Europe | Striking back at the empire

Why a regiment of Belarusian dissidents is fighting for Ukraine

They see a common enemy in Vladimir Putin

Volunteers from Belarus practice at a shooting range near Warsaw, Poland, on Friday, May 20, 2022. Belarusians are among those who have answered a call by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for foreign fighters to go to Ukraine and join the International Legion for the Territorial Defense of Ukraine. (AP Photo/Michal Dyjuk)
|KYIV

The russians were in front of them. The Russians were behind them. It was, says Aliaksandr Naukovich, as if “the war [were] saying, ‘What the fuck are you doing here?’” His unit, a ragtag battalion of Belarusian dissidents, had lived a charmed existence until then, surviving four months of fighting with only a few casualties. But the news coming through was not good. The battalion’s charismatic leader, Ivan Marchuk, was dead following an operation to stop an incursion by Russian tanks near Lysychansk, in the Donbas region. Two men were in Russian captivity, three others missing in action.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Common enemies”

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