Kupiansk, Ukraine. (Credit: Chernichkin/Zaborona/Global Images Ukraine/ Getty)

“We saw four of these fucks going into a house, so we decided to strike it with our artillery. To our surprise there was a huge explosion. Clearly, they were using the place to store ammo. Then soldiers started pouring out of the basement. So we just started shooting them.” Vlad pulls up a video on his phone. I see a smouldering building and fleeing Russians. He swipes right and zooms in on a photo. “See: dead Russians.”
The Ukrainian 3rd Tank Brigade has been fighting in Kharkiv Oblast since last year. If things were bad in the beginning, they are even worse now. A few days ago, Ukrainian sources reported that the Russians have concentrated more than 100,000 soldiers, 900 tanks and 370 multiple rocket launch systems. According to Serhii Cherevatyi, Ukrainian Deputy Commander for Strategic Communications of the Eastern Military Grouping, Russia has also deployed airborne units and the best motorised infantry units there.
Kupyansk has always been of huge strategic importance for both Ukraine and Russia. Located 120km from Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second city, it has been, since the late 19th century, a vital railway junction: five lines intersect there and at the adjacent town of Kupyansk Vuzlovyi. One of these lines leads into Russia, making the city a vital logistics hub for the invading forces. This is largely why the Russians went for Kupyansk immediately after last year’s full-scale invasion, viewing it as a potential regional headquarters. They were welcomed into Kupyansk with no military or political resistance: the city’s mayor reportedly spoke to a Russian commander over the phone, and then simply surrendered. When Ukrainian forces destroyed a bridge into the town to try to slow the Russian advance, the mayor helped the invading troops find an alternative route.
The Russians treated the population with typical brutality — torturing them and forcing them sign documents pledging loyalty to Russia — until Ukrainian forces liberated them on 9 September 2022. As the Russians retreated across the Oskil river they turned their artillery on Kupyansk, destroying civilian infrastructure and demolishing a hospital, as well as a care home for the elderly and mentally ill.
Cut off from supplies along the northeastern front, the Russians have been pounding Kupyansk ever since. As of March 2023, only around 20% of the city’s pre-war population remained. But, in this instance, turning the city’s population into Russians is of less importance to Moscow than seizing its infrastructure. Not only does it house valuable rail connections to towns in northern Ukraine and Russia, but also to the Donbas. This means that control over the town is key in Ukraine’s efforts to continue fuelling their advances in the south.
I arrive at a small base tucked away behind a rusted iron gate that opens into a courtyard strewn with gym equipment. Free weights, a barbell and a pull-up bar bolted to the wall set the scene. A punch bag hangs on a chain dangling from the ceiling. Testosterone is heavy in the air.
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