Larry Strong said:
There is some contention on that figure, estimates range from 8 - 20 million, and now one really knows wether or not civilian deaths from the pogroms conducted by the NKVD before and following the war are included.
"The greatest human losses, as indicated below, were suffered by combatants and civilians of the Soviet Union and China. In the near two-and-a-half year siege of Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) by the German forces, 1 1/2 million Russians alone died from shelling, bombing, disease and starvation, a figure that exceeded all the military casualties of the U.S.A.and British Commonwealth combined."
Country Pop. Killed/Mising Wounded Total(Military) Civilian (deaths)
U.S.S.R. 194m 9 million 18 million 27 million 19 million
Source:
Alan Bullock -
Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives pg.987
The Times Atlas of the Second World War pg. 204,205
Richard Overy -
Russia's War pg. 288
Further:
"Our concern is rather with the figure of 26.6 million which is now widely quoted. This is not the figure of Soviet war dead. It is the figure of the demographic costs of the war in terms of excess deaths. What this means is that the death of several million people is ‘discounted’ because they would have died anyway even though some of them may actually have died of violence or war-related disease and hunger. The figure is calculated by estimating the gross number of deaths in the years 1941–45 and then subtracting those deaths that might have been expected had 1941–45 been ‘normal years’. This leaves the excess death figure, which is 26.6 million."(Haynes)
"During the years 1941–45 42.7 million people were lost from the USSR. Perhaps 2 million or more were migrants, forced or fleeing. The rest were deaths. Had the war not occurred 16.1 million would have died, so the net demographic cost of the war was 26.6 million. But the war did occur, creating horrific conditions on both sides of the lines. Some millions did die peacefully, perhaps of old age, but tens of millions did not. Whatever their fate might have been in the absence of war, they were actually carried off by military violence, malnutrition, disease or repression. Their number lies somewhere between 26.6 and 42.7 million. Both the scale of the figures and their imprecision is a testament to man’s inhumanity to man." (Haynes)
"Historians agree that, whilst the number of civilian and military dead is debated, of all the major Second World War participants the Soviet Union suffered the greatest losses. Soviet historians estimate the number of civilian dead at around 10 million (with another 10 million military losses); Richard Overy offers a total figure of 17 million civilian casualties, including those murdered and starved to death during this period as a result of ‘Soviet brutalities’, with a further 8.6 million military dead.17 Other western historians have suggested 13.6 million military dead and 7.7 million civilians killed—about 11 per cent of the total Soviet population in 1941. The figure currently used in the Russian media is 26 or 27 million dead in total."(Rock)
Source:
Haynes, Micheal, "Counting Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War: a Note" EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES, Vol. 55, No. 2, 2003, 303–309
Rock, S. "Russian revisionism: Holocaust denial and the new nationalist historiography", Patterns of Prejudice, 35:4, 64 - 76