AS HE SPEEDS down Zalaeherseh Street in Kherson, Artem, a Ukrainian soldier, points to blown-out apartments and debris. “The Russians call this the red zone,” he says. No one lives here any more. Close to the Dnieper river, which forms the…
AS HE SPEEDS down Zalaeherseh Street in Kherson, Artem, a Ukrainian soldier, points to blown-out apartments and debris. “The Russians call this the red zone,” he says. No one lives here any more. Close to the Dnieper river, which forms the…