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Fighting for a better life: connecting global stories

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Faisal Bashir /Sopa Images/Sipa Usa/AP/File
The father of Azad Yousuf Kumar displays a photo of his son, in Pulwama village, Srinagar, India, Feb. 28, 2024. His son was lured by recruiters to fight as a mercenary for Russia on the border with Ukraine.

Last December, I was in Miami reporting on the Cuban diaspora when a source casually mentioned Cuban soldiers being sent to Russia to fight in the war against Ukraine. I made a mental note to follow up with my colleagues reporting regularly from Ukraine, but wondered: How would we tell this story? How 鈥 and why 鈥 are citizens from halfway around the world ending up on the front lines of a war that has nothing to do with them or their nation?

It turns out, editors across our international desk were hearing similar anecdotes 鈥 from Nepal to Botswana to Colombia. Although our team is spread around the globe, our daily meetings where we discuss what we鈥檙e covering 鈥 and what we should be reporting next 鈥 keep us closely connected.

This is a space to throw out half-baked ideas and question colleagues about news we may not understand from their patch of the globe. And it often serves as an incubator for international spreads like this week鈥檚 multicontinent feature on how foreign mercenaries have ended up on the front lines of the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

Why We Wrote This

Our foreign desk editors noticed independently that people from their regions were leaving to fight as mercenaries in the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Together, they found a global story.

The number of foreign聽fighters-for-hire in Ukraine increased in 2025, according to a recent report by the Ukrainian government鈥檚 鈥淚 Want To Live鈥 project, an initiative that provides avenues for Russian fighters to voluntarily surrender. On average, two-to-three citizens of countries other than Russia are captured in Ukraine per week, the report cites. Nearly 7% of all prisoners of war in Ukraine today hail from more than 40 countries around the globe.

What started as a colleague mentioning a story pitch about a Botswanan who was duped into enlisting in the Russian military to fight in Ukraine 鈥 and then escaped 鈥 transformed into bigger questions about what this recruitment process looks like, and how it has worked so successfully. Why are certain nationals targeted, like combat-hardened Colombian veterans?

It turns out that even if the recruitment tactics vary, there鈥檚 one thing these African, Asian, and Latin American recruits fighting for Russia, and in some cases Ukraine, have in common: a desire to improve their quality of life.

I鈥檓 grateful to be part of a team that can connect the sometimes isolated dots crossing our desks into a global perspective that tells this bigger story.

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