Katana VentraIP

Disinformation in the Russian invasion of Ukraine

As part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Russian state and state-controlled media have spread disinformation in their information war against Ukraine.[1] Ukrainian media and politicians have also been accused of using propaganda and deception, although such efforts have been compared to the Russian disinformation campaign as more limited.[2]

Russian propaganda and fake news stories have attacked Ukraine's right to exist and accused it of being a neo-Nazi state, committing genocide against Russian speakers, developing nuclear and biological weapons, and being influenced by Satanism. Russian propaganda also accuses NATO of controlling Ukraine and building up military infrastructure in Ukraine to threaten Russia. Some of this disinformation has been spread by Russian web brigades. It has been widely rejected as untrue and crafted to justify the invasion and even to justify genocidal acts against Ukrainians. The Russian state has denied carrying out war crimes in Ukraine, and Russian media has falsely blamed some of them on Ukrainian forces instead. Some of the disinformation seeks to undermine international support for Ukraine and to provoke hostility against Ukrainian refugees.


Russian disinformation has been pervasive and successful in Russia itself, due to censorship of war news and state control of most media. Because of the amount of disinformation, Russian media has been restricted and its reputation has been tarnished in many Western and developed countries. However, the Russian state has had more success spreading its views in many developing countries. In particular, Chinese state media has been largely sympathetic to the Russian side, and has repeatedly censored war news or reproduced Russian fake news and disinformation.


Descriptions of Ukraine-sponsored propaganda and misinformation have focused on over-optimistic reports about the war and promotion of patriotic stories.

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"Ukrainian citizens can decide on their future" - President Putin 12 June 2021

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Cyberwarfare by Russia

 – 2014 Russian atrocity propaganda story in Ukraine

Crucified boy

 – Battlespace use and management of information and communication technology

Information warfare

Nuclear threats during the Russian invasion of Ukraine

– WW2 example of Soviet disinformation

Panfilov's Twenty-Eight Guardsmen

 – Russian state-sponsored Internet commentators

Russian web brigades

– The avenue by which much disinformation has spread

Social media in the Russo-Ukrainian War

– Leaks implicating the Russian company NTC Vulkan in acts of cybercrime

Vulkan files leak

Tracking Social Media Takedowns and Content Moderation During the 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine