Russia says it has handed over the remains of 1,000 soldiers to Ukraine and has received the bodies of 35 Russian soldiers in return.
It comes as Ukraine’s chief negotiator met US President Donald Trump’s envoys in Geneva to discuss economic plans for the reconstruction of Ukraine after the war.
Negotiators were also preparing a third round of US-led talks aimed at ending the conflict, which has entered its fifth year – a trilateral meeting involving the Russian side, too.
Hours before the Geneva talks, Russia launched 420 drones and 39 missiles in six different regions of Ukraine, injuring dozens of people, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
Vladimir Medinsky, a top aide of Russian President Vladimir Putin, announced the exchange of bodies in a short announcement on Telegram.
He gave no details, but included an image showing bodies being unloaded from a truck.
Hours later, Ukraine said it had received 1,000 bodies, which, “according to prior information from the Russian side, may belong to Ukrainian defenders”.
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The two sides have exchanged thousands of soldiers’ bodies over the course of the conflict that began with Putin’s decision to launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022.
The exchange is based on an agreement reached by the two sides during negotiations in Istanbul in June 2025.
Moscow and Kyiv agreed to return the bodies of up to 6,000 soldiers each, as well as all sick and heavily wounded prisoners of war and those aged under 25.
Kyiv and Moscow regularly publish estimates of the other side’s losses, but do not detail their own.
Zelensky recently admitted 55,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed on the battlefield – a figure Western observers describe as an underestimate, as it does not include those missing.
And from public sources, the BBC has confirmed the names of almost 186,000 people killed fighting on Russia’s side in Ukraine.
The true death toll is generally accepted to be much higher, as many deaths on the battlefield are not recorded.
So even though estimates suggest more Russians are dying every day, Moscow has returned more bodies to Ukraine overall than it has received.
No one has explained the discrepancy, even though Russia has previously accused Ukraine of not abiding by the Istanbul agreement, and Ukraine has alleged Russian body returns were irregular and sometimes included Russians’ remains – a charge Moscow has rejected.
One possible explanation is that Russia captures more Ukrainian bodies, given its troops have been on the attack most of the time and, therefore, are more able to retrieve them from the battlefield.



