heard BANG. My shed was gone, in a split second. There was nothing left. It was probably a glide bomb or something,' he said. At dawn, he freed his animals and set off on foot across the fields. Behind, was his flattened home; to the right a crater-pitted road; ahead the large village of Velykomykhailivka. He walked for six hours under a sweltering sky.
For the first time, Russian combat units are close to seizing territory in Dnipropetrovsk oblast. In 2022, the Kremlin said it had 'annexed' four Ukrainian provinces – Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia – despite only fully controlling Luhansk. Most believe Dnipropetrovsk will be added to this list, should Russian troops break through, in Maliyivka and elsewhere.
Since Donald Trump's return in January to the White House, negotiations have taken place between Washington and Moscow over a possible peace deal. This week Volodymyr Zelenskyy restarted direct talks with the Kremlin. So far, though, Vladimir Putin, has refused to compromise. He wants Zelenskyy removed, Ukraine demilitarised and a new map of Europe drawn up, featuring a bigger Russia.
'That idiot Putin wants to take it all. Our most fertile land. That's what it's all about,' Velykyi said, climbing onboard a minibus owned by Proliska, a Ukrainian charity that rescues civilians. The vehicle trundled into Velykomykhailivka, led by soldiers riding in a green-painted van. On its roof were antennae and what looked like multisized upturned buckets: electronic equipment to disable Russian drones.
The village was eerily empty. A school with wooden totem poles and a mural painted with a dove was deserted. The owners of the bar and supermarket on the high street are gone, both shut for good. Apples lay on a verge, unpicked, alongside silent cottages and incongruously blooming kitchen gardens. A few buildings had been walloped. Most were intact. The enemy, it appeared, was coming.
'My country has a future. It's just a question of time,' Serhii Andriyanov said, as volunteers stretchered his 85-year-old grandmother Halyna into an ambulance. 'She had a heart attack six months ago,' he said. His mother, Svitlana, carried their meagre belongings: plastic bags; two kittens in a rectangular cardboard box; and a tub filled with eggs. The chickens would be staying behind.
The convoy picked up two more senior citizens. Police had used an armoured vehicle to collect one of them, Lidia Prysiazhena, from the underfire village of Havrylivka. How were things there? 'Bad,' she replied. Another pensioner, Anatoliy Baraley, said he did not want to leave. 'My daughter repeatedly badgered me to go somewhere safer.'
Ukrainian soldiers defending Dnipropetrovsk oblast describe the frontline as 'stable' but acknowledge the situation is 'dynamic'. 'Our task is to stop them,' Capt Viktor Danyshchuk said. He conceded his mechanised brigade – the 31st – was short of drones, ammunition and infantry. 'Our only option is to keep fighting. We are defending our land,' he said. Asked about Trump's Ukraine policy, he said: 'It's hard to make sense of it.'
Alex Budilov, a combat officer with the brigade, said the Russians exaggerated their battlefield gains for propaganda purposes, in order to spread fear and panic among the local population. They had sustained colossal losses in manpower to achieve the 'fleeting appearance of success', he suggested. 'A couple of dickhead Russian soldiers raise a flag next to a village. Minutes later we wipe them out,' he said.
Speaking in a rear forest camp, Budilov called Moscow's assault tactics 'insidious' and said it involved sacrificing hundreds of soldiers to achieve success. First, it sends in a heavily protected tank, nicknamed 'the barn', which is covered in bulky metal cages to repel Ukrainian drones. Other military vehicles accompany it. They include tanks, armoured personnel carriers and trucks loaded with assault troops.
A second motorised group follows made up of men on motorbikes and buggies. Their goal is to expose Ukrainian defensive positions. 'They deliberately enter the kill zone and are neutralised after revealing our fire points,' Budilov said. Lastly, small groups of infantry are sent on one-way missions to infiltrate forest belts. 'They clear minefields with their own bodies,' he said.
According to western estimates, Russia has suffered more than one million casualties, killed and wounded – a toll far higher than Soviet losses from the war in Afghanistan. 'It's a very Russian idea that you are a small part of something bigger. You sacrifice your life to do something for history. It's a totalitarian mind virus,' Budilov suggested, arguing that Russians and Ukrainians were 'very different'.
On top of kamikaze attacks, Russia has stepped up its bombardment of the Dnipropetrovsk region. At 9.40am on Saturday, a drone blew up outside a police station and outpatient clinic in the village of Oleksandrivka. Shrapnel killed a 70-year-old woman riding past on a moped, Valentyna Podolna. Another passerby Mykola Horoshko, died nearby, not far from a second world war memorial.
The scene afterwards was hellish. Podolna's flip-flops lay on the pavement, next to a blood-spattered kerbstone and a white blanket, used to cover her body. The explosion incinerated parked cars, transforming them into ashen engine parts and smouldering metal. It shredded a grove of walnut trees; their stumps resembled giant black coral. Tiles on the roof of the shop opposite were left crazily askew.
'This happened because of imperial ambition,' Volodymyr Shevchenko, a driver at the medical clinic, said. He showed off the consultation rooms inside his ravaged workplace, now littered with broken glass. Parts of the bomb gouged holes in his ambulance. Shevchenko said: 'Putin is a person suffering from schizophrenia. In public he behaves normally. In reality he is insane. His only desire is to force his goals on the world.'
Velykyi was dropped off at a registration centre in the city of Pavlohrad, which was also pounded last week by numerous drones and several missiles. Dozens of displaced people were already staying there. Most were elderly. Some dozed on metal-framed beds. They had been set up on the stage and around the auditorium of a former theatre.
Oleksandr Holovko, the head of Velykomykhailivka's village council evacuation department, said people began leaving the area in February. On 1 June a compulsory evacuation order was issued to families with children. Holovko said he and the police chief had subsequently made various attempts to persuade Velykyi – the last person in his village – to depart, as fighting became intense.
'The place is completely destroyed. Every house is either fully in ruins or partially. It's kapiets [messed up],' Holovko said, adding it was the same in neighbouring Sichneve and Novoselivka. Vitalii Hrychkoiedov, a field officer with Proliska, added: 'Velykyi wouldn't have survived had he stayed much longer. It's very dangerous.'
Caseworkers asked the pensioner if he had a Ukrainian passport. He shook his head and said he arrived with nothing but his clothes: grubby trousers and a long-sleeved top. Before the war, his village was 'excellent'. 'I worked on a combine harvester. We had two roads, a shop and a school bus. Everyone was my friend,' he said. This spring, he had planted potatoes and onions in his vegetable patch.
'Everything is still there. It's a shame,' he said.
Luke Harding's Invasion: Russia's Bloody War and Ukraine's Fight for Survival, shortlisted for the Orwell prize, is published by Guardian Faber
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
21 minutes ago
- The Sun
‘I will tell Putin to end this war': Trump reveals first details of showdown Putin talks & hints Zelensky could still go
DONALD Trump has revealed details for the highly-anticipated crunch talks with Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday. The US President described the upcoming talks as a "feel-out meeting" - and said that his Russian counterpart wants to get the war "over with". 7 7 7 7 He also told reporters that he would tell Putin: "You've got to end this war, you've got to end it." The historic showdown scheduled for August 15 will mark the first time the pair have met since June 2019, with the White House still weighing up whether or not to invite Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Trump is also set to dial in with European leaders including Zelensky on Wednesday for an emergency summit in preparation for the Putin meeting. He said he would call European leaders "who I get along with very well" after leaving the talks. It comes as a top Vladimir Putin crony urged the tyrant to end his war in Ukraine - just days before crunch talks with Donald Trump, reports say. The Deputy Head of Putin's administration, Dmitry Kozak, has reportedly encouraged the Russian leader to halt the invasion and begin peace talks. It comes after sources close to the US President said that they were "very hopeful" Ukraine's leader would be invited to the highly-anticipated talks. One senior administration official told NBC News that a trilateral meeting remains "absolutely" possible. Another official briefed on White House conversations said: "It's being discussed." It is believed that no official invite has been talked about with Kyiv as of yet. A senior White House official explained: "Right now, the White House is focusing on planning the bilateral meeting requested by President Putin." Zelensky has already been adamant that he must be involved in any peace talks as they directly impact on the future of his country. Speaking last week, the brave leader said any pact struck without Kyiv's involvement would be "stillborn decisions against peace" and would fail before they even began. "Any decisions that are against us, any decisions that are without Ukraine, are at the same time decisions against peace," he said. "They will not achieve anything." His powerful stance has now been echoed by European leaders. Sir Keir Starmer and the leaders of France, Italy, Poland, Finland and the EU all issued a stark warning saying there can be no peace without Ukraine. 7 7 Longtime Putin ally Kozak, 66, is said to have stepped out of line after years of being secretly opposed to the war, the New York Times reported. He is believed to have presented a plan to end the fighting, which even included proposals for internal reforms. Before the full-scale invasion in 2022, Kozak warned the Russian president about the risks of fierce Ukrainian resistance. He also tried but failed to negotiate a working truce after the war started. Western officials claimed that Kozak continued to contact them over the last few years, seeking arguments that might sway Putin. The top Russian aide managed the integration of Crimea into Russia after it was annexed in 2014. Who is Dmitry Kozak? by Harvey Geh LONGTIME Putin ally Dmitry Kozak rose from a St. Petersburg prosecutor to deputy head of Putin's administration through close ties with the Russian President. Born in what was Soviet Ukraine, he served in GRU special forces before training as a lawyer. He has managed crucial projects like the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics and the integration of Crimea after it was annexed. In 2020 he became Russia's lead envoy to Kyiv, negotiating over Donbas and Transnistria. Kozak privately warned Putin that invading Ukraine was a mistake, and after proposing a peace deal. He has been sidelined since his secret opposition to the war. Many of his duties have been slowly handed off to his de-facto replacement Sergei Kiriyenko. Because of his central role in Crimea's annexation and Ukraine destabilisation, Kozak faces sanctions from the UK, EU and US. He also managed preparations for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Russia. But the top official has lost much of his political influence since Putin's bloody invasion. The call with European leaders on Wednesday has been organised by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz as European leaders desperately scramble to get their message across to Trump. The online summit will reportedly focus on how to put pressure on Russia, how to deal with Ukrainian territories seized by Russia, security guarantees for Kyiv and the prospect of potential peace talks. European leaders have made it clear that Putin must first agree to a ceasefire before any peace talks can take place. 7


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Ukraine prepared to cede territory held by Russia
Ukraine could agree to stop fighting and cede territory already held by Russia as part of a European-backed plan for peace. Volodymyr Zelensky told European leaders that they must reject any settlement proposed by Donald Trump which sees them giving up Ukrainian land they still hold - but that Ukrainian territory in Russia's control could be on the table. This would mean freezing the frontline where it is and handing Russia de-facto control of the territory it occupies in Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson and Crimea. The softening of the negotiating position comes ahead of crunch talks between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in Alaska this Friday. 'The plan can only be related to the current positions held by the militaries,' a Western official said, characterising a frantic weekend of diplomacy between Kyiv and its allies. Ukraine and Europe have become increasingly concerned that Mr Trump and Putin could negotiate an end to the long-running war over Mr Zelensky's head. 'I have many fears and a lot of hope,' Poland's prime minister said on Monday.


Times
an hour ago
- Times
Putin cannot be trusted, No 10 warns before his summit with Trump
Downing Street has warned President Trump not to trust President Putin to stick to a Ukraine ceasefire deal, as western leaders scramble to help Kyiv prepare for a peace summit on Friday. Putin cannot be trusted 'as far as you could throw him', No 10 said on Monday, as Britain pushed for guarantees to ensure that any pause in the fighting agreed at the meeting between the two presidents is not used by Russia simply as a breathing space to prepare for a new offensive. European leaders urged Trump over the weekend to allow Ukraine to take part in the talks, nervous at what he might cede to Putin at the summit. The structure of the talks was described by UK government sources as 'fluid' after Trump signalled that he might be willing to include President Zelensky in the meeting taking place in Alaska. The Ukrainian leader has said that anything agreed without him will be 'dead'.