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tv   [untitled]    May 7, 2023 4:30am-5:01am EEST

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[000:00:00;00] products after a whole year and this is even a separate law from langlist . it is a long-standing law that america can take over various factories at any time for the need of protecting not only our territory but allies . only to transfer to ukraine , but also to fulfill the complicated american ones, which sent a lot of weapons to ukraine, and why don’t you hurry, this is internal politics, you know , we can work here for a full year or longer for various political actions in and with the american government is a bunch of people who have nothing to do with us or with ukraine, eh, apparently there are local eh events
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taking place in one of the states where the largest rockets are built and everything is all work and for which we worked for a long time as a land agent other procedures, everything can disappear outside of other political actions . it doesn't happen forever. and i would say that they are weekend for americans to watch international news - it will mostly be only about the king in england. it is good that ms. zelenska came there so that we could fit the ukraine issue into the story, but besides that, we need to work as activists for ukraine.
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to work to forever remind people that it is also important that when any internal quarrels in america that do not include the ukrainian case are found , then we need to find another way and it will probably work. this year, i would like it to be by the summer when the training will be over for ebrom and i will be ebro then to ukraine so that by that time we have decided how many ukrainian pilots will be trained for fx and to know in detail when it will be andriy thank you very much andriy dobryansky director of communications about the ukrainian congressional committee of america when it really comes to when he goes to receive such a decision at 16, i will remind you only briefly what , for example, dmytro kuleba, if in the ukrainian diplomacy, he also evaluated the perspective, said that sooner or later it will happen simply the question of time, the price we pay every day for this time, more on that, he has never
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given an interview to anyone, the first with whom he agreed to talk on camera was our colleague lyudmila dobrovolska with the young officer hero of ukraine, commander of the battalion of the 80th assault brigade, volodymyr in hutsul, they talked about how our paratroopers gained positions in the kherson region in the first days of the war for the liberation of the kherson region and about the battles for belohorivka, and also about how the ukrainian maroon berets destroyed the myth of
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the invincible russian paratroopers and systematically destroy the remains of enemy paratroopers, next, the heroes are on the air we are now going to meet a person who has never happened in my journalistic practice , we are going to meet a person who many have heard of , but few people know what this person looks like, because for security reasons his photo is not published we are going to volodymyr hutsula of the battalion commander as part of the 80th separate airborne assault brigade who, in the first days of the full-scale russian invasion , adjusted the fire of artillery and aviation for two days in a row, and then during the retreat a podvolik aviation saved people and completed the first task, was awarded the title of hero of ukraine, and actually this is all we know about him, this is all we could find in public access, we will
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learn more already on the spot, we are not the first who wants to film an interview with volodymyr hutsul, but we are the first with whom he agreed to communicate, the time and place of our meeting have been postponed several times and now, for security reasons, i will not tell you where exactly we are going , but we are already on the way , and here are the broken houses, broken, broken villages of ours. i have already seen everything so many times, but i still can't get used to it. i still don't know how to get used to it. what are they turning my country into? what are they turning them into? it's possible
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just at this moment . i congratulate you. good day, volodymyr. i'm very glad that this meeting of ours is finally happening. we
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've been waiting for it. i'm glad to meet you. me too. i am glad that we are ready to write volodymyr, when i was preparing to meet with you for this interview, i realized that it would not be possible to prepare because neither i nor our editors found any information about you in free access almost no question why did you avoid communication with the press until now, and why did you agree now? well, first of all, i am not a public figure, and at that time i did not have time at all. well, when we were there in
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the venue, a free window appeared , so i decided that i could give you an interview . then let's start from the very beginning from the very beginning. and where are you from? chernivtsi region, kelmenetski district , moshanets village, born there, grew up in moldova, went to study in chernivtsi at school, and after school, immediately went to the military commissariat, just like me the father at home was so determined that all the boys at home should all go into the army if they wanted . well, i understand that your parents are quite strict. like your parents, yes like your parents. they raised you as much freedom as they gave you, because i definitely wasn't there. i had a diary. i was generally always handsome. my mother was always
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invited to school, then my father was invited to school . do you remember your first love, who was she, a neighbor, a classmate ? in 2013 i i met a girl. she was from a neighboring village in ukraine through customs , and she was short. i met her . i met her for a long time . on february 24, when this war began, but this war has been going on for a century, and the last time muscovites entered our earth with weapons in their hands 9 years ago, when for you the war began, the war began for me well, i
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was 19 years old then, yes, like now i remember after high school, i went to the military office, and my mother immediately followed me, my mother came with me to the office in the military office, the commissar immediately said there were stickers. and i and my mother came in from behind. moms, you can go out. of course, my mother, who is of age, shed tears. she says what did you say to serve? in my opinion, i couldn’t, well, i couldn’t serve . i had a couple of operations there . i'll eat them, but i think i'll go i will serve, i will pay my debt to the state, as they say. i went to the 80th brigade . i didn't want to connect my career with military service at that time
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, then i started to like the army, then the war started, yes, it's the 14th - it's already 14 -th year yes, and with the first batch i went there, well, there was already a small-scale war, but it was a bit tough and debaltsevo also had an airport. i can't remember what i got it for. well probably for the past years, for the totality, yes, in the 14th year, i and the company commander, this andrii lukanyuk, were leaving when they broke through the airport , i and he were leaving in a free car, we found a car somewhere on the road, we were leaving there. the combatant was at the airport, and andriy
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is like that there was a model of a military luhansk airport, there was a military one and he took me with him then, i remember we also drove in a car then to the luhansk airport and he gave me a phone and said write to my wife and i start to write a message and there larisa there forgives me i will, maybe i won’t, well, in short, i can’t remember such a moment anymore. we were 19 years old at the time. what did i specifically write there? but when i finished writing to the end, yes, and i said stop, they forgive me. we went to the airport. we took a couple of people out of there. he told me he told me to go back to the company, he also found some ural on the way, he came back and brought people, well, in short, a sample of the military and after that, i decided that i would connect this life with service in the army in any way i could. i went to study at
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the academy in the 19th year he graduated and came i was a platoon commander in a fresh unit in the third battalion, but in the second company there, i don't remember for a couple of months, i accepted this andriy lukanyuk from my first commander, accepted the company , and you are a hero of ukraine, you are a hero of ukraine, and about this feat in the kherson region. i know that on february 25, you received an order to hold the bridge over the dnieper, and for two days, you adjusted the fire of artillery and artillery, and i know that at that time it was possible to destroy about 25 units of enemy combat equipment and eliminate about 300 occupiers, but i understand very well what
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these lines stand for blood and pain and great courage, tell me, did you receive that order then, and then there were two endless days, as it was, we were at the training ground, and i already understood that if the equipment does not come here, then there is already a possibility that there must be some i remember that day , i'll probably never forget it. in our training, they had to prepare at the training ground. they filled out the documentation until 12:00 at night. they filled out the railway magazines. there were preparations and five. no, at 4:30 the alarm sounded . well, me too. i had a car right away drove there to the equipment, gathered the company there, put it on this one, on the armored personnel carrier, everything got completely stuck, and that day we started moving in the morning . i still
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remember driving on the first bri because of the roads . go out on the bridge, hold the city, i let the patrol unit go forward , and at the very intersection in front of me, well, in front of that unit, i was driving a second tank passing by, the tank didn’t inflate either, no problem, it flew past us, i immediately gave it to everyone there, it’s clear the team all jumped on the armored personnel carrier because there he could turn the tower around and they started shooting at him with rpgs, all the machine guns, all the cpvt, and i understood what i saw further down the street. then the patrol unit and my car remained with the rest , everyone gave the command to turn around
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, our guys did not shoot me either, they did not immediately listen to what i told them, i gave the command to enter the rest of the armored personnel carriers and they all started shoot from machine guns and we had the opportunity at that moment to pick up people and move away from there, and then i saw that well, what is the paratrooper fraternity, the sergeant, my platoon commander, bodya murga , the commander of the first company, vadym huk, and they all ran after us on foot to pull us out of - under that dense fire we started to hit them immediately with our artillery , i was there i found a place to see where we could direct arthur there, we got into a couple of factories there, when their equipment drove by, they also started to fire a little bit at a time leaves and we left from there we left not far left we left there 2 kilometers back we chose a favorable position there
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was a career there and took up the defense there and here is this day there the next day we held there held the defense the first were these moments we put up a thigh found targets destroyed a thigh there i don't remember so many targets already, like three tanks, a couple of ural kamazs with infantry. yes, i don't remember who was there or not. they started to break through on tanks and we already understood that they had already entered our rear and then made the decision that what was needed was suitable there. occupy some the best line, i wanted to ask. it was here. do you know that on the 27th, during the retreat , you diverted the air force to you? this is how it was when we
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were retreating. the armored personnel carriers were already mowed down by the artillery . i was advancing. not so strong the problem was we were on the move we didn't hit it very hard we noticed aircraft in the sky well then my gunner started to fire at the aircraft and the turntables briefly broke my column there we waited for a couple of batteries arto shelling i mine the platoon commander and the armored personnel carrier began to follow the route little by little. where did you go with your personal on the way , the artillery was still working there, they collected three hundred men. and we were moving all night, the enemy was on the left, i understood that maybe somewhere on the right and we are on the field, so
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we moved little by little, we reached the morning the cars sank, then we drove for the whole day, and on the second day at night we arrived at the location of the battalions, i'm listening to you, i heard that in critical situations, well, too much in the war, people work. the so-called muscle memory, that is, at first you do something and only then you realize what you have done, it is very important to make a decision and very quickly, the faster it is, it is not important, it may be right , it may be wrong, but the success of the task depends on how quickly you make a decision. when the commander makes the decision himself, he has more chances on being a paratrooper. what does this mean ? maybe some of the most successful operations of our paratroopers in this war
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. operations i count it was the kharkiv offensive in the kharkiv region, but it was planned and very well planned, i couldn't believe until the end that it could all turn out like this, this is a very good operation, the second, er, too, the belogorivka, this is what i'm saying, that non-standard thinking and very the quick decision-making by our brigade commander at that time, they also heard somewhere yes about the srebyanka about the belgorivka on the srebyanka. here was the second story, i understood that the mood of the battalion commander was going to go. i would have the task of going into the srebyanka and he then
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i only hinted and we immediately rushed there, it was understandable. because i thought that if we dragged there for another hour, then they would cross there and occupy the front streets, and the battle in the city is a completely different story and it is very difficult , and we immediately took up the defense there on the front streets of the sector every moment they started shooting at the enemy, there were 30,400 meters, they were on our shore and we were with him for a day . at night, we spent the night with them on the second night. i blew everything there to dust, then i saw that they were not leaving there , i was thinking what to do. kombat said there are hails. i told my friends on the front wheel
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. from there they started fleeing to the other side because they couldn't fulfill their task there in the direction of srebynka. this war canceled a lot of stereotypes. it destroyed a lot of myths, many myths , including about the second army of the world. that's the question. this is how this war debunked the myth of the invincible russian paratroopers. about the cool russian paratroopers, what am i going to tell you here ? i also remember the words of andrii lukonyuk , the former company commander at that time, he always said that a paratrooper should not be a drunk man tricked a fountain into hitting a bottle on his head and showing off his chest like that tatuha zvdv he has to be cunning
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, smart, impudent and the rest of those moments you already have with us that's how it works out ourselves we make decisions in their standard tactics they are blindly loyal and they are already over yes they on our second the battalion was advancing, yes, they are a stick, but ours, well, they did not advance in any way, and why their non-standard decision , they have already ended, they are no longer there, but i see that you have a weapon and i know that it is not just a weapon, that it has its own history for you, it has value, tell me they changed they changed they said a lot i definitely won't usually be a weapon it's just a gift for me from, as they say, so many days of war in the east of the country goes on and every day well, only you have more friends yes and it's a pity that
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sometimes it happens that there are no more of them what we met in da vinci, we really became friends, he always told me that you were always in some kind of place, he helped me in the box, i also went there to take us into the box to occupy the village, and before that there was a lot of people there , only the infantry were landing there, and their artillery came up and it was necessary to get us out of there, and then he gave me the others, he helped me a lot, the artillery arrived, his group of pilots came, we were friends with him, and his commander gave me a weapon, seryozha filimonov, too, and we still support him the connection is very good we are very good friends, which keeps my psyche at the front and comrades, well, my mood. i, for example, i don’t, er, i never go there upset. i always encourage the guys there, er, i come to them
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, i have to, and there was even such an incident. we were standing near the wood, er, guys my men were advancing through the forest and had to go to the edge of the forest right before the artillery was coming to them by car, shooting with a jeep, generally, the cook was shooting some arrows there. to the pity of his deruns, i brought them sour cream from the deruns, they sat and drank coffee, the artillery was firing armored personnel carriers , their 82 82 bts fired, sat and drank coffee and everything, and i say everything, guys, let's go ahead, the task is to go to the edge of the forest. they are all questions. in the end, i want to ask when i ask myself this question , i do it differently every time.
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victories once thought about it, we had and there is a volunteer needed, he told me that immediately after the victory he had a base at the railway plant in chernivtsi and we would cut off the plant to the railway station in crimea and call all the guests, we would sit and it seems to me that there is not enough space for you. maybe it will come later puts a little well, i think that we will make it a pleasure place - there will be a place for everyone i am grateful for this interview for finding time for breaking free and i wish
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victory victory over everything thank you we are going back to kyiv and if you just watch you can't even say to the window that my country has been holding back a full-scale russian attack for more than a year with human efforts because the spring sun is shining because life is literally spilling in this air and that's exactly what the soldiers of the 80th separate airborne assault brigade stand for exactly that stand all our soldiers and they will stand until victory itself. we remember ukraine spilled blood during
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the second world war, 72 million people died, every seventh of them in ukraine february 24 , for many, that day began with panic, what to do, where to go, how to proceed, but you they knew that millions of ukrainians are counting on you . they are counting on you to take them out of the shelling.
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when you don't get off the train for a month, when you know that it can be a one-way road, it's proven on the railway everything is made of steel , trains, tracks, people. tell me honestly, how we are all going through things right now, something that does not fit in the head, that's why every sharp sound can seem like a rocket, but in silence hear sirens it's from a strong anxiety that sits deep inside the mental health program and how to deal with anxiety go to how are you.com to find out they bake 2000 loaves of bread every day and sell
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it where each crust is just by weight of gold. we have seen people who have spent months with it. this is our military. people with mental disabilities work here. for them, such a job is a chance for a full life, because they are the only door through which they went in order to give this world more about the indomitable factors of volunteers. see marathon, the only news from monday to saturday at 11:15 p.m. good morning to everyone who is joining us now, it's an early morning, but in ukraine it's already sunday, may 7, julia galushka and oleg dunatsky are working for you in the studio. so , roadblocks appeared at the entrance from russia to belarus as belarusian telegram channels write that in one of the border points something like a gate was installed. in another, several wagons were placed for border guards . barriers and barrier tape with spikes were installed . the belarusian border committee

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