×

NATO chief warns young Russians they would die in Ukraine war

By Thomson Reuters Jun 3, 2026 | 10:11 AM

KYIV, June 3 (Reuters) – NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Wednesday warned young Russians that they would probably die if ​they sign up to join Russia’s ‌war in Ukraine.

“You are being sold a raw deal,” Rutte said during a press conference in Kyiv, in remarks he directly addressed to “young Russians and ‌their ​families”.

“Men like you who join ⁠the fight – you ⁠won’t be trained. Equipment they’ll provide you with is substandard. There is a very high chance you’ll die or be wounded ​while you’re out there,” he said.

“And odds are, that if you are wounded, you ⁠will be left to ⁠suffer in the mud and die.”

Rutte ​said Russia was incurring “absolutely staggering” losses in Ukraine, ​where he said more than 30,000 Russian ‌soldiers died every month – matching figures he has cited before.

“This means losing more men in one month than the Soviet Union ⁠did in 10 years in the 1980s in Afghanistan,” the NATO chief said.

“That’s not abstract,” he said. “That ⁠will probably ‌be you.”

Russia, which officially describes ⁠the conflict as a “special military operation” ​and ‌promises recruits large salaries, has long ​argued that ⁠NATO’s eastward enlargement since the end of the Cold War — and the prospect of Ukraine joining the alliance — pose an existential threat to its security.

(Reporting by Bart Meijer; Editing by ​Hugh Lawson)