#CIA #FBI #Mossad
x.com/mikenov/status/2078109…Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) #Russian vs. #Ukrainian #DisinformationRussian vs. Ukrainian Information Warfare share.gemini.google/tpaGxi5w…
Information Warfare, both Russian and Ukrainian; Types, descriptions, examples; purposes, efficiency, comparison
share.google/aimode/WJUvAB2C…Gemini:
It is understandable why a system might flag that specific video as misleading or disinformation. In modern conflicts, the line between legitimate reporting, psychological warfare, and internet clickbait frequently blurs.Let’s break down exactly what that video is doing, and then look at the broader strategies of both Russian and Ukrainian information warfare.
The Video: “47,000 Surrender…”
The video ( youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…) highlights a real Ukrainian psychological operation—the “I Want to Live” project, which gives Russian soldiers a safe mechanism to surrender. However, the video itself skirts the line of misinformation because its title heavily exaggerates the facts presented in its own transcript.
The Claim: The title boldly claims “47,000 Surrender.”
The Reality: The video’s actual transcript states that roughly 10,000 Russian soldiers have surrendered through the program over the course of the entire war [01:12].
The Discrepancy: Later in the video, the narrator mentions that an estimated 50,000 Russian men have deserted or “fled the army” [05:44].By conflating general desertions with active surrenders, the channel manufactures a highly sensationalized, misleading headline. While the channel is pro-Ukrainian and discussing real events, it relies on exaggeration to farm views and amplify a specific narrative—a common tactic in the gray zone of wartime internet content.
Russian Disinformation: The “Firehose of Falsehood”
Russian disinformation is traditionally top-down, state-sponsored, and designed not necessarily to convince people of one specific truth, but to flood the zone with so many lies that the truth becomes impossible to find.
Types & Descriptions: State-run media broadcasts, coordinated social media troll farms (“web brigades”), forged official documents, and the deployment of contradictory conspiracy theories.
Examples: Falsely labeling Ukraine a “neo-Nazi” state to justify the initial invasion; claiming the atrocities discovered in Bucha were staged using crisis actors; and pushing the conspiracy theory that the United States was operating secret bioweapons labs in Ukraine.
Purpose: To justify the war to the domestic Russian population, create plausible deniability for war crimes on the global stage, and exhaust Western audiences into apathy so they stop supporting military aid.
Efficiency: Highly efficient inside Russia due to the Kremlin’s tight monopoly on domestic media and internet censorship. Internationally, it struggles against united Western fact-checking, but it has found success by exploiting existing political divides in Western countries and targeting audiences in the Global South.
Ukrainian Information Operations: Narrative & MoraleUkraine’s approach to information warfare is highly decentralized. Rather than pure fabrication, Ukraine generally relies on “selective amplification”—highlighting real successes, minimizing losses, and utilizing emotional appeals.
Types & Descriptions: Psychological Operations (PsyOps), strategic communications, rapid debunking of Russian claims, and the heavy use of internet meme culture.
Examples: The “I Want to Live” drone-surrender hotline detailed in your video [04:16]; the early-war “Ghost of Kyiv” fighter pilot (which was later admitted to be a myth representing the collective spirit of the air force); and the widespread sharing of intercepted Russian phone calls to highlight enemy demoralization.
Purpose: To sustain domestic resilience, project strength to international allies to ensure continuous financial and military support, and demoralize invading Russian troops.
Efficiency: Extremely effective globally. By relying heavily on authentic smartphone and drone footage, combined with humor and emotional storytelling, Ukraine has successfully maintained its framing as a resilient, tech-savvy underdog fighting a massive, disorganized aggressor.
At a Glance: Tactics ComparedFeatureRussian DisinformationUkrainian Information OperationsPrimary StrategyOverwhelming volume to create confusion and doubtNarrative framing and morale-buildingRelationship to TruthRelies heavily on total fabrications and historical revisionismRooted in real events, but selectively amplified or mythologizedTarget AudienceDomestic Russians, the Global South, and fractured Western groupsDomestic Ukrainians, Western governments, and frontline Russian soldiersDelivery MethodsState TV, coordinated bot networks, fake news domainsDecentralized social media, influencers, government addresses
-— https://x.com/mikenov/status/2078109458689819062— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
Category: Articles and Tweets
Category Added in a WPeMatico Campaign
#Security and #Intelligence #News Review
x.com/mikenov/status/2078109…Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) #Russian vs. #Ukrainian #DisinformationRussian vs. Ukrainian Information Warfare share.gemini.google/tpaGxi5w…
Information Warfare, both Russian and Ukrainian; Types, descriptions, examples; purposes, efficiency, comparison
share.google/aimode/WJUvAB2C…Gemini:
It is understandable why a system might flag that specific video as misleading or disinformation. In modern conflicts, the line between legitimate reporting, psychological warfare, and internet clickbait frequently blurs.Let’s break down exactly what that video is doing, and then look at the broader strategies of both Russian and Ukrainian information warfare.
The Video: “47,000 Surrender…”
The video ( youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…) highlights a real Ukrainian psychological operation—the “I Want to Live” project, which gives Russian soldiers a safe mechanism to surrender. However, the video itself skirts the line of misinformation because its title heavily exaggerates the facts presented in its own transcript.
The Claim: The title boldly claims “47,000 Surrender.”
The Reality: The video’s actual transcript states that roughly 10,000 Russian soldiers have surrendered through the program over the course of the entire war [01:12].
The Discrepancy: Later in the video, the narrator mentions that an estimated 50,000 Russian men have deserted or “fled the army” [05:44].By conflating general desertions with active surrenders, the channel manufactures a highly sensationalized, misleading headline. While the channel is pro-Ukrainian and discussing real events, it relies on exaggeration to farm views and amplify a specific narrative—a common tactic in the gray zone of wartime internet content.
Russian Disinformation: The “Firehose of Falsehood”
Russian disinformation is traditionally top-down, state-sponsored, and designed not necessarily to convince people of one specific truth, but to flood the zone with so many lies that the truth becomes impossible to find.
Types & Descriptions: State-run media broadcasts, coordinated social media troll farms (“web brigades”), forged official documents, and the deployment of contradictory conspiracy theories.
Examples: Falsely labeling Ukraine a “neo-Nazi” state to justify the initial invasion; claiming the atrocities discovered in Bucha were staged using crisis actors; and pushing the conspiracy theory that the United States was operating secret bioweapons labs in Ukraine.
Purpose: To justify the war to the domestic Russian population, create plausible deniability for war crimes on the global stage, and exhaust Western audiences into apathy so they stop supporting military aid.
Efficiency: Highly efficient inside Russia due to the Kremlin’s tight monopoly on domestic media and internet censorship. Internationally, it struggles against united Western fact-checking, but it has found success by exploiting existing political divides in Western countries and targeting audiences in the Global South.
Ukrainian Information Operations: Narrative & MoraleUkraine’s approach to information warfare is highly decentralized. Rather than pure fabrication, Ukraine generally relies on “selective amplification”—highlighting real successes, minimizing losses, and utilizing emotional appeals.
Types & Descriptions: Psychological Operations (PsyOps), strategic communications, rapid debunking of Russian claims, and the heavy use of internet meme culture.
Examples: The “I Want to Live” drone-surrender hotline detailed in your video [04:16]; the early-war “Ghost of Kyiv” fighter pilot (which was later admitted to be a myth representing the collective spirit of the air force); and the widespread sharing of intercepted Russian phone calls to highlight enemy demoralization.
Purpose: To sustain domestic resilience, project strength to international allies to ensure continuous financial and military support, and demoralize invading Russian troops.
Efficiency: Extremely effective globally. By relying heavily on authentic smartphone and drone footage, combined with humor and emotional storytelling, Ukraine has successfully maintained its framing as a resilient, tech-savvy underdog fighting a massive, disorganized aggressor.
At a Glance: Tactics ComparedFeatureRussian DisinformationUkrainian Information OperationsPrimary StrategyOverwhelming volume to create confusion and doubtNarrative framing and morale-buildingRelationship to TruthRelies heavily on total fabrications and historical revisionismRooted in real events, but selectively amplified or mythologizedTarget AudienceDomestic Russians, the Global South, and fractured Western groupsDomestic Ukrainians, Western governments, and frontline Russian soldiersDelivery MethodsState TV, coordinated bot networks, fake news domainsDecentralized social media, influencers, government addresses
-— https://x.com/mikenov/status/2078109458689819062— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
#Russian vs. #Ukrainian #Disinformation
Russian vs. Ukrainian Information Warfare share.gemini.google/tpaGxi5w…
Information Warfare, both Russian and Ukrainian; Types, descriptions, examples; purposes, efficiency, comparison
share.google/aimode/WJUvAB2C…Gemini:
It is understandable why a system might flag that specific video as misleading or disinformation. In modern conflicts, the line between legitimate reporting, psychological warfare, and internet clickbait frequently blurs.Let’s break down exactly what that video is doing, and then look at the broader strategies of both Russian and Ukrainian information warfare.
The Video: “47,000 Surrender…”
The video ( youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…) highlights a real Ukrainian psychological operation—the “I Want to Live” project, which gives Russian soldiers a safe mechanism to surrender. However, the video itself skirts the line of misinformation because its title heavily exaggerates the facts presented in its own transcript.
The Claim: The title boldly claims “47,000 Surrender.”
The Reality: The video’s actual transcript states that roughly 10,000 Russian soldiers have surrendered through the program over the course of the entire war [01:12].
The Discrepancy: Later in the video, the narrator mentions that an estimated 50,000 Russian men have deserted or “fled the army” [05:44].By conflating general desertions with active surrenders, the channel manufactures a highly sensationalized, misleading headline. While the channel is pro-Ukrainian and discussing real events, it relies on exaggeration to farm views and amplify a specific narrative—a common tactic in the gray zone of wartime internet content.
Russian Disinformation: The “Firehose of Falsehood”
Russian disinformation is traditionally top-down, state-sponsored, and designed not necessarily to convince people of one specific truth, but to flood the zone with so many lies that the truth becomes impossible to find.
Types & Descriptions: State-run media broadcasts, coordinated social media troll farms (“web brigades”), forged official documents, and the deployment of contradictory conspiracy theories.
Examples: Falsely labeling Ukraine a “neo-Nazi” state to justify the initial invasion; claiming the atrocities discovered in Bucha were staged using crisis actors; and pushing the conspiracy theory that the United States was operating secret bioweapons labs in Ukraine.
Purpose: To justify the war to the domestic Russian population, create plausible deniability for war crimes on the global stage, and exhaust Western audiences into apathy so they stop supporting military aid.
Efficiency: Highly efficient inside Russia due to the Kremlin’s tight monopoly on domestic media and internet censorship. Internationally, it struggles against united Western fact-checking, but it has found success by exploiting existing political divides in Western countries and targeting audiences in the Global South.
Ukrainian Information Operations: Narrative & MoraleUkraine’s approach to information warfare is highly decentralized. Rather than pure fabrication, Ukraine generally relies on “selective amplification”—highlighting real successes, minimizing losses, and utilizing emotional appeals.
Types & Descriptions: Psychological Operations (PsyOps), strategic communications, rapid debunking of Russian claims, and the heavy use of internet meme culture.
Examples: The “I Want to Live” drone-surrender hotline detailed in your video [04:16]; the early-war “Ghost of Kyiv” fighter pilot (which was later admitted to be a myth representing the collective spirit of the air force); and the widespread sharing of intercepted Russian phone calls to highlight enemy demoralization.
Purpose: To sustain domestic resilience, project strength to international allies to ensure continuous financial and military support, and demoralize invading Russian troops.
Efficiency: Extremely effective globally. By relying heavily on authentic smartphone and drone footage, combined with humor and emotional storytelling, Ukraine has successfully maintained its framing as a resilient, tech-savvy underdog fighting a massive, disorganized aggressor.
At a Glance: Tactics ComparedFeatureRussian DisinformationUkrainian Information OperationsPrimary StrategyOverwhelming volume to create confusion and doubtNarrative framing and morale-buildingRelationship to TruthRelies heavily on total fabrications and historical revisionismRooted in real events, but selectively amplified or mythologizedTarget AudienceDomestic Russians, the Global South, and fractured Western groupsDomestic Ukrainians, Western governments, and frontline Russian soldiersDelivery MethodsState TV, coordinated bot networks, fake news domainsDecentralized social media, influencers, government addresses
–— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
Russian vs. Ukrainian Information Warfare share.gemini.google/tpaGxi5w…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
#Russian vs. #Ukrainian Information Warfare share.gemini.google/pgk9cjsT…
#Disinformation,
share.google/aimode/WJUvAB2C…
both Russian and Ukrainian; Types, descriptions, examples; purpose, purpose, efficiency, comparison
Gemini:
It is understandable why a system might flag that specific video as misleading or disinformation. In modern conflicts, the line between legitimate reporting, psychological warfare, and internet clickbait frequently blurs.Let’s break down exactly what that video is doing, and then look at the broader strategies of both Russian and Ukrainian information warfare.
The Video: “47,000 Surrender…”
The video ( youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…) highlights a real Ukrainian psychological operation—the “I Want to Live” project, which gives Russian soldiers a safe mechanism to surrender. However, the video itself skirts the line of misinformation because its title heavily exaggerates the facts presented in its own transcript.
The Claim: The title boldly claims “47,000 Surrender.”
The Reality: The video’s actual transcript states that roughly 10,000 Russian soldiers have surrendered through the program over the course of the entire war [01:12].
The Discrepancy: Later in the video, the narrator mentions that an estimated 50,000 Russian men have deserted or “fled the army” [05:44].By conflating general desertions with active surrenders, the channel manufactures a highly sensationalized, misleading headline. While the channel is pro-Ukrainian and discussing real events, it relies on exaggeration to farm views and amplify a specific narrative—a common tactic in the gray zone of wartime internet content.
Russian Disinformation: The “Firehose of Falsehood”
Russian disinformation is traditionally top-down, state-sponsored, and designed not necessarily to convince people of one specific truth, but to flood the zone with so many lies that the truth becomes impossible to find.
Types & Descriptions: State-run media broadcasts, coordinated social media troll farms (“web brigades”), forged official documents, and the deployment of contradictory conspiracy theories.
Examples: Falsely labeling Ukraine a “neo-Nazi” state to justify the initial invasion; claiming the atrocities discovered in Bucha were staged using crisis actors; and pushing the conspiracy theory that the United States was operating secret bioweapons labs in Ukraine.
Purpose: To justify the war to the domestic Russian population, create plausible deniability for war crimes on the global stage, and exhaust Western audiences into apathy so they stop supporting military aid.
Efficiency: Highly efficient inside Russia due to the Kremlin’s tight monopoly on domestic media and internet censorship. Internationally, it struggles against united Western fact-checking, but it has found success by exploiting existing political divides in Western countries and targeting audiences in the Global South.
Ukrainian Information Operations: Narrative & MoraleUkraine’s approach to information warfare is highly decentralized. Rather than pure fabrication, Ukraine generally relies on “selective amplification”—highlighting real successes, minimizing losses, and utilizing emotional appeals.
Types & Descriptions: Psychological Operations (PsyOps), strategic communications, rapid debunking of Russian claims, and the heavy use of internet meme culture.
Examples: The “I Want to Live” drone-surrender hotline detailed in your video [04:16]; the early-war “Ghost of Kyiv” fighter pilot (which was later admitted to be a myth representing the collective spirit of the air force); and the widespread sharing of intercepted Russian phone calls to highlight enemy demoralization.
Purpose: To sustain domestic resilience, project strength to international allies to ensure continuous financial and military support, and demoralize invading Russian troops.
Efficiency: Extremely effective globally. By relying heavily on authentic smartphone and drone footage, combined with humor and emotional storytelling, Ukraine has successfully maintained its framing as a resilient, tech-savvy underdog fighting a massive, disorganized aggressor.
At a Glance: Tactics ComparedFeatureRussian DisinformationUkrainian Information OperationsPrimary StrategyOverwhelming volume to create confusion and doubtNarrative framing and morale-buildingRelationship to TruthRelies heavily on total fabrications and historical revisionismRooted in real events, but selectively amplified or mythologizedTarget AudienceDomestic Russians, the Global South, and fractured Western groupsDomestic Ukrainians, Western governments, and frontline Russian soldiersDelivery MethodsState TV, coordinated bot networks, fake news domainsDecentralized social media, influencers, government addresses
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
#CIA #DIA #ODNI
47,000 Surrender Terrifying Putin… Russian Army Can’t Replace This Anymore – YouTube
share.google/aimode/Yg1VJZiu…
Google says, it is DISINFORMATION!
youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
#CIA #DIA #FBI
47,000 Russian Troops Surrender
share.google/aimode/Yg1VJZiu…
Google says, it is DISINFORMATION!
x.com/mikenov/status/2078090…
x.com/mikenov/status/2078088…Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) #VIDEO REVIEW:
– Russian troops surrender,
– #Crimea‘s water and power crises,
– Russia deploys FAB-3000 glide bombs.
Escalating Pressures Reshape Putin’s Ukraine War Strategy rss.app/brief/posts/04c0b1d5…
#AIBrief
Escalating Pressures Reshape Putin’s Ukraine War Strategy
Friday, July 17, 2026
7:42 AM
Summary
Recent developments suggest mounting internal and external pressures on Putin’s war efforts, from military setbacks and resource shortages to diplomatic isolation and potential nuclear threats. Western sanctions and bipartisan political calls for accountability contrast with Russia’s tactical adaptations, such as advanced weaponry and infrastructure vulnerabilities in occupied regions. These shifts may indicate a desperate phase in the conflict, with broader geopolitical implications.Key Stories
Russia faces critical manpower shortages as mass surrenders strain military capacity
youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…
— Reports of 47,000 Russian soldiers surrendering highlight unsustainable losses, suggesting Moscow’s inability to replace troops may force tactical or strategic shifts. This trend could accelerate reliance on asymmetric or unconventional warfare methods.Putin upgrades S-400 defenses amid Western pressure and Ukrainian uncertainty — A secretive overhaul of Russia’s S-400 missile shield aims to counter Western military support for Ukraine, while leaving Kyiv guessing about Moscow’s next moves. The upgrade may signal heightened concerns over air defense vulnerabilities in occupied territories.
Crimea’s water and power crises expose Russia’s logistical fragility — Major blackouts and water shortages in Crimea reveal critical infrastructure weaknesses in Russian-occupied regions, potentially forcing desperate measures to secure supply lines. These failures could undermine Moscow’s control over annexed territories.
Bipartisan US push for sanctions targets Russian oil buyers to isolate Putin — Senators from both parties advocate stricter sanctions on entities purchasing Russian oil, aiming to tighten economic pressure on Moscow. The move reflects growing Western consensus on holding Putin accountable for the war’s escalation.
Russia deploys FAB-3000 glide bombs to intensify strikes on Ukraine — The introduction of Soviet-era FAB-3000 shock glide bombs marks a tactical escalation, enabling Russia to inflict heavier damage on Ukrainian targets. This adaptation may compensate for precision-guided munition shortages or manpower deficits.
Polish minister claims Modi intervened to prevent Putin’s nuclear strike on Ukraine — An explosive allegation suggests Indian Prime Minister Modi played a pivotal role in deterring a potential Russian nuclear strike, though the claim remains unverified. If true, it could indicate fractures in Putin’s inner circle or external diplomatic leverage.
–
youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…— https://x.com/mikenov/status/2078088437094101443— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
|
#CIA #DIA #FBI
47,000 Russian Troops Surrender
x.com/mikenov/status/2078090…
x.com/mikenov/status/2078088…Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) #VIDEO REVIEW:
– Russian troops surrender,
– #Crimea‘s water and power crises,
– Russia deploys FAB-3000 glide bombs.
Escalating Pressures Reshape Putin’s Ukraine War Strategy rss.app/brief/posts/04c0b1d5…
#AIBrief
Escalating Pressures Reshape Putin’s Ukraine War Strategy
Friday, July 17, 2026
7:42 AM
Summary
Recent developments suggest mounting internal and external pressures on Putin’s war efforts, from military setbacks and resource shortages to diplomatic isolation and potential nuclear threats. Western sanctions and bipartisan political calls for accountability contrast with Russia’s tactical adaptations, such as advanced weaponry and infrastructure vulnerabilities in occupied regions. These shifts may indicate a desperate phase in the conflict, with broader geopolitical implications.Key Stories
Russia faces critical manpower shortages as mass surrenders strain military capacity
youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…
— Reports of 47,000 Russian soldiers surrendering highlight unsustainable losses, suggesting Moscow’s inability to replace troops may force tactical or strategic shifts. This trend could accelerate reliance on asymmetric or unconventional warfare methods.Putin upgrades S-400 defenses amid Western pressure and Ukrainian uncertainty — A secretive overhaul of Russia’s S-400 missile shield aims to counter Western military support for Ukraine, while leaving Kyiv guessing about Moscow’s next moves. The upgrade may signal heightened concerns over air defense vulnerabilities in occupied territories.
Crimea’s water and power crises expose Russia’s logistical fragility — Major blackouts and water shortages in Crimea reveal critical infrastructure weaknesses in Russian-occupied regions, potentially forcing desperate measures to secure supply lines. These failures could undermine Moscow’s control over annexed territories.
Bipartisan US push for sanctions targets Russian oil buyers to isolate Putin — Senators from both parties advocate stricter sanctions on entities purchasing Russian oil, aiming to tighten economic pressure on Moscow. The move reflects growing Western consensus on holding Putin accountable for the war’s escalation.
Russia deploys FAB-3000 glide bombs to intensify strikes on Ukraine — The introduction of Soviet-era FAB-3000 shock glide bombs marks a tactical escalation, enabling Russia to inflict heavier damage on Ukrainian targets. This adaptation may compensate for precision-guided munition shortages or manpower deficits.
Polish minister claims Modi intervened to prevent Putin’s nuclear strike on Ukraine — An explosive allegation suggests Indian Prime Minister Modi played a pivotal role in deterring a potential Russian nuclear strike, though the claim remains unverified. If true, it could indicate fractures in Putin’s inner circle or external diplomatic leverage.
–
youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…— https://x.com/mikenov/status/2078088437094101443— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
#CIA #DIA #ODNI
47,000 Surrender Terrifying Putin… Russian Army Can’t Replace This Anymore – YouTube youtube.com/watch?v=GtH9tUdn…— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 17, 2026
