- How Russia keeps raising an army to replace its dead
How Russia keeps raising an army to replace its dead An online bazaar of freelance headhunters finds new recruits to fight Ukraine, emboldening Vladimir Putin at the negotiating table and scaring
- Despite huge manpower losses, how is Russia replenishing its . . .
Despite huge manpower losses, how is Russia replenishing its military? Moscow’s tactics, on the battlefield and domestically, are incentivising men to join and stick to the army
- Putin needs 5 years to refill Russian army as casualties . . .
It will currently take Russian President Vladimir Putin five years to get Moscow's army back to its February 2022 strength, a prominent British military chief has said, as the war in Ukraine
- Russia Losing 1,500 Soldiers a Day, Straining Its Ability to . . .
Russian battlefield casualties — dead and injured — have risen to more than 1,500 a day over the last three months, posing serious problems when it comes to replacing their numbers, military
- Russian Military Reconstitution: 2030 Pathways and Prospects
While the Kremlin has not yet decided on the future force design of its military, this paper highlights the near-term policy choices, opportunities, and constraints that will likely shape Russia’s military reconstitution process through 2030
- How Will Russia Reconstitute Its Military After the Ukraine . . .
The authors identify four pathways that Russia might take in reconstituting its armed forces after the end of the war in Ukraine and assess their implications for Russia’s national security and U S and Western interests in the European theater
- Inside Russia’s Shadow Military Sustaining the War
Still, even after fighting stops, these formations will blur the lines between war and peace U S policymakers and defense planners should account for Russia’s irregular formations as a core component of its military capacity, one that complicates Western deterrence strategies, intelligence assessments, and legal frameworks
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