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Research Finds Russia Managing Loss Of Forces Better Than Ukraine

The research shows Russia has now lost 4,400 main battle tanks since its forces invaded in February 2022, trading quality for quantity as it tapped armour stockpiled since the 1960s.
Russian service members ride military buggies during combat training at a firing range, in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict, in Krasnodar region, Russia December 12, 2024. REUTERS/Sergey Pivovarov/File Photo

Russia lost 1,400 tanks in the past year during its invasion of Ukraine but has managed to withstand the losses while facing a less severe personnel drain than Kyiv, a leading security research organisation said on Tuesday.

Both Russia and Ukraine are suffering a heavy attritional loss after nearly three years of war.

Soviet-Era Armour

Moscow’s economy, however, is proving resilient and its stockpiles of Soviet-era armour and artillery are helping it keep pace so far, the International Institute for Strategic Studies said.

“While Russia can currently sustain the manning of its forces, evidence suggests that Ukraine, which has generally kept its casualty figures secret, has suffered a serious drain on its personnel,” the IISS said in its annual Military Balance report on international militaries.

Ukraine’s Force Management Challenge

Ukraine “faces challenges in force management – with many ground units under strength,” the IISS said in remarks that came a day after Ukraine’s Defence Ministry launched a recruitment drive to attract 18-to-24-year-olds to military service for a year.

Ukrainian forces have maintained pressure on Russia, constraining its once-formidable Black Sea fleet. But while it had received advanced Western equipment, it was “not always in the volume or with the freedom of action that Kyiv would prefer,” IISS said.


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Heavy Losses

The IISS figures show Russia has now lost 4,400 main battle tanks since its forces invaded in February 2022, trading quality for quantity as it tapped armour stockpiled since the 1960s.

“The remaining equipment in store could allow Russia to sustain the current rate of loss in the short term, but a significant number of these platforms would require deep and costly refurbishment,” the report said.

The war has become the overriding purpose of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government, which was ensuring its pace and scale neither strained domestic stability nor hardened Western resolve, the report said.

“But the difficulties that a major war and severe sanctions impose are currently chronic and cumulative, not acute and crisis-inducing,” IISS noted.

(With inputs from Reuters)