Why is Pripyat a great training area?
The abandoned city has buildings, streetscapes, destruction, and a desolate, war-fighting vibe for those who endure training. Parts of the area are under nuclear fallout for another century or so, which means learning to wear nuclear protection is paramount.

Urban training for Ukraine is more than nuclear survival, though. It means outsmarting the Russian forces by fighting in a city setting rather than countrysides and river banks. It also means fighting in the harsh winter, which the Russians also endure.

TheĀ Kyiv IndependentĀ states that the Russian military “might be considering seizing much of Ukraine by destroying the country’s armed forces in a series of offensives avoiding cities.” That would mean trying to seize Ukraine through the farmlands and not the bigger cities.

This training is happening while Russia has amassed more than 120,000 troops along Ukraine’s eastern border while Russia simultaneously conducts routine military exercises with Belarus, which borders on the northwest of Ukraine.

Oleksii Reznikov, who’s the defense minister of Ukraine, said that despite his country’s training in the Chernobyl zone, they don’t necessarily anticipate an attack from Russia in the affected nuclear area.

War has loomed between Russia and Ukraine for a few decades, but more recently in the last several years. Last month after a mass buildup of Russian troops along the Ukrainian border and a week full of missteps by Western governments to support Ukraine, Russia began its buildup of forces and a mounting attack.

“If they actually do what they’re capable of doing, with the force amassed on the border, it is going to be a disaster for Russia,” American PresidentĀ Joe BidenĀ said.

When pressed to give the term “minor incursion” further clarity, Biden said it would be something like, “Russian forces crossing the border, killing Ukrainian fighters” and there were “differences inĀ NATOĀ as to what countries are willing to do.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky responded by saying, “We want to remind the great powers that there are no minor incursions and small nations. Just as there are no minor casualties and little grief from the loss of loved ones. I say this as the President of a great power.”