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Russian Soldiers Die in Photo-Driven Flag Missions for Command Reports

Russian commanders are sending soldiers on high-risk flag-planting missions to produce battlefield photo reports from areas not fully under Moscow’s control, according to Radio Svoboda on July 6.
The report described the practice as “flag planting,” in which small Russian assault groups infiltrate contested settlements, raise a Russian flag, and record footage for propaganda or command reporting.
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Radio Svoboda linked the tactic to Moscow’s recent claims about Kostyantynivka in the Donetsk region, where fighting continues despite Russian declarations of control.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) reported on July 5 that Russian forces have infiltrated significant parts of Kostyantynivka but have not secured control or established lasting positions across much of the city.
ISW assessed that Russia is conducting a targeted information campaign around the claimed seizure, while Ukrainian officials rejected Moscow’s claims.
A relative of Russian serviceman Yevgeny Kiselev told Radio Svoboda that his group was sent into Petrovka to wave a flag and record proof for commanders.
“But in fact, it was not under our control then. My brother was attacked by drones immediately. Most of the group was destroyed,” she stated.

Military expert David Sharp told Radio Svoboda that such missions often serve command reporting rather than military necessity.
He described the practice as “window dressing for superiors and propaganda,” adding that false reports move upward through the chain of command and can trigger further losses.
Radio Svoboda reported similar cases in Krynky, Poltavka, Kupiansk, and near the Dnipropetrovsk regional border, where Russian soldiers were reportedly killed during photo-driven missions.

ISW has assessed that Russian forces will likely continue making tactical gains in Kostyantynivka, but at high cost and without a rapid operational breakthrough against Ukraine’s wider defensive belt.
The staged imagery has increased online, where fabricated battlefield claims no longer require soldiers to advance.
In June 2026, footage purporting to show troops raising Russian flags on the western outskirts of Kostiantynivka and in the nearby village of Dovha Balka was released the same day, and both were claimed to have been captured.
The footage was assessed as likely to have been generated with artificial intelligence, consistent with earlier Russian information operations built around claims of territorial advance.
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