They are Russians fighting against their homeland in Ukraine. Here’s why.

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Soldiers from the Free Russia Legion fire against Russian positions along the front line in the Donbas region.

Soldiers from the Free Russia Legion fire against Russian positions along the front line in the Donbas region.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

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The soldier knelt in the snow, aimed a rocket launcher and fired in the direction of Russian troops positioned about 1.6km away. He was set up at a Ukrainian firing position and looked just like the other Ukrainian troops fighting south of the city of Bakhmut in one of the most brutal theatres of the war.

But he and his comrades are not Ukrainian.

They are soldiers in a Ukrainian military unit made up entirely of Russians who are fighting and killing their own countrymen.

They have taken up arms against their home country for a variety of reasons, including a sense of moral outrage at their country’s invasion, a desire to defend their adopted homeland of Ukraine or because of a visceral dislike of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

And they have earned enough trust from Ukrainian commanders to take their place among the forces viciously fighting the Russian military.

“A real Russian man doesn’t engage in such an aggressive war, won’t rape children, kill women and elderly people,” said one Russian fighter with the military call sign Caesar, ticking off atrocities committed by Russian soldiers that motivated him to leave his native St. Petersburg and fight for Ukraine. “That’s why I don’t have remorse. I do my job, and I’ve killed a lot of them.”

Nearly a year into the war, the Free Russia Legion, as the unit is called, has received little attention – in part to protect the soldiers from reprisals by Russia.

However, there is also some reluctance within the Ukrainian military to highlight the efforts of soldiers whose home country has done so much harm to Ukraine.

Several hundred of them are

concentrated in the area around Bakhmut,

in eastern Ukraine, officials said; they are always grouped with their own but are overseen by Ukrainian officers.

In interviews, some Russian soldiers said they were already living in Ukraine when Russian forces invaded last year and felt an obligation to defend their adopted country. Others, often with no military experience, crossed into Ukraine from Russia after the war began, moved by a sense that the Kremlin’s invasion was profoundly unjust.

“We haven’t come here to prove anything,” said one soldier with the call sign Zaza. “We’ve come here to help Ukraine achieve the full withdrawal of Russian forces from Ukrainian territory and the future de-Putinisation of Russia.”

The soldier training with the Free Russia Legion in the Kyiv region in Ukraine on Feb 7, 2023.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

At the start of the war, Ukrainian law prevented Russian citizens from joining the armed forces. It took until August to finalise legislation that would allow the Legion to legally join the fight, said Mr Andriy Yusov, a spokesman for Ukraine’s military intelligence service.

“There was a large number of Russians who because of their moral principles could not remain indifferent and were searching for a way to enter the ranks of the defenders of Ukraine,” Mr Yusov said, explaining the military’s motivation to create the unit.

“All legionnaires have come with a huge desire to stop Putin’s horde and free Russia from dictatorship,” he added.

The group operates under the umbrella of Ukraine’s International Legion.

It is a fighting force that includes units made up of American and British volunteers, as well as Belarusians, Georgians and others.

It is not easy to join, Russian soldiers said. They have to submit an application and undergo an extensive background check that includes polygraph tests.

Only then can they enter basic training.

As Russian passport holders, they are inevitably met with distrust. There have been several attempts by Russian spies to infiltrate the Legion, Mr Yusov said.

The soldiers said they struggled to explain their decision to family back in Russia.

The soldiers have earned enough trust to take their place among the forces viciously fighting the Russian military.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

Reports of atrocities committed by Russian troops, including the butchering of civilians in the Kyiv suburbs of Bucha and Irpin, are dismissed as foreign propaganda in their homeland.

“They don’t understand the whole truth,” said a 32-year-old soldier with the call sign Miami, who said his parents had urged him to fight on the Russian side. “They’re told that bad people live here, and they believe it. They don’t believe that the second-biggest army in the world could kill regular people.”

Back at the front in eastern Ukraine, the shelling never stops for long. Russian forces have been hammering away at Ukrainian positions, trying to dislodge them around Bakhmut in advance of an expected offensive push to take all of the eastern region known as the Donbas.

On a recent visit to a firing position, the precise location of which The New York Times is withholding for security reasons, the ground rumbled, and artillery shells crisscrossed a clear sky. That day, Russian forces had launched a volley of grad rockets that blanketed the area, wounding several civilians but sparing the soldiers.

“They’re striking everywhere,” a panting Russian soldier said as he took cover in a dugout in a neighbourhood of small, snow-covered cottages.

Nearly a year into the war, the Free Russia Legion, as the unit is called, has received little attention.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

Soldiers in the Legion said that they were continuing to hold the line.

But some have already begun to think beyond the immediate battle, and even beyond the war in Ukraine, to what comes next.

“My task is not just to protect the people of Ukraine,” said Caesar, 50. “If I remain alive after this phase and all Ukrainian territory is liberated, I will absolutely continue fighting, with a weapon in my hand, to overthrow this Kremlin regime.”

NYTIMES

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