Russia ‘looking for new soldiers’; Kyiv claims 83,000 dead so far in 2026

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Russia’s attempts at escalation via Belarus, where it has delivered more nuclear weapons and held highly publicised joint war games, come as its ground war falters in Ukraine.

Ukrainian commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrskii told Militarnyi magazine that Ukraine has seized the tactical initiative, as Ukrainian offensive assaults on Russian positions now outnumber Russian assaults on Ukrainian positions.

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Ukraine’s forces have been able to do this because Russian forces are running out of soldiers to conduct offensive operations, he said.

“Since the beginning of 2026, the total losses of the enemy have already exceeded 141,500 people, of which more than 83,000 are irreversible,” Syrskii wrote on his Telegram messaging channel.

Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence Service believes Russia is unable to replenish these losses of more than 1,000 people a day, and this year is recruiting at a rate of 800-930 a day, suffering a net decrease of battlefield strength.

In response, it said, 40 Russian regions had increased sign-up bonuses by between 30 and 100 percent.

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In a bid to boost Russia’s army, Putin has simplified citizenship procedures for Russian speakers in the Transnistrian region of Moldova.

“Russia is looking for new soldiers in this way,” said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who said he had received information that Russia was trying to mobilise an additional 100,000 soldiers.

“We believe that currently, such potential for covert mobilisation in Russia is lacking,” he said.

On Friday, Russia blamed Ukraine for deadly attacks in the part of Luhansk it controls. At the time of writing, four people had reportedly been killed.

Ukraine’s war on Russian oil and hardware

Russia’s economy is also fraying, said Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence Service, having run up a $78.4bn deficit in the first four months of the year after budgeting for a $50.5bn deficit for the entire year.

“Oil dealt the main blow. Revenues from hydrocarbons fell by 38.3 percent,” it said.

Ukraine has scaled up its long-range campaign against Russian refineries and oil export terminals this year, depriving Moscow of windfall profits from high oil prices.

Ukraine has hit oil pumping stations, storages and pipelines, forcing Russia to curtail production by 460,000 barrels per day (bpd) in April 2026, compared with April 2025, said the International Energy Agency (IEA).

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That meant that even though Russian exports rose by 250,000bpd, the production cuts limited Russia’s ability to take full advantage of the Gulf war.

Ukraine has also scaled up attacks on refineries across Russia this year.

The Reuters news agency estimated that “Ukrainian drone attacks knocked out about 700,000 bpd of refining capacity between January and May across 16 refineries, some hit more than once, compared with eight refineries in the same period of 2025.”

The affected refineries account for a quarter of Russia’s refining capacity, Reuters said.

That could cause supply bottlenecks in Russia, but it also caused Russia to declare an export ban on petroleum products from April to July. The IEA said Russia’s oil product exports quickly fell by 340,000bpd in the first month of the ban.

Family members and friends attend a funeral ceremony for sisters Vira, 17, and Liubava, 12, Yakovlievas who were killed in a deadly Russian missile strike on their apartment building on May 14, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, at St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral in Kyiv, Ukraine, May 19, 2026. REUTERS/Alina Smutko TPX IMAGES OF THE DAYFamily members and friends attend a funeral ceremony for sisters Vira, 17, and Liubava, 12, Yakovlievas, who were killed in a deadly Russian missile attack on their apartment building on May 14, at St Michael’s Golden-Domed Cathedral in Kyiv, Ukraine, May 19, 2026 [Alina Smutko/Reuters]

“Given our limited resources, to effectively resist a much larger enemy, we are trying to shift from a ‘war of attrition’ to an asymmetric strategy,” Syrskii told the European Union Military Committee. “Our main tasks are to stop the enemy’s advance and effectively counterattack, strike at the Russians’ rear, including deep within their territory.”

Ukraine attacked a series of military-industrial targets in a 100km (62-mile) radius around Moscow on May 17, in what appeared to be a response to Russia’s huge attacks on Kyiv on May 13 and 14, which killed 52 people.

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Targets included the Angstrem semiconductor plant, which produces microelectronics for high-precision weapons, the Solnechnogorsk oil pumping station, which serves the military, and the Moscow Refinery.

Satellite pictures later showed four destroyed storage tanks at Solnechnogorsk.

“Ukrainian long-range sanctions have reached the Moscow region, and we are clearly telling the Russians: Their state must end its war,” Zelenskyy said.

Ukraine also hit the Ryazan refinery on May 15, the Azot chemical plant in Stavropol Krai on May 16, the Yaroslavl refinery on May 19, the Lukoil refinery in Kstovo, Nizhny Novgorod on May 21 and the Sizran refinery on May 22.

On May 16, Zelenskyy said Ukraine also struck military hardware, including helicopter gunships, amphibious craft, an ammunition-laden ship and anti-aircraft missile systems.

Ukraine warns Belarus of ‘consequences’ if it joins war

Russia put pressure on Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko to open a new front in its war against Ukraine by launching an attack on Kyiv, Ukraine said.

According to Zelenskyy, Russia would launch a simultaneous attack from its neighbouring region of Bryansk against Chernihiv, in an apparent attempt to recreate the opening strategy of Moscow’s war.

“We know that there have been additional contacts between the Russians and Alexander Lukashenko aimed at persuading him to join new Russian aggressive operations,” said Zelenskyy on May 15.

Zelenskyy said Ukraine’s northern border was being reinforced, and that Ukraine had “concrete capabilities to respond”.

“They must understand there: Consequences for them will follow and be significant,” he said.

Russia involved Belarus in a joint nuclear exercise this week, with 64,000 personnel, more than 200 missile launchers, 140 aircraft, 73 surface ships and 13 submarines.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said the two countries would launch ballistic and cruise missiles as part of the exercise.

Russia has parked its new Oreshnik tactical nuclear missile in Belarus since last year, and has threatened to attack European arms manufacturing and military sites with it. More warheads that can be fitted to Iskander-M ballistic missiles were moved to Belarus as part of the exercise, Moscow said.

The reason for the previously unannounced exercise was concern over NATO’s alleged escalation over Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“As a result of this escalation of tensions, including blatantly provocative moves in the nuclear sphere, strategic risks are increasing, as is the danger of a head-on clash between NATO and our country, with potentially catastrophic consequences as a result,” warned Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov in an interview with the TASS state news agency.

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