22.11.2022, 15:21
Eine ganz interessante Einschätzung zu ukrainischen Aktivitäten hinter den russischen Frontlinien. Ob sie nun direkt in die Anschläge auf Bahntrassen verwickelt sind oder ob hier federführend russische Widerständler aktiv sind, dies versehe ich mal mit einem Fragezeichen, aber hinsichtlich anderer Ereignisse - von Explosionen in der Energieversorgung (siehe auch die Pipeline-Explosion bei St. Petersburg von vor ein paar Tagen) bis hin zum Mord an Dugins Tochter (was auch die USA zu einer Reaktion veranlasst haben soll dahingehend, dass die Ukrainer sich auf russischem Terrain zurücknehmen sollen) - denke ich, haben die Ukrainer die Hände im Spiel...
Schneemann
Zitat:Ukraine Has a Secret Resistance Operating Behind Russian Lineshttps://foreignpolicy.com/2022/11/21/ukr...test062921
Modern-day Ukrainian partisans are quietly working to undermine the occupation.
KYIV, Ukraine—On a busy street in central Kyiv, a tall man in a black hoodie stands outside a cafe furiously puffing on a vape. [...] His official title, head of the Committee of Veterans, might sound like the role of a benign public servant, but Mykhailo—an alias chosen for the purposes of this article to protect his safety—is far removed from parades and ribbon pinning. His job is to work with those who secretly fight for Ukraine behind enemy lines. Mykhailo is one of the main strategists and organizers of Ukraine’s partisans inside Russian-occupied territory. [...]
After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, dormant veterans associations became the lifeblood of the Ukrainian resistance inside occupied territory. Their networks relied heavily on dedicated volunteers who, according to Mykhailo, were in place months before Russia’s full-scale offensive in February. “We were saying back in 2014 that the Russians were not going to stop in those regions. So in a way, the country was preparing,” he said. “Veterans from 2014 were part of this, and now almost all of them have returned back to the army. We were readying people in areas we knew would be hit early. Even in our schools, we were psychologically preparing our kids.” [...]
After some successful lobbying by people like Mykhailo, however, the government in July 2021 passed the Law on the Fundamentals of National Resistance, which was designed to maximize the role of civilians in Ukrainian defense. It helped establish the territorial defense groups in neighborhoods and connect these citizen defense groups with Ukraine’s wider security and military apparatus. By this February, makeshift distribution centers were established for those who had not received weapons and training in order to allow civilians to defend their neighborhoods across the country.
Mykhailo said that for Ukrainians, after the initial shock of the attacks of Feb. 24, these local civil-defense networks began to connect with one another. [...] Initially, organizers like Mykhailo, many of whom are military veterans with experience in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions and now work in collaboration with both Ukraine’s military and security service in Kyiv, began to focus on coordinating the flow of information. [...] On the planning level, Mykhailo works closely with Ukraine’s more conventional security service, the SBU, which works on counterinsurgency movements inside Ukraine. Those in the SBU are officially assigned by the Ukrainian government with the tasks of mapping out the Russian presence inside Ukraine, hunting for Russian spies in Ukraine’s own ranks, and putting together a picture of how their counterparts work inside Ukrainian territory. [...] As the SBU and its intelligence officers begin counterinsurgency work in recently liberated Kherson, Mykhailo continues to work with partisans inside Russian-occupied territory.
Schneemann