War in Ukraine: How many tanks and equipment the Russians have lost – “They will not be able to continue for long”

“THE Russia will not be able to wage another war for years due to the catastrophic losses in tanks, equipment and manpower in front of Ukraine, said defense experts. “It will take years for Russia to rebuild its reserves,” according to the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

In fact, Putin will have a hard time in Donbass because vital “stocks are starting to shrink,” analyst Mark Cancian told the Times. The Kremlin’s damaged equipment now amounts to 939 tanks, 185 planes, 155 helicopters, 421 artillery units and eight shipsassessed this morning the Ukrainian army.

Kyiv estimates that its forces have now killed 22,400 Russian soldiersfrom 22,100 yesterday.

Stocks from the Soviet Union that may be useless

Henry Boyd, a military analyst at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, said Putin could still draw on the significant Soviet-era reserve forces stationed throughout Russia. But most Russian soldiers may not be able to use them, he added.

Mr Boyd told the paper: “They have a large number of Soviet-era tanks, armored vehicles and artillery. “You can probably offset the net number by reactivating older systems, but there is a question mark as to whether the crews will have to man the vehicles and if they have, if they have received adequate training.”

The bad news for Moscow comes as Russia continues its shift to eastern Ukraine, where it has achieved greater military success than anywhere else in the country.

War in Ukraine

“Donbass will be a difficult nut for the Russians”

But United Kingdom Secretary of Defense James Heappey warned yesterday that “Donbass will be a difficult nut to crack for the Russians.” Mr Heappey added that Russian and Ukrainian forces were now equivalent.

It also made headlines yesterday when he claimed Ukraine’s right to attack targets inside Russia using British equipment.

He told Times Radio: “It is perfectly legal for Ukraine to aim deep into Russia in order to disrupt the logistical infrastructure which, if not disrupted, will immediately lead to death and slaughter on Ukrainian soil.

“There are many countries around the world that use equipment that has been imported from other countries – when these pieces of equipment are used we tend not to blame the country that made it, we blame the country that shot it.”

Source: News Beast

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