On Sunday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zalensky announced that any foreigners who wished to fight for Ukraine would be welcomed with open arms and given weapons â and there are many who are answering the call.
A wave of foreign nationals arriving in Ukraine, from all walks of life â from a known for his satire of Trumps supporters, to a ., have flown over to Europe with little-to no training.
Ukraineâs Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba after the initial announcement that the country had received hundreds of requests from foreigners who wished to join the fighting.
In response, he said Ukraine had set up a foreign legion entitled âInternational Legion of Territorial Defence of Ukraine.â
Kuleba urged anyone wishing to join the foreign legion to sign up at their nearest Ukrainian embassy in their home country, and that their entry into Ukraine âwill be simplified to the maximum extent possible.â
Thirty-five year-old Eric Creager of Minnesota told Âéśš´ŤĂ˝â correspondent Daniele Hamamdjian at the border crossing of Medyka, Poland, that although he has no military training, the fight for âfreedomâ is paramount.
âFighting for freedom is important. It doesn't necessarily have to be at home,â Creager said. âThese people have lost their homes because they're being invaded and wars are won by people who show up.â
Describing how he saw the situation in Ukraine unfolding on television, Creager said watching â60-year-olds who work in coffee shops [who] are being handed Kalashnikovsâ with no one to help them spurred his action.
âIâd rather professionals do this instead of me,â he conceded, adding that while he has handled weapons back in the U.S., it doesnât âcount for anything,â in a real war.
âI graduated high school when [the American invasion of] Iraq was getting started and I didnât feel like it was an honourable or just war, so I decided not to join.â Creager said, adding that he believes the U.S. was not justified âin anyâ of its military actions in Iraq and Afghanistan. âWe should not be going into other peopleâs homes and starting wars â thatâs what Russia didâand thatâs why itâs wrong.â
Despite the fear, Creager is determined to do what he feels is right.
âIâm terrified, I know there is a good chance I will be killed by somebody who is better armed and trained than me,â he said. âEverybody likes to talk about freedom, but freedom really only shows up when people are willing to fight for it, whether it be at the ballot box or in a war.â
âJust because I donât know them, I will probably never get to meet most of them or speak the same language doesnât mean they shouldnât be allowed to live their lives,â Creager said.
Twenty-three year-old Olav Nese of Norway also flew to Poland to cross the border into Ukraine to fight Russian forces. Like Creager, he also has no military training.
âRussia has invaded Ukraine, they are not supposed to be there, they have targeted civilians and Ukraine has asked for help,â Nese said when asked why he chose to fight. âItâs the least I can do.â
Nese said he only has experience holding and using hunting rifles, but that did not deter him from his decision.
âThey needed help, I suppose one more volunteer canât hurt,â he said. âIf we donât help them, who will come to help when we need help? If no one shows up to help them, how can we complain when no one shows up to help us?â
Nese said he is aware and afraid of the repercussions Russia could inflict on Norway, noting that Finland and Sweden are not in NATO. âIf Russia invades them, we will have Russia on all our borders, it will only be RussiaâŚthen it would be a quick, one-hour war, then Norway wouldnât be Norway anymoreâ he said.
âI hope if we stop them here, I wonât have to fight them back home.â
Both men said their families back home questioned their decision to leave and fight for Ukraine.
âMy parents said they understand what I am doing, but they donât support it,â Creager said, while Nese admitted that his parents âthink I am crazy, at least their texts say that,â he said.
Some governments have given their blessing for their citizens to fight in Ukraine, such as Latvia and Denmark. In the U.K., Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said that she would âabsolutelyâ support British nationals who went to join the newly formed foreign legion â however Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said those with no military training should join the war efforts.
At a press conference Monday, Defence Minister Anita Anand replied to a journalistâs question about Canadians who may want to join the foreign legion, responding that although the government âunderstands the desireâ of some Canadians to go, the advice to not travel to Ukraine for security reasons remains.
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly also answered the question, noting that the government has advised Canadians to leave Ukraine since Feb. 1, and the advisory for Canadians to avoid travel to Ukraine for security reasons has been in place for âsome time.â
âAt the same time, we understand that people of Ukrainian descent want to support their fellow Ukrainians and also a desire to defend the motherland, in that sense itâs their own individual decision,â she said.
CTVNews.ca reached out to Jolyâs office to ask if Canadians who do go to Ukraine to fight will face legal repercussions once they return home, but did not receive a reply by time of publication.
And for those who are still mulling over the decision to help Ukraine, Creager had some harsh words.
âWhat are you guys doing? How come nobody else is showing up? Weâre a kid from Norway and a middle-aged man who works in data-entry and weâre fighting a war?â he said. âEverybody saw this coming.â