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Moscow slams ‘crude forgery’ deepfake video

Russia never offered to trade a key nuclear plant for a Ukrainian withdrawal from Kursk, the Foreign Ministry said

A video in which Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova offers to hand the Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant back to Ukraine in exchange for Kiev calling off its military incursion into Russia’s Kursk Region is a “crude forgery,” the ministry said on Saturday.

The video in question circulated on Russian- and Ukrainian-language Telegram channels on Friday. In the clip, Zakharova appears to state that “the Russian side is ready to consider transferring the Zaporozhye NPP to the control of Kiev’s representatives in exchange for the voluntary withdrawal of the Ukrainian Armed Forces from Kursk Region.”

Zakharova never made such a statement. According to the ministry, the clip was “hastily put together” using footage from a briefing by the spokeswoman in July.

“Ukrainian special services, with the assistance of their Western overseers, continue to actively use deepfake and other artificial intelligence-based technologies to spread false information about the situation in the border regions of our country,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that the video is a “crude forgery.”

“We emphasize: Maria Zakharova never said anything like that. The authentic comments of the official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry are available on her Telegram channel and on the official resources of the ministry,” the statement concluded.

The Zaporozhye NPP was seized by Russian forces in 2022, four days into Moscow’s military operation. Six months later, the region of Zaporozhye voted to join the Russian Federation. Throughout the first year of the conflict, Russian forces foiled repeated attempts by the Ukrainian military to attack the plant – which sits on the Dnieper River – with landing craft and drones.

On Tuesday, Ukraine launched its largest attack on Russian territory since the outbreak of the conflict, with the Russian Defense Ministry initially estimating that around 1,000 servicemen and dozens of armored vehicles, including some provided by the West, took part in the assault on Kursk Region. Subsequent media reports suggest that the total force involved was several times larger and that some elite Ukrainian units had been pulled from the frontlines to bolster the attack.

According to the Defense Ministry, the Ukrainian advance has since been halted and Russian reserves have been redeployed to the region to engage the Ukrainian units still active there. The ministry claims that Kiev has lost up to 1,100 troops and 140 armored vehicles in the area so far.

 

Russia Today

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