>>/47875/
Ah thanks. I see 1 min 34 seconds.
As for the content. I assume the Ukrainian marine was one of the defenders of Azovstal who surrendered. The wounded obviously had to go through hell, and was extremely lucky he not just survived, but without (noticable) brain damage, and he relatively quickly recovered (I assume it was done this year).
Brutalizing enemy is common in wars. Soldiers are in circumstances which civilians cannot even imagine, and cannot be measured with civilian morals. Not just stress of killing, or the threat of dying, or the sight of the wounded and dead, but pressure from comrades, from commanders, from the propaganda they consume (either forced on them or as true believers strengthening their own beliefs). The world around them is different, and they do things they most likely wouldn't in everyday circumstances. Maybe they would be horrified too. Ofc there is the 2% of psychopaths for whom nothing much matters.
Maybe even if the marine wasn't the one who stabbed him (he could really killed someone else), someone did, maybe getting medals for his acts right now.
I don't want to take the path of whataboutism and pointing out stuff that the Russians did. Those could be as real or fake as this story.