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Day 1,500: Russia Sustains Record Losses as Offensive Slows

2 min read
09:04UTC

The 1,500th day of full-scale war passed with Russian cumulative losses at 1.3 million and daily engagements declining from 163 to 120 as the spring offensive stalls.

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Key takeaway

Russia's 1,303,550 cumulative losses at 1,100-1,230 per day make the offensive mathematically unsustainable at current territorial gain rates.

The Ukrainian General Staff recorded 230 combat engagements on 3 April, the 1,500th day of the full-scale war. Cumulative Russian personnel losses reached 1,303,550 by 5 April. Russia's sustained attrition rate of 1,100 to 1,230 per day translates to roughly a full division equivalent every 10 to 12 days. At 17 square miles per week of territorial gain, Russia would require decades to reach strategic objectives, consistent with the war bloggers' 100-year commentary.

Daily engagements declined from 163 to 120 since the spring offensive's launch. ISW assessed that Russia's 3rd Combined Arms Army cannot seize Ukraine's Fortress Belt in 2026 . Russia lost a net 33 square miles in the February to March period , and the concentration of assaults in the Pokrovsk direction (35 to 58 per day) with 128 total engagements on 5 April suggests a narrowing of offensive focus rather than broad front pressure.

At 1,100 to 1,230 casualties per day, monthly losses of 33,000 to 37,000 exhaust trained reserve pools faster than conscription and training cycles can reconstitute them. Russia allocated 38 to 40% of federal spending to defence , but manpower, not money, is the binding constraint.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The war reached its 1,500th day on 3 April. Russia has now lost over 1.3 million soldiers killed or wounded — roughly the entire population of a large city. Russia is losing this many people while only gaining about 17 square miles of territory per week. At this rate, the war's military logic is deeply unfavourable for Russia's stated goal of capturing Ukraine's eastern territories.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Russia's daily casualty rate makes strategic reserve generation structurally impossible within current mobilisation parameters.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Russia Sells Less Oil but Earns More

Institute for the Study of War· 5 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Day 1,500: Russia Sustains Record Losses as Offensive Slows
Russia's attrition rate — roughly one division equivalent every 10-12 days — makes sustained offensive pressure structurally self-defeating at the territorial gain rate of 17 square miles per week.
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