Russia's Longest War episode artwork

EPISODE · May 20, 2026 · 40 MIN

Russia's Longest War

from WARZONES

On 11 January 2026, something quiet happened.Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine had run for 1,418 days. Exactly the same length as the Soviet Union’s war against Nazi Germany, from 22 June 1941 to Victory Day on 9 May 1945. In those days, the Red Army fought from inside its own borders to the gates of Berlin. The Russian army today has captured roughly 20% of Ukraine, and still can’t take the whole Donbas.Now the war in Ukraine became Russia’s longest war since the Great Patriotic War. By the time Tom Tugendhat and James Glancy sat down to record this week’s Warzones, the count was past 1,540 days and still rising.This week on Warzones, we walk through what that means:- Russia has now lost more soldiers in Ukraine (~325,000 KIA) than in every post-WW2 conflict combined, by an order of magnitude.- Q1 2026 was Russia’s first officially recorded economic contraction of the war.- Ukrainian deep-strike drones have knocked ~43% of Russian fuel production offline.- April 2026 was the first month Russia recorded a net territorial loss since Ukraine’s Kursk incursion of August 2024.- Ukraine has gone from a tired post-Soviet economy in 2021 to the most high-tech state in Europe in 2026.- After the denial of Starlink to Russian force, Ukraine has retaken hundreds of kilometres of territory.“He would be the first Russian leader who has tried to take Kyiv and failed. The big changes in Russian history always come after defeats — 1905, 1917, 1989. This may be the next one.” TOM TUGENDHATJames Glancy & Tom Tugendhat Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published May 20, 2026

On 11 January 2026, something quiet happened.Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine had run for 1,418 days. Exactly the same length as the Soviet Union’s war against Nazi Germany, from 22 June 1941 to Victory Day on 9 May 1945. In those days, the Red Army fought from inside its own borders to the gates of Berlin. The Russian army today has captured roughly 20% of Ukraine, and still can’t take the whole Donbas.Now the war in Ukraine became Russia’s longest war since the Great Patriotic War. By the time Tom Tugendhat and James Glancy sat down to record this week’s Warzones, the count was past 1,540 days and still rising.This week on Warzones, we walk through what that means:- Russia has now lost more soldiers in Ukraine (~325,000 KIA) than in every post-WW2 conflict combined, by an order of magnitude.- Q1 2026 was Russia’s first officially recorded economic contraction of the war.- Ukrainian deep-strike drones have knocked ~43% of Russian fuel production offline.- April 2026 was the first month Russia recorded a net territorial loss since Ukraine’s Kursk incursion of August 2024.- Ukraine has gone from a tired post-Soviet economy in 2021 to the most high-tech state in Europe in 2026.- After the denial of Starlink to Russian force, Ukraine has retaken hundreds of kilometres of territory.“He would be the first Russian leader who has tried to take Kyiv and failed. The big changes in Russian history always come after defeats — 1905, 1917, 1989. This may be the next one.” TOM TUGENDHATJames Glancy & Tom Tugendhat Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

PodParley-generated summary based on available episode metadata and transcript content.

NOW PLAYING

Russia's Longest War

0:00 40:01

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Source Material VICE The media is powered by primary sources. People who were there. People who saw it. People who lived it. Now with a camera in every pocket, phone footage is powering the press. From warzones to wildfires, every person is a cameraman filming one angle of a worldwide documentary. Source Material presents world events through the recordings of those who lived it. Cut out the host, cut out the reporter, and hear the Source Material for yourself. Source Material is a multimedia project that takes you behind the headlines and straight to the source. It is also a video series. Watch on VICE Youtube for original episodes. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. The Wide Woman Podcast Anne Lepelaars This is for all the women that want to become so wide that they can hold ALL of life. Listening to this podcast will help you stretch wide enough to hold your shame, your shit, and your brilliance at your root - without collapsing or cutting short. I'm Anne, a psychologist, trauma survivor, and embodiment & pleasure guide. Trained by textbooks, yes, but also by warzones, sexual violence, and the wild tenderness of womanhood itself. You are not too much, too sensitive or too fragile. You are just not wide enough yet. And I’m here to help you become wider than anything life throws at you. Brain Under Siege: Demystifying the Neuroscience of PTSD Inception Point Ai Post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, is a complex disabling psychiatric condition that can develop after someone experiences or witnesses a profoundly disturbing, frightening or life-threatening event. The trauma triggers a cascade of physiological and psychological symptoms interfering with daily functioning and overall wellbeing. Who PTSD Impacts PTSD can impact anyone who has gone through severe emotional or physical trauma regardless of gender, age, nationality or background. However, certain populations face disproportionately higher risk including: - Military veterans exposed to combat violence - Victims of violent crimes like sexual assault, child abuse, domestic violence, mugging, terrorism - Refugees fleeing warzones, persecution or natural disasters - First responders handling catastrophic accidents with casualties - Patients surviving critical health episodes through emergency interventions Not everyone exposed to trauma develops PTSD which depend A Pilgrim’s Progress Ben Johnson I'm Ben Johnson, Warzone Kid. That's my shorthand for those of us whose childhoods were more like warzones and less like nurseries. I'm a child sex abuse survivor, and as an adult I live with Complex PTSD, Borderline Personality Disorder, I'm a recovering addict, bulimic, and binge eater.This podcast is about my own quest to live my life, to learn and become what I am. I'm a Pilgrim on the Trail to the Western Lnds, the place of peace and wholeness. We've got a long way to go, Pilgrim. Let's walk a few miles together. Daylight's burnin'!

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of WARZONES?

This episode is 40 minutes long.

When was this WARZONES episode published?

This episode was published on May 20, 2026.

What is this episode about?

On 11 January 2026, something quiet happened.Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine had run for 1,418 days. Exactly the same length as the Soviet Union’s war against Nazi Germany, from 22 June 1941 to Victory Day on 9 May 1945. In those days, the Red...

Can I download this WARZONES episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!