Foreign
20,000 Russians died in Ukraine, says Trump

Russia is thought to have passed the one million casualty mark earlier this year, according to Ukrainian and Western estimates.
Trump went on to reveal that Russian forces had lost approximately 112,500 troops since the beginning of 2025. That would mean that Moscow has been losing an average of around 16,000 troops per month since January.
It is unclear whether by that number Trump refers to the number of Russian troops killed in action, rather than total casualties. If Trump’s 20,000 number refers solely to Russian troops killed in action, that number would align more closely with Ukrainian estimates, which have put Russian total monthly casualties at around 40,000 per month since January—for a total of approximately 267,000 casualties thus far in 2025.
Militaries generally consider casualties to be troops killed in action (KIA), wounded in action (WIA), missing in action (MIA), and prisoners of war (POW). Statistically, wounded troops make up the greatest portion of the total casualties. The “WIA” classification is broad by design; it includes both troops that will eventually be able to return to the fight, and those severely wounded that will not.
The President stressed that Ukraine “has also suffered greatly”—putting the number of Ukrainian troops killed in action at 8,000 since January 1, not including troops missing in action. If these figures are accurate, it highlights a huge disparity in losses in favor of the defending Ukrainians.
“Ukraine has also lost civilians, but in smaller numbers, as Russian rockets crash into Kyiv, and other Ukrainian locales,” Trump added.
Trump’s remarks reflect a grim reality for the Russian forces.
According to figures released by the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence, the Russian military, paramilitary units, and pro-Russian separatist forces lost approximately 1,010 troops killed and wounded over the last day. Materiel casualties over the past 24 hours were equally heavy; according to the same data, the Russian forces lost approximately 85 tactical vehicles and fuel trucks, 77 unmanned aerial systems, 28 artillery pieces and multiple launch rocket systems, 8 armored personnel carriers and infantry fighting vehicles, 1 main battle tank, and 1 cruise missile.
Moreover, the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) recently conducted a special operation with drones against a Russian air base in occupied Crimea. SBU claimed that the attack struck five aircraft, destroying one Sukhoi Su-30M fighter jet, damaging another, and hitting three Sukhoi Su-24 fighter-bombers.
In total, Kyiv estimates that the Russian forces have lost approximately 1,057,140 troops since the war began on February 24, 2022. In spite of these gargantuan losses, events have shown that the Kremlin is willing and able to withstand them—and pour more men into the fray in order to achieve its goals.













