French Volunteer Fighter Prepares to Battle for Ukraine

What he saw on his TV screen made him so angry, Pierre says, he decided to set off for Ukraine the very next day. ARIS MESSINIS AFP
What he saw on his TV screen made him so angry, Pierre says, he decided to set off for Ukraine the very next day. ARIS MESSINIS AFP
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French Volunteer Fighter Prepares to Battle for Ukraine

What he saw on his TV screen made him so angry, Pierre says, he decided to set off for Ukraine the very next day. ARIS MESSINIS AFP
What he saw on his TV screen made him so angry, Pierre says, he decided to set off for Ukraine the very next day. ARIS MESSINIS AFP

Pierre, 28, says he spent four years as a volunteer fighter in Syria. Now he is preparing to return to a foreign front again, this time in Ukraine.

The construction worker, who declines to give his full name, was at home in France when Russia invaded its neighbor on February 24.

What he saw on his TV screen made him so angry, he says, he decided to set off for Ukraine the very next day, AFP reported.

"I couldn't just sit on my settee and watch what was going on," he tells AFP.

It took him 10 days, by car and train, to reach Ukraine.

At the border, local troops directed him to the Georgian foreign legion, a military unit set up in 2014 by former soldiers from the Caucasus to help Kyiv fight Moscow.

Now Pierre is cooling his heels in Kyiv, waiting to be posted somewhere. It'll probably be near the capital, a city he doesn't know, and which Russian forces are trying to encircle.

He hopes to be deployed "where I'll be most useful -- on the front line" so he can use the skills he picked up in Syria, like "firing 12.7 mms and 14.5 mms (machine guns), Kalashnikovs and rocket launchers".

- 'To the very end' -
Brown-haired, lean, of middling height, Pierre strolls calmly into the discrete park in Kyiv where he has agreed to talk to AFP.

He is dressed in beige sneakers and a military-style khaki sweatshirt, with a khaki scarf hiding half his face.

He is one of a string of foreigners to respond to President Volodymyr Zelensky's appeal for volunteers to come and repel the Russian forces.

The Ukrainian government puts their number at 20,000, though that figure has not been independently verified.

Pierre expects to be in for the long haul.

"I'll stick around right until the end of the war if need be," he says, out of a sense of "commitment" and "solidarity" with Ukrainians who are "fighting for their freedom against the Russian oppressor".

In Syria, Pierre says, he fought other "oppressors" -- ISIS group extremists and Turkish forces battling the Syrian Kurds.

Between 2014 and 2010, Pierre says he spent a total of four years fighting in Syria, in three separate stints.

He reels off the names of northern Syria's ferocious battles -- "Manbij, Raqa, Deir Ezzor" -- and says he came close to death there on more than one occasion.

Raqa, former "capital" of the IS group's self-declared caliphate, was the worst, he recalls.

When Kurdish forces backed by NATO air power retook Raqa in 2017, the retreating IS fighters mined entire neighborhoods.

Pierre says he and his unit were searching a building when one of his comrades stepped on a mine hidden under debris in a staircase.

Pierre was in a sheltered corner of the stairwell and escaped unharmed. But he saw four men die in front of his eyes.

"It shakes you up a bit," he acknowledges.

- 'A political football' -
According to one inside source, the Georgian foreign legion in Ukraine comprises between several dozen and several hundred foreign fighters.

As in Syria, Pierre says volunteers combatants are joining from all over -- "Italians, Germans, Norwegians, Spaniards, people from pretty much everywhere in Europe. Even from India."

Pierre admires the Ukrainians for their courage and unity.

"Every single civilian is prepared to fight," he says, forgetting that in Kyiv alone, half the city's population is estimated to have left since the start of the invasion.

He sees Ukraine as "a political football" in a high-stakes game between Russia and the United States.

"At the end, it's the Ukrainians who end up in the shit," he says contemptuously.

"When all hell lets loose, there's no-one there to help them. Other countries just fall over themselves to send in weapons."

He says France is just as "hypocritical" as the other European nations, making outraged noises but "letting massacres happen" in Ukraine, just like in "Kurdistan, Yemen and Myanmar".

When he was younger, Pierre wanted to join the French army. But he "did a few stupid things", he explains without going into details, and that was no longer an option.

He knows his long stints in Syria look suspicious to the French authorities and they won't help prise open any barracks gates on his behalf.

But now he says he is grateful he was prevented from going into the forces. "It's better to go to Kurdistan or here (in Ukraine) on your own than play the politicians' hypocritical game."



Lebanese President: We are Determined to Hold Parliamentary Elections on Time

President Joseph Aoun between Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and Speaker Nabih Berri (Lebanese Presidency file photo)
President Joseph Aoun between Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and Speaker Nabih Berri (Lebanese Presidency file photo)
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Lebanese President: We are Determined to Hold Parliamentary Elections on Time

President Joseph Aoun between Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and Speaker Nabih Berri (Lebanese Presidency file photo)
President Joseph Aoun between Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and Speaker Nabih Berri (Lebanese Presidency file photo)

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun reiterated on Thursday that the country’s parliamentary elections are a constitutional obligation that must be carried out on time.

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency quoted Aoun as saying that he, alongside Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, is determined to hold the elections on schedule.

Aoun also emphasized that diplomatic efforts have continued unabated to keep the specter of war at bay, noting that "things are heading in a positive direction".

The agency also cited Berri reaffirming that the elections will take place as planned, with "no delays, no extensions".

The Lebanese parliamentary elections are scheduled for May next year.


Israel Calls Countries Condemning New West Bank Settlements ‘Morally Wrong’

Newly constructed buildings are pictured in the Israeli settlement of Givat Zeev near the Palestinian city of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on October 24, 2025. (AFP)
Newly constructed buildings are pictured in the Israeli settlement of Givat Zeev near the Palestinian city of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on October 24, 2025. (AFP)
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Israel Calls Countries Condemning New West Bank Settlements ‘Morally Wrong’

Newly constructed buildings are pictured in the Israeli settlement of Givat Zeev near the Palestinian city of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on October 24, 2025. (AFP)
Newly constructed buildings are pictured in the Israeli settlement of Givat Zeev near the Palestinian city of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank on October 24, 2025. (AFP)

Israel reacted furiously on Thursday to a condemnation by 14 countries including France and Britain of its approval of new settlements in the occupied West Bank, calling the criticism discriminatory against Jews.

"Foreign governments will not restrict the right of Jews to live in the Land of Israel, and any such call is morally wrong and discriminatory against Jews," Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said.

"The cabinet decision to establish 11 new settlements and to formalize eight additional settlements is intended, among other things, to help address the security threats Israel is facing."

On Sunday, Israel's far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich announced that authorities had greenlit the settlements, saying the move was aimed at preventing the establishment of a Palestinian state.

Fourteen countries, including Britain, France, Germany, Spain and Canada, then issued a statement urging Israel to reverse its decision, "as well as the expansion of settlements".

Such unilateral actions, they said, "violate international law", and risk undermining a fragile ceasefire in Gaza in force since October 10.

They also reaffirmed their "unwavering commitment to a comprehensive, just and lasting peace based on the two-state solution... where two democratic states, Israel and Palestine, live side-by-side in peace and security".

Israel has occupied the West Bank following the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.

Excluding east Jerusalem, which was occupied and annexed by Israel in 1967, more than 500,000 Israelis live in the West Bank, along with about three million Palestinian residents.

Earlier this month, the United Nations said the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, all of which are illegal under international law, had reached its highest level since at least 2017.


Iraq Criminalizes Volunteering in Russia-Ukraine War

A photo circulated on social media shows a 24-year-old Iraqi who traveled to Russia to join its armed forces. (AFP)
A photo circulated on social media shows a 24-year-old Iraqi who traveled to Russia to join its armed forces. (AFP)
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Iraq Criminalizes Volunteering in Russia-Ukraine War

A photo circulated on social media shows a 24-year-old Iraqi who traveled to Russia to join its armed forces. (AFP)
A photo circulated on social media shows a 24-year-old Iraqi who traveled to Russia to join its armed forces. (AFP)

The Iraqi judiciary warned on Wednesday that people involved in the war between Russia and Ukraine will face jail as it attempts to crack down on the recruitment of Iraqis joining the conflict.

Faiq Zidan, the head of Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council, received on Wednesday National Security Advisor Qasim Al-Araji and members of a committee tasked with combating the recruitment of Iraqis.

Zaidan stressed that Iraq criminalizes any Iraqi who joins the armed forces of another nation without the approval of the government.

The judiciary does not have a fixed prison term for anyone accused of the crime, but a court in Najaf last week sentenced to life an Iraqi accused of human trafficking.

He was convicted of belonging to an international criminal gang that recruits Iraqis to fight for Russia in its war against Ukraine.

In November, Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani ordered the formation of a committee, headed by Araji, to crack down on the recruitment of Iraqis to fight for the Russian and Ukrainian militaries.

Iraq does not have official figures detailing how many of its citizens have joined the war. Media reports said some 50,000 Iraqis have joined Russian ranks, while unofficial figures put the number at around 5,000, with 3,000 fighting for Russia and 2,000 for Ukraine.

The debate over the recruitment played out over the media between the Russian and Ukrainian ambassadors to Iraq.

Ukrainian Ambassador Ivan Dovhanych accused Russia of recruiting Iraqis. Last week, the Ukrainian government sent a letter to the Iraqi government about the recruitment.

It hailed Baghdad’s criminalization of such activity. The letter also revealed that Ukrainian authorities had arrested an Iraqi who was fighting for Russia.

Ukraine has denied that it has recruited Iraqis to join the conflict, but reports indicate otherwise.

Meanwhile, Russian Ambassador to Baghdad Elbrus Kutrashev acknowledged that Iraqi fighters had joined the Russian army.

Speaking to the media, he declined to give exact figures, but dismissed claims that they reached 50,000 or even 5,000, saying instead they number no more than a few hundred.

He confirmed that Iraqis had joined the Russian army and “that some four to five had lost their lives”.

He revealed that the Russian embassy in Baghdad had granted visas to Russia to the families of the deceased on humanitarian grounds.

Russian law allows any foreign national residing in Russia and who speaks Russian to join its army with a salary of around 2,500 to 3,000 dollars.

There have been mounting calls in Iraq for the authorities to crack down on human trafficking gangs.

Would-be recruits are often lured by the monthly salary and the possibility of gaining the Russian or Ukrainian nationality.

Critics of the authorities have said Iraqi youths are lured to join foreign wars given the lack of job opportunities in Iraq.