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[ISW] 러시아의 공세 캠페인 평가, 2025년 1월 22일

by Summa posted Jan 23, 2025
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```html Key Takeaways

주요 요점:

  • 크렘린은 러시아 경제가 거시경제적 곤경의 지속적인 지표에도 불구하고 양호한 성과를 거두고 있다는 잘못된 인상을 주기 위한 정보 작전을 시작했습니다.
  • 러시아는 전 러시아 코사크 협회 조직을 통해 장기적으로 인력 예비군을 구축하고, 러시아 예비군의 부분적 소집 가능성에 대비하여 크렘린에 대한 잠재적 반발을 완화하기 위해 설계된 의욕적이고 잘 훈련된 우선 순위 풀을 만들기 위한 노력을 계속하고 있습니다.
  • 보도에 따르면 북한은 2025년 3월 중순까지 러시아에 새로운 군인을 배치하여 쿠르스크주에서 현재의 속도와 강도의 소모전, 보병 주도 공격을 유지할 가능성이 높습니다.
  • 이러한 새로운 북한군은 러시아 작전을 결정적으로 개선할 가능성이 낮으며, 러시아군과 함께 작전을 수행하면서 현재 북한군과 동일한 높은 사상자율과 합병증에 직면할 가능성이 높습니다. 러시아 사령부가 지금까지와 같은 방식으로 북한군을 계속 사용한다면 말입니다.
  • 러시아 군사 블로거들은 시리아의 하야트 타흐리르 알샴(HTS)이 이끄는 임시 정부가 타르투스 항구에서 러시아의 투자와 재정적 개입을 중단했다는 최근 주장에 대해 불만을 표시하고 우려를 표명했습니다. 러시아의 시리아에서의 장기 군사적 존재가 불확실하기 때문입니다.
  • 러시아 국영 언론은 러시아가 최근 이 지역에 러시아산이 아닌 가스를 공급하는 것에 대한 논의에도 불구하고 트란스니스트리아에 직접 가스 공급을 재개할 수 있다고 보도했습니다.
  • 우크라이나군은 최근 토레츠크 근처에서 상실한 진지를 탈환했습니다.
  • 러시아군은 최근 차시브 야르, 토레츠크, 포크로프스크, 쿠라호베, 벨리카 노보실카 근처에서 진격했습니다.
  • 러시아와 우즈베키스탄은 군사 협력을 강화하고 있습니다.

분류: 군사, 정치, 경제 관련 국가: 러시아, 북한, 우크라이나 향후 전망: 러시아는 계속해서 경제적 어려움에 직면할 것이며, 이는 군사력과 국제적 영향력에 부정적인 영향을 미칠 것입니다. 북한은 러시아에 대한 지원을 계속할 것이며, 이는 두 나라 간의 관계를 더욱 강화할 것입니다. 우크라이나는 러시아의 침략에 계속 저항할 것이며, 이는 장기적인 갈등으로 이어질 것입니다.
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Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment

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Davit Gasparyan, Grace Mappes, Olivia Gibson, Angelica Evans, Nate Trotter, William Runkel, and George Barros


January 22, 2025, 7:00 pm ET

Click here to view our Russia-Ukraine interactive maps.


Click here to view our special reports since 2024.


Click here to read the recent report from ISW Russia Team & Geospatial Intelligence Team Lead George Barros: "Russia's Quiet Conquest: Belarus"

The Kremlin has launched an information operation that seeks to create the false impression that the Russian economy is performing well despite numerous continued indicators of macroeconomic distress. Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed during a meeting on economic issues on January 22 that 2024 was a "strong year" for the Russian economy. Putin claimed that Russia has a manageable budget deficit of 1.7 percent and achieved a 26 percent increase in non-oil-and-gas revenue to 25.6 trillion rubles (approximately $257.9 billion) in 2024 and announced a retroactive 9.5 percent increase in insurance and military pensions to address rising Russian inflation. Bloomberg reported on January 21 that the Russian Finance Ministry released a report projecting economic strength and suggesting that Russian budget revenue in December 2024 reached a record high of over 4 trillion rubles (about $40 billion) — a 28 percent increase compared to December 2023 and the highest level recorded since 2011. The data fails to account for Russia's unsustainable levels of defense spending, rampant inflation, a growing deficit and the erosion of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund, however. ISW continues to observe macroeconomic data that directly contradict the Kremlin's claims that the Russian economy is performing well. The Kremlin has recently adopted policies aimed at increasing defense spending all while Russian society faces labor shortages, broader demographic issues, declining savings, and increasing reliance on bailouts as the Russian economy faces rising interest rates, inflated salaries, and deteriorating production capacity. These economic realities suggest that the Kremlin's efforts to posture economic strength are largely an information operation aimed at reassuring domestic audiences and posturing Russian strength abroad while masking the true challenges Russia's economy is facing, particularly heightened due to its war against Ukraine.


North Korea will reportedly deploy new military personnel to Russia by mid-March 2025, likely to maintain the current pace and intensity of attritional, infantry-led assaults in Kursk Oblast. The New York Times (NYT) reported on January 22 that a US senior defense official stated that additional North Korean forces will arrive in Russia "within the next two months," (roughly mid-March 2025). The NYT did not specify the number of troops or whether North Korea is rotating forces or increasing the size of its total force grouping in Russia, however. The South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff reported on December 23 that North Korea may be preparing to deploy an unspecified number of additional forces to Ukraine and military equipment to Russia, either as a rotation or additional deployment of forces. Western officials told the BBC on January 22 that North Korean forces have suffered roughly 1,000 killed in action and 3,000 missing or wounded in action as of mid-January 2025, roughly 33 to 40 percent of the 11,000 to 12,000 total North Korean personnel already in Russia] ISW recently assessed that the entirety of the North Korean contingent in Russia may be killed or wounded in action by about mid-April 2025 at their current casualty rate, and a new North Korean deployment — whether intended to increase the current grouping or rotate out existing forces — is likely intended to sustain Russia’s tempo of operations despite heavy losses of about 30,000 - 45,000 causalities (combined killed and wounded) per month. North Korean forces reportedly spent at least a month training in eastern Russia before deploying to Kursk Oblast for further training in near rear areas in November 2024 and joining combat operations at least as of early December 2024. This timeline roughly coheres with the possibility that a fresh contingent of North Korean forces could undergo training and replace the shrinking North Korean group in Kursk Oblast by mid-April 2025, assuming the reported next batch of North Korean troops will train for the same duration as their predecessors, and deploy to Russia imminently in late January or early February 2025.


These fresh North Korean forces are unlikely to decisively improve Russian operations and will likely face the same high casualty rates and complications operating with Russian forces as the current North Korean contingent, provided the Russian command continues to use North Korean forces the same way as it has thus far. US officials and Ukrainian soldiers told the NYT that North Korean and Russian forces continue to struggle with communications and cohesion and that Russian and North Korean forces have "clashed" at least twice due to troop identification errors. A Ukrainian commander told the NYT that North Korean assault groups now include a translator who speaks Russian but that these groups are still not very effective. Ukrainian soldiers reported that North Korean forces continue conducting mass infantry assaults and that North Korean soldiers do not retreat even if injured. Ukraine's Special Operations Forces (SSO) published footage on January 22 of North Korean forces massing for an infantry assault and reported that Ukrainian forces killed 21 and wounded 40 North Korean soldiers during the eight-hour long combat engagement. Ukrainian soldiers told the NYT that Russian forces are still attempting to conceal the presence of North Koreans on the battlefield by conducting drone strikes against wounded North Korean troops as Ukrainian forces attempt to take them prisoner. ISW continues to assess that North Korea's high casualty rate and interoperability difficulties with Russian forces will affect the lessons that the North Korean military command will learn from fighting in Russia's war.


Key Takeaways:


  • The Kremlin has launched an information operation that seeks to create the false impression that the Russian economy is performing well despite numerous continued indicators of macroeconomic distress.


  • Russia continues long-term efforts to build out its manpower reserve with All-Russian Cossack Society organizations and create a willing and well-trained prioritized pool designed to buffer the Kremlin from potential blowback in the event of a possible future partial call up of Russian reservists.


  • North Korea will reportedly deploy new military personnel to Russia by mid-March 2025, likely to maintain the current pace and intensity of attritional, infantry-led assaults in Kursk Oblast.


  • These fresh North Korean forces are unlikely to decisively improve Russian operations and will likely face the same high casualty rates and complications operating with Russian forces as the current North Korean contingent, provided the Russian command continues to use North Korean forces the same way as it has thus far.


  • Russian milbloggers complained and expressed concern over recent claims that the Hayat Tahrir al Sham (HTS)-led interim government in Syria suspended Russian investment and financial involvement in the port of Tartus as Russia's long-term military presence in Syria remains unclear.


  • A Russian state media outlet reported that Russia may resume direct gas deliveries to Transnistria despite recent discussions about sourcing non-Russian gas to the region.


  • Ukrainian forces recently recaptured lost positions near Toretsk.


  • Russian forces recently advanced near Chasiv Yar, Toretsk, Pokrovsk, Kurakhove, and Velyka Novosilka.


  • Russia and Uzbekistan are deepening military cooperation. 

Click Here to Read the Full Report

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