Russia Has Lost Almost 350,000 Troops in Ukraine, Report Says

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Russia has lost nearly 350,000 troops in Ukraine since it invaded almost two years ago, The Kyiv Independent reported Sunday.

The newspaper said the General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces has reported 346,070 troops have been lost, including 1,250 casualties in the previous 24 hours.

In addition, the report said Russia has also lost "5,739 tanks, 10,692 armored fighting vehicles, 10,766 vehicles and fuel tanks, 8,137 artillery systems, 923 multiple-launch rocket systems, 609 air defense systems, 324 airplanes, 324 helicopters, 6,278 drones, 22 ships and boats, and one submarine."

The British Defense Ministry commented on Russia’s announcement this month that several Ukrainian regions – Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia – will vote in its presidential election, set for March. The regions were also included in Russia’s September regional elections.

The ministry said in its daily Ukraine intelligence update that, as was the case with regional elections, "it is almost certain that presidential election voting in the Russian-controlled regions will be neither free nor fair."

The ministry said Russia "will almost utilize methods, including substantive electoral fraud and voter intimidation to ensure Russian President Vladimir Putin wins in the regions by a substantial margin."

Ukraine will be strengthening its air defense, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address Saturday.

"We have already reached agreements on this," he said. "The theme of air defense arises in almost every meeting and talk with world leaders. There will be more systems, more protection for the sky."

Zelenskyy said that this past week, Ukraine shot down 104 Shahed drones out of the 112.

"Each destroyed drone means saved lives and preserved infrastructure," he said.

During a Russian drone attack across Ukraine on Saturday, Ukraine's air force said its forces and mobile groups of drone hunters shot down 30 of the 31 Iranian-made Shahed drones targeting 11 Ukrainian regions.

The targeted areas included Kyiv, the capital, and the southern region of Kherson and the western region of Khmelnytskyi.

"The drones attacked in groups, in waves, and from different directions,' said Serhiy Popko head of Kyiv's military administration.

Ukraine has signed contracts for joint cooperation on technology weapons production with Western partners in its effort to boost its defense industry at home and to reduce dependence on Western military supplies.

"We have dozens of new contracts between companies on joint production or technology exchange," Defense Minister Rustem Umerov said in a Facebook post.

The drive to increase production at home has become critically important as the future of large-scale military aid from the United States and European Union appears more uncertain and Western stockpiles have become more depleted.

Kyiv has hosted a number of conferences with members of the international defense industry. This week it held a conference with the largest British defense manufacturers, while last September it hosted more than 250 Western weapons producers, followed by a joint Ukraine-U.S. defense conference in Washington in December

"We signed a memorandum with the United States on joint production and technical data sharing," Umerov said.

Ukraine is also seeking more agreements like its venture with German arms producer Rheinmetall AG to service and repair Western weapons, and an agreement with two U.S. firms to jointly manufacture 155 mm artillery shells.

Domestic defense output has tripled in 2023, according to the strategic industries ministry, and is expected to increase six times more next year.

Austria has approved a 12th package of EU sanctions on Russia after Ukraine removed Raiffeisen Bank International RBIV.VI from a blacklist, according to Ukraine's government website and an EU diplomat, Saturday.

Austria had been pushing Ukraine to remove the bank from a Ukrainian list dubbed "international sponsors of war."

The blacklist has no legal standing, but it is symbolically important, reinforcing public pressure on Raiffeisen to quit Russia, something the Austrian bank has said it is willing to do but which has yet to happen.

"The status is suspended for the period of bilateral consultations involving representatives of the European Commission," the Ukrainian government website said Saturday on Raiffeisen's status.

Turkey, Romania and Bulgaria will sign a joint plan to clear mines floating in the Black Sea. Turkish Defense Minister Yasar Guler said Saturday in Ankara.

Guler said the "Trilateral Initiative" would only include Turkey, Romania, and Bulgaria for now, and their defense ministers planned to hold a signing ceremony in Istanbul on January 11.

"Due to the Ukraine-Russia war, there are mines placed in both Ukrainian and Russian ports. These untangle sometimes, and reach our straits due to the current," Guler told journalists.

Turkey, which maintains good ties with both Kyiv and Moscow, is also working with the United Nations, Ukraine and Russia to revive the Black Sea grain initiative which Moscow quit earlier this year, though there have been no public signs of progress on those talks.

A third Ukrainian truck driver has died in blockades at the Polish border organized by Polish truckers, Ukraine's Suspilne public broadcaster said Saturday.

An official from Ukraine's international trucking association, said the driver got sick at the Korczowa-Krakovets crossing — one of four crossing points blocked by the protesters. He died while being taken to a hospital. Two other truckers died last month after getting stuck in the blockades, Suspilne said.

Polish drivers have been blocking crossings since November 6, demanding that the European Union reinstate a system requiring Ukrainian companies to secure permits to operate in the bloc and the same for European truckers to enter Ukraine.

The protesting truckers say Ukrainian products are undercutting prices of local products. Kyiv says the volume of wartime traffic makes a truck permit system impracticable.

One of the crossing points, Dorohusk-Yahodyn, was reopened to traffic this week, but could again be closed after a court ruled that a Polish mayor could not ban truckers from holding a protest in his commune.

Some information came from The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and Reuters.