As the first four months of 2026 have ended, Russia is facing a 'casualty crisis.' The number of dead and wounded are accelerating due primarily to ever more effective Ukrainian drones and their operators. But Russian losses are growing due to another, unexpected bureaucratic factor: more Russian families are demanding that their missing loved ones in Ukraine be declared dead - and Russian courts are complying. The families want the finality of their situation officially decreed, in part so they can collect the death benefits owed them. These results are public and thus difficult for the Kremlin to conceal or alter. JL
Mick Ryan reports in Futura Doctrina:
That Russian forces are no longer in Kupiansk, after struggling for months to support a small infiltration speaks to the logistical fragility of Russia’s operations when supply lines are contested. Ukraine is stepping up its ‘middle strike’ operations and the Russians are finding it difficult to convert infiltrations into sustainable gains. Ukraine's gains of the last two months reverse a long-term Russian trend. Monthly figures reveal a crisis of accelerating Russian casualties. The scale is being recorded in Russia’s legal and administrative systems in ways difficult to conceal. The 352,000 figure is broken down into 261,000 ‘regular’ fatalities and 90,000 ‘late’ fatalities whose deaths were declared by court order as missing and confirmed, or deaths registered with a delay over 180 days because bodies were not recovered, or not identified. This became visible in Probate Registry and Russian court records from mid-2024 on, when a mass campaign of court applications seeking to have soldiers declared missing or dead began to gather pace.























