Tim Mak Profile picture
Mar 14 15 tweets 8 min read
Good morning from Ukraine.

Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.

And further to the south, unarmed Ukrainians continue to bravely demonstrate against Russian occupation. Notice no one reacts w fear when shots are fired in this video from Kherson
The Russian mil continues to press Kyiv but they continue to be stuck in an “operational pause” — they are making some slight progress in the south but without much momentum.

While there were Americans and other foreign fighter training at the Yavoriv training center, none appear to have been among the 35 killed and 134 injured yesterday morning near the Polish border.

buzzfeednews.com/article/christ…
Meanwhile near Kyiv, in the northern suburb of Obolon, more images of destruction in civilian areas, via Ukrainian government
I ran into a sr Ukrainian military official at 345am. News of Kadyrov arriving near Kyiv had reached him.

“F*** Kadyrov,” he said, unprompted, while we waited for air sirens to abate.

Interesting who you will run into in your local bomb shelter.
Another day traveling Ukraine’s rural routes. The checkpoints are getting much smoother… guards have been joking around with us when they see us… rifles slung, not held in the low ready position… a reflection of how Ukrainians in this region feel the war is going for them
The smell at these checkpoints is sweetly burning firewood— many of them have small stoves set up at the CP.

It’s only a few degrees below freezing but it feels much colder for some reason.

If I do an interview outside for 30 minutes it will take an hour inside to fully warm up
I see Ukrainians along the side of the road grimly getting their work done.

I saw a gas station worker still sweeping and cleaning the site despite there being no gas…

I saw workers still filling potholes now that spring is here
Other scenes include soldiers scrolling on the phones while taking a break at a checkpoint, firefighter getting breakfast, and a Ukrainian joke: a dummy wearing body armor on the side of the road
With all the incoming info of violence and war, it’s still somewhat comforting that what Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher are saying is leading news broadcasts on Ukrainian television
This says something profound about what is important to a population. In this case cultural preservation:

In this photo disseminated by Ukrainian govt, Odesa is trying to protect a monument to Duke de Richelieu with sandbags
Am thinking today of the kindness we have experienced… as we evacuated Kyiv (along with hundreds of thousands of others) no hotels were available… one family also on the run took us in at a rented apartment

Here is me and @ElBeardsley having dinner w them:
They fed us, and I remember looking down at this plate of Ukrainian dumplings: “is ALL this for me?!” They were on the run too but refused to be anything but fine hosts

(On the night before, during evac, I had slept on a mattress I found under the stairs in a bldg without power)
The night we ate dumplings together their toddler also peed on me while we were sitting on the same bench

I told @MEvstatieva and she said it was “good luck” — we were part of what would become a multi-day mass exodus from Kyiv, and I was like, “we could use some of that!”
Today’s dogs of war photos are dedicated to the Ukrainians who refuse to leave their family members behind

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More from @timkmak

Mar 15
Good morning from Ukraine.

Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands, but was subject to airstrikes Tuesday which hit residential buildings areas around the city.

And tension is rising in the city due to a curfew that will begin this evening, and run until Thursday morning.
The curfew in Kyiv is the longest of its kind since a multi-day curfew was implemented in the first days of the war.

Back then, local authorities said they were on the hunt for Russian saboteurs in the city. This time, they are less descriptive as to why the curfew is necessary
NPR's @LeilaFadel reported from Kyiv that "the sounds of artillery, Russian strikes, that's commonplace" -- but also that Russian forces are 10 miles away from the city center and face enormous challenges if they attempt to breach the city's defenses

npr.org/live-updates/u… Image
Read 19 tweets
Mar 13
Morning to readers, from Ukraine to wherever you are seeing this.

Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.

But deadly news overnight: at least 35 have been killed, 135 injured, at the Yavoriv military base near the Polish border, an upwards estimate from initial reports.
Eight Russian rockets were launched from the Black Sea, per the governor of the Lviv Oblast.

It's a shocking development, and fractures the relative safety that those felt in western Ukraine, away from the front lines.
It's another wake-up call for Poland.

The Ukrainian military facility is only 22 miles from the border.

And it is in the Lviv Oblast, an area with strong Polish ties and roots.

And then there's the relative proximity to the rest of Europe:

Read 19 tweets
Mar 12
Morning from Ukraine to all those reading.

Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.

However, tensions are high along the Ukraine-Belarus border. On Friday afternoon, Ukrainian officials accused Russia of staging a false flag attack...
Ukrainian officials told NPR that two Russian fighters conducted three airstrikes on a Belarusian border village named Kopany.

I spoke to a Ukrainian military official who is in that region, and he said the odds of a Belarusian invasions were about "50/50"
No invasion by Belarusian troops yet.

Belarus has been used as a staging ground for Russian air/land attacks...

But there are signs Belarusian public would not support actively taking part in an invasion, as I discuss on Morning Edition:

npr.org/2022/03/12/108…
Read 21 tweets
Mar 11
Morning from Ukraine to readers waking up all over.

Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.

However, strikes overnight hit cities in Western Ukraine, places far from the front lines and which have not been hit since the early days of the war.
Many displaced Ukrainians have sought refuge in the western Oblasts.

This is a strike against that feeling of relative safety.

“This looks like a message [from Putin]: ‘I can shoot anywhere,’” Taras Yatsenko, the cofounder of a leading publication in western Ukraine, told me.
This depicts the aftermath of explosions in Ivano-Frankivsk, in western Ukraine, early this morning
Read 31 tweets
Mar 10
Morning to all from Ukraine -- another cold sunny day from where I am sitting.

Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands, with v little movement on the fronts around the capital city.

The world's eyes have instead been on the horrors in another place: the SE port city of Mariupol.
Russia bombed a maternity hospital in that city, and the images there are hard to process.

But observers of Putin's conduct in Syria, for example, would say that this is a standard part of the playbook.

Here’s just one image of the resulting devastation, shared by Ukraine’s Internal Affairs Ministry.

Pallor or ashen faces indicates shock or blood loss
Read 22 tweets
Mar 9
Morning to everyone who finds this.

Kyiv remains in Ukrainian hands.

However troubling signs overnight at the Chernobyl nuclear site, which lost power at 11:22 a.m. local time in Ukraine. The decommissioned site is controlled by Russian forces.
Before we get deep into the details, I want to pump the brakes a little about what this could mean.

A second meltdown/Chernobyl-sized disaster 2.0 is not in the cards. An emergency would likely take some time to develop, if it happens at all.

Emergency generators are continuing to provide power to critical systems at the Chernobyl site, reports NPR's Geoff Brumfiel, but repair to local transmission lines is made impossible by combat in the area.

Generators have 48 hours of fuel.

Read 24 tweets

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