Close Menu
FlyMarshallFlyMarshall
  • Aviation
    • AeroTime
    • Airways Magazine
    • Simple Flying
  • Corporate
    • AINonline
    • Corporate Jet Investor
  • Cargo
    • Air Cargo News
    • Cargo Facts
  • Military
    • The Aviationist
  • Defense
  • OEMs
    • Airbus RSS Directory
  • Regulators
    • EASA
    • USAF RSS Directory
What's Hot

JetBlue Wants A Merger: United, Alaska, And Southwest, Are Frontrunners

March 25, 2026

Eve flies eVTOL prototype for Brazilian president in high-profile test milestone

March 25, 2026

Airborne 03.13.26: R66 TURBINETRUCK!, UT Airport Reprieve, ANN Needs Stringers

March 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Demo
  • Aviation
    • AeroTime
    • Airways Magazine
    • Simple Flying
  • Corporate
    • AINonline
    • Corporate Jet Investor
  • Cargo
    • Air Cargo News
    • Cargo Facts
  • Military
    • The Aviationist
  • Defense
  • OEMs
    • Airbus RSS Directory
  • Regulators
    • EASA
    • USAF RSS Directory
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Demo
Home » Recovery, resilience and returning from war in Ukraine
Defense News (Air)

Recovery, resilience and returning from war in Ukraine

FlyMarshall NewsroomBy FlyMarshall NewsroomOctober 25, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

LVIV, Ukraine — “I’m not disabled, I’m upgraded.” These were words I remember vividly from one Ukrainian army veteran, Serhiy.

Like other Ukrainian soldiers, he identified himself by first name only for security reasons.

Serhiy had been lucky as far as injuries went. A mine had blown off his leg below the knee but he could comfortably jog and skipped about 20 reps with a jump rope, using his good leg.

He’d been far luckier, say, than a former engineer named Artem I met in Kyiv.

During Ukraine’s failed 2023 counteroffensive, a drone-dropped explosive had sheared him almost entirely in half. When I met him more than a year later in a rehabilitation center, he was walking on his arms, doing an assisted bench press, climbing ropes and said he could even comfortably drive a car.

It is as if Serhiy, Artem and others like them take the Green Knight from Monty Python’s admonition that “it is just a flesh wound” literally. They have found ways to live their lives as productively as possible — and many still want to serve their country, even back at the front line.

Serhii Pozniak, a sniper unit commander with the 27th national guard brigade, speaks to soldiers during training near Kyiv, Ukraine, Feb. 17, 2025. (Evgeniy Maloletka/AP)

“Ukraine is the best place in the world for prosthetics, they have the most advanced care and equipment,” said Eddy Scott, a British humanitarian volunteer who lost an arm and a leg evacuating civilians in eastern Ukraine.

In the eight months he has been recuperating at the Superhumans Center, a state-of-the-art facility in Lviv, Scott has seen how Ukrainian surgeons have stitched up the most seemingly hopeless cases.

“They have the most people to learn on,” he says with a shrug and a weary smile.

Ukraine has perhaps 25,000 amputees, most of them veterans, and many more who have suffered all kinds of combat wounds and must be reintegrated into society — at a time when the Russian invasion continues at full pace in Ukraine’s east, and major cities such as Kyiv are being regularly bombed.

On top of it all, there is the mental trauma inflicted upon so many soldiers, not just for those fighting, but for prisoners of war who endured horrific conditions in Russian captivity.

I spoke recently with Oleksii, a soldier who was taken prisoner after the siege of Mariupol in 2022 and endured just under two years in Russian captivity.

He, like many, speaks in euphemisms, noting, “the roof is leaking,” to describe how lives fall apart when they return to Ukrainian society.

Oleksii said that the worst part of his return was the survivor’s guilt.

Despite being back in Ukraine with his family — and a supportive community of veterans — he was tormented by the knowledge that many of his comrades in arms were suffering the same torture and deprivation he had been subjected to.

“I knew 18 people who died around me” of disease, torture and starvation, he said.

Many soldiers say the difficulties in civilian life stem from knowing few people who truly understand their struggles.

Seeing young men and women enjoying coffee at the country’s chic cafes or partying in bars and nightclubs can yield feelings that sacrifices have gone unappreciated.

“It is their turn,” is how one veteran summed up the attitude toward those who have not yet fought in the war.

Some veterans, meanwhile, like Serhiy, have begun looking around for units that admit amputees.

The idea is less crazy than it sounds — with the rise of drone warfare, an operator sitting motionless in a trench or a farmhouse basement can do more damage than the best special forces soldier.

Tom Mutch is a Ukraine-based journalist from New Zealand. He is the author of The Dogs of Mariupol, available now.

source

FlyMarshall Newsroom
  • Website

Related Posts

Marines test ‘cruise control’ swim feature on amphibious vehicle prototype

March 22, 2026

Texelis, Scata team up on medium-heavy vehicle that can do drone defense

March 21, 2026

Ukraine deploys units to 5 Middle East countries to intercept drones

March 21, 2026

Two suspected Iranian spies reportedly arrested near UK submarine base

March 21, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

JetBlue Wants A Merger: United, Alaska, And Southwest, Are Frontrunners

March 25, 2026

Eve flies eVTOL prototype for Brazilian president in high-profile test milestone

March 25, 2026

Airborne 03.13.26: R66 TURBINETRUCK!, UT Airport Reprieve, ANN Needs Stringers

March 25, 2026

NTSB Final Report: Davis DA-3

March 25, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Loading
About Us

Welcome to FlyMarshall — where information meets altitude. We believe aviation isn’t just about aircraft and routes; it’s about stories in flight, innovations that propel us forward, and the people who make the skies safer, smarter, and more connected.

 

Useful Links
  • Business / Corporate Aviation
  • Cargo
  • Commercial Aviation
  • Defense News (Air)
  • Military / Defense Aviation
Quick Links
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Subscribe to Updates

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Loading
Copyright © 2026 Flymarshall.All Right Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version