The 20th Operational Brigade âÂÂLubartâ () is a military formation of the National Guard of Ukraine within the 1st Corps âÂÂAzovâÂÂ.
At the beginning of RussiaâÂÂs full-scale invasion, the âÂÂLubartâ special unit was established in Volyn as a DFTG. In the summer of 2022, the special unit was reorganized into the Separate Special Forces Detachment (OZSP) âÂÂLubartâÂÂ. In February 2024, it became part of the âÂÂAzovâ brigade as the 5th Special Forces Battalion. On April 15, 2025, the battalion was expanded into the 20th Operational Brigade, and the brigade joined the 1st NGU Corps âÂÂAzovâÂÂ.
The brigade is named after Liubartas, prince of Volhynia (now Volyn) and Galicia. Lubart is how Liubartas pronounces in Ukraine.
The âÂÂLubartâ brigade was initially formed from veterans of the âÂÂAzovâ Separate Special Forces Detachment (OZSP) and former participants in the ATO from Volyn and Galicia. Later, volunteers, representatives of the ultras movement, and members of various patriotic organizations began joining the experienced fighters .
The âÂÂLubartâ volunteer unit was created in Volyn in February 2022 â in the first days of RussiaâÂÂs full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The official founding date is 26 February 2022. The name was chosen in honor of prince Lubart from the Gediminid dynasty, a 14th-century ruler and defender of the Kingdom of Galicia and Volhynia. The square in front of Lutsk Castle (also known as LubartâÂÂs Castle) became the gathering place for volunteers who formed the core of the DFTG. The premises of the Holy Archangel MenâÂÂs Castle Monastery of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (Lutsk) were used as headquarters and barracks.
At first, DFTG âÂÂLubartâ fighters, jointly with representatives of the special services, took part in identifying and detaining enemy sabotage groups and agents in the region. The first combat tasks of the newly formed unit were to guard strategic facilities near Lutsk and provide cover for Lutsk Airport. In March 2022, âÂÂLubartâ fighters conducted combat duty on the state border with Belarus, from which there was a high threat of enemy invasion at that time . At the same time, the unitâÂÂs fighters underwent intensive combat training for further service in the combat zone .
In April 2022, âÂÂLubartâ was engaged in combat tasks in the newly de-occupied areas of Kyiv Oblast. In particular, Lubart personnel carried out clearing operations and supported sapper teams that conducted demining of residential neighborhoods, infrastructure facilities, and roads in Borodianka and surrounding villages. In some settlements, it was âÂÂLubartâ fighters who became the first military personnel to enter after Russian occupation forces had been driven out .
Since by the end of spring 2022 the situation on the border with the Republic of Belarus remained stable, the leadership of âÂÂLubartâ decided to scale up the unitâÂÂs activities. As a result, in May of that year, DFTG âÂÂLubartâ was reorganized into a special operations detachment of the Special Operations Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Together with other SOF units, its fighters participated in several key moments of defense, reconnaissance, and counteroffensive actions during the Russo-Ukrainian war in 2022âÂÂ2023.
In the summer of 2022, âÂÂLubartâ was actively involved in combat missions in the southern sector of Donetsk Oblast. The unit operated in the areas of Neskuchne and Velyka Novosilka settlements. During the fighting, dozens of occupiers were eliminated, and one enemy officer was taken prisoner. The unit was also involved in the defense of Zaporizhzhia Oblast [6]. Later, âÂÂLubartâ became part of the SOF Resistance Movement of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, âÂÂWest.â During the winter of 2022âÂÂ2023, OZSP âÂÂLubartâ took direct part in fierce battles for the city of Bakhmut. The detachmentâÂÂs area of responsibility was the southeastern part of the settlement.
In spring 2023, âÂÂLubartâ fighters completed an advanced combat training course in the Republic of Poland under the U.S. Army Ranger training program, which significantly strengthened the unitâÂÂs combat capabilities. In summer 2023, the special unit carried out special missions on the left bank of the Dnipro RiverâÂÂin the areas of Kozachi Laheri, Krynky, Poima, Korsunka, and on islands in the riverâÂÂs delta.
In early August 2023, âÂÂLubartâ fighters were involved in a sabotage operation on the left bank of the Dnipro River near the village of Kozachi Laheri. It was at this time that the unit suffered its first losses. The combat actions were aimed to divert the enemyâÂÂs attention and create conditions for further operations in other sectors of the front.
In October 2023, the SOF âÂÂLubartâ detachment was redeployed to the Zaporizhzhia direction, where it took part in assault operations near the settlements of Verbove and Novopokrovka. In November 2023, the fighters returned to Kherson Oblast. During this period, the unit conducted reconnaissance on the Dnipro River islands and in the floodplains, searching for weak points in the enemyâÂÂs defenses to the south of Krynky.
On 12 February 2024, OZSP âÂÂLubartâ joined the 12th Special Forces Brigade âÂÂAzovâ as the 5th Special Forces Battalion .
From spring 2024, âÂÂLubartâ fighters, as part of the 12th Special Forces Brigade âÂÂAzov,â took an active part in combat operations in the Serebrianskyi Forest in Luhansk Oblast . In summer, âÂÂLubartâ fighters conducted counteroffensive actions in the area of the Siverskyi Donets River.
Since early autumn 2024, the 5th Battalion âÂÂLubartâ has been actively involved in combat operations in the ToretskâÂÂNew York direction in Donetsk Oblast, between the villages of Nelipivka and New York.
In April 2025, the battalion was expanded into the 20th Operational Brigade; the brigade joined the 1st NGU Corps âÂÂAzovâ . On 1 October 2025, on the occasion of the Day of Defenders of Ukraine, the âÂÂLubartâ Operational Brigade received its battle flag. It was presented by the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, to the brigade commander, Lieutenant Colonel Vadym âÂÂYankeeâ Krykun .
Since October 2025, fighters of the âÂÂLubartâ brigade have been carrying out combat missions in the DobropilliaâÂÂPokrovsk direction in the area of the settlement of Rodynske.
Commanders:
Chiefs of Staff:
Lubart Suprovid is a structural unit focused on providing comprehensive support, recovery, and ongoing assistance to service members of the âÂÂLubartâ brigade who have been wounded or fallen ill while defending Ukraine . Commander: Yuliia Chepurko (âÂÂYulaâÂÂ) .
Areas of activity
The service coordinates interaction between military structures, medical institutions, volunteers, and state institutions. Its partners include, among others, the charitable foundation âÂÂVolyn SOSâ and the brand M-Tac.
The public organization âÂÂLubart Suprovidâ engages donors and partners to cover the financial needs of treatment and rehabilitation and, where possible, facilitates the involvement of civilian specialists (medical personnel, coordinators, logisticians, case managers, drivers).
Signifer Service (from Latin âÂÂsigniferâ â standard-bearer) is a structural unit of the brigade responsible for shaping the unitâÂÂs internal culture, upholding traditions and identity, and ensuring communication between service members, society, and state institutions. Signifer Service of the âÂÂLubartâ brigade was established in 2025 . Signifers are servicemen of this subunit. Commander: Marko Melnyk (âÂÂVyriiâÂÂ) . Signifers carry out combat missions alongside line units in the combat zone.
Duties of a signifer
âÂÂLubartâ carries on and develops the Azov tradition of the Khorunzha Sluzhba, remaining one of the few military formations that consciously cultivate this unique institution of modern military culture. This is about systematic work with meaningsâÂÂthose that hold the unit together from within no less firmly than weapons and discipline.
A signifer in âÂÂLubartâÂÂ, first of all, is a bearer of ideological, philosophical, and historical memory, as well as a guardian of the unitâÂÂs symbols and regalia. Their mission encompasses educational, research, lecturing, publishing, and media work aimed at fighters across all subunits and at civilian society, primarily youth. In wartime, such work becomes critically important: the Khorunzhy Service serves as an antidote to hostile pseudo-historical narratives, ideological subversion, and information-psychological operations.
The very term âÂÂkhorunzhyiâ appeals to the Cossack tradition, although it has no direct institutional analogues in the Zaporozhian Host, the army of the Ukrainian PeopleâÂÂs Republic, or the Hetmanate. This is its fundamental distinctive feature. A âÂÂLubartâ signifer is not a military rank or title in the classical sense, as it was during the 1917âÂÂ1921 War of Independence. Rather, it is a marker of meaning that determines a personâÂÂs place in the internal hierarchy of honor and responsibility.
Signifer is a stylised name for the Ukrainian âÂÂkhorunzhyiâÂÂ. The name âÂÂkhorunzhyiâ directly points to its connection with the most sacred thing a unit possessesâÂÂits battle banner, the khoruhva. It embodies honor, continuity, and the shared memory of the military formation. To be a khorunzhyi means to stand guard not only over the flag, but also over the meanings for which that flag is raised in battle.
A separate nationwide project of Signifer Service is the All-Ukrainian Military Culture Forum âÂÂSteel Wordâ and a network of âÂÂSteel Wordâ military culture clubs based at higher education institutions, volunteer communities, and veteran communities in the following cities (as of December 2025): Kyiv, Poltava, Lutsk, Odesa, Rivne, Lviv, Dubno (Rivne Oblast), Lubar (Zhytomyr Oblast), Kryvyi Rih, Novovolynsk (Volyn Oblast).
The first All-Ukrainian Forum of Military Culture âÂÂSteel Wordâ took place in Poltava on 21âÂÂ23 November 2025. According to information from local self-government bodies and state institutions of the Poltava region, it was the first forum of this format in Ukraine, bringing together service members, veterans, publishers, journalists, artists, and government representatives.
The project was initiated by Signifer Service in partnership with the Poltava Regional Military Administration.
The program of the first three-day event included panel discussions and roundtables, book presentations by service members and veterans and autograph sessions, as well as thematic meetings hosted at veteran institutionsâ venues.
Lubart Foundation is the official support platform for the âÂÂLubartâ brigade.
The platform publishes information on current fundraising campaigns (including for ground robotic systems and reconnaissance observation equipment) and data on assistance provided (such as drones, vehicles, generators, and funding for communications equipment).
The primary colors used by the brigade for insignia are subdued dark green, black, and beige. The central symbol of the insignia is a hollow skull with deep detailing and a crown above the head . Since the 19th century, AdamâÂÂs skull in European military aesthetics has symbolized contempt for death, while the crown alludes to the Volhynian Prince Lubart, who is the brigadeâÂÂs patron .
On the DFTG âÂÂLubartâ shoulder patch, in addition to the crowned skull, there was the inscription âÂÂThe dead do not fear death,â later replaced by âÂÂAmat victoria curamâ (Latin: âÂÂVictory loves the preparedâÂÂ). Today, the brigadeâÂÂs sleeve insignia has a pentagonal shape, symbolizing the âÂÂShield of the Nation.âÂÂ