The bodies strewn across the streets were carelessly abandoned as flotsam left by a receding tide. The images that began circulating April 1 from Bucha, a suburb of Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital city, were the latest proof of the Russian military’s brutality.
As Russia has withdrawn its forces from outside Kyiv and other cities in Ukraine’s north and west to reconsolidate in the east, its soldiers made no effort to conceal their campaign of murder and torture. Images out of Bucha foreshadowed what’s become a daily stream of new outrages, as Ukrainians in towns no longer under Russian control began to count their dead and come to terms with the ordeal they’d survived — but so many hadn’t.
The Kremlin has been working overtime to advance a much more chilling narrative, one aimed at persuading people not to believe their eyes.
I’d assumed photos and videos documenting the atrocities would be censored in Russia, that President Vladimir Putin’s regime would pretend the video doesn’t exist rather than confront the magnitude of its crimes. Because how could Russia let its people see the graphic evidence that soldiers fighting in their name had executed civilians whose hands were bound and left their corpses littering the road?
I was wrong. Rather than hide the images from the Russian people, the government has been working overtime to advance a much more chilling narrative, one aimed at persuading people not to believe their eyes. That has involved telling the masses that two seemingly contradictory ideas are true: that the images out of Kyiv are fake and that they’re also the result of Ukrainian atrocities carried out against their own people. And all evidence so far suggests that the plan is succeeding.
On state media, anchors and columnists declared that the videos out of the Kyiv suburb were complete fabrications. “Among the first [videos] to appear were these Ukrainian shots, which show how a soulless body suddenly moves its hand,” Russia-1’s evening news claimed last Monday, according to The Associated Press. “And in the rearview mirror it is noticeable that the dead seem to be starting to rise even.”
4/14 “Listen how consonant the English word “butcher” and the name of the city “Bucha” are. This is how the Western audience was subconsciously prepared for this provocation.”
— Alexey Navalny (@navalny) April 5, 2022
Other state organs instead said the killings were real — but were actually carried out by the Ukrainian armed forces after the Russians had already left town. The ministries of Defense and Foreign Affairs both declared that the massacre was “another hoax by the Kyiv regime for the Western media.” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zahkanova claimed in a Telegram post that Ukraine’s goal was the “disruption of peace negotiations and the escalation of violence.”
The idea that the bodies seen in Bucha had been carefully staged for Western audiences was quickly disproved. The New York Times and the BBC have confirmed that the corpses seen April 1 had been visible from satellite imagery from two weeks earlier, when Russia controlled the city. German intelligence has also reportedly intercepted Russian radio communications of soldiers describing indiscriminate killing of civilians.
And yet the Russian disinformation campaign carries on, warning that more “provocations” from the Ukrainians, NATO or both are yet to come. It’s a dark mirroring of American and British officials’ releasing intelligence about Russia’s plans ahead of the war to pre-emptively counter planned Russian false flag operations. In telling domestic audiences that more revelations are yet to come, the Russian government is all but acknowledging that other atrocities will become public.
Compared to traditional American propaganda efforts during wartime, there’s a level of brazenness at play from Russia that feels all the more shocking. American governments have more often relied on suppression of information in their military cover-up efforts, either via classification or through limiting access for journalists, than on the sort of easily debunked lies that Moscow is embracing. It’s as if the U.S. had claimed that the 2007 video of American helicopters firing on civilians in Baghdad, which was leaked to the public in 2010, was either fake or that the Iraqis had actually been piloting the aircraft.








