Contrary to optimistic reporting in most Western countries, things look grim for Ukraine. Hopeful predictions of Russia giving up with fatigue or demoralisation, or Ukraine mounting a sudden devastating offensive have little chance of fulfilment.
While the war grinds on, the toll on both sides is rising.
Western media manipulation
Most Western media reports immediately following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on 24 February claimed the Russians were shocked at the resolve and skill of the heroic Ukrainians and would soon turn tail and run, noses bloodied, never to return. These were overly optimistic, as events have proven.
Much reporting continues to be inaccurate. Earlier this month, Euronews published a detailed update with attribution to Reuters, Agence France Presse and Associated Press. Seems legit.
It quoted US Under Secretary of Defense Colin Kahl estimating that ‘The Russians have probably taken 70 or 80,000 casualties in less than six months.’
Probably? Or we wish? No verification was offered.
Kahl claimed ‘Moscow's armed forces have also lost 3,000 to 4,000 armoured vehicles, and could be running low on precision-guided missiles ...’
Perhaps they could. But no evidence was shown. Russia has vast stockpiles of missiles and is continually manufacturing more.
Euronews claimed, ‘The enemy (Russia) is having no success. Donetsk region is holding.’ That was on August 8th. Donetsk city and its surrounds were overrun on August 22nd.
Of course, both sides manipulate the media. Citizens in each country receive daily reports of the great advances their courageous armies are making and the success of their precision air strikes, often with recycled TV footage from earlier skirmishes or from other wars.
Fatalities mounting steadily
So what is the toll so far? The correct answer is we do not know. Both sides exaggerate estimates of enemy deaths and minimise their own.
Earlier this month, Russia’s TASS news agency asserted that ‘the Ukrainian army’s irretrievable losses may exceed 193,000 service members since the beginning of Russia’s special military operation in Ukraine’.
That contrasts with a Reuters report last week claiming fewer than 9,000 Ukrainian military personnel have been killed so far, attributing that estimate to Ukraine's commander-in-chief General Valeriy Zaluzhnyi.
So we can be pretty sure the number is between 9,000 and 193,000. That narrows it down.
Ukrainian casualties
Our best estimate is between 22,000 and 24,000 Ukrainian combatants killed, about 60,000 wounded and close to 8,000 captured or missing. That’s based on reports, studied with due scepticism, from Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, TASS, the BBC, the Guardian, independent analysts and various others.
Ukrainian civilian casualties are about 15,200 with 5,900 killed and 9,300 seriously injured. This is based on data from Interfax Ukraine, the United Nations and NPR.
Russian casualties
These are trickier to assess as the Russians know the number and they’re not telling anyone anything.
Our best estimate is 12,000 Russian combatants killed and 29,000 wounded. That’s based on reports from Ukraine’s Foreign Affairs Ministry, the BBC, the Economist, NPR and other sources.
This is consistent with last week’s claim by Ukraine’s General Zaluzhnyi to have killed or wounded 45,200 Russian military personnel. The general would hardly underestimate this tally.
Russian civilian deaths have been minimal as most fighting has been inside Ukraine.
Future scenarios
Ultimately, Russia will win. Both sides know that. Both sides are prosecuting the war to gain the strongest possible diplomatic position when peace is negotiated and the country eventually carved up.
It is virtually certain now that the eastern states will return to Russian rule. What happens to the rest of the country remains unknown.
Meanwhile, the bodies keep piling up.
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This is an abbreviated version of an article published today in Independent Australia. The original article is available here in full for free:
https://independentaustralia.net/life/life-display/russia-may-defeat-ukraine--but-at-incalculable-human-cost-,16708
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“Alan Austin is a great Australian journalist and,
I think, a pirate. I steal Alan Austin’s findings all the time.”
~ Jordan Shanks
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtV-2X4BjQI
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