Engineering, medicine, endurance: how command units of the Podillia Brigade train
Intensive training of command units took place in the 46th Separate Airmobile Podillia Brigade of the Air Assault Forces. Servicemen practiced key elements of combat training — from fire and engineering tasks to tactical medicine and psychological endurance.
This was reported on the brigade’s page, which released photos from the training ground.
The training activities were conducted in an intensive mode and focused on unit cohesion and rehearsing actions that directly determine effectiveness on the battlefield. The brigade emphasizes that combat readiness is not a one-time state, but the result of systematic daily work.
During fire training, servicemen honed accuracy, reaction speed, and confidence in handling individual weapons. Engineering training focused on fortifying positions and installing and overcoming mine-explosive obstacles — skills without which modern defense is impossible.
A separate block of training concerned tactical medicine. Soldiers practiced algorithms for providing aid to the wounded in combat conditions.
The final stage was a psychological obstacle course — a test of endurance, stress resistance, and the ability to work under pressure. The brigade notes that such loads form the inner resilience necessary for real combat operations.
The 46th Separate Airmobile Podillia Brigade emphasizes that training is ongoing, as every exercise is another step toward confident, coordinated, and professional actions during combat missions.








