Paul Goble
Staunton, June 8 – The human costs of Putin’s war in Ukraine are increasingly visible on the streets of Moscow in the form of Russian veterans of that conflict who have lost legs or arms. According to the government agency helping veterans, 22.8 percent of veterans have lost one leg, 2.4 have lost both, and 5.6 have lost one or both arms.
Yuri Khabrov, head of that agency, told the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum that 2.6 million veterans of the war in Ukraine had turned to his group, a number that indicates just how many have such serious injuries (vedomosti.ru/society/articles/2026/06/08/1204045-bolee-polovini-veteranov-svo-s-raneniyami-poluchili-i-i-ii-gruppi-invalidnosti).
He said that 24,000 veterans were now getting medical rehabilitation, 8,000 are in sanatoria, and 54,000 are being supervised by doctors. As large as Khabrov’s figures are, they may be understating the problem, to judge from reports now coming in from the federal subjects (e.g., svoboda.org/a/v-bashkortostan-vernulisj-pochti-chetyre-tysyachi-uchastnikov-voyny-protiv-ukrainy-iz-nih-tretj-s-invalidnostjyu/33776602.html and svoboda.org/a/vlasti-chuvashii-zayavili-chto-57-vernuvshihsya-s-voyny-v-ukraine-voennosluzhaschih-trudoustroeny/33775775.html).
But however that may be, Khabrov’s numbers are large enough to project that Russians will be seeing in their daily lives for many years the results of Putin’s war and that governments at all levels will be compelled to spend far more than they planned taking care of these victims.