Friday, February 27, 2026

'Seriously CRIMINAL': Donald Trump threatens to deport Robert De Niro

Donald Trump threatens to deport Robert De Niro
Copyright AP Photo


By David Mouriquand
Published on 

The Oscar winning actor shared his prediction that Donald Trump “will never leave” office. He also attended a counter State Of The Union event during which he said he felt “betrayed by my country”.

Following his State of the Union address, Donald Trump has delivered yet another irate rant on his Truth Social platform, in which he called for some of his opponents to be deported.

These include “lunatics” Rep. Ilhan Omar and Rep. Rashida Tlaib (both Democrats and American citizens), as they heckled Trump as he delivered his speech in the House chamber, and Oscar-winner Robert De Niro – following his impassioned speech prior to the State of the Union address.

De Niro, a longtime and fervent Trump critic, appeared on MS NOW to speak about the current US president, sharing his prediction that Trump “will never leave” office and that it is up to Americans to “get rid of him”.

“He will never leave. We have to make him leave,” said the actor. “He jokes now about nationalizing the elections. He’s not joking. We’ve seen enough already.”

The celebrated actor - and American citizen - also appeared at an event called State of the Swamp at the National Press Club, sponsored by Defiance.org, during which he told the crowd: “Tragically, we are now in a country of, by and for a handful of dishonest and greedy and cruel authoritarians.”

De Niro added: “The bottom line is that I feel betrayed by my country. It doesn’t have to be perfect but it does need to return to the values that gave us our strength and humanity.”

Donald Trump during his 2026 State of the Union address AP Photo

Trump was not best pleased, posting that Omar and Tlaib “should actually get on a boat with Trump Deranged Robert De Niro, another sick and demented person with, I believe, an extremely Low IQ, who has absolutely no idea what he is doing or saying - some of which is seriously CRIMINAL!”

He continued, regarding De Niro: “When I watched him break down in tears last night, much like a child would do, I realized that he may be even sicker than Crazy Rosie O’Donnell, who is right now in Ireland trying to figure out how to come back into our beautiful United States. The only difference between De Niro and Rosie is that she is probably somewhat smarter than him, which isn’t saying much.”

Last year, Trump threatened to revoke the US citizenship of actress and comedian Rosie O’Donnell, despite a decades-old Supreme Court ruling that expressly prohibits such an action by the government.

Following his re-election, O’Donnell moved to Ireland.

Prior to Trump’s State of the Union address, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found that six in 10 American think that Trump has become erratic as he ages, with 61 per cent of respondents (89 per cent of Democrats, 30 per cent of Republicans and 64 per cent of independents) saying they would describe Trump as having "become erratic with age."

The poll also showed that most Americans think the US’ political leadership is too old, with 79 per cent of respondents agreeing with the statement that "elected officials in Washington, D.C., are too old to represent most Americans."

The average age in the US Senate is 64, and 58 in the US House of Representatives.

White House spokesman Davis Ingle said the poll results were examples of "fake and desperate narratives."

However, according to another recent poll by Washington Post/ABC News/Ipsos, only 39 per cent of Americans approve of the way Trump is handling the job of president.




INTERVIEW

‘Filmmaking is political’: Raoul Peck on ‘Orwell: 2+2=5’, Donald Trump, and the dangers of AI

LONG READ

Raoul Peck and Euronews Culture's David Mouriquand Euronews Culture

Copyright Euronews Culture - Le Pacte - Velvet Film
Published on 19/02/2026 

"It’s a problem when you lose your connection with history. The ignorance is really incredible. Even though we had the facilities and instruments all along..." Euronews Culture sits down with Raoul Peck to discuss his new documentary, 'Orwell: 2+2=5' - one of the most urgent and vital films of 2026.


“The very concept of objective truth is fading out of this world. This prospect frightens me much more than bombs.”

This ripped-from-the-headlines statement could have been written yesterday but it belongs to George Orwell, the world-renowned author of “Animal Farm" and "Nineteen Eighty-Four", who died 76 years ago.

Time marches on, but certain things don’t change. In fact, they often get worse.

The quote features in Orwell: 2+2=5, the new documentary by Raoul Peck, the celebrated filmmaker and former Minister of Culture for Haiti who has continually questioned and explored the legacies of colonialism and the mechanics of oppression through his uncompromising filmography.

Following his Oscar nominated I Am Not Your Negro and his Peabody-winning HBO docuseries Exterminate All The Brutes, Peck takes the words of Orwell - read in voiceover by actor Damian Lewis - and connects the dots between the writer’s diary entries and present-day totalitarian regimes.

In making Orwell’s words collide with scenes from history and the modern day, Peck not only shows us that the past can inform the present but also exposes how the playbook for totalitarianism – as practiced in Orwell’s final dystopian novel – has been used as a blueprint by governments all over the world over the past century.

Haiti. Myanmar. Russia. Israel. The United States of America.

Orwell: 2+2=5 highlights not only how history repeats itself but how present-day figures like Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu have all adopted "Nineteen Eighty-Four"'s strategy of “Newspeak”, showing that sentences like “War is Peace”, “Freedom is Slavery”, “Ignorance is Strength” and “Two plus two equals five” don’t belong to the realms of dystopian fiction anymore. They resonate in our reality.

Euronews Culture sat down with Raoul Peck to discuss his essential new documentary, how the words of Orwell echo in the age of “fake news” and deepfakes, and how objective truth is threatened when language is corrupted and technology goes unregulated.

Raoul Peck and Euronews Culture's David Mouriquand Euronews Culture

I didn’t want to make a film exclusively about Donald Trump. It’s a film about Orwell, who wrote to give us the whole toolbox to recognise every attempt towards authoritarianism.
Raoul Peck

Euronews Culture: What was it that brought you on board for this project? Was it (documentarian and producer) Alex Gibney, or a more personal relationship with the writings of George Orwell?

Raoul Peck: Well, it came as a big, huge gift from Universal, who approached Alex Gibney to inquire if he would be producing such a film on Orwell. Alex called me and I asked him if I would have the freedom to do the film I wanted. He assured me that that was the case, and of course, I said yes! Because that's not something you get every day - to have access to the totality of an author’s body of work. And Orwell being this recognized figure in the whole world... So much as to become an adjective... That's not an offer that you can refuse.

I imagine that because you fled Haiti at a very young age to escape the Duvalier dictatorship, you were already all too familiar with the language of totalitarianism and its methods...

Not only that, I grew up with what we call “Newspeak” (the fictional language of the totalitarian superstate in Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four") - the use of language in order to hide your real intention. That's an approach that you have in economy, in business, in all sorts of life. And indeed, coming from Haiti, you recognize very early on that words could have two meanings. Some governments talk about democracy and then support the dictatorship. I learned that very early on, with the Duvalier dictatorship and the support of the USA and part of European governments... On one side, they're talking about democracy. On the other side, they're making deals with governments or authoritarian regimes who are keeping their people down. I was aware of that contradiction very early on in my life.

Orwell: 2+2=5 Le Pacte - Velvet Film

We see how rapidly the degradation of democracy can happen, even in the most important beacon of democracy that was the United States. Because it’s not anymore.

Raoul Peck

There's a quote that stood out for me in the film, when Orwell talks about "Animal Farm". He said that it was the first time that he fused his political intent with his artistic intent. Does that mirror your own approach to filmmaking?

It does. When I started in cinema, you couldn't make any political ambition with art. Art was supposed to be something special, something pure. The same thing with entertainment. Everything became entertainment. Even news became entertainment. But I never believed that. It's not because it's entertainment that you can't put more weight in terms of content, and you will find a form to make it cinema. I always believed that filmmaking is political. I would say that I always had a political intention in making my films. I was glad that it was also Orwell’s intention from the start...

He is heard in the film as saying: "The opinion that art should have nothing to do with politics is itself a political attitude".

What he basically says is that the attitude to say, ‘Well, I am neutral’ or ‘I don't take a position’ is actually a political position. There is no such thing as ‘I don’t have an opinion’ or ‘I can’t act on what is happening in the place I live’. No, you are a citizen, and democracy means that you are an informed and educated citizen that takes part in the affairs of your city or society.

Democracy is not something that you can acquire once and for all. Especially in the western part of this planet, where, of course, you have been protected almost 50 years from immediate wars on your territory, with a few exceptions. But people got lazy, thinking that they have it and they don't have to do anything else to protect it. And now we see how rapidly the degradation of democracy can happen, even in the most important beacon of democracy that was the United States. Because it’s not anymore.

I have always believed in the value of fighting for freedom of speech, the freedom to be able to vote. It's a luxury in most parts of the world. But here in Europe, we live as if it’s perfectly natural and that it will grow by itself and that we don't have to do anything to defend it. No, we have to work on it every day.

Raoul Peck Euronews Culture

It's misunderstanding to reduce Orwell to a specific type of totalitarianism. This film is also an instrument to understand that, to show the value and the layers of Orwell's understanding about the whole world.
Raoul Peck

The last time I spoke to you was 10 years ago for the release of I Am Not Your Negro. When watching Orwell: 2+2=5, I couldn't help but draw parallels between both films. You use the voice of deceased authors, both of whom were sincere and incredibly bold in their time, and make their voices reverberate in the present. You told me at the time that one of your aims with I Am Not Your Negro was to bring the voice of James Baldwin to a new generation that hadn't yet had the privilege of reading and hearing his words. But George Orwell is very different because he remains a household name – and as you say, has become an adjective. It’s gone as far as his words becoming overused in general discourse – whether it’s “collateral damage”, “alternative facts” or “Room 101”... These have been so overused and bandied about on the news and social media that they almost seem gutted of sense.

That's the problem with Orwell at some point. The name is as known as Coca-Cola, and I'm not sure that everybody really understands what it means. Don't forget, he died very young. He was 46, so he was not there to do the spinning of his work. So after his death, it was basically used against fascism - mostly against Stalinism and communism. That was the order of the day, and they forgot that Orwell's work has a much more universal goal. What he wrote was against any kind of totalitarianism. He wrote that "Nineteen Eighty-Four" is embedded in Britain because he wanted to demonstrate that that kind of behaviour or historical development could happen in the English speaking countries and Europe. So, it's misunderstanding to reduce Orwell to a specific type of totalitarianism. This film is also an instrument to understand that, to show the value and the layers of Orwell's understanding about the whole world.

Throughout the film, we hear Orwell’s words through his diary entries and his correspondence, all in the last years of his life as he’s finishing “Nineteen Eighty-Four". You keep things very personal.

In my experience, it is immensely more intense and efficient to let the author himself tell this story than the use of experts or talking heads, which are basically people mostly interested in giving their own angles on something. There is nothing more powerful for me than to give the stage to the author himself.

Hearing his voice also makes it very urgent, as well as haunting. One detail I enjoyed was the eeriness of both the beginning and the end, in which we see not only a photo of a baby Orwell with his Indian nanny, but also Koch’s bacillus...

It's one of the many layers that you have to find to make the film also emotionally resonant. I don't think I would like to make a film that is essentially intellectual. It's about cinema. Cinema is about emotion. And it's one of the tools that I use - music, images, graphics - to make sure that you are not only in the presence of just thoughts, but also of emotion, of exchanges, of collective community.

We see that aspect with your use of portraits in the film.

Yes, the portraits are important for this film. That's the human part. They are almost like the witness of what what is happening in the world. And yes, the bacillus – it's when you realise that it’s much more than politics - it’s also life itself. And when you use the subject of “I can't breathe”, it’s the analogy for all people who actually can't breathe in their society because they are not accepted or they are not considered like normal human beings.

I'm glad you mention music, because one of my favourite needle drops you’ve done was in I Am Not Your Negro, when you recontextualise Kendrick Lamar’s song ‘The Blacker The Berry’. Here, you use this eerie AI lullaby at the end. Why did you choose to end the film that way?

I wanted to come out of the film with a kind of irony - an irony that Orwell himself had. He had a lot of humour and wasn’t dark. He had his fight and he tried to take a stand, but at the same time, he had that incredible British dry humour. And so I wanted to capture this through that music, which is totally AI composed. And I hope people understand that it was AI generated, with words extracted from what Donald Trump has said. It was a kind of wink

AI is just technology, and like any technology, the problems usually come when it's totally in the hands of people that are using it for money, for profit.
Raoul Peck

You explore a great many topics in this film and spend some time dealing with tech, social media and AI as the new battlegrounds for objective truth. Can you tell me more about your use of AI-generated clips in the film?

In order to show what a specific technology can do, you have to show it and its use. It was important to show it. The only thing that I had to do was make sure I was being totally transparent. I say when I’m using it and when I’m showing it. AI is particularly worrisome and dangerous because it's a system that can create its own system. Even though we have to feed it, it can come to a place where it will be able to function by itself. The main problem is regulation.

After all, AI is just technology, and like any technology, the problems usually come when it's totally in the hands of people that are using it for money, for profit. If you are using it for education, if the state was paying for it, there wouldn’t be any problems because parliament or senators would give their advice on it. Pedagogues, teachers, scholars would tell us the best way to use it, how not to make it dangerous, how to control it... But now it's in the hands of people whose only goal is to make money out of it. There is even a race to be the first one to have the whole system, to have the most users possible.

The same happened to the internet. Originally, it was used in universities, and I remember having to go to my professor to have access to the internet, and we were using it for research. Then one day you start hearing that little song from AOL, and you knew it was over. You knew that you couldn't control the beast. And that's happening again. So we shouldn't be scared of that. We should fight to have regulation and unfortunately, government administration is always late in that fight.

Orwell: 2+2=5 Le Pacte

People make fun of Donald Trump, but I just see it as an exaggeration of behaviour that I've seen in Europe. The same use of language to destroy people is being used. It's just a little bit more polite.

Raoul Peck

We see many clips of Trump and Putin in the film, but also a lot of European figures – whether it’s Giorgia Meloni, Viktor Orban, Eric Zemmour... How do you view Europe's reaction to the rise of totalitarianism compared to the US?

Well, that's the thing... Europeans - and it's always bad to say 'European' as if there is just one unity- but in most countries, you can see that there is still denial. There is a denial that it can never happen here. But we forgot how many years of Berlusconi we had. It's a typical example of how it can happen in Europe. People make fun of Donald Trump, but I just see it as an exaggeration of behaviour that I've seen in Europe. The same use of language to destroy people is being used. It's just a little bit more polite, a little bit more intellectual sometimes, with more general culture. But the words mean what they mean. And you can see that a lot of things that happened in the US at some point, five or 10 years later, they happened in Europe.

It’s the same thing with I Am Not Your Negro - I remember the first discussion I had in France and some other European countries, and people would say, ‘Wow, the bad Americans, they are so racist.’ As if there is no racism in Europe! So the denial is sometimes very deep in Europe because it's hard to face reality. It's hard to hear what other people are telling you, even though you are living side by side with them. That’s why I did the film Exterminate All The Brutes. I went to the bottom of that story and showed that it's a link in European history and that racism was transported to the United States. They didn’t start it. Europe started it. It’s a problem when you lose your connection with history. The ignorance is really incredible. Even though we had the facilities and the instruments all along...

Raoul Peck Euronews Culture

The United States has an incredible capacity of denial. There are things happening right now that you would never think possible even one year ago...
Raoul Peck

Your film shows us that we’ve been given the tools, we have the blueprint - whether it’s Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four" or the film adaptations of that work. Or even films like Terry Gilliam’s Brazil or Steven Spielberg’s Minority Report – both of which feature in your film. We’ve been warned, and as you say at the end: “All that matters has already been written”. While that can feel hopeful in the sense we already have the instruments to recognise repeated patterns and counter the rise of totalitarianism, we’re still being duped by the same tactics that have been used again and again.

As Sven Lindqvist says in Exterminate All The Brutes, everything is already there. We just don’t want to acknowledge it.

But you know, I think it’s the result of the fact that Europe in particular has been thinking that they’ve had peace for 50 years and if the danger is not that close, they're always pushing confrontation back. It's like Europe in the 30s - people were heading into one of the most severe world wars still believing that it was still OK. Hitler invaded Austria. No, no. That's okay. He will stop. He invaded Poland? OK, but he better stop there. And then, a few months later, we were in a world war.

What I’m saying is that there is a tendency: when you don't react it’s because you're in a very privileged position. You don’t react because you think you don’t have to. But when you realize, it's usually too late.

Raoul Peck Euronews Culture

One definition I quote is that the degradation of language is the condition for the degradation of democracy, and the perfect arithmetic is two plus two equals five. We need to always be able to say ‘two plus two equals four’. It’s as simple as that.
Raoul Peck

Orwell: 2+2=5 premiered in Cannes last year and went on to screen in Toronto, before being released in the US in October. Considering it pulls no punches when it comes to Trump and his administration, have there been any reactions from US audience members that surprised you or stayed with you?

Some were thankful. Others in disbelief. Some in denial. The United States has an incredible capacity of denial. There are things happening right now that you would never think possible even one year ago...

To the extent you could continue to update this film with fresh footage from the US to illustrate the point further – there would be a constant correspondence between Orwell's words and what’s happening right now. Trump dehumanising the Obamas in that AI video, for instance, or even Pete Hegseth being given the title of Secretary of War...

That title is completely Orwell. But you know, I had to be careful with this film not to make a film about Trump. I didn’t want to make a film exclusively about Donald Trump. It’s a film about Orwell, who wrote to give us the whole toolbox to recognise every attempt towards authoritarianism. And that was my job as well. Trump is only one example, and probably the worst today. But we have to understand that it's everywhere. Any institution can become something different than what they pretend to be if we don't look at it, if we're not active. Because Trump, he will pass... The damage will be huge because it will take a few decades to bring the paste back in the tube, if we ever can... But the tools remain the same, words will be destroyed, and those who talk of peace are only making war. One definition I quote is that the degradation of language is the condition for the degradation of democracy, and the perfect arithmetic is two plus two equals five. We need to always be able to say ‘two plus two equals four’. It’s as simple as that.
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Orwell: 2+2=5 Le Pacte - Velvet Film

If I have to say that Netanyahu should be in prison, I will say it. (...) If you cannot say those words, there is no freedom of speech. There is no democracy if you can't even talk about this publicly.

Raoul Peck

The film explores this degradation of language, and one audience reaction that struck me was the sound of very uncomfortable laughter when the film lists examples and definitions of Newspeak. There was even applause when the definition for ‘Antisemitism 2024’ came up on screen, with the definition: “Weaponised term to silence critics of Israeli military action”. It sounded like it was a cathartic moment for some cinemagoers to read those words.

I was surprised myself about the response, which was overwhelming in the audience. One good friend of mine, who is from the Jewish religion even though she's not a follower, interpreted it differently, and I can understand why. But I understood that the reaction was the fact that many people felt that they were not able to criticize a right wing government making a genocide in Gaza. That was the response I felt. Because each time you touch the subject, you’re immediately accused of antisemitism. If they want to attack me on that, just watch my films. I've worked a lot on the Shoah and on genocide, so I can make the distinction between the use of the word and the propaganda that it's used for. If I have to say that Netanyahu should be in prison, I will say it. That's the reality. His own justice system has been trying to arrest him for many years. The war is also a result of that, because he doesn't want to go to jail. If you cannot say those words, there is no freedom of speech. There is no democracy if you can't even talk about this publicly.

Coincidentally or perversely, Orwell: 2+2=5 comes out around the same time as the Melania Trump documentary, Melania... It struck me that it would make for the ideal double bill with your film, because you'd have the so-called propaganda film on one side, and then Orwell giving you all the tools to explain what you've just seen on the other side...

First of all, I wouldn't call that a film. It’s not even propaganda, because propaganda can be more intelligent. This is basically a publicity stunt. It’s a bribe. This film happened because a network could spend $40 million to make it. I know many other filmmakers who would have loved to have that kind of money to make a more convincing film. And ethically speaking, no documentarian would accept to make a film where the subject is the executive producer of the film and basically calling the shots. That's ethically unacceptable. That's why I cannot call it a film.

Lastly, towards the end of your film, you include a segment with Edward Snowden. 10 years ago, he was everywhere and the subject of Laura Poitras’ doc Citizenfour. At one point, he says that his greatest fear is that “nothing will change”. And sadly, he’s been proven right to a certain degree. Do you share that same fear?

Absolutely. And it's heartbreaking because I see this young man in his 20s who sacrificed everything to tell us the truth. And now he's somewhere in exile in Russia. We just forgot about that. It's like a young man who goes to war for his nation and got killed and nobody cares. He took the risk to tell us what was going on and what he saw was absolutely a nightmare. And that nightmare is already there.

We lost that war long time ago. And now those potentially dangerous tools are in the hands of people who don't care about anything but themselves. I'm sure they don't even care if the world goes to war, because in their minds they will survive. It’s a kind of craziness that comes from people being drunk on their own power and don't see anything else. They’re not looking forward and they don't care what happens to America and the rest of the world after that. And they think they can get away with it. They won't get away with it. Even if it has been seen in other countries, I hope that Americans will not accept that the elections will be taken away from them. That's my whole hope.

Raoul Peck and Euronews Culture's David Mouriquand Euronews Culture

Orwell: 2+2=5 is out in the US, Denmark and Portugal. The film is released in more European cinemas - France and Spain - this month. France's Institut Lumière (Lyon) is currently doing a retrospective of Raoul Peck's works. Stay tuned to Euronews Culture for our review of Orwell: 2+2=5.


 


Podcast: How activism is helping Ukrainians endure four years of full-scale war



By Méabh Mc Mahon & Alice Carnevali
Published on  

A meeting in Kyiv marking the anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Hungary’s vetoes on financial aid to Ukraine, and the resilience of Ukrainians: after four years of conflict, the end of the war seems nowhere in sight.

There are moments in life that are hard to forget and remain etched in the collective memory of those who witnessed them: a natural disaster affecting our hometown, a terrorist attack in our country or the outbreak of a full-scale war.

“You can ask every Ukrainian — no matter where they were, in Ukraine or abroad — and they will remember moment by moment where they were and what they were doing the moment Russia started its full-scale invasion,” Euronews’ correspondent Sasha Vakulina told Brussels, My Love?.

Together with Marta Barandiy, founding president of Promote Ukraine and Katharina Emschermann, head of programme EU and international politics at Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, Euronews' correspondent joined this week’s episode of the podcast to discuss the fourth anniversary of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

How are Ukrainians coping? Is the EU doing enough to support them?

Apple podcast Spotify podcast Castbox podcast

The morale in Ukraine

Marta Barandiy founded her non-profit organisation Promote Ukraine in 2014, the year Russia annexed Ukraine's peninsula of Crimea. “The war started in 2014, let’s not forget that, the full-scale invasion started in 2022,” Barandiy said.

Over the years of Barandiy’s activism in Brussels, she witnessed how slowly things were moving toward providing support and maintaining attention to Ukraine. “I sort of imagined that (the war) could last so long,” she said.

Barandiy explained that Ukrainians are resisting by creating communities of veterans, of families of abducted children and abducted prisoners of war: “The whole of Ukraine is living in activism in order to help each other to cope with the situation and to not lose.”

The EU's role

On Tuesday, European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President António Costa and some European leaders went to Kyiv to show their support for the country on the day of the anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion.

The meeting, however, came just one day after Hungary vetoed both a new package of sanctions against Russia and a €90 billion loan to Ukraine. “That undercut the message that European leaders wanted to send,” Emschermann said.

According to the expert, Hungary’s veto puts the EU before a broad question about how it makes decisions on security challenges, its efficiency, and its unity.

The loan had, in fact, been approved in December 2025 at the European Council after long negotiations among 27 heads of state and governments.

Also according to Vakulina, Hungary’s last-minute veto and the meeting in Kyiv are very representative of the EU challenges.

“The EU has done a lot,” she said, commenting on Brussels’ involvement in Ukraine.

“Even the EU itself wishes it could do more, but there are some hurdles, political issues, nuances, vetoes on some occasions, which is very frustrating not only for Ukraine but for the EU,” she said.

Listen to the podcast in the player above or wherever you get your podcasts.

Get in touch with us by writing to brusselsmylove@euronews.com.



‘It’s Not A War Crime If It Was Fun’: Three

 

Years Of Gory Messages By A Russian

 

General – Analysis



Major General Roman Demurchiev has served as commander of the 42nd Guards Motor Rifle Division, fighting in Ukraine. Photo Credit: RFE/RL


February 27, 2026
RFE RL
By Yelizaveta Surnacheva, Valeriya Yegoshyna, Kira Tolstyakova, Schemes and Systema


On October 18, 2022, roughly eight months after Russia launched its all-out war on Ukraine, a high-ranking Russian officer texted several messages to his wife, and several acquaintances, back home in Russia.

The officer, then-Colonel Roman Demurchiev, commander of the 42nd Guards Motor Rifle Division, bragged about how his soldiers had just stormed a “strongpoint” in Ukraine, and had captured four prisoners-of-war.

In a message to his wife, Aleksandra, he sent a photograph that appeared to be several human ears, blackened and hanging from a metal pipe.

“What do you do with them afterward?” Aleksandra wrote.

“I’ll make a garland and give it as a gift,” Demurchiev, who was promoted to major general the following year, responded.

“Like pig ears for beer,” she wrote.

“Yeah,” he replied.

The gory banter, and evidence of possible war crimes by a senior Russian military officer, are among the revelations contained in three years of communications — text and audio messages, photographs, videos — purportedly sent and received by Demurchiev.

The materials — dozens of messages and other related materials — were provided to reporters from Schemes, the investigative unit of RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service , by a person serving in the Ukrainian military. RFE/RL agreed not to disclose the person’s identity or how they obtained the files.

Schemes verified the authenticity of the communications, working with forensics laboratories in the United States and data researchers in Germany.

RFE/RL reporters also corroborated many of the dates and events listed in the data using details provided by soldiers from Ukraine’s Third Army Corps, whose units fought, and continue to fight, against soldiers under Demurchiev’s command.

Contacted by RFE/RL by phone, Demurchiev, 49, hung up upon being asked about the treatment of prisoners of war.

The Russian Defense Ministry did not respond to RFE/RL’s emails regarding its policies on treatment of prisoners of war.
‘You Didn’t Touch The Ears?’

Throughout Russia’s war on Ukraine, which hits its fourth anniversary on February 24, there have been widespread allegations of, and ample evidence pointing to, war crimes being committed by Russian units.

Among the best-known examples was from Bucha, a town north of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, that was occupied by Russian forces for just over a month.

After the Russian troops withdrew, residents discovered dozens of dead bodies, overwhelmingly civilians that appeared to have been summarily executed, or tortured, with corpses lying on streets or piled in basements.

With the help of military records left behind in Bucha and cross-referenced with social media profiles, RFE/RL identified several members of the one particular unit — the 234th Pskov Regiment — that was directly involved in the killings of civilians.

In the correspondence obtained by RFE/RL, the conversation about the mutilated ears began when Demurchiev wrote to another army officer who was a longtime acquaintance: Major General Igor Timofeev, the first deputy commander of the 36th Army.


“You didn’t touch the ears? Like when we were kids?” Timofeev replied in response.

It’s unclear exactly what Timofeev was referring to.

However, both he and Demurchiev fought in Chechnya in the 2000s, during the conflict that ravaged the Russian region.

Demurchiev then started a separate chat on the same subject with his wife, Aleksandra. In one of her responses, she also appeared to refer to Chechnya when reacting to the ear photo:

“I thought those were tales from Chechnya times,” she wrote. “Turns out it’s true.”

Aleksandra could not be reached for comment.

Russian forces have been accused of amputating ears of prisoners in the past.

During the First Chechen War, in the 1990s, journalists and human rights activists documented multiple reports of reported mutilations by Russian troops. In 2000-2001, during the second conflict in the region, Human Rights Watch and the Russian rights group Memorial described bodies with severe mutilations, including scalping, broken limbs, and cut-off fingers and ears.

Russian media have described similar practices by Chechen fighters.

In 2022, Schemes obtained another series of recordings of calls from Russian soldiers, intercepted by Ukrainian intelligence. In one, a soldier could be heard saying of a prisoner: “He wouldn’t talk. They cut off his ear.”

Demurchiev mentioned amputating ears again in late 2024 in a voice message sent to a contact identified as Valery Nepop.

RFE/RL was able to determine that Nepop was likely an officer with the Federal Security Service, Russia’s main domestic intelligence agency.

“You’re the boss of a super organization, that’s my dream,” Demurchiev can be heard saying. “Damn, and you even cut off the ears. But at our age they don’t do that anymore; we just give out the orders.”
Of Mice And Generals

Some of the materials sent or received by Demurchiev showcased dark, juvenile, and often sadistic humor among his colleagues or acquaintances, many of whom are Russian officers.

In one received by Demurchiev in December 2023, a live mouse is shown tied up by its legs — spread-eagled, as if it were being crucified — as a Russian voice pretends to interrogate the mouse, offering it a cigarette.

Demurchiev replied with a smiley-face emoji to the video, sent by Lieutenant General Mikhail Kosobokov, commander of the 49th Combined Arms Army.


In a separate message sent to Kosobokov, Demurchiev sent a Russian language meme that said: “It’s not a war crime if it was fun.”

In another series of messages with a person who appeared to be a military intelligence officer attached to the FSB named Roman, Demurchiev asked Roman what to do about a Ukrainian prisoner in his custody.

“I’ve got one prisoner… I can gift him to you,” he wrote in the October 2023 messages. “He’s sitting in a pit… What should I do with him — dispose of him or give him to you?”

“We didn’t have time to torture him, so the info was friendly,” Demurchiev wrote. “But you’ve got plenty of time — you can use tools that make people tell the truth.”

RFE/RL identified the prisoner in question: a 42-year-old man from the southern city of Zaporizhzhya who spent nearly two years in Russian captivity, including a facility in Altai, a Russian region far from Ukraine.

In the summer 2025, the man was returned to Ukraine, as part of a prisoner exchange.

RFE/RL reporters contacted the soldier via relatives. The man declined to speak in detail, saying he was in poor physical and mental health. He only said that he had been severely beaten and subjected to electric shock.
‘Are They Dismembering Them?’

Other messages exchanged by Demurchiev point to his possible complicity not only in blatant war crimes — but also possibly outright murder.

In December 2024, Demurchiev received a video message that appears to have been taken by drone, using a thermal imaging camera. A voice speaking in Russian off-camera asks: “Are they dismembering them?”

Yeah, with a shovel,” another voice responds.

“Are they ours?” the first voice says, asking if the people wielding the shovels are Russian soldiers.

Yeah,” the second voice replies.

Holy shit!” the first exclaims.

Other messages sent by Demurchiev explain that the soldiers shown in the video were former prison inmate and that they had hacked three surrendering Ukrainians to death using sapper shovels.

“Well, I reported this to you. Two of the cons made it into the stronghold. There were three Ukrainians,” he wrote to his commanding officer, General Oleg Mityaev, using a derisive insult to describe them. “They took them prisoner and then chopped them up with shovels. Shit. Beasts. But look, shit, they executed them with sapper shovels. Shit.”


RFE/RL identified the Ukrainian military unit whose soldiers were taken prisoner and then killed by Russian troops. The unit said the incident occurred in eastern Ukraine. The unit also asked RFE/RL not to disclose its identity or the names of the deceased, saying that could traumatize relatives or survivors.

Intelligence data provided by the unit identified the former prison inmates who were mentioned by Demurchiev in the video: members of the “Black Mamba” unit of the 252nd Motorized Rifle Regiment, part of the Third Division of Russia’s 20th Combined Arms Army.

In later correspondence, Demurchiev reported the details of the incident to Mityaev, who commanded the Russia’s 20th Army. Mityaev responded with praise.

“The ‘cons’ who took that location and chopped them up with shovels, God willing they’ll survive,” he said. “They should definitely be nominated for an award. Keep pushing, little by little. Well done…Good job, keep pushing, keep pushing, crush the bastards,
 shit.”


Yelizaveta Surnacheva is journalist for Systema, RFE/RL’s Russian Investigative Unit. Focused on political and social issues, she previously worked as an editor for the Russian investigative outlet Proyekt and BBC News.

Valeriya Yegoshyna is a journalist for Schemes (Skhemy), an investigative news project run by RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service. Yehoshyna is the 2024 winner of the ICFJ Knight International Journalism Award. She was recognized as one of the “Top 30 Under 30” by the Kyiv Post in 2019 and has won a number of other awards, including the top prizes at the V. Serhienko Investigative Journalism Competition in 2017 and the Mezhyhirya Festival in 2018. An investigation she co-authored in 2023 about Izyum and the Russian invasion of Ukraine received a Special Certificate of Excellence at the Global Shining Light Awards from the Global Investigative Journalism Network.

Kira Tolstyakova is an editor for Schemes, the investigative unit of RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service.
Schemes (Skhemy) is the award-winning investigative project of RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service. Launched in 2014, it has exposed high-level corruption and abuse of power for over a decade. Following Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, the project expanded to uncovering Russian war crimes.

Systema is RFE/RL’s Russian-language investigative unit, launched in 2023. The team conducts in-depth investigative journalism, producing high-profile reports and videos in Russian.



































An Archive of material relating to Nestor Makhno and the Makhnovshchina.

Makhno was a Ukrainian anarchist revolutionary and the commander of an independent anarchist army in Ukraine from 1917–21.

English: Organizational Platform of the General Union of Anarchists (Draft), Nestor Makhno and others of the Group of Russian Anarchists Abroad (the "Delo ...


Could glacier melt slow climate change? Scientists thought so – until now

Sampling rosette with gray sampling bottles at left, the ship’s rail at lower right, and the face of the ice shelf in the background.
Copyright Robert Sherrell

By Liam Gilliver
Published on 


Iron fertilisation has long been touted as a glimmer of hope amid rising emissions – but a new study has seemingly debunked the theory.

A “long-standing silver lining” to the wrath of climate change has been put under scrutiny, as scientists find a huge flaw in the theory.

As heat-trapping emissions continue to bake the planet, glaciers in Antarctica are witnessing unprecedented melt. Despite being geographically isolated from civilisation, the demise of these vast bodies of ice has a significant impact on the entire world.

Thwaits Glacier, aka the Doomsday Glacier, is already responsible for four per cent of global annual sea level rise. If it were to collapse completely, sea levels could increase by a staggering 65cm.

To put this into context, scientists predict that for every centimetre of sea level rise, around six million people are exposed to coastal flooding.

But down in the elusive Southern Ocean, the theory of iron fertilisation offered a glimmer of hope.

What is iron fertilisation?

As temperatures rise and glaciers melt, ice-trapped iron is released into the ocean.

Scientists theorised that this iron goes on to feed huge blooms of microscopic algae, which can suck carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis.

When the algae dies, it sinks to the sea floor – potentially sequestering carbon forever.

While some researchers have promoted dumping large amounts of iron into the ocean as part of geoengineering drives to tackle rising emissions, others warn it could potentially cause “dead zones”.

This is where oxygen levels are so low – in this case, consumed by decomposing algae – that little to no life can exist beneath the surface water. It has already occurred in places like the Baltic Sea due to nutrient pollution from human activity.

Can melting glaciers help reduce carbon emissions?

However, marine scientists from Rutgers University-New Brunswick in the US have discovered that meltwater from the Antarctic ice shelf supplies far less iron to surrounding waters than previously thought.

Working with several universities in the US and UK, Rob Sherrell, a professor in the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences, and his team travelled to the Dotson Ice Shelf in the Amundsen Sea, West Antarctica, in 2022.

The Amundsen Sea accounts for most of the sea level rise driven by Antarctic melting. Here, glacial meltwater comes from beneath floating ice shelves, primarily driven by warm water flowing from the deep ocean into the cavities under the ice.

To measure how much iron this meltwater contributes to surrounding waters, researchers identified where seawater enters one such cavity and where it exits after meltwater is added. They collected water samples from both entry and exit points.

Back in the US, Sherrell’s colleague Venkatesh Chinni analysed the samples for iron content in both its dissolved state and in suspended particles to calculate how much more iron was coming out of the cavity than went in.

To their surprise, the scientists found that only around10 per cent of the outflowing dissolved iron came from the meltwater itself. The majority came from inflowing deep ocean water (62 per cent) and inputs from shelf sediments (28 per cent).

‘Meltwater carries very little iron’

“Roughly 90 per cent of the dissolved iron coming out of the ice shelf cavity comes from deep waters and sediments outside the cavity, not from meltwater,” Chinni says.

The study, published in the science journal Communications Earth and Environment, also found that beneath the glacier is a liquid meltwater layer that lacks dissolved oxygen. This could be a larger source of iron than ice shelf melting.

“Our claim in this paper is that the meltwater itself carries very little iron, and that most of the iron that it does carry comes from the grinding up and dissolving of bedrock into the liquid layer between the bedrock and the ice sheet, not from the ice that is driving sea level rise,” Sherrell says.

The team says that more research is now needed to understand Antarctica’s iron sources in a warming world. It means the “silver lining” many scientists hoped for may no longer hold water.