Burning through ammo, Russia using 40-year-old rounds in Ukraine, US official says
- Moscow’s forces will run out of fully serviceable ammunition by early 2023 if they do not resort to foreign suppliers and older stock, the official added
- But the use of such rounds carries risk, such as failure to fire or to explode when they land

Russia is turning to decades-old ammunition with high failure rates as it burns through its stockpiles to carry out its nearly 10-month-old invasion of Ukraine, a senior US military official said on Monday.
“They have drawn from [Russia’s] ageing ammunition stockpile, which does indicate that they are willing to use that older ammunition, some of which was originally produced more than 40 years ago,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The United States accuses Russia of turning to Iran and North Korea for more firepower as it exhausts its regular supplies of ammunition.
The senior US military official assessed that Russia would burn through its fully serviceable stocks of ammunition by early 2023 if it did not resort to foreign suppliers and older stocks.
“We assess that at the rate of fire that Russia has been using its artillery and rocket ammunition in terms of what we would call fully serviceable artillery and rocket ammunition. They could probably do that until early 2023,” the official said.
