Putin Orders 43 Million Men: Kremlin Cracks - Jason Jay Smart
Russia is still recruiting about 30,000 men a month, and that pace reveals a much deeper manpower crisis inside Putins war machine. Russias 2026 reservist training order, expanding digital notification systems, and growing reliance on older recruits all point in the same direction: the Kremlin is preparing for sustained pressure, not relief. The 46 million figure matters because it shows the size of the population the state can classify, notify, and pressure over time, even if it does not mean 46 million ready reservists.
The burden is not falling evenly across Russia. Verified per-capita losses are heaviest in Tyva, Buryatia, Zabaikalsky Krai, and the Altai Republic, while Moscow remains far more insulated. That means the country is not sharing this war equally. Poorer and more distant regions are paying the highest price, and village-level losses are hitting families, workforces, and local stability at the same time. Siberia and the outer republics are absorbing costs the capital is still able to keep at a distance.
Russias manpower squeeze is now spilling into civilian life. Unmanned systems recruitment is struggling, sign-on bonuses keep rising, Deripaska is calling for a 6-day workweek, factories in St. Petersburg and Leningrad region are cutting back, and anti-blackout arrests and VPN pressure show the state tightening control at home. The pattern is clear: Russia needs more men, more labor, and fewer exits, while the regions absorb the damage first.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 - Intro: Putins Hidden Manpower Deficit
01:23 - Kremlin Censorship: Putins Fear of Dissent
03:01 - Russias Labor Crisis: Putins Six-Day Work Week
04:12 - Russias Ethnic Divide: High Minority Casualty Rates
06:02 - Chechen Power Struggle: Putins North Caucasus Problem
07:56 - Dagestan Riots: Moscows Failing Financial Control
09:03 - Russias Failing Offensive: Ukraine Shaping the Battlefield
11:42 - Putins Existential Crisis: The Kremlins Final Options