EP 297: Yuriy Boyechko - CEO of Hope for Ukraine: Surviving Human Safari and Drone Warfare episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 9, 2026 · 29 MIN

EP 297: Yuriy Boyechko - CEO of Hope for Ukraine: Surviving Human Safari and Drone Warfare

from Finding Your Summit · host MARK PATTISON

Welcome back to Finding Your Summit! Host Mark Pattison reconnects with Yuriy Boyechko, CEO of Hope for Ukraine, a humanitarian organization operating in the most dangerous war zones of Eastern Europe, delivering life-saving aid to civilians trapped in cities under constant drone surveillance and artillery bombardment. In this urgent and deeply sobering conversation recorded in May 2026, Yuriy provides a real-time update on what has become one of the most brutal and overlooked humanitarian crises of our time, revealing why the war that began in 2022 has evolved from conventional combat into what he calls "human safari," where Russian forces use AI-powered drones to hunt individual civilians on the streets, drop mines disguised as donuts into playgrounds, and systematically terrorize populations to force entire cities into abandonment. This episode offers a masterclass in courage under fire and humanitarian persistence, demonstrating why ordinary people with extraordinary determination can hold back the second largest army in the world, how volunteers risk their lives driving 140 kilometers per hour through drone-infested zones to deliver food packages, and why the 60,000 civilians still living in basement cities like Kherson represent the front line of democracy itself. Yuriy opens up about the evolution from operating on hope in 2022 to operating on "define hope" in 2026, the devastating reality that four million internally displaced Ukrainians have nowhere to go because safe areas are priced beyond reach, and why his forthcoming book captures the stories of regular people whose courage is rewriting what humanity thought possible in the face of relentless aggression.\n\nKey Topics Discussed:\n\nFrom Hope to Define Hope: Four Years of War and the World Has Moved On\nYuriy reveals the stark difference between 2022 when every aid organization in the world flooded into Ukraine and 2026 when only the most committed teams remain. Discover why he and Mark originally spoke at the end of 2022 when Yuriy believed the war would be over in three to six months, and the crushing reality that four years later the situation is worse than ever with no end in sight. Learn why Hope for Ukraine has shifted from operating on hope to operating on "define hope," acknowledging that optimism alone cannot sustain humanitarian operations when the global news cycle has moved on to Iran and other crises. Yuriy explains why the teams that remain are those who simply cannot leave because abandoning these populations would mean certain death for thousands, and how the mathematics of survival have become brutally simple when you're one of the few organizations still willing to enter the kill zones.\n\nHuman Safari: The Drone Warfare Revolution That Changed Everything\nDiscover the terrifying new reality of modern urban warfare that Yuriy calls "human safari." Unlike 2022 when aid convoys could drive into cities, distribute supplies, and leave without incident, 2026 has brought AI-powered drones that constantly patrol the skies above cities like Kherson, hunting for any sign of human movement. Learn why a simple trip to a coffee shop can result in a missile strike within minutes, how Russian forces use drones as spotters to pinpoint individual civilians and launch targeted attacks, and why the only defense is driving at 110 to 140 kilometers per hour while scanning the sky and listening for the telltale buzzing sound. Yuriy shares the devastating story of a family taking their two young daughters to a playground when a missile strike killed the father and injured the mother and both children, ages five and three, illustrating why Kherson has become what he describes as a total war crime scene.\n\nThe Three Hour Window: How Aid Missions Work in a Basement City\nYuriy unveils the precise and dangerous choreography required to deliver humanitarian aid in 2026. Teams load vans with food, hygiene products, and supplies in western Ukraine, then drive overnight to a staging area 60 kilometers from Kherson where they sleep. At 4 AM they wake and make the high-speed run into the city with one driver pushing maximum speed while two spotters watch through windows and listen for drones, using detection devices to identify threats. Discover why Kherson is now called "basement city" because residents spend most of their time underground, only rushing out when the aid van arrives to grab a food kit before retreating to safety. Learn about the two to three hour operational window before drone activity makes the mission impossible, why the team parks under trees for concealment, and how reducing exposure to the deadly Khumbu Icefall equivalent—the journey through drone zones—from six passages to one represents a massive safety improvement in humanitarian

Welcome back to Finding Your Summit! Host Mark Pattison reconnects with Yuriy Boyechko, CEO of Hope for Ukraine, a humanitarian organization operating in the most dangerous war zones of Eastern Europe, delivering life-saving aid to civilians trapped in cities under constant drone surveillance and artillery bombardment. In this urgent and deeply sobering conversation recorded in May 2026, Yuriy provides a real-time update on what has become one of the most brutal and overlooked humanitarian crises of our time, revealing why the war that began in 2022 has evolved from conventional combat into what he calls "human safari," where Russian forces use AI-powered drones to hunt individual civilians on the streets, drop mines disguised as donuts into playgrounds, and systematically terrorize populations to force entire cities into abandonment. This episode offers a masterclass in courage under fire and humanitarian persistence, demonstrating why ordinary people with extraordinary determination can hold back the second largest army in the world, how volunteers risk their lives driving 140 kilometers per hour through drone-infested zones to deliver food packages, and why the 60,000 civilians still living in basement cities like Kherson represent the front line of democracy itself. Yuriy opens up about the evolution from operating on hope in 2022 to operating on "define hope" in 2026, the devastating reality that four million internally displaced Ukrainians have nowhere to go because safe areas are priced beyond reach, and why his forthcoming book captures the stories of regular people whose courage is rewriting what humanity thought possible in the face of relentless aggression.\n\nKey Topics Discussed:\n\nFrom Hope to Define Hope: Four Years of War and the World Has Moved On\nYuriy reveals the stark difference between 2022 when every aid organization in the world flooded into Ukraine and 2026 when only the most committed teams remain. Discover why he and Mark originally spoke at the end of 2022 when Yuriy believed the war would be over in three to six months, and the crushing reality that four years later the situation is worse than ever with no end in sight. Learn why Hope for Ukraine has shifted from operating on hope to operating on "define hope," acknowledging that optimism alone cannot sustain humanitarian operations when the global news cycle has moved on to Iran and other crises. Yuriy explains why the teams that remain are those who simply cannot leave because abandoning these populations would mean certain death for thousands, and how the mathematics of survival have become brutally simple when you're one of the few organizations still willing to enter the kill zones.\n\nHuman Safari: The Drone Warfare Revolution That Changed Everything\nDiscover the terrifying new reality of modern urban warfare that Yuriy calls "human safari." Unlike 2022 when aid convoys could drive into cities, distribute supplies, and leave without incident, 2026 has brought AI-powered drones that constantly patrol the skies above cities like Kherson, hunting for any sign of human movement. Learn why a simple trip to a coffee shop can result in a missile strike within minutes, how Russian forces use drones as spotters to pinpoint individual civilians and launch targeted attacks, and why the only defense is driving at 110 to 140 kilometers per hour while scanning the sky and listening for the telltale buzzing sound. Yuriy shares the devastating story of a family taking their two young daughters to a playground when a missile strike killed the father and injured the mother and both children, ages five and three, illustrating why Kherson has become what he describes as a total war crime scene.\n\nThe Three Hour Window: How Aid Missions Work in a Basement City\nYuriy unveils the precise and dangerous choreography required to deliver humanitarian aid in 2026. Teams load vans with food, hygiene products, and supplies in western Ukraine, then drive overnight to a staging area 60 kilometers from Kherson where they sleep. At 4 AM they wake and make the high-speed run into the city with one driver pushing maximum speed while two spotters watch through windows and listen for drones, using detection devices to identify threats. Discover why Kherson is now called "basement city" because residents spend most of their time underground, only rushing out when the aid van arrives to grab a food kit before retreating to safety. Learn about the two to three hour operational window before drone activity makes the mission impossible, why the team parks under trees for concealment, and how reducing exposure to the deadly Khumbu Icefall equivalent—the journey through drone zones—from six passages to one represents a massive safety improvement in humanitarian

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EP 297: Yuriy Boyechko - CEO of Hope for Ukraine: Surviving Human Safari and Drone Warfare

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Welcome back to Finding Your Summit! Host Mark Pattison reconnects with Yuriy Boyechko, CEO of Hope for Ukraine, a humanitarian organization operating in the most dangerous war zones of Eastern Europe, delivering life-saving aid to civilians trapped...

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