Sunday, December 7, 2025
ADVT 
International

'It's existential': Ukrainian soldiers get advanced engineering and medical training

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Aug, 2025 09:10 AM
  • 'It's existential': Ukrainian soldiers get advanced engineering and medical training

With the prolonged war in Ukraine intensifying and no end in sight, the training being provided to Ukrainian soldiers by Canadian Forces personnel is being honed to better reflect the needs on the battlefield.

Operation UNIFIER is the Canadian Armed Forces' military training mission in support of Ukraine. 

Launched a decade ago at the request of the Ukrainian government, following Russia's annexation of Crimea, it was modified three years ago after the Russian invasion.

Canadian troops, along with some NATO partners, provide training on a variety of basic and advanced military skills, including tactical medical training, combat engineering, and leadership skills and education in secret bases across Poland.

"This mission is critically important from an operations perspective. So Russia's illegal war in the Ukraine, if we do not enable the Ukrainians and help and do everything we can to make a difference there, I think that's critical in doing our part," said Lt. Col Chelsea Braybrook, the commander of the UNIFIER mission, in an interview with The Canadian Press in Warsaw.

Braybrook said for the Ukrainians, this is a matter of life or death.

"These are serious people doing serious work. For them, it's existential. I think they take it very seriously. They're very professional," she said.

"These are very patriotic people who care about the future and survival of their country, and I think that's evident when they come to the training."

Prime Minister Mark Carney touted Operation UNIFIER in a speech Sunday, Ukraine's Independence Day, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and hundreds of Ukrainian troops on hand.

"Canada, under Prime Minister Stephen Harper, launched Operation Unifier, sending hundreds of Canadian Armed Forces personnel to this country. Since its inception, the Operation UNIFIER has trained over 45,000 members of the Ukrainian Security Forces," Carney said.

"A mission that has unfortunately only grown in importance since that cold February three years ago when Putin renewed his illegal war."

The core training includes engineering, with elite combat engineers skilled in minefield placement and clearing, bridge building, demolitions, field defences, and road and airfield construction, as well as medical procedures. At one point, Ukrainian troops were instructed on using the Leopard tanks provided by Canada.

The new training is getting a revamp at the request of the Ukrainian government.

"On the engineering and medical side, new curriculums are rolling out right now. You have seen a basic sapper-type training, and that has now changed to be a professional sapper-type training," Braybrook said.

"It's the same on the medical side. They went from a kind of basic level of combat casualty care, and they're advancing those skill sets all the time and moving into the space where they're training instructors, so I think over time we can say we're building on the work."

Braybrook said the new advanced engineering training has already begun. The updated program on medical care will be launched next month. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE International ARTICLES

Israel strikes Lebanon amid ceasefire

Israel strikes Lebanon amid ceasefire
Israel has carried out a series of airstrikes, targeting several areas in southern and eastern Lebanon, media reported. Israeli warplanes launched multiple raids on the heights of the eastern Mountain Range and an area in the Baalbek district of eastern Lebanon, the National News Agency (NNA) reported, adding Israel also launched several airstrikes on targets in southern Lebanon at around 10:35 p.m. local time on Thursday.

Israel strikes Lebanon amid ceasefire

At least 10 killed at adult education center in what officials say is Sweden's worst mass shooting

At least 10 killed at adult education center in what officials say is Sweden's worst mass shooting
At least five people have been injured in a shooting at an education campus in Orebro, central Sweden, Swedish Radio reported on Tuesday. The victims' condition remains unknown, but the county council said four people have been admitted to hospital. Meanwhile, the Swedish newspaper Expressen has reported that the shooter killed himself or herself.

At least 10 killed at adult education center in what officials say is Sweden's worst mass shooting

Support, silence and confusion: Republicans respond to Trump's trade war

Support, silence and confusion: Republicans respond to Trump's trade war
U.S. President Donald Trump's unprecedented move to pull America’s closest neighbours into a trade war has left some Republican lawmakers precariously navigating how to support the leader's tariff agenda while their local economies brace for impact.

Support, silence and confusion: Republicans respond to Trump's trade war

What is known about the deadly collision between a passenger jet and Army helicopter

What is known about the deadly collision between a passenger jet and Army helicopter
American Airlines Flight 5342 and an Army helicopter collided in midair near Washington D.C.'s Reagan National Wednesday night, sending the two aircraft into the Potomac River and killing all 67 aboard in the deadliest U.S. air disaster since 2001. The cause of the crash 3 miles (5 kilometers) south of the White House and U.S. Capitol was under investigation Monday as crews recovered wreckage from the river.

What is known about the deadly collision between a passenger jet and Army helicopter

Observers call for pressure on U.S. corporations as Trump, Musk take aim at Canada

Observers call for pressure on U.S. corporations as Trump, Musk take aim at Canada
As U.S. President Donald Trump and Elon Musk take aim at Canada, some high-level observers are calling on the federal government to consider sanctioning or even banning corporations owned by those close to Trump — much as it did with Russian oligarchs after the invasion of Ukraine.

Observers call for pressure on U.S. corporations as Trump, Musk take aim at Canada

Mexican president says she's cut a deal with Trump to delay tariffs by a month

Mexican president says she's cut a deal with Trump to delay tariffs by a month
Mexico's president says she spoke with U.S. President Donald Trump and he has agreed to delay the implementation of tariffs on her country for one month. Claudia Sheinbaum says in a social media post that Mexico will send 10,000 members of its national guard to the U.S. border to combat drug trafficking. 

Mexican president says she's cut a deal with Trump to delay tariffs by a month