Fight medic Olena Ivanenko, 44, whose army name signal is “Ryzh,” takes a break from the entrance line within the northeastern metropolis of Sumy, Ukraine, earlier this yr.
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Anton Shtuka for NPR
KYIV and KHARKIV, Ukraine — Maryna Mytsiuk spends her free time at a capturing vary outdoors Kyiv, hyper-focused on hitting her targets. She’s received to observe. She’s ready for a name that, any day, will ship her to struggle.
“After all, I would prefer to be in a fight place,” stated Mytsiuk, a 27-year-old folklore scholar who speaks Japanese and works at a nonprofit. “With my construct and top, I am not a pure match for that … so I am coaching very laborious.”
She is amongst a rising variety of Ukrainian ladies becoming a member of the army as Russia’s full-scale struggle on the nation nears its fourth yr, and troops stay in brief provide. This comes as an finish to the preventing seems no nearer than it was when President Trump took workplace in January vowing to rapidly dealer peace.
Mytsiuk stated the Ukrainian army has turn out to be way more receptive to ladies because the early days of the full-scale invasion, when Ukrainian males had been lining up at recruitment facilities to turn out to be troopers.
She needed to enroll, too, however was advised she can be finest off within the kitchen, she stated, “the place I may make dumplings.”
Mytsiuk, nonetheless, plowed forward. She enrolled at a army college for a second diploma, graduating this summer time. She regarded into a number of brigades and utilized to these with particular forces items. She had tough conversations along with her mom and her boyfriend, a soldier. Each strongly oppose her choice.
Maryna Mytsiuk, a 27-year-old Ukrainian folklore scholar, meets NPR at a restaurant in Kyiv, Ukraine. She has been prepping for the day she hopes she’ll get referred to as up for fight.
Joanna Kakissis/NPR
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Joanna Kakissis/NPR
“I see ladies my age getting married, having youngsters,” she stated. “I can not assist having ideas, like am I doing the appropriate factor? However there is not any turning again now.”
Ultimately, she stated, she believes everybody in Ukraine who is ready to must combat, particularly with no ceasefire deal on the horizon.
Troopers by selection
Males between the ages of 25 and 60 may be drafted in Ukraine, however ladies are exempt.
“We’re volunteers selecting to combat,” Mytsiuk says.
Ukraine’s army says greater than 70,000 ladies had been serving within the nation’s armed forces as of January. Oksana Hryhorieva, the army’s gender adviser, says although that is solely about 8% of the nation’s whole armed forces, the variety of ladies has risen 40% since 2021.
“Till parliament handed a 2018 legislation,” she stated, “the army was patriarchal, and ladies weren’t legally allowed to serve in fight positions or examine all disciplines at army universities.”
Girls who joined battalions when Russia invaded elements of jap and southern Ukraine in 2014 did combat on the entrance line however had been categorized as noncombatants.
“For instance,” Hryhorieva stated, “we had biathletes who had been nice snipers, however in response to their paperwork, they had been cooks. It was completely unfair.”
Now, she says, ladies make up about 20% of army cadets and 1000’s are formally serving in fight positions. They embody fighter pilots, artillery commanders, drone operators and engineers. NPR met a number of ladies serving in varied army items this yr.
Yevhenia, 19, a reconnaissance drone pilot of the Khartiia thirteenth Nationwide Guard Brigade, works in a drone workshop in northeastern Ukraine earlier this yr.
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Some brigades, together with Khartiia and Azov, that are each a part of Ukraine’s Nationwide Guard, function ladies of their promoting campaigns. In a single fashionable Azov recruitment video launched this summer time, two dads in a automotive store discuss their children. One says his son is looking for a job at a important enterprise to exempt him from army service. The opposite says he has a daughter — and he or she’s a soldier.
The Khartiia thirteenth Nationwide Guard Brigade, based by a Ukrainian billionaire in early 2022 as a volunteer battalion, relies within the northeastern area of Kharkiv. It is well-resourced and an innovator in robotic warfare.
This spring, the brigade launched a female-centered recruitment marketing campaign that includes a soldier within the floor robotic methods division named Jess. She is proven on a area, a white ribbon tying again her pink hair, testing land drones which might be used to ship water, meals, gas and ammunition to troopers in front-line positions.
“I’m the one girl on this unit,” she says. “I’m 21 years outdated.”
The drone operators
At a Khartiia camp in northeastern Ukraine earlier this yr, two drone pilots — Yevheniia and Dasha — examined newly assembled first-person view (FPV) drones at a small hut with a 3D printer. The scent of shorn wooden, metallic and prompt espresso wafts by the air.
NPR is utilizing solely the drone pilots’ first names and name indicators on the request of the Ukrainian army, which cited safety issues.
Yevhenia “Furia” (left), 19, a reconnaissance drone pilot, and Dasha “Galactica,” 23, a first-person view drone pilot — each members of Ukraine’s Khartiia thirteenth Nationwide Guard Brigade — sit in a drone workshop on Feb. 1.
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Yevhenia, 19, resembles Arya Stark from Sport of Thrones. She makes use of the army name signal “Furia,” after the traditional Greco-Roman goddesses who punished evildoers for his or her sins. She stated male troopers usually ask her: What are you doing right here?
“And I say, I’ve to be right here, and that is that,” she stated.
“And why drones?” she added. “I believe as a result of I like to play laptop video games.”
She and Dasha had been amongst three ladies in an FPV drone unit of 15.
Dasha, 23, is tall and stern. She makes use of the decision signal “Galactica.” She was briefly married and, earlier than the struggle, was planning to turn out to be a police officer. Dasha stated her mom wept when she left for fundamental coaching.
“My mom needed me to remain at house, be a spouse, have youngsters,” Dasha stated. “And I selected what she calls a person’s career, residing with a continuing menace on my life.”
One other drone operator within the unit is in a muddy area a brief drive from camp. Daria is a former software program engineer in her early 30s. She is testing a brand new aerial drone because the solar units.
“Numerous my family members do not even know I am right here,” she stated. “They are saying, ‘She must go to Europe and be in some protected place.'”
Daria, a reconnaissance drone pilot of Ukraine’s Khartiia thirteenth Nationwide Guard Brigade, conducts a coaching flight in northeastern Ukraine earlier this yr.
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Daria volunteered as a humanitarian employee within the early days of the full-scale invasion, working 20 hours a day shuttling meals and different provides to front-line areas. She by no means felt like she was doing sufficient.
“I am Ukrainian, I am part of this nation, and I want to assist,” she stated.
She discovered tips on how to assemble and fly first-person-view drones, that are outfitted with video cameras and steerage methods managed remotely. Some brigades advised her there weren’t many roles for “women” however Khartiia welcomed her drone abilities.
“Right here,” she stated, “they knew what to do with me.”
She stated she has misplaced contact with many buddies since becoming a member of the army. Male buddies have fled the nation to keep away from the draft. She stated she has struggled to not decide them.
“It is their selection,” she stated, frowning. “They will do what they need to do. I can not say, ‘All people must be like me.’ Although I would like [to], actually.”
The medic
Earlier this yr within the metropolis of Sumy, additionally in northeastern Ukraine, a fight medic who had simply left the entrance line walked right into a magnificence salon.
Olena Ivanenko, who goes by the decision signal “Ryzh,” was exhausted. She slumped in an opulent chair, then closed her eyes as a beautician formed her eyebrows, then polished her nails.
Fight medic Olena Ivanenko at a magnificence salon throughout a break day from the entrance line earlier this yr.
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“I do know that in three days my nails shall be dirty once more,” she stated. “However taking a look at clear nails for sooner or later provides me such aid and pleasure. For me, it is as routine as breakfast.”
Ryzh is 44 and ran eating places earlier than becoming a member of the army in 2023. She was with the forty seventh Mechanized Brigade earlier than becoming a member of 412 Nemesis, a brigade in Ukraine’s unmanned methods, this yr.
“I made a decision after three months of service that I might keep within the military perpetually,” she stated. “I can’t return to civilian life. I really feel very snug right here. I really feel like I’m 100,000, million p.c in my place.”
Her service has additionally introduced appreciable heartbreak. She calls them “the darkish dates.” In a single battle in 2023, many in her unit died, together with certainly one of her closest buddies.
“He was the primary to get blown up,” she stated, “and I pulled him out of the dugout. That is most likely the toughest factor for me in the entire struggle up to now.”
Ryzh herself was wounded within the leg after a Russian tank fired at her. (She has since recovered.)
She stated she speaks quite a bit to civilians about what troopers face on the entrance line. She has observed the divide between troopers and civilians rising.
“Troopers say we’re working for victory, and civilians say we would like peace,” she stated. “However peace and victory are various things.”
The army intelligence analyst
At a Kyiv exhibition corridor this spring, Ukraine’s army intelligence unveiled state-of-the-art sea drones — and three members of the elite unit that function them.
A Ukrainian cowl of the tune “Sonne” by the German gothic metallic band Rammstein blared because the troopers strode onto the stage. They appeared in disguise, in balaclavas and sun shades. After they spoke by microphones, their voices had been distorted for safety causes. One was Xena, just like the warrior-princess of the Nineties TV collection.
A model of those sea drones, geared up with rockets and machine weapons, downed a Russian fighter jet within the Black Sea earlier this yr.
Grenades ready for drone drops by the Khartiia brigade, within the Kharkiv area of Ukraine, on Feb. 1.
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“Our problem,” Xena stated, “is to lure the Russians out of their bases after which hunt them. We intend to maintain adapting these sea drones till we will goal and hit Russian fighter jets, helicopters and ships beneath any situations.”
Xena has been a army analyst for a decade and joined this elite unit after the full-scale invasion, which has fueled a speedy innovation of weapons in Ukraine. She stated she’s used to being the one girl on her crew.
“And it is not straightforward,” she stated. “I do really feel assist from my guys, however generally they will act like children, you recognize? They see my assist function as bringing them cookies or tea — or one thing like that.”
She laughed into her balaclava and stated she has extra vital issues to fret about, like staying alive.
“Motivation helps,” she stated. “Motivation to win this struggle.”
A demise, and a brand new life
In early September, a big crowd stuffed St. Michael’s domed cathedral in Kyiv for a soldier’s funeral. As a army band performed, pallbearers carried out the coffin previous mourners kneeling in respect.
The household clutched a framed portrait of the fallen soldier: a smiling younger girl with wire-rimmed glasses. Daria Lopatina, 19, was an engineer with the particular forces of the Azov brigade. She had dropped out of the Kyiv Faculty of Economics to defend Ukraine.
A army procession carrying the coffin of 19-year-old Daria Lopatina throughout her funeral on Sept. 8, in Kyiv, Ukraine. Lopatina was an engineer from Ukraine’s Azov 1st Battalion, killed in motion throughout a fight mission on the entrance line.
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Paula Bronstein/Getty Photos
Saluting her coffin was Ruslan Shelar, who works on the Protection Ministry with Lopatina’s father. Shelar stated he has observed extra ladies enlisting, particularly these beneath 25. He factors out Lopatina was 8 years outdated when Russia backed paramilitaries to grab elements of jap Ukraine and illegally annex Crimea in 2014 — earlier than the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion in 2022.
“She grew up with struggle,” he stated, “surrounded by individuals who had taken half in it. Her path was set.”
Ukraine’s armed forces don’t disclose Ukrainian casualty figures, so it is unclear what number of feminine troopers have died. The stakes are clear to Maryna Mytsiuk, the brand new recruit in Kyiv ready for her army project.
“I continuously give it some thought, about demise,” she stated. “Nevertheless it’s higher to die on the battlefield than from a missile hitting your house in Kyiv. Higher to die preventing than die in your knees.”
Olena Lysenko and Hanna Palamarenko contributed reporting from Kyiv.











