Cats Are Fighting The Ukraine War On The Propaganda Front — And From The Trenches

From the military camps where they stop mice from wreaking havoc to social media where they help raise money, Ukraine’s felines are enduring the war alongside their people.

Roman Sinicyn and his men were living in an abandoned house in a destroyed village for a month.

Although each of the Ukrainian soldiers contributed to their survival and fought the Russians, perhaps their biggest hero was Syrsky the Cat.

The fearless feline evicted a rodent infestation in the platoon’s temporary headquarters, hunting the mice mercilessly as his humans engaged in firefights with invading Russians. By day Syrsky made the soldiers’ temporary lodgings livable and by night he soothed their trauma with healing purrs.

The cheese-loving moggie’s moniker is a double-entendre: he’s named for Ukrainian Army Land Forces Commander Oleksandr Syrsky, and for the Ukrainian word for cheese, syr.

A new story from Politico EU details the important role of felines as the costly war enters its third year. Russian missiles, bombs and artillery have flattened villages, sending civilians fleeing and often separating them from their families and their pets.

The bewildered cats and dogs, accustomed to easy lives indoors, are suddenly thrust into a world of death, explosions, mine fields and other horrors.

As the war endured past its early phases, former pets began seeking out humans where they could find them — in military camps and in the rodent-infested trenches where they hunkered down against the constant thunderclaps of Russian artillery.

During peak war season in the summer, Vladimir Putin’s bedraggled military fires up to 20,000 artillery rounds a day according to the Associated Press, with that number dipping to “only” 7,000 per day as the war machine slows in brutally cold Slavic winters.

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Oleksandr Liashuk, a Ukrainian soldier, with his cat Shaybyk. Credit: Oleksandr Liashuk

Just like they did 10,000 years ago when they first domesticated themselves, cats proved their worth by chasing out mice and rats, but this time they didn’t have to convince humans to allow them to stick around. They were welcomed with open arms and hands bearing snacks, serving as hunters and therapy animals to men enduring a living hell.

“When this scared little creature comes to you, seeking protection, how could you say no? We are strong, so we protect weaker beings, who got into the same awful circumstances as we did, just because Russians showed up on our land,” Oleksandr Yabchanka, a Ukrainian medic, told Politico.

It’s amazing how a return to primitive circumstances has so quickly pushed humans back toward reliance on animals who made it possible for our species to survive in the first place.

Without dogs, early hunter-gatherers would have been much worse off on the hunt and their groups would have been much more susceptible to ambush when they slept. Indigenous societies eking out existences on the tundra would have no reliable animals to pull sleds. Without oxen to pull plows, farmers wouldn’t be able to produce enough food for civilization to thrive and grow.

And the people of nascent human settlements, taking the first great leap forward for our species with the invention of agriculture, would have starved out over long winters as mice and rats gnawed away at their food stores — if not for cats, our furry friends.

In 2024 humans can’t live without cats once again. Felines patrol Ukraine’s World War I style bunkers, killing hordes of mice. Mice that otherwise devour MREs, chew through comm link and power wires, damage weapons and make soldiers miserable.

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A Ukrainian soldier with a stray kitten. Credit: Ukraine Ministry of Defense

Some cats become unofficial unit mascots and good luck charms, but many others are claimed by individual soldiers who find normalcy and relief in their company.

One soldier/cat pair are viral sensations thanks to videos of the alert cat riding along with his human, scanning the terrain ahead. Another story detailed a patrol whose men just avoided an ambush thanks to their company’s cat, who spotted the enemy first and frantically warned that something was wrong.

In that way, cats are serving the propaganda effort as well, helping the public to connect to the men and women defending them.

Military cats have become signals for Ukrainians to rally around, but Russians are doing it too. Russia is a famously cat-loving country, and Putin’s government has latched onto stories about the felines accompanying his men into battle — an effort that Politico notes is meant to humanize Russian soldiers and create the impression that it values them even as it continues to conscript unwilling civilians and ship them to the front line “meat grinders” with a few weeks’ worth of training, meager supplies and minimal ammunition for their rifles.

In that respect, the soldiers of Ukraine and Russia have at least two things in common — they love their feline companions, and they’re enduring hell as well as a high risk of death because of one small man’s delusions of greatness and legacy. Western media tends to ignore the humanity of Russian conscripts, and the pro-Ukrainian side of the internet calls them “orcs,” painting them as the mindless and disposable drones of a bloodthirsty dictator.

But they’re human too, with their own hopes and fears, and mothers back home worrying about them. They don’t want to be there. It seems fanciful to imagine Russians refusing to continue the invasion when Putin has squads behind the front lines with guns pointed at his own men to prevent them from deserting or refusing to fight. But maybe the men in the trenches can come together over shared interest and shared love of cats, and help put an end to three years of misery.

11 thoughts on “Cats Are Fighting The Ukraine War On The Propaganda Front — And From The Trenches”

    1. True, though the Ukrainians have a lot more to worry about than whether the crimson-crested tit or the purple-plumed sparrow didn’t nest in Jonathan Franzen’s backyard for as many weeks as they did the previous year.

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      1. Yes i know. I’m talking in general. My Russian client says cats who kill birds are doing what nature tells them to do. She tells me she doubts Russians and Ukranians would kill ferals and stray. But you never know with Putin.

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  1. We all suffer at the hands of the Sociopaths trying to control this world with their man-made wars and other agendas fabricated to serve THEIR needs. Humans and animals alike are merely collateral damage. They will not win, of course. They never do.

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  2. And i know not all Russian soldiers would do this but they slaughtered peoples pets before they slaughtered them. No human would do that. People tend to forget about animals in wars.I saw a movie about this and wished i hadn’t. The Zoo Keepers Wife.

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  3. It breaks my heart that cats & little kittens like the one on the shoulder of the Ukrainian soldier are being unwillingly abandoned by loving owners & facing the horror of a totally needless war. I’m grateful they can bring comfort & be useful to the soldiers on both sides but it is so unfair that the kitties (and people) should suffer for the pursuit of glory by evil men. It makes me particularly angry that Putin uses the Russian Orthodox church leaders to uphold his wicked aims. My son fought in Iraq as a platoon sgt and has little good to say about how humans destroy each other for selfish pointless reasons. I pray for these two beautiful SEPARATE countries to return to peace so everyone’s young men – and kitties – can live again in peace.

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    1. Thanks, Sheila. I hope your son returned with his mental and physical health intact. It’s no accident that people who see combat up close are the ones who argue loudest for peace.

      re: The Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill is a Putin stooge masquerading as a spiritual leader. Of course no one really expects a Putin critic would be allowed to have that position in Russia, but Kirill is particularly effusive in his praise of a tyrant.

      I think we’ve mentioned it before on the blog, but the graphic novel Pride of Baghdad is a look at the Iraq War through the eyes of a pride of lions that escaped Baghdad Zoo during the coalition bombing of that city. The lions and their escape really happened and it was well-documented at the time, while the anthropomorphic depictions are obviously fictional yet provide a good opportunity to represent the various viewpoints of Iraqis. It’s well worth reading.

      Cheers

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  4. Ukrainian history didn’t begin when “the Russians [just] showed up on our land.” You give away your lack of knowledge about what has been happening there when you repeat this misinformation.

    The US government has been very much involved in recent Ukrainian politics since at least 2014, and has basically taken advantage of the Ukrainian people’s trust by leading them into an unwinnable war which destroyed a whole generation of young Ukrainian men. Now that they are done using the Ukrainian people, they are pulling their aid out and leaving the restoration of Ukraine to Blackrock and other predatory Wall Street firms.

    Not to mention that many Congresspersons are heavily invested in the stocks of the military industries, over and above the campaign contributions that they get.

    It was established at the Nuremberg trials that ignorance is not a defense if the information is available and you don’t make any effort to learn about it. You can follow Aaron Mate’, Glenn Greenwald, Matt Taibbi, Jimmy Dore, Russell Brand, the late John Pilger, The Greyzone, and The Real News Network to learn what your television isn’t telling you.

    I like your comments on cats. You have a lot to learn about politics.

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