Russia gained 4,000sq km of Ukraine in 2024. How many soldiers did it lose?
As its forces advanced in the area nearly three years into the conflict, Russia asserted this week that it had taken control of the resource-rich town of Kurakhove in eastern Ukraine.
Even as Ukraine launched a new offensive in Russia’s Kursk, leaving residents shaken, Moscow’s forces have continued to make slow gains in eastern Ukraine. The morale of Ukrainian forces, who are forced to work together despite constant attacks from Russia, seems to be declining as a result of this attritional conflict.
Amazing new statistics now indicate a dramatic increase in the costs that the war has caused for both sides of Europe’s biggest conflict since World War II. According to experts, Russia seized territory in the Ukraine in 2024 that was twice as large as Mauritius. However, how many soldiers perished in the process?
In 2024, how much of Ukraine’s territory did Russia occupy?
Russian forces gained 4, 168 square kilometres (1, 609 square miles) of Ukrainian land in 2024, according to geolocated evidence collected by the Washington, DC-based Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
That’s twice the size of Mauritius, a nation in the Indian Ocean, and five times New York City’s size.
Apart from the land it regained from Ukraine in Kursk, Russia’s territorial gains in 2024 largely consist of fields and small settlements in Ukraine, according to the ISW.
Additionally, Russia gained Avdiivka, Selydove, Vuhledar, and Kurakhove, four mid-sized settlements, the ISW reported.
Russia lost how many soldiers, exactly? What Ukraine says
As of December 30, 2024, 427, 000 Russian soldiers died or were injured in the war in 2024, according to Ukraine’s Commander-in-Chief Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskii.
In a release published on January 2, Ukraine’s Defence Ministry placed Russia’s losses last year at 430, 790 soldiers.
Based on the more recent number, the Russian losses in 2024 amount to an average of 1, 180 per day, and about 103 losses per square kilometre gained.
The Russian losses increased toward the end of the year, according to Ukraine. The Defence Ministry said the highest losses came in November, with 45, 720 losses, and December, with 48, 670 losses. How many of these Russian soldiers were killed, how many were injured, and how many were taken off the battlefield as a result?
Russia lost how many soldiers, exactly? what others have to say
According to the independent Russian website Mediazona, at least 31, 481 Russian soldiers are confirmed to have died between January 1, 2024, and December 17, 2024.
Mediazona uses open-source research to compile the names of Russian soldiers killed, verifying the information through obituaries, posts by relatives, statements from local authorities and other public reports.
The Mediazona website says that the numbers for 2024 are “preliminary conclusions”, stating that: “2024 appears set to become the war’s deadliest year. While this can’t yet be proven conclusively, as casualty data emerges with considerable delay”.
These numbers cannot be independently verified by Al Jazeera.
“It seems likely that Russian deaths are in the 100, 000-plus]range]”, Timothy Ash, an associate fellow in the Russia and Eurasia programme at Chatham House, a London-based think tank, told Al Jazeera.
However, according to Ukrainian commander Syrskii, who spoke with French newspaper Le Monde in an interview from December 17 that appeared to be increasing indefinitely.
Commenting on Syrskii’s comments, Crisis Group senior analyst Oleg Ignatov asked: “How are Russian troop numbers in Ukraine growing if Moscow is suffering such devastating losses?”
“We don’t know whether]this is because] the Russian recruitment model is good, or there are not as many]Russian] casualties]as is claimed]”, he said.
Why are death tolls difficult to verify?
Because of their enormous propaganda value, in part, these figures contribute.
“Both sides are engaged in a war of narratives. Both sides use statistics to discredit one side while trying to prove their accomplishments on the ground. These narratives are part of the war”, Ignatov told Al Jazeera.
Since the start of the war in February 2022, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the president of Ukraine, announced in a Telegram post on December 8 that 43, 000 Ukrainian soldiers have perished on the battlefield. In February of this year, he last reported that 31, 000 Ukrainian soldiers had died. This would mean, 12, 000 Ukrainian soldiers died in the battlefield over about 10 months in 2024.
However, neither Russia nor Ukraine regularly release information on the number of soldiers killed during the conflict.
According to Marina Miron, a researcher at King’s College London’s Department of War Studies, they want to avoid disclosing how effective their military operations have been.
This tactic is common in wartime: in World War II, for example, each side exaggerated enemy casualties by two to three times while underreporting their own by half, according to Miron.
Additionally, there are other elements. The family is only informed of a soldier’s death when the body is discovered, and the relevant defence ministry then issues a death notification.
In October, Miron claimed that a government avoids having to pay the deceased’s families if it officially rejects a soldier’s death.
Is there a record number of deaths in Russia?
Experts are in agreement on the number of Russian soldiers killed in the conflict, and specifically in 2024, despite the fact that it was the largest casualty count since World War II. An estimated 8.7 million Soviet military personnel died during World War II, which is by far the highest total for any nation. Of the 15 Soviet republics, Russia lost the most soldiers – an estimated 6.7 million.
In the Soviet-Afghan war, which lasted 10 years, the Soviet army suffered about 15, 000 casualties. During the Vietnam War, which lasted 20 years, the US Army lost 58, 220 soldiers.
According to Ash, “Russian losses in Ukraine appear to be significantly greater than this.”
“Years from now on will be felt in Russian society.” Think about the impact that will have on the workforce in terms of human costs, followed by the cost of that in terms of healthcare and economic costs, he said. That, Ash added, “partly explains current tight labour markets in Russia and high wage-price inflation”.
“This war has only made the demographic mix worse for Russia,” he said.
What about the 2024 territorial gains? Were they significant?
According to experts, neither nation’s strategic importance is diminished by the territorial gains made by Russia or Ukraine.
Without the land Russia currently occupies, Ukraine can survive and prosper economically. However, security is crucial there. That’s why the terms of the peace are so important for Ukraine”, Ash said.
“For Russia, the land captured makes little positive impact economically or strategically”, he added.
In fact, Ash argued, the occupied Ukrainian territory “will be a huge burden to the Russian economy to fund reconstruction”.
He added that this occurs at a time when the Russian economy is hampered by sanctions for its resources.
Ignatov argued that neither side’s territorial expansion was essential to the conflict. Instead, “it’s a war of attrition – casualties, material, infrastructure is what matters”.
Neither side, he said, appears “interested in ceasefire so far”. Ignatov speculated that Moscow might have to deal with a challenge in 2025 as its manpower losses increase.  , “We don’t know how sustainable the Russian recruitment model is and we don’t know if Russia has to mobilise this year”, he said.