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Europe
Russia Accidentally Reveals Its Massive Ukraine Body Count
2015-08-27
[Daily Caller] Though Russia denies official involvement in Ukraine's civil war, a Russian news site briefly reported Russia's huge military casualties in Ukraine Tuesday.

Buried in a mundane report on army salaries, Delovaya Zhizn (Business Life) noted that family compensation went to the families of 2,000 soldiers killed "taking part in military action in Ukraine." The information was briefly online before Russian censors detected the fact and took it offline -- but not before a Ukraine-based news site detected the admission and cached it online.

That some 2,000 Russian service members have died, all fighting a war that the Kremlin does not acknowledge exists, is a staggering admission of President Vladimir Putin's commitment to the conflict in eastern Ukraine. The Ukrainian war has lasted for exactly 18 months -- by comparison, the U.S.' nearly 14-year involvement in Afghanistan has claimed the lives of 2,154 American soldiers.

Besides the toll on Ukrainian and Russian fighters' lives, the Russian intervention has also inflamed sanctions against Russia from European and North American governments. In response, Russia has embargoed food imports from a long list of Western countries, prompting a grocery crisis for Russian shoppers.
Posted by:Besoeker

#3  The Russians are just going to say that all of those soldiers volunteered with the army's premission to fight for the rebels in the Donbass, and they are being compensated for their service. Understand that nearly all the officers and most of the cadre are Russian or Russian prior service, so it isn't surprising.

Wake me when the Russians finally admit elements of the Russian 5th Tank Brigade participated in the shutting of the lid at Debaltsevo last February.
Posted by: badanov   2015-08-27 21:09  

#2  I read a deal about how both sides are using drones for artillary spotting,
and say if said drone can find location (GPS), altitude, and wind direction (what else would be handy, barometric pressure?), and you know your artillary's stuff, then you have nearly real time shooting.

The article went on to explain it was giving both sides fits, making it difficult to move, mass, fortify positions.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2015-08-27 15:48  

#1  To be fair, the US body could be higher in a high intensity conflict with artillery and such.

But still.... that is a lot of bodies for such a limited involvement. Maybe those Ukrainians are quite the crack shot with their artillery? Or are Russian soldiers just that poorly equipped and trained? Or all of the above?
Posted by: DarthVader   2015-08-27 09:03  

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