San Francisco Chronicle

THE INVASION

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Roughly 5,000 missile strikes, 3,500 airstrikes and

1,000 drone strikes: Firepower that Russia has launched against Ukraine over the past year, according to Brig. Gen. Oleksiy Hromov, a senior official in the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. 18: The percentage of total Ukrainian land controlled by Russian forces as of Thursday, according to the Institute for the Study of War, a think tank. 71,905: Potential Russian war crimes — killings, kidnapping­s, indiscrimi­nate bombings and sexual assaults — under investigat­ion by Ukraine’s prosecutor-general. Reporting by the Associated Press and “Frontline” has independen­tly verified 639 incidents.

THE CASUALTIES

8,006: Confirmed civilian deaths in Ukraine since Russia’s invasion, through Feb. 15, according to the U.N.

5,937: Russia’s most recent count, from September, of its troops killed in Ukraine since February 2022.

Around 200,000: Western estimate of Russian troops killed and wounded.

9,000: Ukraine’s most recent count of its troops losses since the invasion.

More than 100,000: Estimate of Ukrainian troops killed or wounded, according to Western officials.

REFUGEES AND THE DISPLACED

8.1 million: Refugees who fled Ukraine after the Russian invasion, based on figures provided by national government­s.

5.4 million: People who were driven from their homes but stayed inside Ukraine, according to a Jan. 23 count by the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

17.6 million: People in Ukraine needing humanitari­an aid, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs.

INTERNATIO­NAL SUPPORT

$113 billion: Emergency funding for the Ukraine response approved by U.S. Congress last year.

$59 billion (55 billion euros): Total commitment­s to Ukraine from European Union member nations and EU institutio­ns, according to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.

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