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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."Looking back on it now, Mickey Cesar wishes he had been a little better prepared last month to take flight from his home in Kyiv, Ukraine.

“My friends and I had had many discussions about the buildup, and we all heard the warnings coming from the American government that we should get out," he said. “Most of us saw it as bluster between Putin and the United States."

So, the Kansas expat decided to stay.

Cesar, who went to high school in Lawrence and graduated from the University of Kansas, had been living in Ukraine since 2011, where he taught English in the afternoons and evenings at the STUDY Academy Center in Kyiv.

Cesar told KCUR's Up to Date he planned to wait things out in his Kyiv apartment. He had stockpiled 15 pounds of potatoes, dozens of cans of vegetables, a spare power block for his phone, cigarettes and more. He also taped up the windows and put blankets over them to minimize flying glass in the event of an explosion. Cesar made preparations to sleep in the hallway, away from exposed walls.

“I wish I could say that I would've been smarter,” he said. “Like with an escape plan set, (and a) bag packed and ready to go, like, right by the door.”

Traffic in Kyiv had already gridlocked by the time he woke up on the day the invasion began. He watched online videos of trains packed with people trying to leave and an airport that had already been bombed.

“Just at that time, they announced a curfew that was starting within an hour,” he said. “So I was essentially frozen in place.”

He hunkered down for six days, venturing out during daylight to find food and other essentials, then back home before night, when most of the Russian bombing happened. Despite the knot of logistical problems in Kyiv, Cesar never lost power, heat or internet service.

One snowy morning, he decided to break for the Polish border. Cesar had a bag packed and was prepared to make the four-mile trip to the train station by foot.

“At that point, the government had stopped requiring tickets to be on a train,” he said.

After the walk and 10 hours at the station scouting trains, Cesar bought a ticket to Lviv, in western Ukraine. As he boarded the train just before 9 p.m., an explosion rocked a nearby hotel.

“I ducked down onto the floor of the train, covered my head … then realized that that was over and that the train was undamaged,” Cesar said. “That was the longest five minutes of my life, because I couldn't understand why the (train) driver was waiting. … In my mind I’m screaming, ‘Man, just go!’”...
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SP5 Dennis Loberger
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Always good to be lucky
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