The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Far East military exercises reveal drain on Russian forces

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

Russia’s rst largescale military exercises since its invasion of Ukraine, held in the Far East, have been considerab­ly scaled down from its previous drills, illustrati­ng how much the ongoing war has exhausted its military strength.

Flaunting its cooperatio­n with China and India, Russia is emphasizin­g through the exercises its ability to deploy its forces in the Asia-Pacific region and is making clear its intention to in uence the United States, which continues to provide military support to Ukraine.

SHOWING ‘RESERVE POWER’

At the nal stage of the Vostok 2022 exercises on Sakhalin Island on Sunday, the Russian military conducted a decontamin­ation drill on the assumption that enemy forces had used chemical weapons immediatel­y before retreating. e Russian military has repeatedly made unilateral claims that its Ukrainian counterpar­ts are secretly developing chemical weapons with the support of the U.S. military and others.

The exercise also featured the T-80, Russia’s main battle tank. e Russians have lost about 200 tanks of the T-80 series in Ukraine, according to Oryx, an organizati­on that monitors the losses su ered by Russian and Ukrainian forces. More than 5,000 Russian ground weapons and pieces of equipment, including tanks and armored vehicles, are said to be no longer usable.

Vostok 2022 is aimed at highlighti­ng the “reserve strength” of the Russian military.

NO. OF VEHICLES UNKNOWN

However, senior U.S. and British o cials have put the number of Russian military casualties in Ukraine at about 80,000. Estimated to have a total strength of about 900,000 troops, Russia seems to be having di culty concealing the drain on its forces.

Russia conducts large-scale military exercises every fall on a rotating regional basis — this is the rst time they have been held in the Far East since Vostok 2018 four years ago. Soldiers gathered from other regions of the country for that event, making it the largest such undertakin­g since the end of the Cold War, with 300,000 soldiers participat­ing.

This year, however, there are only 50,000 soldiers, onesixth of the previous number.

The number of tanks and other vehicles taking part — approximat­ely 36,000 in 2018 — has not been disclosed.

The number of sites scheduled for land exercises has also been reduced to seven, from the 13 announced in July.

Over the past six months, ground troops deployed by the Russian military in the Far East may also have been reduced from the about 80,000 indicated in Japan’s White Paper on Defense. is is because the Eastern Military District, which has jurisdicti­on over the Far East and other areas, has also dispatched troops to Ukraine, some 8,000 kilometers away, as part of Russia’s so-called special military operations.

According to the Institute for the Study of War, a U.S. public policy research organizati­on, soldiers from the Eastern Military District are believed to be deployed in Izyum, the Kharkiv region in eastern Ukraine, and Russian-occupied areas in the Kherson region in southern Ukraine.

13 FOREIGN NATIONS

Russia’s Defense Ministry announced that 13 foreign countries, including observers, would participat­e in the exercises, including China, India and the anti-U.S. le ist government of Nicaragua in Central America. is is the largest number ever to take part in Vostok military drills.

The exercises include daily joint drills involving the Russian Paci c Fleet and the Chinese Navy. is is to demonstrat­e their ability to send naval vessels immediatel­y to the Asia-Paci c region, including Japan, and to cooperate with each other.

The joint drills to be held at a training ground near Vladivosto­k in the Far East on Tuesday are expected to be watched by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is seeking to demonstrat­e that Russia has not been isolated in military a airs. (Sept. 6)

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