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Feb 14 12 tweets 4 min read Read on X
1/ In January 2026, Ukraine reported killing 34,000 Russian soldiers – on average 1,096 a day, or 7,846 per week. Thousands of Ukrainians have likely died in the same period. Last month in Ukraine was much bloodier than the average monthly death toll at Auschwitz. ⬇️ Image
2/ The extraordinary lethality of the Ukraine war stands out in comparison to recent wars and mass killings:

🔺 At least 7,000 people are reported to have been killed in the recent Iranian uprising. More have died in Ukraine in each week of last month.
3/🔺 At least 84,000 people died in the Gaza war between 7 October 2023 and 10 October 2025 – an average of 3,500 per week. The number of weekly fatalities in the Ukraine war last month alone was more than twice Gaza's monthly average. Image
4/ 🔺 8,372 Bosnian Muslims were killed at Srebrenica in July 1995 – at the time, the worst European massacre since the Holocaust. Ukraine has seen an equivalent of a Srebrenica for each week of January 2026. Image
5/ 🔺 During the 8-year long Iran-Iraq war, monthly fatalities ranged from an estimated 1,216 to 2,432 per month. That is equivalent to between two or three days' fatalities in Ukraine last month. Image
6/🔺 At the peak of the Vietnam War in 1969, the US lost an average of 521 soldiers a month. Russia lost on average twice that number on every single day of January 2026. Image
7/ 🔺 During World War II, the monthly number of deaths across the entire Nazi concentration camp system (excluding the extermination camps) was usually far lower than in Ukraine in January 2026. Image
8/🔺 The SS recorded camp system-wide death tolls between July 1942 and June 1943. In no month were more than 12,217 deaths recorded – only a little more than a third sustained by the Russians in January 2026.
9/🔺 Dachau concentation camp became infamous for the huge numbers of deaths recorded in the final four months of the war in 1945. However, the number of fatalities in that time was "only" 2,600 to 4,000 per month – equivalent to a few days' worth of Russian losses. Image
10/🔺 Even at Auschwitz, the most notorious of the extermination camps, monthly deaths were usually considerably less than those recorded in Ukraine in January 2026. During the 56 months it was in operation, an average of 19,500–20,000 were killed per month. Image
11/ In short, the Ukraine war is currently incurring a monthly dead toll far higher than anything seen since 1945, outside of outright genocides such as in Rwanda. Its only real point of comparison is the two World Wars, which – not coindentally – saw intense fighting in Ukraine.
12/ It's also worth noting that the Russians, according to most estimates, have suffered far higher losses than the Ukrainians – and many of these losses have been born disproportionately by economically disadvantaged ethnic minorities. It's a self-genocide for Russia. /end

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

Feb 16
1/ Simply travelling to and from the front line in Ukraine is a deadly task, due to the wide-ranging presence of drones. Many soldiers are killed before they even get near a frontline position. An account from a Russian warblogger highlights the work of "killzone runners". ⬇️
2/ 'Voenkor Kotenok' writes:

"On the front lines, they're often called "runners." They're supposedly special forces/semi-combatants on errands. They're supposedly as nimble as sperm, evading even drones."
3/ "The attitude is somewhat dismissive, as if they're not second-class citizens, but rather just helpers. They say there are "tough guys," assault troops, a military elite (and there is one, right?), and then there are the runners, the lackeys. You get the idea.
Read 20 tweets
Feb 15
1/ Telegram will not be restored in Russia, and tighter restrictions will be imposed on mobile phone ownership, says Sergey Boyarsky, head of the State Duma IT Committee. He cites scammers, pro-Ukrainian sabotage, and drone attacks as the reasons behind these moves. ⬇️ Image
2/ In a wide-ranging interview with the St Petersburg online newspaper Fontanka, Boyarsky has explained the thinking behind the government's new restrictions on Telegram. He says that "Telegram doesn't comply with Russian Federation law, and hasn't done so for many years."
3/ "The requirements are simple, basic: localise user data within the Russian Federation, remove prohibited information (extremism, terrorism), and cooperate with law enforcement agencies to solve serious crimes (for example, the Crocus [terroist attack] case)."
Read 17 tweets
Feb 15
1/ While Telegram is only part of a wider complex of communications systems used in the Russian army, it comprises a keystone without which the wider system falls apart. A commentary by a Russian warblogger explains the Russian army's communications ecosystem in detail. ⬇️ Image
2/ Responding to comments earlier this week by presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov, 'Vault No. 8' provides a "briefing note" on the role of Telegram in the Russian military communications ecosystem.
3/ "A typical motorised rifle regiment (today, the basic tactical unit—the military unit that holds the front line) utilises several tools to manage its troops:
Read 41 tweets
Feb 15
1/ While the Russia army struggles with the impact of Telegram and Discord being throttled or blocked by the government, Ukraine has long used a highly sophisticated indigenously developed digital command and control system. Russian warbloggers have highlighted the contrast. ⬇️ Image
2/ Detailed accounts such as the one in the thread below illustrate how Telegram – a commercial app run from Dubai – has been a central tool in the Russian kill chain, allowing for rapid responses to Ukrainian actions. Discord was also heavily used.
3/ Although this approach has been effective, it has now deliberately been rendered unusable by the Russian government. 'Two Majors' compares how Ukraine has approached digital command and control, and never made itself reliant on Telegram:
Read 21 tweets
Feb 14
1/ The Russian army is reportedly forcing its soldiers to abandon Telegram and move over to the government-authorised MAX app. A Russian warblogger explains why the transition will prove to be very difficult. ⬇️
2/ 'Unofficial Bezsonov' writes:

"Some challenges of switching from Telegram to MAX for our military personnel.

Telegram doesn't require a Russian number to be linked, making it difficult for adversaries to [de]anonymise users."
3/ "Max requires not only a Russian number but also real data (according to the messenger's rules), which enemy electronic warfare systems will immediately receive (although a Russian number alone is sufficient for the enemy to identify a user).
Read 16 tweets
Feb 14
1/ Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov recently said (very wrongly) that "It's difficult, if not impossible, to imagine ... frontline communications being provided via Telegram or any other messenger." Warblogger Nikita Tretyakov has a list of other 'unimaginables'. ⬇️
2/ "What else is unimaginable?

It's unimaginable that just a week ago, our troops' communications relied on an enemy country's satellite constellation.
3/ "It's unimaginable that soldiers still obtain many essential items for war and military life (anti-thermal blankets, radios, gasoline-powered and electric tools, inverter generators, etc.) almost exclusively from their salaries or from volunteers.
Read 16 tweets

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