London: More than 31,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in action in the two years since Russia launched its full-scale invasion, the country’s president Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sunday, as he warned the toll would rapidly rise unless promised military aid made it was to the frontline soon.
It is the first time that Kyiv has confirmed the number of its losses since the end of 2022, when Zelensky’s office said 13,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed since the invasion.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky answers media questions during his press conference in Kyiv, Ukraine,
But the Ukrainian leader, who has spent the second anniversary pleading with western leaders to redouble their military aid efforts, said that he would not disclose the number of troops that were wounded or missing. He also said that “tens of thousands of civilians” had been killed in occupied areas of Ukraine, but that exact figures would not be available until the war was over.
Zelensky told a news conference in Kyiv that revealing the number of wounded would help Russian military planning, as he again warned that half of all Western aid for Ukraine has been delayed, costing lives and territory.
He said that “large numbers” of Ukrainian soldiers would also die without stepped-up military support.
“Whether Ukraine will lose, whether it will be very difficult for us and whether there will be a large number of casualties depends on you, on our partners, on the Western world,” he said at the “Ukraine. Year 2024″ forum in Kyiv.
Ukrainian soldiers help a wounded comrade into an evacuation vehicle in the frontline in Bakhmut, Donetsk region,
“31,000 Ukrainian military personnel have been killed in this war. Not 300,000, not 150,000, not whatever Putin and his deceitful circle have been lying about. But nevertheless, each of these losses is a great sacrifice for us.”
Ukraine is currently experiencing a variety of setbacks in its mission to drive Russia from its territory after a counteroffensive failed to make headway before winter, with opposing forces now entrenched along the 1000-kilometre frontline. Last week, it was announced that troops had withdrawn from the key eastern town of Avdiivka, which was one of Moscow’s biggest win in months.
Zelensky also needs to find about 500,000 new recruits this year but has so far stopped short of a conscription effort and warned that Ukraine had reached the hardest stage for maintaining unity which was crucial for the war effort.
“Now is the most difficult moment for our unity, and if we all fall apart, from the outside and God forbid inside, then this will be the weakest moment. It has not happened yet,” he said.
Although Ukraine has mobilised some civilians to fight, the initial wave of troops at the start of the war in 2022 was overwhelmingly made up of volunteers. However, the average age of the country’s soldiers is now 43, with most of them having had no rest from fighting since the start of the war two years ago.
Russia has provided few official casualty figures, with recent data from its defence ministry, published in January 2023, pointing to just over 6000 deaths, although a US intelligence report declassified in December last year estimated that 315,000 troops had been killed or wounded in Ukraine. If accurate, the figure would represent 87 per cent of the roughly 360,000 troops Russia had before the war, according to the report.
Independent Russian news outlet Mediazona said Saturday that about 75,000 Russian men died in 2022 and 2023 fighting in the war.
Kyiv’s Defence Minister Rustem Umerov also spoke at the event, emphasising that some 50 per cent of Western arms deliveries to Ukraine had not arrived on time. Zelensky had previously said that was one of the reasons the highly anticipated counter-offensive did not start earlier.
Zelensky also suggested that plans for Kyiv’s long-awaited counteroffensive last year had been leaked to Russia ahead of time, without providing any other details on how the information was passed on.
“Our counteroffensive action plans were on the Kremlin’s table before the counteroffensive actions began,” Zelensky said, adding that his military chiefs were preparing “several plans” for this year’s battlefield strategy “because of information leaks.”
Western leaders travelled to Kyiv at the weekend in a show of solidarity with Ukraine as the country marked two years since Russia’s full-scale invasion, with both Italy and Canada announcing security deals with Ukraine in a boost of support until the country could join NATO.
with agencies
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