Russia has suffered an estimated 1.4 million battlefield casualties since invading Ukraine, according to a new report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), which concludes Moscow’s military position is steadily weakening despite more than four years of war. As Russian advances slow, Ukrainian counteroffensives regain territory and long-range drone strikes increasingly disrupt targets deep inside Russia, analysts say the conflict is becoming progressively more favorable to Kyiv.
More Than 2 Million Casualties
More than two million military casualties have now been recorded since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, according to a new study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), underscoring the staggering human cost of Europe’s largest war since World War II.
Russia's Heavy Toll
The Washington-based think tank estimates that Russian forces have suffered approximately 1.4 million battlefield casualties, including between 400,000 and 450,000 killed, while Ukraine has sustained between 525,000 and 625,000 casualties, including an estimated 125,000 to 150,000 fatalities.
Moscow Losing Momentum
Although Moscow continues to occupy roughly one-fifth of Ukrainian territory, the report concludes that Russia’s military position has steadily deteriorated during the first half of 2026 as its offensive momentum fades, losses continue to mount, and Ukraine increasingly succeeds in striking military and industrial targets deep inside Russian territory.
A Costly War
The findings paint a picture of a conflict that is becoming more costly for both sides while making a decisive battlefield victory increasingly unlikely. According to CSIS, Russia’s battlefield strategy has reached a point of diminishing returns after more than four years of attritional warfare.
Recruitment Falling Behind
Russian monthly casualty rates now exceed the country’s estimated monthly recruitment rate, raising growing concerns about Moscow’s ability to sustain prolonged offensive operations. At the same time, the casualty ratio has shifted dramatically in Ukraine’s favor during the first half of 2026, with Russian forces reportedly suffering nearly eight casualties for every Ukrainian casualty inflicted.
Advances Grind to a Halt
Despite continuing assaults across eastern Ukraine, Russian advances around strategically important cities including Kostiantynivka, Pokrovsk and Sloviansk have slowed to between 50 and 90 meters per day, among the slowest rates of advance documented in modern warfare. CSIS attributes the slowdown to corruption, poor battlefield tactics and Ukraine’s increasingly effective layered defenses.
Ukraine Regains Ground
One of the report’s most significant conclusions is that Russia has begun experiencing net territorial losses for the first time since August 2024. During April and May 2026, Ukrainian counteroffensives reportedly recaptured approximately 400 square kilometers of territory, demonstrating Kyiv’s ability to exploit weaknesses along parts of the front.
Drones Change the Battlefield
The report also highlights Ukraine’s rapidly evolving use of advanced military technology as one of the primary reasons behind Russia’s deteriorating position. AI-enabled drones and long-range strike capabilities have repeatedly targeted Russian ammunition depots, logistics hubs, military headquarters, energy infrastructure and strategic air bases far behind the front lines.
Pressure Deep Inside Russia
According to CSIS, Ukrainian strikes reaching Moscow, St. Petersburg and other strategic military sites have exposed weaknesses in Russia’s air-defense network while forcing Moscow to divert valuable resources away from frontline operations. Analysts conclude that these attacks have significantly increased the economic and military costs of the war for the Kremlin.
Zelensky Calls for Peace Through Pressure
The report comes as Russia continues launching large-scale missile and drone attacks across Ukraine. Reacting to one of the latest bombardments, President Volodymyr Zelensky told CNBC: «Russia’s head is completely refusing to end the war. And although through all possible official and unofficial channels… we have conveyed that the war can and must be ended, and that we in Ukraine are ready for meetings and meaningful negotiations, he sees only further aggression.» He added: «Russia must be placed in a situation where, apart from peace, it has no other option.»
Negotiations Increasingly Likely
While Russia still possesses significant manpower, industrial capacity and the ability to conduct long-range strikes, the CSIS report concludes that the overall trajectory of the conflict has become considerably less favorable for Moscow. With mounting casualties, slowing territorial gains and increasingly effective Ukrainian strikes, analysts believe the war is becoming one of endurance, making a negotiated ceasefire or broader peace agreement more likely than a decisive military victory for either side.