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At Current Rates, Russia Will Overtake Ukraine in 2256

Russia's Heavy Losses in Manpower and Military Equipment Will Not Stop Putin - He Has Committed to a War That Could Extend Beyond Ukraine

Снимка: БГНЕС/ EPA

At Current Rates, Russia Will Take Centuries and Tens of Millions of Victims to Overtake Ukraine, Forbes Reports.

Russian Forces Captured 68 Square Miles of Ukraine in April. But It Cost Them 4,800 Vehicles and More Than 36,600 Soldiers Killed or Wounded, According to an Analyst Who Compiled Data Mostly from Official Ukrainian Sources, Including the General Staff in Kiev.

Ukrainian Losses That Month Were "Minimal." Currently, 19% of Ukrainian Territory Is Under Russian Occupation. At Current Rates of Advance and Losses, the Russians Could Overtake the Rest of Ukraine in 2256 at a cost of 101 million casualties. Russia's current population is 144 million. According to the General Staff of the Ukrainian forces, 954,000 Russian soldiers have been eliminated since the beginning of the invasion of Ukrainian soil.

Incredibly, the staggering losses in men and equipment have not yet crippled the Russian effort in Ukraine. The Kremlin has equipped its forces with thousands of civilian vehicles, including scooters, cars, and even a bus. Since many of the wounded eventually return to the front lines, the Russian armed forces are recruiting more men each month than they are losing.

Putin is estimated to be mobilizing 30,000 soldiers each month. As a result, Russian forces in Ukraine are actually growing. They now number no fewer than 600,000 troops, the highest level during the war and almost double the number of forces that invaded in February 2022.

Russia’s defense budget will account for 40% of all government spending, its highest level since the Cold War, said General Christopher Cavoli, commander of U.S. forces in Europe. By comparison, the United States spends only 13% of its federal budget on military purposes.

To prolong the wartime extravagance, Putin’s regime is not only prepared to increase the tax burden on Russians but is also changing its priorities for economic development. Losing much for gaining very little in Ukraine, and sustaining the costly effort at enormous expense, Russian authorities are walking an economic and political tightrope.

But the danger has not deterred Putin and his ministers and generals. According to Cavoli, Putin and his entourage are engaged in a long war – one that could extend beyond Ukraine.