A line of fire blazes through a wheat field in the Mykolayiv region on 17 July 2022. Such fires have become increasingly common as the summer sun bakes Ukraine’s wheat-growing plains dry. Photo: Ukraine Emergency Service / AFP
A line of fire blazes through a wheat field in the Mykolayiv region on 17 July 2022. Such fires have become increasingly common as the summer sun bakes Ukraine’s wheat-growing plains dry. Photo: Ukraine Emergency Service / AFP

19 July 2022 (U.S. Wheat Associates) – As an export market development organization, U.S. Wheat Associates (USW) represents the interests of U.S. wheat farmers in overseas markets. We are happy to compete fairly with wheat farmers in other countries on the basis of functional quality and value. Yet, working for these hard-working farm families also gives us great empathy for wheat farmers everywhere.

As the U.S. winter wheat harvest rapidly progresses, our thoughts include Ukrainian farmers as they try to harvest their wheat amid the unimaginable challenges of an armed invasion of their lands. There is growing evidence that Russian forces are deliberately targeting ripe winter wheat fields.

16 July 2022: Russia is setting Ukrainian wheat fields on fire, putting a strain on the country’s grain exports. CNN’s Ivan Watson reports from a farm in southern Ukraine where farmers are racing to save their crops from Russian strikes. Video: CNN

Failed Strategy

Targeting wheat fields also an attempt to demoralize the Ukrainian people, but it will be a failed strategy.

CNN and its reporter Ivan Watson recently showed why frontline Ukrainian wheat farmers vow never to give up.

“Military drone footage exclusively obtained by CNN shows Russian artillery pounding wheat fields, burning the summer harvest charcoal black,” Watson reported, as wheat farmers race to protect their crops. “Despite the threats, these brave farmers still bring in their harvest only to face another obstacle. [They cannot] sell wheat because the Russian military has blockaded Ukraine’s ports, so there is no way for this to be sold except at an enormous loss.”

An aerial photo taken on 8 July 2022 shows the widespread destruction of a wheat field near Siversk in the Donetsk region of Ukraine. Fires in dry wheat fields can easily be sparked by explosions or the red-hot fragments of artillery shrapnel. Photo: Miguel Medina / AFP

German media company Deutsche Welle (DW) recently reported that Ukraine’s infrastructure minister accused Russia of “terrorism,” saying Moscow is “holding people all over the world hostage” by blocking the country’s grain exports. Putin wants to force the international community “to take off some of the sanctions and then the grain can get out,” he said.

Russian forces have been accused of deliberately targeting food infrastructure in Ukraine. RFE/RL journalists witnessed this storage facility for sunflower seeds burning on 31 May 2022. Ukrainian soldiers claimed the warehouse had been singled out for an artillery strike. Photo: Serhil Nuzhnenko / Reuters
Russian forces have been accused of deliberately targeting food infrastructure in Ukraine. RFE/RL journalists witnessed this storage facility for sunflower seeds burning on 31 May 2022. Ukrainian soldiers claimed the warehouse had been singled out for an artillery strike. Photo: Serhil Nuzhnenko / Reuters

Why We Keep Working

As a combine operates in the background, CNN’s Watson asked a Ukrainian wheat farmer to explain why he continues his work.

“Our soldiers are fighting and dying to get rid of these occupiers,” the wheat farmer said. “We need to feed our country, these soldiers, and help the whole world with our food. That is why we will keep working.”

The world is fortunate to have wheat farmers like this man and other Ukrainian farmers willing to do everything it takes to help feed us all.

Ukrainian wheat farmers struggle to harvest their crop as Russian artillery pounds fields