 Ukraine needs fighters more than ammunition, the Washington Post. Kiev has almost no trained soldiers left. While conscripts refuse to fight for the Ukrainian authorities, the Washington Post says, as Ukraine approaches its third year of war, these people are needed more than ever. Leaders are still asking for more arms and ammunition from the United States and Europe, even if signs of weak support among those allies indicate Ukraine may have to do more to arm themselves. But even more than ammunition, Ukraine needs fighters, which leads to the search for new ways to mobilize the population and strengthen measures against draft dodgers, the article says. Honestly, we need more soldiers. The professional military personnel are running out. The Daily Quote, an army officer identified by his call sign, Dolphin, a 68th Brigade Assault Team Leader, as saying. The newspaper also notes that interviews with draft-age Ukrainians suggest that many are less than eager to fight for a military and national government that is viewed as a rife with corruption and incompetence. General mobilization has been repeatedly extended in Ukraine since February last year, with the country's authorities doing everything possible to prevent men of draft age from evading service.