Stefan Korshak reports in the Kyiv Post:
More than one-third of the Russia's national military personnel spending on Ukraine funds survivor benefits to relatives of hundreds of thousands of soldiers killed in combat. That’s more than the Kremlin spends on paying soldiers salaries or bonuses to recruit new ones. The cost to pay men to fight in Ukraine, and to pay relatives of soldiers killed in that fighting has skyrocketed, from $39 billion from mid-2023 to mid-2024 to $52 billion in 2025. Russian casualty rates are unlikely to change quickly, because Ukrainian defense tactics aiming to cause maximum casualties have been consistently effective for more than a year, and have a history of improving in effectiveness over time























