Soldiers in Donbas are suffering from trench foot, a medical condition that plagued a large number of troops in World War I . Volunteers near the front have established sprawling depots full of donated products that are delivered to nearby businesses .
Area in Donetsk, Ukraine: Soldiers are fighting trench foot, but winter conditions have muddied roads in eastern Ukraine, prompting others to ask how they will weather the coming cold.But, according to Ukrainian forces near the frontlines, the Russians just keep coming.They're like zombies.According to a 30-year-old Ukrainian soldier with the call sign Kit, which means whale, fighting on the front is only getting colder and more wet as the first snows have dusted the area and melted in addition to the sheets of freezing rain that drench the area almost daily.
Yesterday, I went to the hospital and looked like a huge pile of mud,' said one soldier.Taller, a nickname for a 24-year-old soldier with a special forces unit in Donbas, told AFP that many troops are now suffering from trench foot, a medical condition that plagued a large number of troops in World War I.They go to bed quite sporadically.Volunteers near the front have established sprawling depots full of donated products that are delivered to nearby businesses, Slava Kovalenko said. As the temperatures drop, the Kremlin intensifies its combat in Donbas, destroying the city's frontlines and threatening the troops and civilians who were injured near the frontlines, according to Oleksiy Yakovlenko, the chief of staff at a hospital in Kramatorsk.Then, as the weather improves, the city's military has increased their intensity.The following day, the Russian military has increased its presence in the region, bringing the whole army into