Ukraine puts its Russian war trophies online for allies to pick apart
TrophyLab bad for Vlad as battlefield losses spill the secrets they had
offbeat
Ukraine puts its Russian war trophies online for allies to pick apart
TrophyLab bad for Vlad as battlefield losses spill the secrets they had
Russia’s equipment losses in Ukraine are about to become the world’s gain, as Kyiv has decided to hand out its intel on seized Russian battlefield assets to its international partners. And it has launched a new site to do so.
Announced on Friday by Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense, the TrophyLab is being billed as a place for Ukraine and its allies to analyze Russian military technology for the benefit of both Kyiv’s government in its current fight against Moscow, and for anyone else that might face off against Russian gear in the near future.
“From now on, the entire democratic world will have access to the secrets of Russian weapons and equipment,” the Defense Ministry said in a press release. International partners also have the opportunity to obtain samples of war trophies for their own research efforts via the program.
As for how much equipment is in the database so far, the Defense Ministry said that TrophyLab currently contains samples from more than 115 war trophies divided into 79 categories, including bombs and missiles, aircraft, drones, electronic warfare equipment, tanks, and even small arms.
More than 225 prior studies of the seized equipment are also included in the TrophyLab dataset, and that’s just the beginning, with Ukrainian defense forces, the Main Intelligence Directorate, and the country’s Security Service all continually providing data for the program.
The included total so far is likely just a fraction of the data Ukraine could share with its international partners, as Russia’s losses since its 2022 invasion of its southwestern neighbor have been extensive.
One estimate last year by the US Center for Strategic and International Studies suggests that Russia lost more than a thousand armored fighting vehicles, at least 3,000 infantry fighting vehicles, 300 self-propelled artillery units, and nearly 2,000 tanks. That only includes losses sustained between January 2024 and June 2025 when the report was published, mind you, meaning the actual total may be far greater.
Russia’s gains in Ukraine have been largely erased outside of the Russian-annexed but contested Crimean peninsula, where it has focused most of its energy of late. Even then, it hasn’t had a successful run of things, with Ukrainian forces continuing to bomb its soldiers, forward bases, and logistical routes using long-range drones.
Speaking of long-range Ukrainian drones, international media has been filled with images lately of Moscow being bombarded by suicide drones that have flooded Russian airspace and repeatedly struck a major oil refinery despite being shot down by the hundreds, according to Russian state media. Ukraine has captured some Russian territory, but like Russia's gains in Ukraine, many of those advances have been pushed back, leading to a prolonged stalemate between Russian forces and Ukrainian troops.
Ukrainian scientific organizations, military units, and defense sector firms are all eligible for access to TrophyLab, as are the governments and defense departments of Ukraine’s allies and defense contractors in partner nations. That said, access is being tightly controlled.
In order to get a peek at the TrophyLab data, applicants need to prove they don’t have any ties to Russia, haven’t been sanctioned by Ukraine, and meet other criteria set by the MoD.
“Every missile, drone, and vehicle seized on the battlefield is now a source of knowledge for the free world,” Ukrainian defense minister Mykhailo Fedorov said of the new platform in a social media post over the weekend. “What was meant to be the enemy's secret advantage is being dismantled to defend democracy.” ®
Originally published on The Register


