Almost everyone in Ukraine can remember what they felt and did last February 24, the day Vladimir Putin’s army launched Europe’s biggest ground war since 1945, seeking to subjugate a country that the Russian president pretends to be in fact not a country. .
In the early dark hours, as armored vehicles crossed the border and warplanes filled the sky, people slept, bathed, made love, played video games, soothed a sick child. Later, as the invasion reached its full extent, there were frantic calls and messages to relatives and friends in danger – a status that came to include almost every corner of Ukraine.
The cost of a year of war has been staggering: tens of thousands of people have died or been maimed, millions have been driven from their homes, cityscapes disfigured, desolate mass graves have been uncovered, the global economy has been shaken as well as the whole security architecture of Europe.
Los Angeles Times
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