
Yevhen Pronin will be at the European Championships to watch his nation’s athletes – before returning to battle on the front line
By Ben Bloom, ATHLETICS CORRESPONDENT, IN MUNICH 14 August 2022 • 10:30pm
Yevhen Pronin, the acting president of the Ukraine Athletics Federation, presses play on a video on his phone. “There are two Russian soldiers here,” he says, matter of fact. “So I drop the bomb here, like a basketball, as you see. The machine moves here and crushes them, so they died.”
Pronin, 31, is the youngest athletics federation president in the world. He is also a successful lawyer and, for the past few months, a soldier on the Ukrainian army’s front line fighting the Russian invasion.
This week, he will travel to Munich to watch his nation’s athletes – many of whom have fled their homes to escape the war – compete in the European Championships. Then, he will return to fight.
“When war started on Feb 24, I chose something that a lot of boys and men in Ukraine chose,” he said. “I signed a contract and became a soldier of the Ukrainian army. I had no experience, but I was ready mentally and emotionally.”
His girlfriend and sister lived in the car park under their building in Kyiv for a month before evacuating to Dresden and then Vienna. Pronin stayed behind, left his home and committed to fight.
Having flown drones in his spare time, he signed up to undertake reconnaissance missions and use military drones to drop bombs on enemy fighters.

Asked how he felt to be personally killing Russian soldiers, he replied: “I feel great because I am doing this for my country. If we do not kill them, they can kill our children, they can kill us. Of course, I’m not a killer in real life.
“We’ve had a lot of problems with Russia over maybe 200 to 300 years. For my generation, it is a chance. My parents are scared to do something because they grew up as part of the Soviet Union. But my generation are different. With the international sanctions, the work with the international community, it is the best time to do it. The time of this war is the best time for our generation.”
Alongside his fellow lawyer friends, Pronin forms part of a drone unit called the Tactical Busters, who upload videos of their kills on to Instagram. “It’s propaganda,” he said. “Most Ukrainian soldiers do it. It’s a new type of war. When we need some help from volunteers or international organisers, we send them videos.”
It is the same reason he is given clearance to leave the front line and speak to the media while attending the European Championships and last month’s World Championships. “They know it sends out a powerful message when I am here and our athletes are here,” he said.

A slimmed down Ukraine contingent won two high-jump medals at those World Championships, where Pronin says he was disappointed that Ukrainian legend and World Athletics vice-president Sergey Bubka chose not to meet the athletes. “I don’t understand Sergey,” Pronin said. “I respect him as a great sportsman, but I don’t respect him as an official now.”
Ukraine should also win a handful of medals this week, while Russia and Belarus have been banned from international athletics since March. Pronin insists the sanction should remain for a while yet.
“I think that Russians can come back into international sport, but not in this generation,” he said. “First of all, we must spend time after this war to be separated with Russia. It is like the same situation with Hitler’s Germany. Maybe one generation, maybe 30 years, will be the right time to compete without Russians.”
So important is Pronin’s role in the war that he knows there is a bounty on his head. Every day, Ukrainian security services intercept Russian phone calls discussing the “f—ing drone team”.
Pronin said: “They say to their soldiers if they can catch one of our group alive, they either give them some money or some days off.”
Nonetheless, he will come out into the open this week in Munich to fulfil duties in the other role of his dual life. Off comes the military uniform and on goes the suit befitting his presidential status. It seems like an astonishing existence, alternating between killer and dignitary. “Why?” he responded. “It’s normal.”
“If we do not kill them, they can kill our children, they can kill us. Of course, I’m not a killer in real life.”
And that’s the difference. He’s an honourable man fighting for his family and his country. The orcs are just subhuman savages with no empathy, no mercy and therefore very dangerous. All this good man can do is kill as many of them as possible.
More comments:
Anka Epsley Reply to A Denny
“No person who ‘feels great’ for killing another person/even enemy is sensible and well adjusted in my book.”
John Moone Reply to Anka Epsley
“Your own Russian barbarians revel in murdering, raping and destroying innocent Ukrainians. They feel great about it. Trolls shouldn’t complain when Ukrainian vengeance strikes their own families and friends.”
A Denny: Reply to Anka Epsley
“You are entitled to that unrealistic, and comfortable opinon sitting in your armchair in a relatively benign country which is not at war with no shells raining down on your town destroying it to rubble. I wonder if you would change that opinon if you were subjected to rape, or you son or daughter, or other relative was raped and killed in front of you by a barbaric Russian soldier invading your country. It might then seem rational for you to kill as many Russian soldiers as possible. I think it very rational indeed. That is war.”
Some commenters were concerned about his safety :
Justin Atick:
“Great that he’s doing this but not very clever to expose him in this way given the Russian’s reputation for carrying out proxy murders. From the start, the West has been glorifying the war and Ukrainian efforts and reporting on everything we’re doing to supply armaments (in detail), Even Selensky is saying this is very unhelpful as Russia can even prepare themselves against certain arms which are being sent. The reported hit on the American HIVARS even before they were put into action is just an example of giving the Russians a green light on where to aim.”
Douglas Denny :
Brave man. Sensible and well adjusted mentally.
Carry a Glock 9mm and a couple of clips at all times Yehnen. . . . And a couple of close bodyguards 24/7 – the Germans are in the pocket of Russia don’t forget. They might suddenly arrange for their security guards to disappear for a while. Duplicitous Barstewards the Germans and the French. Don’t trust them.
STUPID of the DT to publish his photograph. HIGHLY IRRESPONSIBLE.
That’s exactly right! Never trust a ruskie but also never trust a kraut or a frog.
There are thousands like Pronin fighting for Ukraine. They have righteousness on their side and righteousness always wins.
He could send me as many clips of moskali being blown up as he likes.