Stephen “Elvis” Pressley has been fighting in Ukraine since March, arriving just weeks after Russia invaded. He’s a strong believer in protecting the lives of the innocent, and across his months living in the country he has become enamoured with Ukrainian hospitality, nationalism and pride.
But the 27-year-old Californian has also become disillusioned with the way the army is run, saying the Soviet-era style of management was harming soldiers.
“I knew there was corruption coming to Ukraine as an ex-Soviet bloc country, but I just didn’t understand how deep the rabbit hole went,” he said.
Crikey has spoken separately to three military specialists from the UK and the US who each allege the armies are supplied with outdated weapons, raising concerns about the efficacy of Ukraine’s military — and how NATO and allied donations are being used. Similar concerns were raised by two other veterans Crikey spoke to in May.
A war of attrition
Pressley has been on the frontline for much of his time in Ukraine, working within a specialist weapons detachment of the International Legions. The former specialist E-4 in the US Army (the highest rank for junior enlisted recruits) said he was recruited while abroad but couldn’t reveal whom by due to a non-disclosure agreement.
He said mismanagement almost lost him his life. While fighting near the Azov chemical plant in Severodonetsk on June 10, he was in a building that came under artillery fire by Russians.
“I asked for clearance for fire and they told me to stand down. They said it would give away our position … this is while we’re taking artillery, small arms fire and a T-90 [tank] just levelled half the building,” he told Crikey via video chat.
“They do quantity over quality, which is not the Western way. We’re trained in small unit tactics, whereas the Russians will just throw hundreds of people in an area and they don’t give a shit if they live or die.”
Two weeks ago, Ukraine conceded the city to Russia.
Pressley has a US flag signed with the names of soldiers he meets — a tradition in Western warfare. Many of those who signed have lost their lives. Pressley struggled to talk about the fallen: “I pray to God every day … that this isn’t going to be a war of attrition … because I don’t think the West and the rest of the world are really ready to see and hear the true number [of deaths].”
While Pressley said he felt comfortable with many of the arms he was provided on the frontline — armed personally with a machine gun while his team had NATO anti-tank rockets — a huge concern was getting medical help to the frontline.
“There’s not enough painkillers for guys that are bleeding out and badly wounded. You have to pretty much suffer for hours and hours and hours until [medical personnel] can arrive,” he said.
“A lot of guys have been dying from sepsis, which is completely preventable.”
Pressley said he’s fought in Afghanistan and that the warfare in Ukraine was more brutal as soldiers fought directly with soldiers in urban fighting and trench warfare.
“This is way more intense, there’s no comparison — we don’t have air superiority, the logistics suck. We have to pretty much improvise, adapt and overcome in every situation we’re thrown into and the bureaucracy and the rear just don’t help — it makes it three times harder.”
NATO tanks missing from training bases
Both dual US-UK citizen Todd Chamberlain and UK citizen Mike Perkins said they were recruited by contacts of the Ukrainian Army to train Ukrainian soldiers. Chamberlain said he was given the title of major, while Perkins was his first lieutenant. Crikey first met Perkins at Europe’s large border crossing in Medyka, Poland, while on assignment covering the Ukrainian refugee crisis in April and has sighted Chamberlain’s passport.
A letter sighted by Crikey, reportedly written by members of the Ukrainian Army, asks border staff to allow Perkins and Chamberlain to cross into Ukraine. It’s stamped with the logo of a Ukrainian humanitarian organisation, though both Perkins and Chamberlain said this was to allow them to present as humanitarian workers to avoid detection by undercover Russian agents.
Chamberlain, who has formally been involved in the UK military and has since worked as a tank operator and mechanic, said he was contacted after commenting on a post in a Ukranian aid support Facebook group with details about armoured equipment. He said he checked the person’s passport and was put in contact with a UK resident who he understood to be the brigadier general of the Ukrainian Army with connections to the Ukrainian embassy. Crikey could not independently verify this contact’s identity.
“He basically recruited me to go over initially to train the Ukrainian military on the operation of these different platforms,” Perkins said, adding that this included being in command of equipment, organising a centralised staging point for it, determining where equipment has to go and when, and training soldiers on its use.
The UK has donated a range of military equipment, including 120 armoured vehicles, anti-tank missiles, thousands of night-vision devices and dozens of heavy-lift UAV systems to provide logistical support to isolated forces. In recent weeks, Britain pledged short-range Brimstone 1 missiles, Mastiff armoured patrol vehicles, Malloy T150 heavy-lift drones, Starstreak missiles and the Stormer HVM air defence system.
A letter written by Chamberlain stated that the pair were to travel to Ukraine to select and train five to 10 soldiers who spoke English and Ukrainian to train in driving armoured vehicles, including the Russian-built T-72 vehicles, before then going on to train other soldiers. Chamberlain planned to stay until July 25 and Perkins until July 8.
They had hoped to visit former British soldier Josh Griffiths, who was targeted in a Russian mortar attack and was being treated in a Kyiv hospital. Instead, they said they were transported directly to a secret military base on the outskirts of Kyiv upon their arrival on June 24, meeting with Ukrainian commanders who tested their knowledge of equipment.
“This military base where we were taken is supposed to be the most secret military base in Ukraine. But Ukraine can’t do secrets,” Chamberlain said, adding soldiers were permitted to bring women onto base after a night out, and it wasn’t uncommon to see the soldiers’ families, including young children, visiting.
They soon learned none of the equipment with which they were supposed to be training soldiers had arrived. They left within a week at a large personal financial cost.
Key equipment ‘locked in warehouses’
Perkins said the disorganisation was so bad that “Ukrainians [couldn’t] even get the simple thing of toilet roll into an accommodation block”. He said they weren’t initially given uniforms, there were no secure coms, night vision or thermal imaging.
“A lot of this stuff has gone over to Ukraine — however, it’s been stored in a warehouse and the quartermaster will not issue it out, in case it gets lost or damaged because he’s been told that he would then have to pay out of his own pocket to replace it,” Perkins said. He added that while those on the frontline were equipped, weaponry was taken off soldiers once they left — even in areas targeted by grenades and RPGs.
“People are dying because they haven’t got access to this equipment,” he said.
An additional issue he witnessed was the number of separate armies fighting for Ukraine without adequate communication systems, meaning those on the same side were occasionally engaged in warfare. Perkins, who is a paramedic, said he brought his own medical equipment with him, though locations lacked key items, such as defibrillators.
All three men are concerned that by the time the war ends there’ll be nothing left of Ukraine as cities are flattened across the country.
Michael Shoebridge, director of defence, strategy and national security at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, tells Crikey that chaos in war was to be expected and that individual soldiers don’t often have a clear picture of command and organisation. But he added that the war had also moved from its initial phase of a war of movement into one of attrition.
“This is a much more grinding, longer-term kind of conflict, which plays to the Russian military’s strengths,” he said.
“The Ukrainians are dependent on [Australia], NATO and other external materials support, and the production systems across NATO aren’t able to sustain wartime production. There are some limitations in the supplies that are getting to the Ukrainians.”
He said this created pressures for NATO about new forms of support, especially as infrastructure is destroyed across the country, making it harder for Ukraine to wage war. But the Ukrainian military had done a “remarkable” job in reinventing itself, he added, since the annexing of Crimea in 2014.
Despite the devastation, Pressley said he planned to “hang up his boots” in Ukraine if he survives the war. He, like many US veterans, lived on the streets in his home country, but said he was offered a number of jobs by Ukrainian locals.
“People don’t know what kind of courageous and brave men and women have died out here and the amazing things that I’ve seen in the sheer face of pure evil, knowing they were not going to walk away,” he said.
“I always say the best people in society are killed in war.”
Don’t know whether to laugh or cry at the surprised comments in this article.
The war has become a war of attrition – who would have thought?
By the time the war ends, there’ll be nothing of Ukraine left . . . . . who would have thought?
There is corruption and chaos in the way a corrupt country fights war – who would have thought?
Ukrainian soldiers are dying in the war – who would have thought?
Fighting a professional army is ‘more brutal’ than pinging off civilians in Afghanistan with the help of hi-tech air cover – who would have thought?
Many US vets live on the streets back home in the US, while war-mongering <anal-openings> like Bush and Bolton avoided the draft by joining the National Guard.
And what’s with the US flag in the middle of Ukraine? He’s not fighting for the US, is he . . . . is he?
Yes Peter, US veterans are thrown on the scrap heap like the millions of murdered civilians. I’ve often pondered how the US religious right, and their obsession with abortion, tallies the deaths of millions of various ethnic groups, including pregnant females, over there, “out of sight and mind”, and don’t raise a whimper from the evangelicals. Hypocrisy at its worst.
US veterans comprise 75% of the homeless, and they commit suicide at an average of 22 a day, since Afghanistan 2001. That’s 8000 per year, for 21 years.170,000 roughly. With the civilian US gun death toll since 9/11, approaching 500,000…the neo-cons plans are going just fine. Throw in a million or so deaths from Covid as well.
The land of the free….whatever that means now.
Yes, sanctity of life seems to apply only to embryonic life in the womb and dying life on the death bed.
I’ve read an estimate of 12 million deaths from US military action since 1945 – the estimate based on indirect deaths (from sanctions and destruction of physical, social and economic infrastructure) being five times direct deaths (bombs and bullets) in modern warfare. We (rightly) hear of the Nazi holocaust, but nothing about the US one.
Ah yes, the ‘land of the free’, the one that has the highest imprisonment rate in the world, mostly black males, mostly due to the ‘war on drugs’ (the US does love its wars, doesn’t it). Google ‘Ehrlichman war on drugs quote’ to understand what the war on drugs was (and is) all about.
Yes, sanctity of life seems to apply only to embryonic life in the womb and dying life on the death bed.
I’ve read an estimate of 12 million deaths from US military action since 1945 – the estimate based on indirect deaths (from destruction of physical, social and economic infrastructure) being five times direct deaths (bombs and bullets) in modern warfare. We (rightly) hear of the (German dictator’s, to get around the madbot) holocaust, but nothing about the US one.
Ah yes, the ‘land of the free’, the one that has the highest imprisonment rate in the world, mostly black males, mostly due to the ‘war on drugs’ (the US does love its wars, doesn’t it). Google ‘Ehrlichman war on drugs quote’ to understand what the war on drugs was (and is) all about.
There are many reports of western weapons being smuggled out of Ukraine. I have seen a video of anti tank missiles smuggled in Bulgaria. There are as well unverified reports of Ukrainians selling top end military hardware to the at Russians. Once the donated weapons cross into Ukraine their is no accountability and tracking to where they end up.
To be expected. It’s a very corrupt country across the board. Weapons popping up in the Middle East via the black market.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corruption_in_Ukraine#:~:text=According%20to%20Transparency%20International's,Russia%20the%20most%20at%20136.
A friend has Ukranian relatives still living in Kyiv. Rumours of a huge black market in donated weapons are rife. One story highlights the debacle the US have caused. A US $12 million weapons system being sold to undercover Russian agents for US$800k. The US State Dept’s Victoria Newland and her neo-com buddies don’t care, particularly where civilian deaths are concerned. It’s all about profit for the US Military Industrial machine, and, like Afghanistan in the early days, drawing Russia into a needless war to drain their spirit, and atone for the Vietnam fiasco, by giving Russia one of their own. US revenge knows no limits. After the hugely successful campaigns of Syria, Iraq, Central America, and Afghanistan, one would think the West-world would be reluctant to engage in yet another US lies-based pointless, fabricated invasion. Still, plenty of gullible mercenaries and Ukranians, and the country itself, to sacrifice in this latest US escapade.
Russia had this won from the start, and still do.
I’ve heard a recent report that stated that a (M142) HIMARS system was sold to the Russians who are now examining it closely in a large armaments factory in the Urals. Wouldn’t surprise me at all to learn that this is true and not just another rumour in the fog of war given the corruption that has been verified about Ukraine.
I think that was a French piece, cost 7 million euro and was sold for 120.000.
The “US Military Industrial machine” is drawing Russia into this war? Please take off the tinfoil hat. And I think Ukrainians and the course of the war might disagree with you on Russia having this “won from the start”. How this rubbish gets upvoted in the Crikey comments I’ll never understand.
Every day Russians take new territory. One needs to look at how long the front lines are and how many fortifications ahead of that front line. Russia hasn’t lost an air asset in over 2 months now. There is a learning curve, this is the first conflict since WW2 between two first world militaries.
Yes it is interesting how many people have no understanding of Russian Military Tactics. Goes all the way back to the Czars.
I noted how some were wringing their hands with glee after seeing lines of tanks on the road. Yes tanks are designed for cross country and I would not disbelieve the Commander is now “holidaying” in Siberia. The US found a fault with the T90, one of, if not the best tank in the World. Lack of armament on top so vertical dropping missiles penetrate.
If I were Putin I would send the US a letter thanking them for pointing out the weakness. Remember the Mk1 Spitfire was bit of a dog with a gravitational float in the Carburetor. 20 odd Mks later it was definitely the No1 Fighter in WW2. I reckon the Russians would be developing design variations for the T90 already.
Good points.
Just a btw the ruSSians can’t build T90’s. They can’t get the parts. The tank plants have shut-down.
Oreb, you might want to check the historical context. This is an exact reversal of the Cuban missile crisis, and we know how the US reacted. Russia is doing the same. Their tactics are sound. They never wanted Kyiv, a diversion, to relieve the 8 year siege of Donbass. Your views appear to lack any intellectual rigour. The Murdoch press is not the place for research.
I neither get my research from conservative Western propaganda like the Murdoch press, nor from the propaganda arm of Putin’s empire, which masquerades as unbiased alternative media (e.g. RT). If you think Russia threw enormous numbers of men and equipment at Kyiv as a “diversion”, I’ve got a once in a lifetime investment opportunity to offer you, guaranteed 200% returns!
Ha ha. So, you’re the guy selling the Harbour Bridge. Didn’t expect to find you here, but you do seem to pop up everywhere. How’s the sale going? The joke is a bit old. Maybe some genuine humour would be better.
So which part of my reasoning is wrong in your opinion? Do you really believe Putin is so stupid as to risk annihilation on a whim? He had no choice, but to push back on NATO expansion.
NATO has had training facilities in Ukraine for over 10 years. To pretend this not part of an orchestrated US plan is ludicrous.
Just out of interest, do you imagine that if “…Russia threw enormous numbers of men and equipment at Kyiv…” that it could not have done it like a dinner?
From late February through to April the NYT was frantically reporting the battle for Kyiv which stubbornly refused to occur.
(I’d post links but they’d not pass the mod – google it mate!)
They also refrained from disabling major civilian infrastructure such as power plants, water supplies and telecommunication – unlike the US when it attacked Iraq.
When they take Ukrainian prisoners they let them keep the mobile phones so that they can tell their families that they are OK.
The rouble is stronger than it’s been for years and is now the currency of the Donbas, it has land access to the Crimea and any Ukrainians who want a Russian passport can get one a lot more quickly than we can get an Australian one.
Mission Accomplished as Shrub once claimed.
Some links in case the mod is feeling generous – https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/28/podcasts/the-daily/ukraine-citizens-kyiv-russia.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/19/world/europe/kyiv-ukraine-russia-war.html
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/04/02/world/europe/kyiv-invasion-disaster.html
” ‘Resources are being wasted’: “I hope this guy’s is not expecting every bullet’s winner .
I appreciate the journalism in this article, but the editorialising seems to be overly negative. The headline and tagline don’t seem to match the conclusion of the article. The conclusion is positive, but the clickbait is negative – not really in synch it seems. I’m sorry to see this kind of editorialising in this article.