Many of Russia’s fontline soldiers are now young conscripts unexpecedly thrown into the war whenUkraine invaded the Kursk region. Image: Russian Defense Ministry Press Service

Reports have emerged in recent months of particularly savage casualties among Russian troops fighting in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine as the Russian military bids to capture as much territory as it can, possibly with one eye on a potential ceasefire deal.

Much will depend on the outcome of the US election. US presidential candidate Donald Trump has said he will end military aid to Ukraine if elected, bringing the war to an end in “one day.”

This could mean that Kiev will be forced to cede Ukrainian territory along current lines of occupation. Analysts have commented that this was one of the motivations for Ukraine’s Kursk offensive inside Russia in August since territory captured by Ukraine would be a valuable bargaining chip in negotiations.

Meanwhile, Russia’s offensive in eastern Ukraine has been particularly bloody, with US intelligence reports of casualty numbers of up to 1,000 per day, dead and wounded. This calls to mind the “meat grinder” tactics of previous Russian and Soviet military campaigns.

The “meat grinder” is a collective battlefield approach that values high troop density and intensity to overwhelm the enemy. It is a uniquely Russian approach nine decades in the making, consisting of a combination of two much older strategies, namely attrition and mass mobilization.

At the heart of attrition is the notion of abundance. The opponent is physically and psychologically exhausted by the sheer force of numbers as wave after wave of cannon fodder is relentlessly deployed.

Mass mobilization is the large-scale movement of troops to a particular location with the intention of overpowering the adversary. Neither approach recognizes the intrinsic value of individual lives.

Despite being outmatched in organization and tactics, the Russian military successfully undertook a war of attrition against Napoleon’s invasion in 1812. A century later, the Russian empire generated enormous casualties but successfully launched large-scale counterattacks during the First World War.

The “meat grinder” became embedded in Soviet military tactics. The phrase “quantity has a quality of its own” has apocryphal roots in Stalin’s leadership during the Second World War.

Key battles such as Stalingrad and Kursk involved the deployment of millions of soldiers, and the Soviet army eventually crushed the Nazi blitzkrieg through the sheer weight of numbers on the eastern front.

Past victories do not guarantee future success. But – for the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, and his military planners – it seems the dead and disabled bodies of their own soldiers are necessary collateral damage.

It is estimated that more than 70,000 Russian troops have died since 2022. But it has been reported that Russian casualty rates are now rising more rapidly due to its military’s increased reliance on inexperienced fighters.

ISW map showing the state of the war in Ukraine , October 20 2024.
The state of the war in Ukraine, October 20, 2024. Graphic: Institute for the Study of War

Civilian recruits now make up the greatest proportion of deaths since the invasion began. This increase is partially their lack of military knowledge in a challenging fighting environment against a highly motivated enemy.

However, inadequate medical care and poor-quality protective kit are also important factors. The Russian state media shares carefully curated images and stories of the deceased but morale is still crashing, and military wives and mothers are rebelling.

Ultimate sacrifice

Putin’s meat grinder continues to expand, however. The Russian government announced plans to spend £133.8 billion (US$174 billion) on national security and defense in 2025, equivalent to 41% of annual government expenditure. All healthy men aged 18 to 30 can now be conscripted, and Russia has recently ordered a third increase in Russian troops.

The recruitment of a further 180,000 soldiers will make Russia’s army the second largest in the world, with nearly 2.4 million members. Yet this army is unqualified and offers little protection for the individual soldier.

Ukraine does not view its soldiers’ lives as disposable in the same way – and they are comparatively well-trained and resourced. But the dynamic in Ukraine may be changing.

The country’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, signed new conscription laws in April 2024 that lowered the age of conscription to 25, and it has reached the point where eligible men are now being dragged away from restaurants and nightclubs by army recruiters.

Russia’s meat-grinder tactics are not infallible and will eventually collapse. Large formations can quickly become large targets in an age of remote reconnaissance.

While Russia can coerce military participation through the carrot of high wages and the stick of forced conscription, a large and unmotivated army is not well-equipped for modern warfare and will eventually produce diminishing returns.

Even a declaration of martial law in the whole of Russia – Putin introduced martial law in the occupied part of Ukraine in September 2022 – would not overcome the deeply embedded structural issues Russia faces.

Poor care of soldiers and veterans will generate long-term challenges in the form of disability and treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

The social and cultural harms of a poor culture of care are already manifesting in Russia. Approximately 190 serious crimes have been committed by veterans upon returning home. With Putin showing no interest in peace, we can only hope that the Russian war machine burns itself out – and that the long-term consequences are not terminal.

Becky Alexis-Martin, Peace Studies and International Development, University of Bradford

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Join the Conversation

18 Comments

  1. Becky Alexis-Martin one should speak the truth to advance the peace.
    But you seems to be a stooge of the collective west.
    And no much knowledge about history.
    Napoleon in Russia: There was no meet grinder as you say. Here is a glimpse of the history from Wikipedia:
    As his Russian army was outnumbered by far, Mikhail Bogdanovich Barclay de Tolly successfully used a “delaying operation”, defined as an operation in which a force under pressure trades space for time by slowing down the enemy’s momentum and inflicting maximum damage on the enemy without, in principle, becoming decisively engaged,[18] using a Fabian strategy as a defence in depth by retreating further eastwards into Russia without giving battle.[19]
    And so on.
    In the ww2 Russian fought as they could.
    If they wouldn’t fought like that you would be speaking german now, idiot.

  2. Reports from where? Ukraine sources or UK sources, or some think tanks in Washington?
    What an absolute piece of junk propaganda.

  3. It is interesting to see how this propaganda about the Russian meat waves keep reappearing, despite it being proven false on so many occasions. I’m wondering if it is part of the western cope about losing the war. “Yes, we lost the battle, but just look at how many men Russia lost. So even if we had to give up half of Ukraine we still won the war.”

    1. So give us the numbers from the Kremlin?
      Yup give up 25% of Ukraine and Russia is finished in 10yrs. Increasingly Mohammedan and Chinese settlers in Siberia. Russ not producing babies.
      It’s kaput/finished.
      500yrs from Moscovy to the USSR, 50yrs from USSR to Moscovy.

  4. The Russians have not run out of missiles and they are certainly not losing more men than Ukraine, in case you believe perfidious Albion lies and Western media claptrap. They lost 27 million during WW2 fighting Western Fascism, I’m sure the losses today are minimal and worth the price paying for preventing Western Fascism rolling tanks once again in utter distaste towards Russian borders again after 80 years. NATO is the continuation of the Third Reich. You can call it the Fourth Reich

    1. What are you smoking? I want some as well ….
      So if Russians are not running short of things to throw or men, why are they relying on NK? 27m? Don’t forget the 4m that died in the Holodomor in Ukr and m’s others that died in the Soviet Union at the hands of their leaders.
      It’s all very well using your soldiers as canon fodder when your TFR is 4+ and they know if they do not win, then their families will be exterminated. The estimate for WW2 is 6 Russ to 1 German. That’s higher than the usual 3 or 4:1 which is probably the case in this 6wk SMO !
      Russia is hemorrhaging people and the TFR’s of ethnic Russ are extinctional, within a decade 30% of the Russian Federation will be Mohammedan – that’s when they will have to let Chechnya & Dagestan go. China is also taking over Siberia.
      Ukr soldiers will go home as heroes, while the Russ conscripts will be brutalised, shell-shocked and vilified.
      Good job Vlad !

      1. Ukraine has lost at least 10 times as many troops as the Russians. If you actually believe the figures are the reverse, you need to lay off the Anglo American media. Its really bad for your mental health. Your “heroes” started this war in 2014. Russia will end it.

        1. Total pony and trap. The best estimates for Russland are 100k killed and 500k casualties. So taking the 4 to 1 estimate that is 25k Ukr killed and 100k injured.
          Unless of course you’re a Putin fanboy, in which case the SMO has only taken 3 weeks and the Moscow is still afloat.

          1. We heard the very same tropes from your end. Sanctions and a tweet attack will cripple the Russian economy in a few weeks. Nothing like that happened. I do not recall anybody in Russia claiming the SMO will take 3 weeks. But I did hear Western pundits getting all giddy at the impending collapse of Russia. Who’s credibliity has taken a nosedive? Next time, keep your mouth shut. The dogs bark loud but the caravan moves on.

  5. ‘launched large-scale counterattacks during the First World War.’
    Correct, but the Brussilov offensive was rolled back by Hindenburg & Ludendorff (plus Hoffmann) and lead to the collapse of Tsarist Russia.

    ‘Poor care of soldiers and veterans will generate long-term challenges in the form of disability and treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.’
    Why is this the first article I have ever read that mentions this? Putin’s troubles start the moment these lads return home.

    1. Should rename yourself “TinyPecker”… trying so hard but tiny pecker will remain tiny pecker

  6. “L’Ucraina non considera le vite dei suoi soldati come sacrificabili allo stesso modo, e sono relativamente ben addestrati e dotati di risorse.”
    Affermazione che scredita definitivamente l’ articolo e l’autore.

    1. Italians…. invented a tank with 1 forward gear and 5 reverse! Not a mob to take seriously when talking about war.
      It’s pretty obvious that Ukr has been (mostly) careful with it’s soldiers lives.

      1. It’s pretty obvious che non hai informazioni corrette circa quello di cui scrivi.
        P.S.
        Il carrarmato di cui scrivi è stato inventato (e poi prodotto e venduto) da Leonardo, con consulenza Beretta, su precise specifiche tecniche delle Forze Armate degli Stati Uniti che, dopo il positivo collaudo in Afghanistan, lo hanno ritenuto il più idoneo per il teatro ucraino.

        1. Did Leonardo’s tank also have 5 reverse gears?
          Come on, stick to pizza and wine. Since Rome fell the Italians have been hopeless at war.

        2. You know NATO always planned for the Italians to be on the frontline. Not because they were expected to fight, but because the chaos of them running backwards/forwards in panic would be a distraction to the enemy.
          Also to have them in the rear would be leaving yourself open to a stab in the back.