{"id":1595,"date":"2025-08-11T21:56:25","date_gmt":"2025-08-11T21:56:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.logicalware.net\/?p=1595"},"modified":"2025-08-12T19:23:38","modified_gmt":"2025-08-12T19:23:38","slug":"trump-putin-talks-painful-for-ukraines-former-pows","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.logicalware.net\/index.php\/2025\/08\/11\/trump-putin-talks-painful-for-ukraines-former-pows\/","title":{"rendered":"Trump-Putin talks \u2018painful\u2019 for Ukraine\u2019s former POWs"},"content":{"rendered":"
As President Trump seeks a breakthrough in talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, former Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) are torn. <\/p>\n
A ceasefire deal could finally free thousands of Ukrainian soldiers who remain in Russian prisons, but it could also mean ceding land that thousands have died fighting to defend. <\/p>\n
\u201cThe guys who have been there have been rotting,\u201d said Oleksandr Didur, a service member in Ukraine\u2019s 36th Separate Marine Infantry Brigade who spent 15 months in Russian captivity after being captured in April 2022. <\/p>\n
Speaking through a translator last week, Didur said POWs are under \u201cinhumane conditions, such as torture, psychological pressure.\u201d<\/p>\n
Yuliia Horoshanska, another former soldier who spent four months in Russian captivity, said it was \u201cincredibly painful\u201d to think about the terms being discussed to end the war. <\/p>\n
Trump has floated \u201cswapping lands\u201d between Russia and Ukraine, which apparently would cede much of eastern Ukraine to Russia in exchange for Russian forces withdrawing from other parts of the country. <\/p>\n
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday the Ukrainian Constitution would not allow such concessions. <\/p>\n
\u201cI don\u2019t want any more deaths, but I want everything that was taken away from us, given back,\u201d Horoshanska said.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n Both Didur and Horoshanska were taken captive during Russia\u2019s siege of the southern port city of Mariupol, which has become a symbol of Putin\u2019s cruelty and the devastation in Ukraine. Hundreds were killed in the bombing of a theater<\/a> sheltering children and civilians from the war. A maternity ward was targeted in a Russian attack<\/a>. At least 8,000 people are estimated to have been killed<\/a> during the nearly three-month siege. <\/p>\n The former Mariupol POWs traveled to Washington, D.C., last week to raise awareness of the fate of their brothers- and sisters-in-arms. They are ambassadors for the Heart of Azovstal organization, an initiative helping former prisoners of war rehabilitate and reintegrate into society and the workforce.<\/p>\n \u201cWe\u2019ve [been] very lucky because we are the people who came here specifically to talk about Ukrainian veterans and to remind people that there are still Mariupol defenders in Russian captivity,\u201d Didur said. \u201cAnd that we believe and hope that the United States will help us and that our brothers- and sisters-in-arms will come back.\u201d<\/p>\n Russia was reported to hold about 4,000 Ukrainian prisoners of war in 2024, although the exact number is not acknowledged by either Moscow or Kyiv. Of those POWs, between 1,500 and 2,000 are soldiers who were captured defending Mariupol more than three years ago.<\/p>\n The war transformed the city of half a million people \u201cinto something unrecognizable: a tangled mess of crumpled buildings and a place of shallow graves,\u201d a 2024 Human Rights Watch report<\/a> noted. <\/p>\n As the city fell under Russian occupation, civilians and Ukraine\u2019s armed forces took shelter and set up defenses in the Azovstal Steel Works, a sprawling industrial compound that stretched more than 4 square miles. While some evacuations took place under siege, Russia captured thousands of soldiers in its takeover of the plant in May 2022. <\/p>\n Didur was severely injured during an attack from a Russian tank during that time. He was knocked unconscious and injured so gravely he was initially marked as dead. But when showing signs of life, Russian captors transferred him for medical care. He lost his left eye; three fingers on his right hand were amputated, and his left hand is nonfunctional, smashed by flying debris. A shockwave broke his teeth. In captivity, he said he suffered physical and psychological abuse. <\/p>\n He said his captors never bothered to set his broken arm. \u201cThat\u2019s talking about the medical help that Russians are providing to Ukrainian prisoners of war when they\u2019re claiming to do so,\u201d he told The Hill through a translator.<\/p>\n To keep his sanity over the months of captivity, he relied on his athletic training, he told The Hill.<\/p>\n Heart of Azovstal was launched by billionaire Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine\u2019s richest man and head of the business group that owns the Illich Steel and Iron works and Azovstal Steel plant in Mariupol.<\/p>\n The company made the decision to suspend the factory’s operations and open up the plants to civilians<\/a> in the wake of Russia\u2019s full-scale invasion. Azovstal was described at the time as a \u201cfortress in a city\u201d<\/a> by a Russian separatist deputy commander. <\/p>\n In addition to Ukrainian soldiers, Russia also holds Ukrainian civilians in captivity and has abducted tens of thousands of Ukrainian children<\/a> in what the International Criminal Court has deemed a war crime. <\/p>\n \u201cWe have to remind you that not only [Ukrainian] soldiers are in captivity. There are a lot of civilians [in captivity]. They [Russians] are kidnapping kids and civilians. They are in the same conditions [as POWs],\u201d said Dmytro Morozov, also an ambassador for Heart of Azovstal.\u00a0<\/p>\n Morozov said he lost close to 90 pounds in Russian captivity, a shocking amount for his 6-foot frame. Morozov was in the infantry for the National Guard, wounded during the Russian siege on Mariupol. <\/p>\n Morozov said he was determined not to surrender to the Russians, who pressured him to turn on his country. He drew strength from knowing his wife and child had escaped Mariupol for Kyiv. <\/p>\n \u201cRussia killed my wife\u2019s parents, my brother, and a lot of people in my family. My mom is alive. And I didn\u2019t care what they would do to me, I mean, to pressure me to flip sides. I told myself no matter what my family is safe and whatever happens, happens. So that kept me going,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n Morozov was released in one of the first prisoner exchanges between Ukraine and Russia, which prioritized the severely wounded, sick and women. Over three years of war, the Ukrainian government has succeeded in carrying out some 60 prisoner swaps \u2014 the largest in mid-May, with 1,000 Ukrainians brought back from Russia<\/a>, including civilians. <\/p>\n That exchange was made possible through direct negotiations that were instigated by the Trump administration in May, in its push to end the war. <\/p>\n The physical state of the returning Ukrainian soldiers \u2014 heads shaved, emaciated bodies, signs of torture and abuse \u2014 only added to the urgency for more swaps. <\/p>\n Horoshanska said she almost lost her will to live during her months in Russian prison, \u201cbecause I lost everything that was important to me.\u201d <\/p>\n Horoshanska was injured in a Russian airstrike and was receiving medical treatment in Azovstal when it came under Russian occupation. <\/p>\n \u201cThe day I was injured, my whole platoon was killed. \u2026 Often I was thinking it was a mistake I stayed alive, but I was thinking about my daughter and understood she needs me.\u201d <\/p>\n Mariupol is in the southeastern Donetsk region of Ukraine, which remains largely under Russian control, making it likely part of the \u201cland swap\u201d Trump is pushing. <\/p>\n Russia controls about 20 percent of Ukrainian territory, including a large portion of the country\u2019s east, the Crimean Peninsula in the south, and pockets in the northeast, the areas of Sumy and Kharkiv. <\/p>\n In a video address on Saturday, Zelensky said Ukraine\u2019s Constitution bars him from relinquishing territory. But just more than half of Ukrainians agreed that Kyiv should be open to making some territorial concessions as part of a peace deal to end the war, according to a recent Gallup poll<\/a>. <\/p>\n Putin has proposed ending the fighting in exchange for Ukraine handing over roughly one-third of the eastern Donetsk region that Kyiv still controls, The Wall Street Journal reported<\/a>. The front line would be frozen elsewhere, including in the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions that Russia also claims as its own.<\/p>\n A counterproposal from Europe, according to the Journal, would have Ukraine hand over the entire Donetsk region in exchange for Russia withdrawing from occupied parts of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson in the south. The European plan also calls for ironclad security guarantees for Ukraine, including potential NATO membership. <\/p>\n Horoshanska reflected on the tough choices for Ukraine and all that has been lost. <\/p>\n \u201cI want to go back home, this is true that the building, as my home, does not exist. But I want to go back to the region where I was born and raised and visit the graves where my relatives are,\u201d she said. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" As President Trump seeks a breakthrough in talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday, former Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) are torn. A ceasefire deal could finally free thousands<\/p>\n