Posted at 5:00 a.m.
40,000
Number of Russian soldiers wounded, dead, missing or taken prisoner since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine just over a month ago, according to NATO
Between 7,000 and 15,000
Number of Russian soldiers killed since the start of the invasion on February 24, a blow for Moscow. Media outlet Radio Free Europe reported this week that thousands of wounded and killed Russian soldiers were being quietly transported to Belarus to avoid overloading hospitals and morgues in Russia, where the government refuses to talk about war, citing instead a ” special operation” in Ukraine.
1300
Number of Ukrainian soldiers killed as of March 12, according to information provided by the government of Kyiv
Prisoners
As of March 19, Ukraine held 562 Russian POWs. As for Russia, it has not provided any data so far on Ukrainian prisoners of war.
Trades
Russians and Ukrainians exchanged prisoners on Thursday, according to Iryna Vereshchuk, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister, and the Russian delegate for human rights. “In exchange for ten captured occupants, we recovered ten of our soldiers,” she said, according to Agence France-Presse. It is known that informal exchanges of prisoners of war between Ukraine and Russia have taken place since the beginning of the Russian invasion. The daily Kyiv Independent reported this week that Ukrainian soldiers were even exchanging the remains of Russian soldiers for living Ukrainian prisoners of war. A field journalist from the same media reported that six corpses of Russian soldiers had been exchanged for two Ukrainian prisoners of war near Kyiv this week.
Russia has no intention of stopping in Ukraine. She has no intention and will not. She wants to go further.
Volodymyr Zelensky, President of Ukraine, in conference virtually with NATO on Thursday
The problem with a protracted war is that it is difficult for the NATO countries to stay in agreement. Everyone has their interests, their geostrategic challenges […] For example, Europe needs Russian energy, while North Americans don’t. Will they be able to maintain a united front for a long time? I doubt.
Luca Sollaï, lecturer in the history department of the University of Montreal
I think the crisis will last. The poor Ukrainians, they will suffer. The Russians have suffered a lot of losses, but we are not at the point where we can envisage a victory for the Ukrainian side either. And the closer the Russian forces are to the NATO states, the higher the tensions will be […] Will Putin want an escalation elsewhere than in Ukraine? It is a possibility, even if it is not extremely realistic. One can imagine that Russia, feeling squeezed in the corner, decides to climb the ladder of the crisis.
Michel Fortmann, Emeritus Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Montreal