How do Russia and Ukraine’s military capacities compare?

After almost one year of fighting following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, how do the military capacities of the two countries compare? Exact figures and precise information are, understandably, hard to come by, but we do know that Western powers are supplying some heavy weaponry to Ukraine. Most recently, according to statements made in Brussels on 9 February, Ukraine is asking several Western partners for fighter jets. This follows an historic agreement to supply modern tanks by Germany, the UK and the USA, with lighter weaponry coming from France, Poland and other NATO members in Europe.

Will Russia be able to produce and purchase enough arms to continue its ongoing aggression or even simply to defend the occupied territories?

Is the Ukrainian military prowess sufficient to retake the occupied and unilaterally annexed territories, or is the principal task today – resistance to the Russian advancement?

“Ukraine critically dependent on Western supplies”

According to the Israel-based military commentator David Gendelman, Russia is not curbing its attacks. _”At the moment, Russia has the advantage in arms, primarily in barrel and jet artillery as well as aviation, and the Russian military industry allows for fighting at the current capacity. Russian consumption of artillery ammunition has significantly dropped compared to the spring-summer period, and that slows the Russian pace.” However, he says Russian forces are advancing, slowly but surely. “Nevertheless progress, albeit slow and in narrow sections of the front, is being made.”

Gendelman points out that the Ukrainian army is largely dependant on the western supplies of modern weaponry.

“Ukraine is critically dependent on Western supplies. At the moment the main task of the Ukrainian forces is defence. To think about significant counterattacks beyond local counterattacks is possible only with the receipt of significant quantities of Western weapons, which are promised, but not yet delivered.”

“Moscow trying to delay its inevitable defeat”

In the months following the Russian invasion, the world saw heavy losses of Russian military hardware, damaged and abandoned on the battlefield. The Kremlin appeared unprepared for the realities of full-scale head-on combat: a quick annexation of territories was allegedly planned by Moscow with the Rosgvardia, the National Guard Troops, expected to ensure territorial and public security on the ground in the first weeks of the invasion.

But that’s not what happened and the offensive may have caused damage to the Russian armed forces that will take a long time to repair, according to Pavel Luzin, a US-based expert on Russian foreign and defence policy:

“It is impossible to restore Russia’s military potential. The army was at the peak of its strength in 2020-2021, and it will not return there. But it is trying to stretch out its agony. Take ISIS: without aviation and with a minimum of armour and artillery, the Islamic State was able to resist a superior international coalition for almost four years. That’s how Moscow is trying to delay its inevitable defeat.”

Strengthening supplies to Ukraine in two main areas: armoured vehicles and artillery

Neil Melvin, Director of International Security Studies at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) suggests Ukraine is slowly gaining control over the situation, especially with the arrival of the modern armaments supplied by the Western partners:

“The war has really been going on since 2014 [and the Russian annexation of Crimea]. Going into this new round of fighting (which began in February 2022) both sides are already well equipped: Russia had a comprehensive range of capabilities and Ukraine had some significant ones, but lacked key armaments in certain areas.

“In the first phase of the war, when Ukraine managed to blunt the Russian assault first on Kyiv and then gradually grind down the Russian drive through Donetsk, an enormous amount of Russian equipment was captured and repurposed.

“The Ukrainians have taken control and then just sort of repainted and rearmed lots of this Russian equipment, which of course, they’re very familiar with. They now have pretty good air defences, which when going into the war were really very thin: mostly a few Soviet rather old systems. They’ve now got some of the most modern Western ones, which have been quite effective in taking out the Russian drones and missiles, although a few still get through.

How has the situation evolved since the early onset of tensions in 2014?

“What we see now is a push to provide the Ukrainians with modern armoured vehicles and to provide Ukraine with modern artillery and rocket forces. They have quite a lot of artillery. Actually, one of the largest artillery forces in Europe built up from 2014 primarily.

Four months into the war, the bombardment of Mariupol and the atrocities of Bucha (near Kyiv), the US announced the supply of long-range HIMARS systems to counter the Russian attacks.

“The range of these has been increased, particularly with the donation of modern artillery and howitzer systems. And most recently the United States has boosted artillery with a range of about 150 km  by modifying the previously supplied well-known HIMARS systems.

“With these new missiles, the Ukrainian forces from their current lines will be able to hit Russian forces in almost all of occupied Ukraine, not the southern and eastern-most parts of Crimea and not the eastern-most parts of the Donetsk region, but everywhere else will be within range.

“But they still lack the longer range, up to 300-km range missiles, the United States is denying requests to supply those and the Ukrainians don’t have modern NATO standard fighter jets. They’re still using Soviet era ones, the Russian ones. These are still essentially Soviet-era technology.

Since last summer dozens of countries have allocated military aid to Ukraine in the form of modern weapons systems and financial support. Melvin added:

“The challenge for the Ukrainians is to actually use all of this in a coordinated way to try and break through the Russian lines in what’s called combined arms operations: linking them all up. That’s the challenge.”

Russia “running short on advanced equipment”

On the Russian side, military capacity has also evolved, although not in the same way, according to Melvin. 

“Russia went into the war with massive armed forces in large numbers. They lost a lot of equipment. They lost a lot of men. But they’ve used the winter to somewhat reconstitute their armed forces.

“The Kremlin had a 300,000-man mobilisation, beginning in September of last year, who are now in place.

“They have a lot of Soviet-era equipment: there were huge stockpiles when the Soviet Union collapsed. They have a lot of artillery shells, they have a lot of tanks and armoured vehicles, not necessarily the most modern ones, but in large numbers. They’re unlikely to run out of that basic equipment.

Since his Munich declaration against NATO expansion into Eastern Europe in 2007, President Putin has been menacing the West with Russian military innovations: in 2018, we even saw an animation of a new secret missile seeming to strike US territory. These new cutting-edge systems, however, are not present in the war in Ukraine, despite what has been suggested. They remain largely lab models or virtual, rather than implemented, technologies.

“Where Russians are running short is on the more advanced post-Soviet systems of rockets and advanced armoured vehicles,” said Melvin.

“So the battle, I think, comes down to essentially a question of Russia’s going to try and use its overwhelming amount of resources, particularly its manpower, to break through the Ukrainian lines without necessarily much sophistication in linking up different parts of the armed forces.”

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Russian forces massing in eastern Ukraine and other top stories

Russian forces massing in eastern Ukraine – officials

Russia is mustering its military might in eastern Ukraine, local officials said on Wednesday. 

Moscow has begun gathering troops in the Luhansk region of Ukraine, with Kyiv suspecting it is preparing for an offensive in the coming weeks.

Kremlin forces are removing locals living near the front line so that they can’t provide information about Russian troop deployments to Ukrainian artillery, Luhansk Governor Serhii Haidai said.

“There is an active transfer of [Russian troops] to the region and they are definitely preparing for something on the eastern front in February,” Haidai detailed. 

Military analysts anticipate a new push soon by Moscow’s forces. Late Tuesday, the US-based Institute for the Study of War said “an imminent Russian offensive in the coming months is the most likely course of action.”

The General Staff of Ukraine’s armed forces also reported today that Russia is concentrating its efforts in neighbouring Donetsk province, especially in its bid to capture the key city of Bakhmut.

Donetsk and Luhansk make up the Donbas, a prized industrial region area bordering Russia that President Vladimir Putin identified as a goal from the war’s outset. 

Moscow-backed separatists have fought Ukrainian authorities here since 2014.

Donetsk was one of four provinces that Russia illegally annexed in autumn last year, but it controls only about half of it. To take the remaining half, Russian forces have no choice but to go through Bakhmut, which offers the only approach to bigger Ukrainian-held cities.

Russian forces have been trying for months to capture Bakhmut. Moscow-installed authorities in Donetsk claimed Russian troops are “closing the ring” around the city.

US clamps down on global network helping Russia evade sanctions

The United States sanctioned 22 individuals and entities in several countries on Wednesday, accusing them of being behind a global sanctions evasion network supporting Russia’s military-industrial complex.

The move — which comes as Washington looks to increase pressure on Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine — is part of a US push to crack down on sanctions evasion around the world. 

They want to limit Russia’s access to revenue it needs for the war, the US Treasury Department said in a statement.

The sanction dodging network is led by Russia and a Cyprus-based arms dealer Igor Zimenkov, who was slapped with sanctions on Wednesday, along with his son Jonatan. 

Projects connected to Russia’s military machine, including supplying high-tech devices to Moscow’s forces in Ukraine, have been helped by the group, the Treasury said, alongside state-owned Russian defence companies. 

Russia’s embassy in Washington did not immediately comment.

The sanctions, which freeze any US assets of those on the list and bar Americans from dealing with them, mark the latest round of sanctions imposed on Russia. 

“Russia’s desperate attempts to utilize proxies to circumvent U.S. sanctions demonstrate that sanctions have made it much harder and costlier for Russia’s military-industrial complex to resupply Putin’s war machine,” Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said in the statement.

Kremlin welcomes bounty put on Western tanks in Ukraine

The Kremlin on Wednesday welcomed a Russian company’s offer of “bounty payments” for soldiers who destroy Western-made tanks on the battlefield in Ukraine, saying it would spur Russian forces to victory.

The Russian company Fores this week offered 5 million roubles ($72,000) in cash to the first soldiers who destroy or capture US-made Abrams or German Leopard 2 tanks in Ukraine.

On Wednesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russian troops would “burn” any Western tanks that were delivered to Ukraine, adding the bounties were extra encouragement for Russian soldiers.

“This testifies to the unity and the desire of everybody to contribute as best they can, one way or another, directly or indirectly, to achieving the goals of the special military operation,” Peskov told reporters.

“As for these tanks, we have already said they will burn. With such incentives, I think there will be even more enthusiasts.”

The Western-made tanks — far more advanced than anything used by Ukraine or Russia in the conflict so far — are unlikely to arrive at the frontlines in eastern and southern Ukraine for several months.

Putin urges military to stop Ukrainians shelling Russia

President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday that Russia’s military must cease Ukrainian shelling on Russian territory, which he said had left many people homeless or without power.

Putin was addressing a government meeting about restoring destroyed housing and infrastructure in regions of southwest Russia that border Ukraine.

“Of course, the priority task is to eliminate the very possibility of shelling. But this is the business of the military department,” Putin said in remarks published on the Kremlin website.

Ukraine does not claim responsibility for strikes inside Russian territory but has described them as “karma” for Moscow’s invasion.

Many Ukrainian cities have been razed to the ground and Russia systematically targets the country’s energy infrastructure, frequently leaving people without power and water in the depths of winter.

People were facing “very acute” problems, and repairs and compensation were needed, Putin said, detailing that houses had been damaged or destroyed in Belgorod, Bryansk and Kursk, as well as Crimea, which Russia seized from Ukraine and annexed in 2014

“Many people found themselves in a difficult situation, lost their homes, were forced to move to relatives or to temporary places of residence, faced interruptions in the supply of water, heat, and electricity,” he said.

Putin’s comments signalled Moscow’s frustration at the frequency of attacks in southern Russia, which have included strikes on sites such as electricity substations and depots for weapons and fuel.

‘Cherry on the cake’: Ukraine hails French radar gift

Ukraine’s defence minister said on Wednesday that Ukrainian lives will be saved by a sophisticated radar supplied by France. 

The air defence system is powerful enough to spot incoming missiles and exploding drones in the skies over all of Ukraine’s capital and its surrounding region.

The minister, Oleksii Reznikov, was so enthusiastic about what he called Ukraine’s new “electronic eyes” that he quickly coined a nickname for the Ground Master 200 radar — the “Grand Master.”

Speaking through an interpreter at a handover ceremony for the radar with his French counterpart, Reznikov described the French-made GM200 as a “very effective” improvement for Ukraine’s network of about 300 different types of air-defence radars.

Thales, the manufacturer, says the radar detects and tracks rockets, artillery and mortar shells, missiles, aircraft, drones and other threats.

“Because of your support, Ukrainian lives will be saved,” the minister said at the ceremony in Limours, where Thales makes the equipment.

“This radar will be the cherry on the cake,” he added. “That’s why it will be called ‘Grand Master.’”

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Russia takes war to ‘different stage’ and other developments

Russia takes war to ‘different stage’ – EU official

Moscow has ratcheted up its invasion of Ukraine by making indiscriminate attacks on civilians and framing the conflict as a struggle against the West, according to a senior EU official. 

Stefano Sannino, Secretary General of the European Union’s European External Action Service, said on Friday Russia has taken the war to “a different stage”, while defending Germany and the US’s decision to send tanks to Kyiv. 

He criticised Russian President Vladimir Putin for waging a war on NATO and the West, saying this had triggered this week’s move to supply Ukraine with heavy battle tanks. 

Speaking at a news conference in Tokyo, Sannino said Putin had “moved from a concept of special operation to a concept now of a war against NATO and the West.”

The EU foreign policy official said German and US tanks are meant to help Ukrainians defend themselves, rather than attack Moscow.

“I think that this latest development in terms of armed supply is just an evolution of the situation and of the way Russia started moving the war into a different stage,” Sannino said. 

The EU is not moving the war into a different stage but is “just giving the possibility of saving lives and allowing the Ukrainians to defend [themselves] from these barbaric attacks,” he added. 

Germany and the US announced on Wednesday they will send advanced battle tanks to Ukraine, offering what one expert called an “armoured punching force” to help Kyiv break a stalemate on the battlefield. 

Washington will send 31 M1 Abrams tanks, while Berlin has agreed to give 14 Leopard 2 A6 tanks from its own stocks.

Wagner mercenaries shot for fleeing, says ex-commander

A former commander of Russia’s Wagner group, who fled to Norway, witnessed comrades being shot as they tried to flee the frontline in Ukraine, according to his Norwegian lawyer.

Andrei Medvedev, who escaped Russia over the Russian-Norwegian border in January, said he fears for his life after witnessing the killing and mistreatment of Russian prisoners taken to fight for Wagner in Ukraine. 

Speaking to Euronews in January, experts made similar accusations that Chechen troops have been used to execute deserting Russian soldiers

Medvedev is living in a secret location in the Oslo area after he was released from detention on Wednesday following a “disagreement” with police about measures taken to ensure his safety.

His lawyer Brynjulf Risnes said he had seen some “incredibly horrible” situations while fighting last autumn and was “slowly coming to terms with what’s happening” in Ukraine. 

“His life has been chaotic and dangerous and very stressful for a very long time,” Risnes said, “particularly, of course, during the autumn when he was in Ukraine with the Wagner group.”

“But of course, his life hasn’t been easy before that either.”

Thousands of Ukrainian civilians have been killed, millions uprooted and cities reduced to rubble since Russian forces invaded Ukraine 11 months ago.

Kripos, Norway’s national criminal police service, which has responsibility for investigating war crimes, has begun questioning him about his experiences and wants to carry on, Risnes said.

Kripos is part of a project to investigate war crimes in Ukraine conducted by the International Criminal Court.

US lawmakers call for China to be sanctioned over Ukraine

US lawmakers on Thursday urged the Biden administration to take a tougher stance on China, accusing Chinese organisations of providing support to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“We need to be much more robust” against China, said Democratic Senator Bob Menendez, citing “evidence that Chinese companies are providing dual-use technology including semi-conductors”, which can be used to guide missiles.

“It seems to me that we shouldn’t give up the potential for sanctions against China if they provide crucial assistance and they shouldn’t be able to hide behind companies,” he said.

His Republican colleague James Risch felt China was acting “with impunity” and that the US needed to “strengthen the sanctions” on the country.  

US Foreign Minister Antony Blinken is due to visit China next month. 

In parallel, Washington announced on Thursday more sanctions against Wagner and its supporters, which included a Chinese company accused of helping them in Ukraine.

A Chinese space research institute, the Changsha Tianyi Space Science and Technology Research Institute are among the organisations the US Treasury Department believes provided Wagner with satellite images in Ukraine.

China, an ally of Russia, says it is neutral towards the conflict in Ukraine, while strengthening ties with Russia, particularly in the energy field, on the side.

But US officials are increasingly concerned about the support provided to Russia through Chinese companies in the field of high technology in particular.

Ukraine grain harvest will nosedive – prediction

Ukrainian production of grain and other essential foodstuffs is expected to fall even further next year, according to new estimates. 

Sown areas of grain and oilseed harvest are expected to drop to “53 million tonnes” in 2023, half of what they were in 2021, according to estimates by the Ukrainian Grain Association (UGA).

“We are at war,” said Nikolay Gorbachov, UGA President, on Thursday. “We continue to produce grain but the harvests will drop. For farmers, it is no longer profitable to produce grain.” 

In 2021, 106 million tonnes of grain were harvested, a historic record, this fell to around 65 million tonnes for 2022, while “53 million tonnes” is predicted for 2023, he outlined. 

Prior to the Russian invasion, Ukraine was the world’s fourth largest corn exporter and the country was on the way to becoming the third largest wheat exporter.

Fighting in 2022 hampered the ability of farmers to sow crops, which was compounded by a lack of fuel and the destruction of agricultural machinery and storage infrastructure. 

Gorbachov expressed concern about exports in the next season: “For Ukrainian national food security, it will be fine. But if Ukraine cannot export these 40 or 50 million [tonnes of grain]? Prices will increase. Europe can allow it, but not developing countries,” he said.

Disruptions to food exports from Ukraine have pushed many developing countries to the brink of starvation by sending prices into orbit. 

Experts have warned the food crisis is causing increasing numbers of migrants to come to the European Union.

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Ukraine war: Germany denies tank delivery veto and other top stories

1. Fighting in southern Ukraine increases as situation at nuclear plant worsens

Fighting in Ukraine’s southern Zaporizhzhia region has enormously intensified, according to a statement released by a Russian-installed official in the area.

Vladimir Rogov, the leader of the collaborationist “We Are Together” movement, said on messaging platform Telegram that “the intensity of military activity ha[d] sharply increased” in Zaporizhzhia’s direction.

He also added that Russian forces had managed to capture a village in the region, just 50 kilometres south of the local capital.

In the meanwhile, Ukraine’s energy minister said on Friday that the situation at the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station was worsening because of the psychological state of its Ukrainian staff and the condition of the equipment.

The plant — Europe’s largest — has been shelled repeatedly throughout the conflict, raising fears of a possible disaster. Each side blames the other for the attacks.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN nuclear watchdog, is attempting to set up a safe zone around the facility.

2. EU countries work on 10th sanction package as Hungary blocks military aid

EU countries have been working on a tenth package of sanctions on Russia and €500 million in military aid to send Ukraine, the latter of which Hungary is currently blocking, diplomatic sources told Euronews.

The EU’s strongest anti-Kremlin critics have already been calling for another sanction round to curb the bloc’s nuclear fuel cooperation with Moscow, ban imports of Russian diamonds and reduce trade with Moscow’s ally Belarus, among other measures.

On Friday, senior diplomats from three middle-way countries said the next sanction package should be ready around the anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on 24 February.

EU officials have also been seeking approval from the ministers for a seventh tranche of military aid for Ukraine, but Hungary is reportedly contesting this attempt.

The Hungarian foreign ministry and the government spokesman did not respond to requests for comment on reports that Budapest was blocking that move ahead of the talks on Monday.

EU diplomats told Euronews that they are hopeful to reach a deal on the military aid by Monday, which will require the unanimous approval of all 27 EU member states.

3. Germany denies blocking Leopard shipment to Ukraine amid Ramstein meeting

Germany’s newly-appointed Defence Minister Boris Pistorius on Friday denied Berlin was the last country blocking the shipment of Leopard main battle tanks to Ukraine, saying the government was ready to move swiftly on sending them if there was consensus among allies.

“There are good reasons for the (tank) deliveries and there are good reasons against,” he said, speaking to reporters at a meeting of NATO and defence leaders from approximately 50 countries at the Ramstein Air Base in Germany. 

“And in view of the entire situation of a war that has been ongoing for almost one year, all pros and cons must be weighed very carefully,” 

This comes after Poland and other countries said they were waiting for Germany to lift its veto.

“The impression that has occasionally arisen, that there is a closed coalition and Germany was standing in the way, this impression is wrong,” Pistorius said.

Pressure has been building on Berlin to provide tanks to Kyiv, with Scholz’s government reportedly being wary of taking steps that could be considered to make it a party to the war with Russia.

Germany has become one of Ukraine’s main military supporters — overcoming a taboo rooted in the dark moments of its 20th-century history — but it has not yet agreed to send tanks or allow other countries to send their own German-made tanks.

Leopard tanks are seen as highly suitable for Ukraine as they are used widely, meaning several countries could provide some of their tanks to support Ukraine.

4. CIA chief meets with Zelenskyy, US official reports

CIA Director William Burns visited Kyiv last week to meet with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a US official said in an article published by The Washington Post, the latest example of high-level contacts between the two countries.

The official, speaking anonymously, claimed that Burns met Ukrainian intelligence officials and emphasised Washington’s “continued support for Ukraine” in the war.

This is not the first time the CIA chief has briefed the Ukrainian president, speaking repeatedly before and since Russia invaded its neighbour, passing on US intelligence findings about Moscow’s war plans and intentions.

The CIA director, a former US ambassador to Moscow, told PBS NewsHour last month that agency analysts forecasted “a reduced tempo and fighting between the two militaries as winter sets in.”

“I don’t underestimate for a moment the burdens, the challenges, that this war poses for Ukrainians first and foremost, but for all of us who support Ukraine,” said Burns. “But strategically, I think, in many ways, you know, Putin’s war has thus far been a failure for Russia.”

5. Kadyrov and Prigozhin contest Russian military leadership

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov on Thursday decried a ban on Russian soldiers wearing beards, joining Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin in the two men’s latest criticism of Russia’s military leadership.

Writing on Telegram, Kadyrov denounced the rules as “a clear provocation”, claiming his Muslim-majority troops wore beards as part of their religious duty.

This comes after a Wednesday interview with Viktor Sobolev, a retired lieutenant general and member of Russia’s parliament, who defended the ban on beards, personal smartphones and tablets as an “elementary part of military discipline”.

Wagner boss Prigozhin called Sobolev’s comments “absurd” and “archaisms from the 1960s”.

He has also recently attacked the Kremlin for failing to block US-owned video-sharing platform YouTube, signalling a growing rift with Putin’s administration.

Kadyrov and Prigozhin, whose forces in Ukraine operate with a significant degree of autonomy, have become more outspoken following Moscow’s armies suffered a string of cascading defeats in the autumn.

The two men have struck up a tacit alliance, amplifying each other’s criticism of Moscow’s military leadership and calling to escalate the war effort.

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Ukraine war: Investigators probe 58,000 possible Russian war crimes

Ten months into Russia’s latest invasion of Ukraine, overwhelming evidence shows the Kremlin’s troops have waged total war, with disregard for international laws governing the treatment of civilians and conduct on the battlefield.

Ukraine is investigating more than 58,000 potential Russian war crimes — killings, kidnappings, indiscriminate bombings and sexual assaults. Reporting by The Associated Press and US television channel PBS, recorded in a public database, has independently verified more than 600 incidents that appear to violate the laws of war. Some of those attacks were massacres that killed dozens or hundreds of civilians and as a totality it could account for thousands of individual war crimes.

As Karim Khan, chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, told the AP, “Ukraine is a crime scene.”

That extensive documentation has run smack into a hard reality, however. While authorities have amassed a staggering amount of evidence — the conflict is among the most documented in human history — they are unlikely to arrest most of those who pulled the trigger or gave the beatings anytime soon, let alone the commanders who gave the orders and political leaders who sanctioned the attacks.

The reasons are manifold, experts say. Ukrainian authorities face serious challenges in gathering air-tight evidence in a war zone. And the vast majority of alleged war criminals have evaded capture and are safely behind Russian lines.

Even in successful prosecutions, the limits of justice so far are glaring. Take the case of Vadim Shishimarin, a baby-faced 21-year-old tank commander who was the first Russian tried on war crimes charges. He surrendered in March and pleaded guilty in a Kyiv courtroom in May to shooting a 62-year-old Ukrainian civilian in the head.

The desire for some combination of justice and vengeance was palpable in that courtroom. “Do you consider yourself a murderer?” a woman shouted at the Russian as he stood bent forward with his head resting against the glass of the cage he was locked in.

“What about the man in the coffin?” came another, sharper voice. A third demanded the defense lawyer explain how he could fight for the Russian’s freedom.

The young soldier was first sentenced to life in prison, which was reduced to 15 years on appeal. Critics said the initial penalty was unduly harsh, given that he confessed to the crime, said he was following orders and expressed remorse.

Ukrainian prosecutors, however, have not yet been able to charge Shishimarin’s commanders or those who oversaw him. Since March, Ukraine has named more than 600 Russians, many of them high-ranking political and military officials, as suspects, including Minister of Defense Sergei Shoigu. But, so far, the most powerful have not fallen into Ukrainian custody.

“It would be terrible to find a scenario in which, in the end, you convict a few people of war crimes and crimes against humanity who are low-grade or mid-grade military types or paramilitary types, but the top table gets off scot-free,” said Philippe Sands, a prominent British human rights lawyer.

Throughout the war Russian leaders have denied accusations of brutality.

Moscow’s UN ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, said no civilians were tortured and killed in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha despite the meticulous documentation of the atrocities by AP, other journalists, and war crimes investigators there.

“Not a single local person has suffered from any violent action,” he said, calling the photos and video of bodies in the streets “a crude forgery” staged by the Ukrainians.

Such statements have been easily rebutted by Ukrainian and international authorities, human rights groups and journalists who have meticulously documented Russian barbarity since the Kremlin ordered the unprovoked invasion in February.

Part of that effort, the AP and PBS Frontline database called War Crimes Watch Ukraine, offers a contemporaneous catalog of the horrors of war. It is not a comprehensive accounting. AP and Frontline only included incidents that could be verified by photos, videos or firsthand witness accounts. There are hundreds of reported incidents of potential war crimes for which there was not enough publicly available evidence to independently confirm what happened.

Still, the resulting database details 10 months of attacks that appear to violate the laws of war, including 93 attacks on schools, 36 where children were killed, and more than 200 direct attacks on civilians, including torture, the kidnapping and killing of civilians, and the desecration of dead bodies. Among Russia’s targets: churches, cultural centers, hospitals, food facilities and electrical infrastructure. The database catalogs how Russia utilized cluster bombs and other indiscriminate weapons in residential neighborhoods and to attack buildings housing civilians.

An AP investigation revealed that Russia’s bombing of a theatre in Mariupol, which was being used as a civilian shelter, likely killed more than 600 people. Another showed that in the first 30 days after the invasion, Russian forces struck and damaged 34 medical facilities, suggesting a pattern and intent.

“That’s a crime against the laws of war,’ said Stephen Rapp, a former US Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes. “Once somebody’s injured, they’re entitled to medical care. You can’t attack a hospital. That’s the oldest rule we have in international law.”

Experts say Russia under President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly ignored the rules established by the Geneva Conventions, a series of treaties that dictate how warring countries should treat each other’s citizens, and the Rome Statute, which established the International Criminal Court and defined specific war crimes and crimes against humanity.

“These abuses are not the acts of rogue units; rather, they are part of a deeply disturbing pattern of abuse consistent with what we have seen from Russia’s prior military engagements — in Chechnya, Syria, and Georgia,” said Beth Van Schaack, the US Ambassador at Large for Global Criminal Justice, speaking earlier this month at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands.

Short of a regime-toppling revolution in Moscow, however, it is unlikely Putin and other high-ranking Russians end up in court, whether in Ukraine or the Hague, experts say.

And even as a chorus of global leaders have joined Ukrainians in calling for legal action against the architects of this war, there is disagreement about the best way to do it.

The International Criminal Court has been investigating potential war crimes and crimes against humanity in Ukraine. But it cannot prosecute the most basic offense, the crime of aggression — the unjust use of military force against another nation — because the Russian Federation, like the United States, never gave it authority to do so.

Efforts to plug that loophole by creating a special international tribunal for the crime of aggression in Ukraine have been gaining momentum. Last month, the European Union threw its support behind the idea.

Some human rights advocates say a special tribunal would be the smartest way to proceed. Sands, the British human rights lawyer, said prosecuting Russia before such a tribunal would be a “slam dunk.”

“You’d need to prove that that war is manifestly in violation of international law,” he added. “That’s pretty straightforward because Mr Putin has set out the reasons for that war, and it’s blindingly obvious that they don’t meet the requirements of international law.”

But Khan, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, has opposed the creation of a special tribunal, calling it a “vanity project.”

”We are an international court,” Khan told AP and Frontline in July. “We’ve been accepted, of course, by the Security Councilors as legitimate. They’ve used this court in terms of referrals. And I think we should focus on using this court effectively.”

Whatever happens on the international stage, the vast majority of cases will be heard within Ukraine itself.

The daunting task of turning Ukraine’s beleaguered prosecutorial service into a bureaucracy capable of building sophisticated war crimes cases falls on Yurii Bielousov.

When he was offered the job of leading the war crimes department in the prosecutor general’s office, Bielousov knew it would be tough. Just how tough became clear after Russians pulled out of Bucha last spring, leaving behind a crime scene strewn with the decomposing bodies of more than 450 men, women and children.

Bucha was the first complex case picked up by Bielousov’s prosecutors, and it quickly became one of the most important. No one in Ukraine had ever dealt with something of that scale before.

“The system was not in collapse, but the system was shocked,” Bielousov said. “OK, OK, let’s go everyone, and just try to do our best.”

Ukraine has five different investigative agencies, each assigned legal responsibility for different kinds of crimes. The crimes in Bucha cut across all those categories, tangling the bureaucracy. That has only made building tough cases even harder.

Despite the setbacks and hurdles, Bielousov says his prosecutors remain focused on gathering evidence that will stand up in domestic and international courts. He says he is also focused on another goal — compiling an incontrovertible record of Russia’s savagery that the world cannot ignore.

Yulia Truba wants the same thing. Her husband was one of the first men Russian soldiers tortured and killed in Bucha. She said she wants to establish a single, shared truth about what happened to her husband

“Russia won’t recognise this as a crime,” Truba said. “I just want as many people as possible to recognize it was a real murder and he was tortured. For me, this would be justice.”



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