Those soldiers didn't appear out of thin air though, they're all able-bodied workers, many of them are likely the main providers for their families too.
These soldiers come at the cost of the Russian economy and puts even more stress on suffering families.
And how well is the country doing? So many men dead for nothing. Probably not good in the long term. Even if they "win" the war. What will they have actually gained?
They will then be close to closing one of the defensive gaps that requires them to have a military which will soon be too big to maintain with their future demographic collapse.
Campbell’s assessment seems to contradict those of the Pentagon and America’s allies in Europe.
At a meeting of countries that support Ukraine late last month, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said that Russia had suffered more than 315,000 casualties during the war. With a drop in American aid, leading to ammunition shortages on Ukraine’s front lines, Russian forces have advanced. But those too have been costly, the Pentagon has said.
In an interview earlier this year, the chair of Lithuania’s national security committee estimated it would take Russia between five and seven years to reconstitute its forces for a full-scale war.
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You see, killbots have a preset kill limit. Knowing their weakness, I sent wave after wave of my own men at them until they reached their limit and shut down. Kif, show them the medal I won.
They certainly haven't replaced their losses of tanks, aircraft, armored vehicles, or artillery pieces. And I'm sure the new soldiers aren't as good as the original batch.
They have turned their entire economy into a war economy. And the factories they have been building are now up and running. Meanwhile Ukraine isn't even getting their promised 1 million artillery shells a year because there just isn't production.
Unless the military support for Ukraine increases dramatically Russia will pull ahead.