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Russia suffering highest daily frontline losses since start of war, says UK army chief

Russian daily losses on the frontline in Ukraine are the highest they have been since Vladimir Putin ordered the full-scale invasion nearly three years ago, the UK army chief has claimed.

Sir Tony Radakin told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme that Russian forces were suffering 1,500 casualties a day and were nearing the 700,000 mark for total killed and wounded since February 2022. He described the cost of the war on the Russian people as “extraordinary”.

“[This is] the enormous pain and suffering that the Russian nation is having to bear because of Putin’s ambition,” said Sir Tony.

Previous western estimates over the past few months have put Russia’s daily toll of dead and wounded at around 1,200, which at the time was also the highest rate of losses of the war.

Sir Tony did not say how UK officials had calculated the Russian casualty figures, but such losses tend to occur when one side is on the offensive.

He added there was “no doubt that Russia is making tactical, territorial gains and that is putting pressure on Ukraine”, though he added that the losses were only “tiny increments of land”.

Since capturing the eastern Ukrainian city of Adviivka, in the Donetsk region, in February this year, Russian forces have taken more than 300 square miles of territory in that area, advancing towards the city of Pokrovsk, a linchpin of the region’s defence.

Though their attack towards the heavily fortified Pokrovsk has now stalled, Russian troops have pushed along multiple points to its south, capturing the strategically valuable towns of Selydove and Vuhledar last month. The city of Kurakhove, between Selydove and Vulhedar, and less than 20 miles from Pokrovsk, is now under threat of being captured as well.

Further north, in the Russian region of Kursk, which borders Ukraine, Moscow has amassed roughly 50,000 troops, including North Korean troops, to retake the area seized by Kyiv’s soldiers in August and held ever since, according to Ukrainian and US officials who spoke to the New York Times.

While Ukrainian forces have fought off previous Russian attacks in Kursk, albeit losing bits of the region in the process, there are concerns that the size of the imminent counteroffensive, expected in the next few days, could prove more difficult to stop.

Most concerningly for Ukraine, the officials suggested Russia had not had to divert any of its advancing forces in Donetsk to make up the 50,000, meaning that Moscow can continue to push along multiple fronts.

When Ukraine crossed the border into Kursk in August, by comparison, it had to redeploy some of its troops defending Donetsk, a manoeuvre that led to accusations that the region was being abandoned.

As fears that US president-elect Donald Trump could force Ukraine to cede territory to Russia in order to end the war – a pledge that he has not made explicitly but has been discussed by several people affiliated with him, including his vice president-elect JD Vance – Sir Tony insisted that Kyiv’s western partners must stand with them for “as long as it takes”.

On Sunday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov praised Mr Trump for “talking about peace … not about confrontation”.

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  • Source of information and images “independent”

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