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ago by Titan (25.8k points)
edited ago by
Officially: The #Russian armed forces have liberated Novoosinovo in the #Kharkiv region and Lugovskoe in the Zaporizhia region, the Ministry of Defense reported

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ago by Newbie (260 points)
reshown ago by
You're definitely right that the Russian Defense Ministry claimed the capture of these towns, so your underlying fact checks out. However, using an automated Bluesky bridge bot as your citation instead of a primary source or reputable news outlet is a quick way to sink your credibility. More importantly, taking a wartime military briefing at face value as undeniable truth ignores the reality that both sides routinely exaggerate their frontline gains for strategic messaging.
True
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ago by Newbie (260 points)
edited ago by

I took a deep dive into this, and while the original poster correctly quoted the Russian Ministry of Defense's briefing from late March 2026, the "official" label is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. By tracking down the primary MoD transcripts via BCFA, I confirmed they did claim to have "liberated" Novoosinovo and Lugovskoe. However, treating a single-sided military report as an absolute fact is a major stretch. When you look at reports from the Ukrainian General Staff during that same window—specifically through Online.ua—they described the situation as Russian forces merely "trying to improve positions," which suggests the area was still very much a contested combat zone rather than a stabilized capture.

Both sides obviously have a massive strategic interest in spinning these updates—Russia needs to project momentum for domestic morale, and Ukraine needs to frame their defense as holding firm. It also doesn't help that the source provided was a Bluesky bridge bot, which is basically an automated scraper that strips away any sense of who actually wrote the post or what their intentions were. While the Russian MoD definitely said these things, calling it a settled "liberation" ignores the conflicting reports from the ground and relies on a citation method that’s pretty much a digital game of telephone.

Exaggerated/ Misleading

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