For Russia, the loss of thousands of tanks is an accepted cost of Putin's war in Ukraine - Action News
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For Russia, the loss of thousands of tanks is an accepted cost of Putin's war in Ukraine

Russia's all-out war in Ukraine has led to heavy losses of soldiers and military equipment for Moscow, including thousands of tanks. Military analysts say Russia is content to absorb these hefty losses in pursuit of larger goals outlined by President Vladimir Putin.

Russia leans into Cold War inventory to keep up flow of tanks to Ukraine battlefield

A turret from a destroyed Russian tank is seen near the Ukrainian village of Robotyne in February 2024.
A turret of a destroyed Russian tank is seen near the Ukrainian village of Robotyne last month, near the war's front lines. Russia has reportedly lost thousands of tanks over the course of more than two years of all-out war in Ukraine. (Reuters)

Days before the Russian invasion in February 2022,Ukraine's top military leaders had a sharp message to share.

"We are ready to meet the enemy, and not with flowers, but with Stingers, Javelins and NLAWs," the leaders of Ukraine's army and defence ministry warned,name-checkingthe very weapons theywould use against their invaders.

Since the beginning of the war, Ukraine has used Western-suppliedanti-tank weapons, theirmade-in-Ukraine equivalentsand drones, to hit Russian tanks on the wrong side of the border.

Russia has reportedly lost thousands of tanks to the invasion, but continues to send theseheftywar machines to the front lines despite their apparent vulnerabilities.

A mural shows a fictional character known as 'Saint Javelin' on the side of an apartment building in Kyiv.
A mural of the fictional 'Saint Javelin' on the side of apartment building in Kyiv last month shows the character cradling the FGM-148 Javelin anti-tank weapon that the Ukrainian army used against Russian troops in the war. (Efrem Lukatsky/The Associated Press)

Military analysts say the countryis content to absorb these losses in pursuit of larger goalsoutlined by President Vladimir Putin, favouring a quantity-over-quality approach.

"Rebuilding an empire within the borders of the former USSR is Putin's goal, and the loss of tanks is a perfectly acceptable price for this," said Andrii Kharuk, a Ukrainian military historian, in an email.

The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), a London-based defence- and security-focusedthink-tank, believesRussia has lost at least 3,000 tanks during its Ukraine campaign.The open-source intelligence site Oryxputs the number at just under 2,850 as of the end of February.

Ukraine, meanwhile,claims to have destroyed twice this number.

An aerial view shows a group of destroyed Russian tanks, as seen near the Ukrainian village of Bohorodychne in Februrary 2024.
An aerial view shows a group of destroyed Russian tanks, as seen near the Ukrainian village of Bohorodychne last month. (Vladyslav Musiienko/Reuters)

Old tanks, new war

Whatever the true count, Russia is looking to its Cold War inventoryto source the replacementtanks it needs in Ukraine.

"Russia has a lot of tanks left over from overspending on defence during the Soviet era," saidNick Reynolds, a research fellow at the U.K.-basedRoyal United Services Institute (RUSI), via email.

He says many of the tanks and armoured vehicles lost in Russia's invasion of Ukraine date from that era and were refurbished.

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Analysts say Russia's reliance on these older machines means the quality of the tanks being sent to Ukraine is decreasing with time.

Kharukpoints to known examples of T-54 tankswhich began development in the 1940sand alsopost-war T-55 tanks being pressed into service into Ukraine.T-62 models, which first entered production in the 1960s, are also present on the front lines of this war.

Peter Samsonov, an author andindependent tank expert, saidRussia had sent T-62 tanks into Chechnya, in both wars there.

But the retooling of the older tank models, like the T-55, surprised him.

"I did not even expect Russia to have any of these [tank] chassis still available," said Samsonov, whose Tank Archives blog provides detailed historical information on many Second World War-era tanks.

But he saysCold War-era thinking saw the Soviet Union hang onto large amounts of older weaponry such as tanks or guns, knowing that they could have have some use in the future.

Across the border

In the West, the kinds of lossesRussia has seen would be fodder for potential criticism.

Robert Person, an expert on Russian politics at the United States Military Academy, said that in Russia, no such opposition can realistically occur, given Putin's crackdown on dissent.

A boy sits on a Russian tank at a weapons exhibition in St. Petersburg, Russia, in February 2024.
A boy sits on a Russian tank at a weapons exhibition during the 'Russians Change the World' patriotic festival in St. Petersburg last month. (Dmitri Lovetsky/The Associated Press)

In this climate, Putin can drive forward with his war plans, even if thousands of tanks are compromised in the process not to mention the lives of Russian troops being dispatched to the Ukrainian front lines.

"I don't think he loses any sleep over it," Person said in a telephone interview, noting his analysis was his own and not that of his employer.

RUSI's Reynolds sees a broader split in how soldiers' lives are viewed in Moscow versus in Western countries.

"Young Russian men are treated, at best, as having a duty to perform to Russia regardless of the personal consequences for them, or frequently,if they end up in the less attractive parts of the Russian Ground Forces, as simply a resource to be expended," he said.

The rise of drone warfare

Tanks have been wieldedin wars across the world for more than a century.But their use in the Ukraine conflict has shown how new tools like drones can potentially limit their usefulness.

Kharuk, the Ukrainian historian,says Ukraine and Russia are having to deal with what drone threats mean for tanks and what can be done in response.

A woman in Vladivostok, Russia, takes a photo of a mural showing a tank marked with a 'Z' on it  the tactical insignia of Russian troops in Ukraine.
A woman snaps a photo of a tank-themed mural in Vladivostok, Russia, in September 2023. The tank in the mural shows the 'Z' letter, a tactical insignia of Russia troops in Ukraine. (Natalia Kolesnikova/AFP/Getty Images)

"Will the tanks be able to adapt to the new threat? What will be the forms and methods of this adaptation?" he said.

"And won't this ultimately lead to a fundamental change in the very concept of a tank as a combat vehicle?"

But these are questions that have been askedfor almost as long asthe weaponshave existed, and so far, tankshave endured.

With files from Reuters