Hundreds of thousands wounded and dead in Ukraine as war grinds on, intelligence suggests - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:10 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Hundreds of thousands wounded and dead in Ukraine as war grinds on, intelligence suggests

With no end in sight after more than 21 months of war, the number of people killed or wounded in the Russian invasion of Ukraine is in the hundreds of thousands, intelligence estimates suggest.

U.K. Ministry of Defence estimates around 320,000 Russian casualties

A woman stands in cemetery with many Ukrainian flags flying in the breeze.
A woman visits the part of a cemetery in Brovary, Ukraine, where Ukrainian soldiers are buried in April. Tens of thousands of Ukrainians have been killed in the conflict. (Roman Pilipey/Getty Images)

With no end in sight after more than 21 months of war, the number of people killed or wounded in the Russian invasion of Ukraine is in the hundreds of thousands, intelligence estimates suggest.

The U.K. Ministry of Defence said this week that between late February 2022, when the moveto take Kyivbegan, and this November, official Russian forces suffered as many 240,000 wounded and 50,000 killed. Wagner Group mercenaries likely suffered 40,000 wounded and 20,000 killed, the ministry said.

"The median of the estimate range is 320,000 total Russian combatant casualties," the ministry tweeted. "Even amongst Russian officials there is likely a low level of understanding about total casualty figures because of a long-established culture of dishonest reporting within the military."

Fighting continues to rage in thebiggest European conflictsince the Second World War, with no sign that either side haslanded a telling blow on the battlefield.

Tracking casualties in Ukraine

Ukrainian soldiers, many living in freezing trenches, acknowledgethey are exhausted going into a second winter of full-scale warwith a resource-rich, nuclear-armed superpower that has morethan triple Ukraine's population.

A Ukrainian civic group said it has confirmed 24,500 combat and non-combat deaths using open sources. But if many of the 15,000 troops listed as missing are also dead, the figure could be much higher, according to a report published in the Ukrainian journal Tyzhden.

"Obviously, the 24,500 names are not the final number of dead (deceased), but by our assessment it is no less than 70 per cent," the authors wrote. "That is, the real number of dead (deceased) in combat and non-combat situations is more than 30,000 people."

Reuters could not independently verify the figures.

A bearded soldier wearing goggles and a camouflage helmet and vest presses his finger to his lips.
In this image made from video provided by Ukrainian Defence Ministry on June 4, 2023, a Ukrainian soldier poses for the camera with his fingers to his lips, in an undisclosed location. Kyiv keeps its casualty figures secret. (Ukrainian Defence Ministry/The Associated Press)

Kyiv treats its losses as a state secret and officials say disclosing the figure could harm its war effort.

An August report by the New York Times, citing anonymous U.S. officials, put the Ukrainian death toll at close to 70,000 and the number of wounded as high as 120,000.

The UN said last month that more than 10,000 civilians had been killed.

Whatever the number, Ukrainian casualties have been dwarfed by Russia's.

"Russian forces may be suffering losses along the entire front in Ukraine at a rate close to the rate at which Russia is currently generating new forces," the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-basedthink-tank, wrote this week.

It pointed to attrition-heavy battles in the eastern cities ofBakhmut, Maryinkaand Avdiivka.

"Russian forces are currently conducting mass infantry-led assaults to capture Avdiivka in an apparent effort to conserve armoured vehicles despite the risk of even greater manpower losses," the institute wrote Wednesday.

WATCH | U.S. Senate deadlock could doom Ukraine funding:

Inside the U.S. Senate deadlock that could doom Ukraine funding | About That

10 months ago
Duration 9:47
A fight over border security measures has left more aid to Ukraine hanging in the balance. Andrew Chang explains what's behind this Senate deadlock and what it could mean for Ukraine's future.

It added that if Ukrainian-provided figures are accurate, Russia is losing men at a high rate everywhere, not only at Avdiivka.

Russian troops, who occupy about 17.5 per centof Ukraine, are againon the offensive in the east after largely withstanding aUkrainian counteroffensive that was unable to punch throughsprawling defensive lines in the south and east.

Russian forces conducted aerialattacks in the east Thursday and used smaller attack groups to try tocapture Avdiivka, the Ukrainian military said.

"For the second day in a row, occupying forces have beenactively using kamikaze drones and aviation. And the number ofcombat clashes has significantly increased," militaryspokesperson Oleksandr Shtupun said on television.

Strain on society

The strain of the war is likely to weigh on Ukrainian society and thepolitical landscape over the coming year. Reforms underway tomake army recruitment and conscription more efficient illustratethe sensitive but important issues the government must navigate.

Oleksii Tilnenko, who helps internally displaced people in Kyiv,says war fatigue is a fact of life.

"Everyone's tired. The soldiers are tired, victims aretired, the IDPs are tired. But there's no way out. We can't justgive up and say 'OK, fine'. At the very least, too many peoplehave died. We hope it'll get easier. And we'll see how it goes."

A wounded soldier lies on a hospital bed as a medical professional leans over him.
Military medics give first aid to a wounded soldier at a medical stabilization point in Ukraine's Donetsk region in late April. (Libkos/The Associated Press)

The grind is weighingon Russia as well, despite Russian President Vladimir Putin's iron grip on power.

Brookings Institution scholar Fiona Hill, a former U.S. National Security Council expert on Russian affairs, said Putin thought "a lovely small, victorious war" would consolidate support for his re-election, the campaign for which he announced Friday.

"Ukraine would capitulate," she told The Associated Pressearlier this year. "He'd install a new president in Ukraine. He would declare himself the president of a new union of Belarus, Ukraine and Russia over the course of the time leading up to the 2024 election. He'd be the supreme leader."

The war didn't turn out that way. The sloghas raised severe challenges to the rising prosperity integral to Putin's popularity and the Russianpropensity to set aside concerns about corrupt politics and shrinking tolerance of dissent.

"This is taking place in the context of a major war that is imposing material and human constraints and stresses on Russia," said Nigel Gould-Davies, a former British ambassador to Belarus and senior fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London. "So ultimately, [the election]will be all about the war."

With files from Reuters and The Associated Press