Russia & Former Soviet Union

Ukraine’s military weakened in 2024 – Global Firepower

Ukraine’s military weakened in 2024 – Global Firepower

The outlet has downgraded Kiev from 18th to 20th place in its latest rating of the world’s most powerful armies, with Moscow ranking second

Ukraine’s military weakened in 2024 – Global Firepower

Ukraine’s military weakened in 2024 – Global Firepower

FILE PHOTO. ©  Jose Colon/Anadolu via Getty Images

Ukraine’s military has slid for a second consecutive year in the rating of the world’s top armies compiled by Global Firepower. By contrast, Russia has retained second place for over a decade.

In its 2025 Military Strength Ranking, the analytical outlet ranked the US military first, with a ‘PowerIndex’ score of 0.0744 (where 0.0000 is considered perfect), followed by Russia with 0.0788, and China in third place with the same score. Ukraine ranks 20th, with a score of 0.3755. The latter indicator inversely correlates with a nation’s military might.

Last year’s assessment placed Kiev in 18th place, with the top three armies remaining unchanged. In 2023, Ukraine ranked 15th.

The website, which has been publishing annual ratings of 145 armed forces since 2006, claims to base its analyses on “each nation’s potential war-making capability across land, sea, and air fought by conventional means,” – meaning that a country’s nuclear arsenal, if it has one, does not factor in. “The results incorporate values related to manpower, equipment, natural resources, finances, and geography represented by 60+ individual factors,” Global Firepower writes on its website.

Ukraine’s military weakened in 2024 – Global Firepower

Ukraine’s military weakened in 2024 – Global Firepower

READ MORE: Ukraine should have mobilized all men and women – ex-UK defense minister

Speaking in mid-December, Valery Gerasimov, the head of the Russian General Staff, estimated that since the Ukrainian conflict escalated in February 2022, Kiev had suffered nearly 1 million casualties in terms of manpower and lost approximately 20,000 tanks and other armored vehicles.
According to the general, while the “US and its allies [had] significantly increased the volume of military assistance to Ukraine,” Russian forces continued to have the upper hand on the battlefield.

In an interview with local media late last month, Vladimir Shylov, former commander of the 3rd Company in Ukraine’s 134th Separate Territorial Defense Battalion, claimed that the country had “ceased to exist” as a functional state due to widespread corruption and mismanagement, pointing the finger at the leadership in Kiev and Vladimir Zelensky personally. He warned that in light of these difficulties, Kiev’s forces could soon be overwhelmed by advancing Russian troops, allowing Moscow’s military to reach as far as the Dnieper River.

The former commander also criticized Ukraine’s ongoing incursion into Russia’s Kursk Region, describing it as a political ploy without any real strategic military value. He pointed out that the operation has failed to stop Moscow from making territorial gains in recent months.

Several Western media outlets have similarly quoted Ukrainian officers and soldiers as complaining about dire manpower shortages, despite the ever-intensifying mobilization of fighting-age men.

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