A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Feb 16, 2025

Russia Is Slowing In Ukraine Due To Losses of Men, Armor - And Exhaustion

Russia's substitution of golf carts and motor bikes for infantry fighting vehicles and tanks in Ukraine  is symptomatic of its larger problem: exhaustion.

While more populous than Ukraine, Russia's exorbitant casualties and loss of armored vehicles has contributed to a loss of momentum and morale that shows no signs of abating. That Trump is pressing for an end to the war is also a factor, as no one wants to be the last to die for a faltering effort. The question now is how the ceasefire boundaries will be drawn, since Russia no longer has the wherewithal to determine them on its own. JL  

James Marson and colleagues report in the Wall Street Journal:

The Russian army’s advance in Ukraine is slowing. They have slowed over winter, because lack of foliage makes infantry easy to spot and target with aerial drones, but (also) because of growing exhaustion on the Russian side. Recruitment is getting tougher, and Russia is having to increase payments to attract volunteers, including those from prisons. Russian daily casualties increased every month in the last five months of 2024. Russia lost as many people last year as in the first two years of the war. With stocks of armored vehicles ebbing, Russia has used civilian vehicles and motorbikes in assaults, but mostly is relying on unprotected infantry, which have taken heavy casualties. Russia will run critically low on battle tanks and armored personnel carriers by late 2025

The Russian army’s advance in Ukraine is slowing, just as President Trump is pressing for talks.

The slowdown comes at a critical time for both sides. Russia wants to trade gains on the battlefield—and the impression that further advances are inevitable—for a favorable deal in peace talks proposed by Trump. Ukraine, meanwhile, wants to show that it can still fend off its giant neighbor.

In the first month of 2025, Russia was taking on average nearly six days to occupy an area the size of Manhattan, according to data from DeepState, a Ukrainian group that monitors the front lines. That is more than twice as long as in November. Gains in February have slowed further.

The heavy losses for small geographical gains set up the brutal arm-wrestle that will most likely characterize Russia’s war in Ukraine this year: Can the Russians sustain or even accelerate their assaults and gain enough ground to force Ukraine, struggling with a lack of manpower, and its allies to seek an accommodation? Or will the offensives peter out in the face of Ukraine’s dogged resistance?

These five maps and charts show where Russia has gained momentum on the battlefield, but how it could struggle to sustain it.

How Russia is pushing in Ukraine’s east

Russian gains in Ukraine

A map of the Ukrainian front line showing key Russian offensives and gains since July 1

MAIN RUSSIAN

OFFENSIVES

Sudzha

Russia

Ukrainian

FORCES

In RUSSIA

Russian gains

since July 1

Russian

forces

Ukraine

Chasiv Yar

Luhansk

Toretsk

Pokrovsk

Kurakhove

Donetsk

Velyka Novosilka

50 miles

50 km

Note: As of Feb. 12
Source: Institute for the Study of War and AEI’s Critical Threats Project

Russian forces are persistently pressing forward at several points along the front line, taking advantage of superior resources, especially manpower. After heavy aerial bombs and artillery blast a path, Russian troops scurry forward house by house taking heavy losses.

 

Ukraine, short on infantry, relies mostly on explosive drones to pick off the soldiers as they seek to advance. Kyiv and its Western allies said Russian daily casualties increased every month in the last five months of 2024.

So far, the Russians are still nibbling forward. They have taken the small cities of Kurakhove and Selydove, both with prewar populations of around 20,000, and swept around the south and west of the city of Pokrovsk, a key target in the east. They are also pressing in other cities, such as the high point of Chasiv Yar, and, reinforced by North Korean shock troops, battling to take back territory in their own Kursk region occupied by Ukraine since last summer.

Why Russian gains are slowing

Russia’s gains accelerated last fall, particularly in areas to the west of the occupied regional capital of Donetsk. But they have slowed over winter, in part because a lack of foliage makes infantry easy to spot and target with aerial drones, but possibly because of growing exhaustion on the Russian side, analysts said.

Charts showing overall Ukrainian land occupied by Russia before and after Feb. 24, 2024 and monthly Russian territorial gains in the Ukraine

Total Ukrainian land occupied by Russia*

Land occupied before Feb. 24, 2022

Land occupied after Feb. 24, 2022

16,977

26,346

43,323

square miles

Newly captured Ukrainian land by month

300

square miles

After making steady gains, Russian advances have slowed in recent months.

200

100

0

2024

'25

*As of Feb. 12
Source: DeepState

It took the last half-year for Russian forces to seize Ukrainian territory equivalent to the land area of Rhode Island, at the cost of tens of thousands of troops. Recruitment is getting tougher, and Russia is having to increase payments to attract volunteers, including those from prisons.

In October last year, a senior U.S. defense official said that Russia had suffered some 600,000 casualties since the start of the war in February 2022, and that the accelerated advance was increasing losses. Ukraine’s top military commander, Gen. Oleksandr Syrskiy, said Russia lost as many people last year as in the first two years of the war.

Russia’s big push to encircle one city 

Russia’s most significant advance has come to the south of the eastern city of Pokrovsk. The city was long on a major supply route for Ukrainian forces in the east via a highway and railroad. But Russia has swept through villages and towns to the south and is approaching the road on the city’s east and west flanks.A senior U.S. military official said that Russia had concentrated tens of thousands of troops in a very small area, advancing by sheer force of numbers while creating easy pickings for Ukrainian troops. A small counterattack by Ukraine recently regained one village.

Situation near Pokrovsk

A map of the Ukrainian front line near Pokrovsk showing Russian gains since July 1

Bakhmut

UKRAINE

Chasiv Yar

Kostyantynivka

Russian forces

T0504

Horlivka

Pokrovsk

Mezhova

Avdiivka

Selydove

Russian gains

since July 1

10 miles

10 km

Note: As of Feb. 12
Source: Institute for the Study of War and AEI’s Critical Threats Project

Russia strikes back on its own territory

A key Russian goal is to eliminate the Ukrainian military presence in Russia’s Kursk province. Russian counterattacks, together with the front-line deployment of thousands of North Korean troops, has shrunk the territory Ukraine holds to around half its greatest extent.

But Ukraine is clinging on by deploying some of its best-equipped units to the area. Ukraine’s leaders say they want to hold part of Kursk as a buffer zone and as a bargaining chip in any future peace negotiations. Critics of that approach say it has sucked in troops sorely needed elsewhere on the front line.Ukrainian incursion into Kursk

A map of the Ukrainian front line near Kursk region and gains since Sept. 10

RUSSIA

UKRAINE

Ukrainian FORCES

AS OF SEPT. 10

Rylsk

CURRENT

Ukrainian

POSITIONS

Sudzha

KURSK REGION

UKRAINE

Sumy

20 miles

20 km

Note: As of Feb. 12
Source: Institute for the Study of War and AEI’s Critical Threats Project

What’s happening with Russia’s tanks?

After three years of war, Russia has burned through about half of its vast stocks of mostly Soviet-era tanks and armored vehicles—and many of the rest are older models in poor shape, according to an analysis by a group of open-source intelligence analysts who examine satellite images of Russian stores.

The huge losses show the cost of Russia’s advances, and how difficult they will be to sustain. With stocks of armored vehicles ebbing, Russia has used civilian vehicles and motorbikes in assaults, but mostly is relying on unprotected infantry, which have taken heavy casualties.

At the current tempo, Russia will run critically low on battle tanks and armored personnel carriers by late 2025, said George Barros, an analyst at the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank. However, Russia’s partners, especially North Korea, could help by providing armored vehicles from their own stockpiles, he said.

Russian equipment remaining after losses as of 2024, percentage of prewar total

A chart showing Russian equipment remaining after losses as of 2024, percentage of prewar total for tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, Armored personnel carriers and artillery.

Prewar total

Decent or

poor condition

Worse

condition

Total remaining

Lost

Tanks

48% remaining

Infantry fighting vehicles

52%

Armored personnel carriers

45%

Artillery

41%

Source: Open source intelligence analysts: @jonpy99, @highmarsed, @waffentraeger, @CovertCabal, @Vishun_military and @Ath3neN0ctu4

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