Påstods i tråden från en som försvarar Putin och Ryssland att Euronews måste ses som hyfsat neutral i sin rapportering och publicering av artiklar/videor, då kommer här ett utdrag från en av deras artiklar:
The disinformations War
There have been three main unsubstantiated claims used as a justification for the military action by Russia, according to a report by the European Expert Association - a research group that focuses on security in Ukraine - and the technology watchdog group Reset Tech.
One of these claims was that Ukraine was preparing an attack on Donbas.
Russia sent 12 Russian war correspondents to the occupied Donbas, and they are allegedly connected with Russian special services. And they started to make fake videos and photos and every kind of disinformation message claiming that Ukraine is attacking Donbas, which was completely untrue.
Ukraine has made numerous statements about that, and we have international observers and the group of international correspondents out on the front lines who have seen for themselves that no such kind of aggression is happening. But it didn’t stop the Russian side".
Another unsubstantiated claim was that Ukraine was planning to attack separatist-held territories in the east of the country using chemical weapons.
minister of defence of Russia [Sergey Shoigu] said in his public speech [on December 21] that Ukraine has chemical weapons supplied here by some American private military company and that Ukraine is preparing to use these chemical weapons against the citizens in Donbas," Avdeeva explained.
After that, that message appeared in numerous channels, on media, on the messaging app Telegram".
Often these unsubstantiated claims are picked up and amplified by Russian state media which gives them further reach.
And there are numerous other examples of false information being disseminated through Russian media and social media users.
Many misleading posts also portray the Ukrainian government as corrupt, neo-Nazi, and Russophobic.
That kind of rhetoric is "straight out of Putin's mouth," according to Frantisek Vrabel, the founder, and CEO of Prague-based Semantic Visions, which identifies potential disinformation based on the use of language patterns online.
https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2022/02/25/the-disinformation-war-the-falsehoods-about-the-ukraine-invasion-and-how-to-stop-them-spre
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