Citing data collected by the Warspotting project, an open-source monitor of Russian military losses, Dialog.ua noted that the number of Russian tanks lost in the war zone hit an all-time low in May 2025, not because they were “being better protected”, but because “they simply no longer exist”.
Then, a few weeks later, the Ukrainian Defence Ministry’s Main Directorate of Intelligence (GUR) reported that due to the “large-scale irretrievable losses of weapons and military equipment sustained during the war against Ukraine”, Russia had been forced to deploy obsolete tanks to theatre due to a lack of their modern equivalents, or even comparatively up-to-date Soviet-era combat vehicles.
In particular, the GUR noted that 1960s-era T-62 tanks were being readied for combat at a repair plant in Russia’s far eastern Zabaykalsky region, before being deployed to western Russia from the Eastern Military District. The technical condition of most of these vehicles, according to the GUR, was “unsatisfactory” as they “had been stored outdoors for decades”, without ever being serviced.