Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

US Supreme Court Lifts Order That Blocked Trump’s Mass Federal Layoffs

22 hours ago

Trump to Attend Club World Cup Final, FIFA Opens Office in Trump Tower

22 hours ago

Trump Says Pharmaceutical Tariffs Could Reach 200%

22 hours ago

Rescue Teams Find Three More Bodies After Central Texas Floods

22 hours ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Rigoberto Simental Aguilar

22 hours ago

Trump Says He Is Not Happy With Russia’s Putin, Considering Sanctions

22 hours ago

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs to Be Sentenced on October 3

22 hours ago

Israeli Military Says It Struck Key Hamas Figure in Lebanon’s Tripoli

23 hours ago

Madera County Sheriff Logs 29 Fire-Related Calls on Fourth of July, Most in 5 Years

23 hours ago

Trump Says He May Take Over Governance of Washington, DC

23 hours ago
Military Training Efforts for Ukraine Hit Major Milestones Even as Attention Shifts to Gaza
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 2 years ago on
November 13, 2023

Share

A FRENCH ARMY BASE, FRANCE — Battle cries pierce the smoke and rat-a-tat-tat of gunfire as Ukrainian soldiers fight through and take enemy trenches and dugouts that hide gruesome, bloody remains.

“Grenade!” one screams in Ukrainian. Another yells: “Let’s go, let’s go, let’s go, let’s go!”

This time, no lives or limbs were lost. Because this time, the rounds fired were blanks and the “enemy” troops were, in fact, French soldiers whose intention was not to kill the Ukrainians but instead to help shape them into better, more lethal warriors.

But soon, the war games these troops played in the mud in France will become all too real, when the Ukrainians return home and are sent to the front lines against Russia’s forces.

Global Support Amidst Ongoing Conflict

As the Russian invasion grinds into a second winter and casualties — already estimated in the hundreds of thousands — continue to mount on both sides, combat training programs provided by Ukraine’s allies are helping it hold out and its odds of eventual victory. By continuing to prepare Ukrainian troops for battle even as the Israel-Hamas war diverts global attention, Ukraine’s backers also are making concrete their promises to stick with it for the long haul.

France is on course to have trained 7,000 Ukrainians this year — some in Poland, others at French bases — as part of a European Union military assistance mission for Ukraine that launched a year ago this week. The French army granted The Associated Press access to a training base in rural France last week to observe the latest class of Ukrainian infantrymen being put through its paces at the tail end of a four-week course.

Training Goals and Achievements

The EU mission’s initial goal was to train 15,000 soldiers, but it has far exceeded that target and now expects to hit 35,000 by the end of this year. All but three of the EU’s 27 member countries, plus non-member Norway, have provided training courses or instructors, the EU Commission says.

The United States has trained about 18,000, mostly in Germany, with an additional 1,000 in the pipeline, the Pentagon says.

In Britain, 30,000 have learned soldiering in the past 17 months, a training program the U.K. government says is unprecedented since World War II.

Specialized Military Training

As well as basic training with weapons, battlefield first aid and other skills, instructors are also imparting specialized military know-how, ranging from clearing mines and launching waterborne attacks aboard small boats to equipment repair, officer training and even help for Ukrainian military chaplains.

With their return to Ukraine just days away, the grimness of the future that awaits the trainees at the French base was perceptible in the men’s determined, unsmiling looks. Civilians not long ago, they now carried themselves like soldiers. They addressed each other with nicknames. There was liberal swearing as the men caught their breaths after storming trenches with fake grenades and blank rounds.

French instructors left animal remains in the complex of dugouts and ditches to harden the troops to battlefield bloodshed. Only the officers had previous front-line experience, the chief French training officer said.

He said Ukraine is looking to France for tactics and know-how that could help its forces bust through Russian defenses. Because of French military concerns for the base’s security, the officer, Lt. Col. Even, could only be identified by his rank and first name.

“One can clearly see in Ukraine that the front line is relatively frozen, with two belligerents who employ very similar doctrines,” he said. “So today, one of the keys being sought in an attempt to break this inertia is to try to develop maneuvering schemes that can bother and even shake up the adversary.”

As well as seeing their assault on freshly dug trenches, the AP also observed Ukrainians vigorously defending a mock-up village against a French “enemy” attack and concealing themselves in rain-drenched woodlands. Translators bridged the language gap between the soldiers and their French hosts.

French trainers said they’ve learned through experience that it’s unwise to get too friendly with the trainees — because some of them are sure to be killed back home. Despite sharing the bonding discomforts of long days and nights in the French wilds, they sever ties when the training is done, with soldiers under orders not to swap phone numbers or other contacts.

“You have to burn bridges because otherwise you ask yourselves too many questions. When you find out that this or that person is dead, you’re bound to ask yourself what you did wrong: ‘Did we work enough on this or that tactic? Should I have insisted more on this point?’” said one of the instructors, Capt. Xavier.

“We’re doing our utmost,” he said. “Asking yourself afterward what you did wrong or could have done better is torturing yourself for nothing.”

 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno Woman Sentenced to Prison for DUI Crash That Killed One, Injured Three

DON'T MISS

Union Files Ethics Complaint After College Chancellor’s ‘Goddaughter’ Receives $161K In Contracts

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect Tied to 2 Shootings, Firearm Recovered

DON'T MISS

Are Former Measure C Execs Pushing Their Own Ballot Measure?

DON'T MISS

San Luis Obispo’s Madre Fire Near New Cuyama Grows to 80,615 Acres, 35% Contained

DON'T MISS

US Justice Department Scrambles to Defend Its About-Face on Release of Epstein Files

DON'T MISS

US Supreme Court Lifts Order That Blocked Trump’s Mass Federal Layoffs

DON'T MISS

Trump to Attend Club World Cup Final, FIFA Opens Office in Trump Tower

DON'T MISS

Trump Says Pharmaceutical Tariffs Could Reach 200%

DON'T MISS

Rescue Teams Find Three More Bodies After Central Texas Floods

UP NEXT

Israeli Military Says It Struck Key Hamas Figure in Lebanon’s Tripoli

UP NEXT

Gaza Ceasefire Can Be Reached but May Take More Time, Israeli Officials Say

UP NEXT

UN Passes Climate Change Motion After Marshall Islands Drops Fossil Fuels Focus

UP NEXT

Gazans Reject Trump’s Displacement Plan Despite Death and Destruction

UP NEXT

Israeli Military Official Says Iran Hit Some Military Sites Last Month

UP NEXT

Netanyahu Nominates Trump for Nobel Peace Prize

UP NEXT

Netanyahu Meets Trump at White House as Israel, Hamas Discuss Ceasefire

UP NEXT

Tucker Carlson Aired Interview With President of Iran

UP NEXT

Israeli Guilt Over Gaza Lurks Beneath Silence and Denial

UP NEXT

Iran President Says Open to Dialogue With US, Accuses Israel of Assassination Attempt

Horse Racing May Be Out at Fresno Fair, but New Events Promise to Pack Grandstands

41 minutes ago

Wall Street Shakes off Tariff Concerns, Nvidia Leaps to $4 Trillion

54 minutes ago

Who Will Dyer Support as His Successor? We Asked Him.

1 hour ago

Kenya’s President Orders Police to Shoot Violent Protesters in the Leg

1 hour ago

Trump Issues Tariff Letters to Six Countries

1 hour ago

Trump Says US Interest Rate Is at Least 3 Points Too High

2 hours ago

Netanyahu and Trump Prioritize Hostages as Gaza Military Campaign Grinds On

2 hours ago

California Protester Pulls Mask from ICE Agent During San Diego Clash

2 hours ago

iPhones Now Eligible for Starlink Satellite Texting

2 hours ago

Nvidia-Backed Perplexity Launches AI-Powered Browser to Take on Google Chrome

2 hours ago

California Highway Patrol Makes 1,311 DUI Arrests During Independence Day Weekend

The California Highway Patrol issued 34,582 citations and made 1,311 DUI arrests during a statewide holiday enforcement period aimed at curb...

42 seconds ago

fresno
43 seconds ago

California Highway Patrol Makes 1,311 DUI Arrests During Independence Day Weekend

Volunteers pack supplies for impacted residents at a donation hub in Kerrville, Texas, on Monday, July 7, 2025. Gov. Greg Abbott revealed late Tuesday that at least 173 people remained missing after the devastating floods — the first time state officials have identified just how widespread the human toll might eventually be. (Loren Elliott/The New York Times)
16 minutes ago

Death Toll Reaches at Least 119 in Texas Floods, With 173 Missing

16 minutes ago

Nathan Magsig: Why Our Second Amendment Resolution Matters to the People of the Central Valley

41 minutes ago

Horse Racing May Be Out at Fresno Fair, but New Events Promise to Pack Grandstands

Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., July 1, 2025. (Reuters/Jeenah Moon)
54 minutes ago

Wall Street Shakes off Tariff Concerns, Nvidia Leaps to $4 Trillion

1 hour ago

Who Will Dyer Support as His Successor? We Asked Him.

Kenya President William Ruto speaks at a news briefing over Congo situation after attending an African Union (AU) institutional reforms retreat at State House, Nairobi Kenya, January 27, 2025. (Reuters File)
1 hour ago

Kenya’s President Orders Police to Shoot Violent Protesters in the Leg

President Donald Trump speaks to the media after the U.S. Supreme Court dealt a blow to the power of federal judges by restricting their ability to grant broad legal relief in cases as the justices acted in a legal fight over Trump's bid to limit birthright citizenship, in the Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington D.C., June 27, 2025. (Reuters File)
1 hour ago

Trump Issues Tariff Letters to Six Countries

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend