Liut Brigade

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Liut Brigade
ДПОП ОШБ ЛЮТЬ
Sleeve patch of the Brigade
ActiveJanuary 13, 2023 – Today
Country Ukraine
Branch National Police of Ukraine
RoleOffensive Guard
Size1200-1500
Motto(s)"Turn your rage into a weapon"
Colors
EngagementsRussian invasion of Ukraine
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel Oleksandr Netrebko
Notable
commanders
Lt. Colonel Alexander Gostischev 

The Liut Brigade (Ukrainian: ЛЮТЬ, lit.'Fury', also spelled Lyut), is an assault brigade of the National Police of Ukraine formed on January 13, 2023, as a merger of three Special Purpose units from the War in Donbas.

History[edit]

Formation[edit]

During the War in Donbas, Ukraine turned local police, militias, paramilitaries and volunteers from the Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts that remained loyal to Ukraine into impromptu military formations called special purpose units, that specialized in assault operations. These units were technically part of the National Guard of Ukraine, however, largely operated independently. During outbreak of the Russian Invasion of Ukraine, Denys Monastyrsky, then Minister of Internal Affairs, sought to restructure these units shortly before his death.[1] Many of these units were merged into newer, more professional units, named the Offensive Guard. Three special purpose units, the Safari Regiment, Tsunami Regiment, and Luhansk-1 Battalion, which were made up of policemen, were merged to form the basis of the Liut Brigade, which would be subordinated to the National Police of Ukraine (NPU), and later joined by the Myrotvorets, Skif, Zakhid, and Enei Battalions.[2] The NPU views the Liut Brigade, and other units based off police formations as a necessary patch, with NPU chief, Ivan Vyhivskyi, stating in an interview with the The Washington Post on 17 November 2023, that: "I hope... that with time there will be no need for such a brigade."[3] The brigades first, and so far only, commander is Police Colonel Oleksandr Netrebko, who, at the start of the invasion, was a veteran during the War in Donbas who then worked for the Kyiv police patrol.[3]

Irpin[edit]

The unit first saw combat during the Battle of Irpin. The nascent brigade was rushed into creation to stop a Russian advance on Kyiv, and Netrebko noted that their presence shocked many members of the Ukrainian military, with one soldier coming up to him and asking "The police are at war? How is that possible?" The unit at that point was exclusively police officers, namely from Kyiv's Rapid Operational Response Unit (KORD) unit and largely wore a mismatch of police uniforms and surplus camouflage and used armored cars on loan from local banks as they "became military within a day."[3]

The units were also open to new recruitment, seeing a surge of civilian enlistment during and after the Battle of Kyiv, and the Brigade is noted as having a higher concentration of woman soldiers when compared to other Ukrainian military formations. Prior to being sent to the front, their training was directly supervised by Dmytro Nazarenko, head of the Kyiv Oblast State Administration.[4]

As with other NPU military formations, recruitment targets former members of the police, and members of the Liut Brigade can either use traditional military ranks, or if they were an active or former police officer, could either retain or be restored to their police rank. Members are also promised post-war employment as police officers, and active police members that joined are promised pay raises.[3]

Klishchiivka[edit]

The brigade shifted towards the Eastern front and has taken part in the 2023 Ukrainian Counteroffensive, seeing front line combat on the Donetsk oblast. Notably being involved in the liberation of Klishchiivka on September 16, 2023, and receiving praise from President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for their role in freeing the village.[5][6]

Odesa airstrike[edit]

On 15 March, 2024, an airstrike on Odesa killed 21 individuals, including Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Gostischev, the commander of the Tsunami regiment.[7]

Structure[edit]

  • Brigade Headquarter and Headquarter Company
  • Safari Regiment
  • Tsunami Regiment
  • Luhansk Assult Regiment [uk]
  • Myrotvorets Battalion
  • Skif Battalion
  • Zakhid Battalion
  • Enei Battalion
  • Tavr Battalion
  • Dnipro-1 Regiment
  • Shtorm Battalion

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kolomiiets, Daryna. "Ukraine's New 'Offensive Guard': What It Is and How to Join". Kyiv Post. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
  2. ^ Mazurenko, Alona (2023-02-02). "Ukraine's Interior Ministry forming volunteer assault brigades known as Offensive Guard". Ukrainska Pravda. Archived from the original on 2023-02-12. Retrieved 2023-02-13.
  3. ^ a b c d O'Grady, Siobhán; Khudov, Kostiantyn. "Cops in the trenches: Ukrainian police key to fight against Russia". The Washington Post. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
  4. ^ Kizilov, Yevhen. "Kyiv Oblast reveals details of Liut (Fury) Brigade's training". Ukrainska Pravda. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  5. ^ Terajima, Asami. "Ukraine war latest: Ukraine liberates Klishchiivka in Donetsk Oblast after months of heavy fighting". The Kyiv Independent. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  6. ^ Polityuk, Pavel; Starkov, Nick; Monaghan, Elaine; Kelly, Lidia; Craft, Diane; Coates, Stephen. "Ukraine recaptures village near Bakhmut - Zelenskiy". Reuters. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  7. ^ "Tsunami regiment commander Alexander Gostischev dead: last interview published". socportal.info. Retrieved 18 March 2024.