Community Corner
8-Day-Old Baby Born In Ukraine Now Safe In Parents' Arms
Among the latest evacuees Tampa vets helped are a former Army Airborne ranger and his wife and an 8-day-old baby born to a Canadian couple.
TAMPA BAY, FL — They have left behind family and leadership roles in businesses they founded to spend the past month and a half volunteering to evacuate Americans from Ukraine as the war with Russia escalates.
But members of Tampa-based Project Dynamo, made up of former combat veterans, said it has been worth every moment.
To date, members of the nonprofit group have run gauntlets, dodged Russian troops, GRU officers (Russia's former KGB) and battle zones to drive 215 Americans and other NATO allies to safety in Poland, Romania and Hungary.
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Among the latest of those rescued are an 8-day-old baby and a retired Army sergeant and his wife.
Bryan Stern, co-founder of Project Dynamo and a Purple Heart recipient, said retired Sgt. 1st Class Bob Platt, a veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division who served in Operations Just Cause and Desert Storm, and his wife were surrounded by Russian troops at their home outside Kviv, Ukraine, when they contacted Project Dynamo.
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"Russian forces looted their neighbors' surrounding homes while their neighborhood was being mercilessly shelled by artillery with Russian tank battalions blocking their roads," Stern said. "He had tanks parked on his street, Russian tanks. He told me to leave and we said we're not doing that."
The relentless attacks made it impossible for the Project Dynamo volunteers to extract Platt and his wife. Team members made it within 5 miles of the Platts' home when they came under military fire and were forced to retreat.
“Having been on the receiving end of Russian artillery, it puts in painful perspective what the Platt family and their neighbors have been enduring over the last several weeks as Russian troops were literally in their backyard,” Stern said. “But, we never lose sight of our No. 1 priority, which is to never leave Americans behind, especially a fellow combat veteran. So we pressed on, devised a new plan and found a window of opportunity. I am proud to say we were finally able to rescue Platt from Russian-occupied territory and transported him to safety in Poland on Saturday evening (March 19)."
The relief was audible in Platt's voice once he and his wife and cat were on their way to the Polish border.
"We're about 20, 30 ks (kilometers) from the Polish border, and it's been a long and tiring day. We got evacuated. We appreciate everything Bryan and his crew have done for us."
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Another rewarding experience was the rescue of an 8-day-old surrogate baby boy named Aari, who was adopted by a Canadian couple.
The couple was stuck in Poland while their baby remained in a clinic in Kyiv, but they feared for the baby's safety as Russian troops drew closer to the clinic.
Project Dynamo team members came up with a plan to evade Russian troops and made their way to the clinic, where they removed the baby and later delivered him to his grateful parents in Poland.
“We’re deeply grateful to the Canadian embassy for the overwhelming support they provided before and throughout this mission,” Stern said. “Their help was truly imperative, and it would have been far more difficult without their support.”
An 8-day-old surrogate baby boy named Aari was moved by Project Dynamo from a clinic in Ukraine and united with his adoptive parents in Poland.
The volunteers, accompanied by neonatal nurses and physicians also led an ambulance carrying twin American premature baby boys and a premature British baby girl to safety across the Ukraine border.
In all, the volunteers have completed 20 missions, piling evacuees into cars and loading buses.
However, Stern said there's a lot of work left to be done.
His organization has received more than 14,000 requests for evacuations. And, because there is no U.S. embassy in Ukraine and the U.S. State Department is unable to enter the country to help, Stern said the volunteers are basically on their own.
The U.S. State Department issued the following alert:
" The U.S. Department of State suspended operations at U.S. Embassy Kyiv, effective Feb. 28, 2022. All in-person consular services in Ukraine are suspended until further notice. Since Feb. 24, Russia’s forces have attacked major Ukrainian cities, and the Ukrainian government closed its airspace to commercial flights due to Russia's military actions."
Evacuees can also register with Project Dynamo at projectdynamo.org.
Anyone interested in donating to Project Dynamo can click here.
All donations go to providing safe ground transportation to airports, fuel for helicopters and planes to evacuate Americans and NATO allies, pilots and food and supplies for the evacuees and rescuers.
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