Joint War: U.S. Paratroopers Support Wounded Ukrainian Soldiers

U.S. Army Europe
May 16, 2015
Paratroopers visit wounded Ukrainian soldiers
By Sgt. Alex Skripnichuk

YAVORIV, Ukraine: Paratroopers with the U.S. Army’s 173rd Airborne Brigade visited Ukrainian wounded soldiers at the Main Military Clinical Hospital of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine May 13, 2015, in Kiev, Ukraine during a two-day visit to the U.S. Embassy.
The visit was part of a community outreach program as the paratroopers train soldiers from the Ukrainian national guard here as part of Fearless Guardian. Fearless Guardian is the name for the Congress-approved, Departments of State and Defense initiative under the Global Security Contingency Fund-Ukraine to train and equip the newly-formed Ukrainian national guard. The mission and the program of instruction come at the request of the Ukrainian government.
As a show of support for the soldiers of Ukraine, the paratroopers visited several Ukrainian soldiers wounded in the country’s anti-terrorism operations in eastern Ukraine.
“The soldiers we visited were very supportive of our presence in Ukraine,” said Capt. Kyle Robinson, a civil affairs officer with the 173rd Abn. Bde…
According to Robinson the visit is a step forward in the ongoing initiative to partner the paratroopers from the brigade with wounded soldiers of Ukraine during their time training in western Ukraine.
“I am reminded of the patriotism our Soldiers showed during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” said Sgt. 1st Class Jason Fisher, a civil affairs platoon sergeant with the 173rd Abn. Bde. “Even after being injured, the Ukrainian soldiers were eager to return to their comrades.”

The paratroopers from 173rd Abn. Bde. are in Ukraine for the first of several planned rotations to train Ukraine’s newly-formed national guard as part of Fearless Guardian, which is scheduled to last 6 months.

The staff at the 1,100-patient-capacity medical facility treated more than 5,000 patients during the height of anti-terrorism operations, according to Lt. Col. Roman Kaschenko, a senior officer of the department of personnel at the hospital.
“We did more than 14,000 surgical operations in the last year,” said Kaschenko. “80 percent of which were trauma related.”

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