Kyrylo Horbenko represented the future of the Ukrainian army.
Immediately after turning 18, he joined a program that fast-tracks military careers for Ukraine’s youngest recruits, hoping front-line experience would help him secure a spot at a military academy he hadn’t had the money to attend.
“I want to devote my entire life to military service,” the gangly teen told The Wall Street Journal last spring as he prepared to take his oath of service at a base in east Ukraine.
Less than six months later, Horbenko was dead. Thrown into combat on the most dangerous part of the front line, he was cut down by Russian artillery while en route to reinforce a Ukrainian position in Pokrovsk in October.
The fate of Horbenko, whom comrades described as a committed patriot and an ideal future commander, underscores the severity of Ukraine’s manpower deficit in the face of a relentless onslaught by Russian units that often outnumber its own units 10 to one.
It also illustrates Ukraine’s impossible choice four years into a war that has decimated its professional army: how to safeguard and nurture a rising generation while at the same time ensuring a steady flow of bodies to the front line?
U.S. Veterans Race to Train Ukrainians as Marines; ‘Time Is Not on Their Side’ -WSJ April 2022.
A Year Into War, Ukraine Faces Challenges Mobilizing Troops -WSJ, March 2023.
Ukraine’s Front-Line Troops Are Getting Older: ‘Physically, I Can’t Handle This’ -WSJ, Dec 2023.
Ukraine’s Battered Army Grapples With Growing Troop Shortage -WSJ, March 2024.
Ukraine, in Need of Troops, Lowers Age of Conscription -WSJ, April 2024.
Ukraine’s Strained Military Tries a New Style of Recruitment -WSJ, May 2024.
Ukraine Resorts to Shaking Down Nightlife Spots for Recruits as Troop Numbers Fall -WSJ, Oct 2024.
Ukraine Is Offering Money and Perks for Gen Z to Fight -WSJ, May 2025.
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Kyrylo Horbenko represented the future of the Ukrainian army.
Immediately after turning 18, he joined a program that fast-tracks military careers for Ukraine’s youngest recruits, hoping front-line experience would help him secure a spot at a military academy he hadn’t had the money to attend.
“I want to devote my entire life to military service,” the gangly teen told The Wall Street Journal last spring as he prepared to take his oath of service at a base in east Ukraine.
Less than six months later, Horbenko was dead. Thrown into combat on the most dangerous part of the front line, he was cut down by Russian artillery while en route to reinforce a Ukrainian position in Pokrovsk in October.
The fate of Horbenko, whom comrades described as a committed patriot and an ideal future commander, underscores the severity of Ukraine’s manpower deficit in the face of a relentless onslaught by Russian units that often outnumber its own units 10 to one.
It also illustrates Ukraine’s impossible choice four years into a war that has decimated its professional army: how to safeguard and nurture a rising generation while at the same time ensuring a steady flow of bodies to the front line?
Read more (free link): [https://www.wsj.com/world/ukraine-young-soldiers-russia-war-e7c28620?st=x44ffV&mod=wsjreddit](https://www.wsj.com/world/ukraine-young-soldiers-russia-war-e7c28620?st=x44ffV&mod=wsjreddit)
Poor kid, heros one and all
Adding it to the pile.
U.S. Veterans Race to Train Ukrainians as Marines; ‘Time Is Not on Their Side’ -WSJ April 2022.
A Year Into War, Ukraine Faces Challenges Mobilizing Troops -WSJ, March 2023.
Ukraine’s Front-Line Troops Are Getting Older: ‘Physically, I Can’t Handle This’ -WSJ, Dec 2023.
Ukraine’s Battered Army Grapples With Growing Troop Shortage -WSJ, March 2024.
Ukraine, in Need of Troops, Lowers Age of Conscription -WSJ, April 2024.
Ukraine’s Strained Military Tries a New Style of Recruitment -WSJ, May 2024.
Ukraine Resorts to Shaking Down Nightlife Spots for Recruits as Troop Numbers Fall -WSJ, Oct 2024.
Ukraine Is Offering Money and Perks for Gen Z to Fight -WSJ, May 2025.