hit counter html code Inside the vast military cemetery that lays bare the 100,000 Ukrainian troops lost since Putin’s invasion – Cure fym

Inside the vast military cemetery that lays bare the 100,000 Ukrainian troops lost since Putin’s invasion


GRIEVING families prayed for peace yesterday as a vast military cemetery laid bare Ukraine’s war losses.

The embattled nation is now estimated to have lost about 100,000 troops — more than the capacity of Wembley Stadium — in the 35 months since the start of Vladimir Putin’s invasion.

Man mourns at a military cemetery in Kharkiv, Ukraine, among numerous graves marked with Ukrainian flags.
Doug Seeburg

This vast military cemetery lays bare Ukraine’s war losses[/caption]

Kharkiv military cemetery with numerous graves, many adorned with Ukrainian flags.
Doug Seeburg

100,000 Ukrainian soldiers have died since the Russian invasion in 2022[/caption]

Aerial view of a cemetery with numerous Ukrainian flags placed at the gravesites.
Getty

Blue and yellow flags mark graves and faces on tombs[/caption]

Russia has lost up to double that number as its ruthless president pours more men into assaults along Eastern Ukraine’s blood-soaked front line.

But the tyrant has calculated he will eventually win the war as he has more men to toss into the meat grinder than his enemy.

And Ukraine’s toll has now become impossible to hide at military cemeteries across the war-weary nation.

At Kharkiv Cemetery Number 18 yesterday, grieving loved ones braved bone-chilling cold to silently pay their respects.

Flags marked out a yellow and blue sea of sacrifice alongside endless rows of grey stone tombstones etched with the smiling faces of the fallen.

Previously, a few dozen soldiers who died in Russia’s first Donbas incursion in 2014 made up a corner of the graveyard.

But after the February 2022 invasion, their ranks expanded as far as the eye can see to 6,000 in just one cemetery.

Dmytro Neznamov and his elderly mother lit a candle at the war grave of his cousin Andrey Levtesov yesterday.

He told The Sun: “He was an artillery gunner killed by a Russian drone when he tried to save the crew of a tank.

“He was a builder before the war but joined up to defend his country when the Russians invaded and was 46 when he died in June last year.


“His family remember him as a man with a warm heart. But now he’s here with all the others, thanks to Putin.”

The Russian tyrant has said he is ready to negotiate — although hopes were dashed last night when Russia said it would deploy its superfast Oreshnik missiles to Belarus, close to Ukraine’s northern border.

Dmytro said: “We want this war to end. You can see we have lost too many good men.

“I’m proud of Andrey and men like him, but it’s time for the killing to stop.”

About 51,000 Ukrainians are missing, with more than 40,000 civilians dead and wounded.

Defence analyst Paul Beaver told The Sun: “Russia has the huge manpower advantage and a leader with no regard for the human cost to his own people.

“It’s a proper meat grinder.”

Kharkiv military cemetery with numerous graves, many marked with Ukrainian flags and photos of the deceased.
Doug Seeburg

The tombstones of fallen Ukrainian soldiers[/caption]

Headstone with a photo of Mykola Anatoliyovych PIVEN, 1973-2022, in a Kharkiv military cemetery.
Doug Seeburg

The headstone of a soldier who died in the opening months of the conflict[/caption]

Military cemetery in Kharkiv with many graves marked by Ukrainian flags.
Doug Seeburg

Ukrainian flags stand over the graves[/caption]

Kharkiv military cemetery with numerous graves, many marked with wooden crosses and Ukrainian flags.
Doug Seeburg

Wreaths and flowers are left to pay respects[/caption]

Man in a dark coat stands in front of numerous Ukrainian flags at a military cemetery.
Doug Seeburg

Nick Parker in Ukraine[/caption]

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