Kiev today showed off two purported Russian soldiers it captured during a gun battle in the separatist east that Ukraine's pro-Western leadership says proves the Kremlin's direct involvement in the war.
The two wounded men -- recovering in a Kiev military hospital under the guard of masked state security men -- have turned into pawns in a bitter public relations war being waged by Moscow and Kiev since Saturday's firefight.
Russia insists that Captain Yevgeny Yerofeyev and Sergeant Aleksander Aleksandrov had been decommissioned from the armed forces by the time Kiev believes they entered the Ukrainian war zone more than a month ago.
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But Ukraine's military has released interrogation videos in which the two say they were part of a force of about 200 men contracted to serve with the main military intelligence branch of the Russian General Staff.
The storied unit -- known among global security experts by its Russian acronym "GRU" -- has been one of the most sophisticated and well-equipped branches of the armed forces since Soviet times.
Its presence in Ukraine would suggest that Russia is covertly trying to stoke a separatist conflict that drains Kiev's dwindling resources and further complicates Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko's efforts to move his ex-Soviet country into the European Union and under the military protection of NATO.
Yet Kiev's decision to organise an international media visit to the two captives' hospital rooms threatens to further outrage the Kremlin and harden Putin's stance during international talks on finally resolving the crisis.
US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland cautioned during a visit to Moscow on Monday that Kiev must respect international laws governing the fair treatment of war captives even as it tries to lay out an irrefutable case against Putin.
Both of the men looked wan and disturbed by the media's presence as they lay in their individual rooms dressed in brown hospital-issued pyjamas.
Neither acknowledged their membership in the Russian armed forces nor revealed any details about their service.
"I would like to express thanks to the hospital doctors for their professional help," the bearded Yerofeyev said while shielding his face with his elbow.
The slightly younger Aleksandrov's face had a yellow tint that signalled a more serious condition. He stared blankly at the media scrum and said little besides expressing a longing to see his parents and wife.