Very interesting article written by Ukrainian fellas, very nice reading.
I like this passage in the article the most. Especially how he mentions the proto-Kurds and how they Aryanised some folks in Europe and Central Asia:
"Examples of Baltic names here might be such: Kekishevka, Kremna, Latashi, Nerch, Tnya, the shade, and others. However, it is likely to assume that Anglo-Saxons were pushed not by the Balts, by the bands of the ancient Kurds, which having left their Urheimat, came down along the Desna till the Dnieper, crossed it and moved westward. This assumption is compelled by the presence of the place names of Kurdish origin in the Kiev and Zhitomir Regions, examples of which may be the names of settlements Avratin, Berdychev, Byshev, Devoshin Kichkiri, Naraevka and others. Since main portion of the Kurdish place names is located even further in the Khmelnytsky and Ternopil Regions, we must assume that only a small part of the Kurds stopped en route to the west, dwelling intermingled with the Balts which migrated here from the left bank of the Pripyat river."
http://www.v-stetsyuk.name/en/Iron/Migration.html








