Database of 305 videos exposes the horrors of war in Ukraine (2024)

Post Verified: eyewitness videos

By Washington Post Staff

Updated Feb. 24 at 8:40 p.m.Originally published May 9, 2022

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On Feb. 24, as Russian forces rolled into Ukraine and missiles began to strike Kyiv, civilians picked up their phones and pressed record. For eight months, they have documented the war, allowing the world to witness the conflict in Ukraine through the eyes of its people.

New videos emerge each day, taken by local residents, soldiers and public officials. They show the trails of rockets streaming through the sky and the smoldering ruins of towns. Footage has shown slain civilians, some bearing signs of torture, lying in neighborhood streets or unearthed from mass graves.

A growing body of visual evidence has become instrumental for war crimes prosecutors, while also propelling global outrage against Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war.

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Video location

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Feb 24, 2022

Feb 24, 2022

Jan 28, 2022

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The Washington Post’s visual forensics team has been verifying and cataloguing videos since the start of the invasion. This work is searchable in a database that continues to be updated, though at a slower pace than in the first months of the war, with the emphasis more recently on key events. The videos have been uploaded in raw format; graphic content is clearly marked.

Amid the onslaught of death and rubble in this database, certain trends are apparent:

  • Little has been spared. Houses, apartment buildings and playgrounds have been destroyed across Ukraine.

    See videos of residential areas

  • Patients seeking care became victims of war. A maternity hospital, a cancer ward and a children’s dental clinic are among hundreds of health facilities that have been struck.

    See videos of medical facilities

  • Bombardments are routine. Security cameras and citizens filming from their windows have captured moments when strikes reduce structures to rubble.

    See videos of military strikes

  • Russia has targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, and officials in Kyiv warn of a difficult winter ahead.

    See infrastructure attacks

  • Ukrainian soldiers have recorded their successes — from the battles that saved the capital in the spring to the recent counteroffensive that has forced Russia to retreat in parts of the east and south.

    See counteroffensives

If you’re in Ukraine and have footage you recorded of what is going on, please send it to us on Telegram at 202-580-1002. The Post will continue to verify videos of the Russian invasion.

Methodology

A team of reporters at The Washington Post has been monitoring and verifying videos of the war since Feb. 24. To do that, reporters geolocate the video by cross-referencing distinctive landmarks in the footage with reliable source material such as satellite imagery or Google Earth street view. Next, reporters investigate when the video was recorded, checking for metadata and time stamps. Other visuals, official statements, eyewitness testimony and spoken audio provide context that can help corroborate videos. Reporters also review the uploader’s account and try to find the original source for the video. The source links in this database are where reporters discovered the video online, but are not always the original source. Weapons and military equipment can be clues as to what transpired; reporters consult with military experts on that. Some videos in this database were also corroborated by news verification groups such as Storyful or open-source researchers, but all have been independently confirmed by The Post.

Post reporters also screen for fake videos by examining whether there are jump cuts, interrupted audio, or visuals and audio that don’t match. We also run a reverse-image search and look for other posts on the same topic to make sure it is not an old video — perhaps even from a different conflict — that is recirculating.

Verification takes rigorous reporting, fact-checking and collaboration across the newsroom. The Post publishes only verified videos.

Credits

Visual forensics reporting by Sarah Cahlan, Joyce Sohyun Lee, Meg Kelly, Atthar Mirza, Elyse Samuels, Samuel Oakford, Jon Swaine, Razzan Nakhlawi, Jonathan Baran, Joy Sharon Yi, JM Rieger, Jason Aldag, Karly Domb Sadof, Dalton Bennett, Louisa Loveluck, Monica Rodman and Adriana Usero. Design and development by Shikha Subramaniam, Leo Dominguez, Gabriel Florit, Atthar Mirza, Joe Fox and Jason Bernert. Graphics by Dylan Moriarty. Writing by Elyse Samuels, Ruby Mellen, Samuel Oakford, Sarah Cahlan and Meg Kelly.

Editing by Matt Callahan, Reem Akkad, Nadine Ajaka and Ann Gerhart. Copy editing by Vanessa Larson.

Database of 305 videos exposes the horrors of war in Ukraine (2024)

FAQs

What is the best website for Ukraine war footage? ›

DATTALION is home to the largest free, independent, open-source database of Ukraine war footage.

How many people died in the Ukraine war tracker? ›

Total deaths
BreakdownFatalitiesTime period
Total14,200–14,400 killed6 April 2014 – 31 December 2021
Civilians3,404 killed (306 foreign)6 April 2014 – 31 December 2021
Ukrainian forces (ZSU, NGU, SBGS and volunteer forces)4,400 killed6 April 2014 – 31 December 2021
4,647 killed6 April 2014 – 23 February 2022
4 more rows

Can Russia sustain the war? ›

The authors concluded Russia could sustain its current rate of attrition for up to three years and maybe longer. The report also detailed how, despite international sanctions, Russia's economy had proved resilient and it had ramped up defense spending for 2024.

What is the most visited website in Ukraine? ›

g google.com.

How many soldiers does Ukraine have left? ›

Armed Forces of Ukraine
Ukrainian Armed Forces
Active personnel1,250,000+ (2024)
Reserve personnel2,500,000 (2024)
Expenditure
Budget$64,8 billion ₴ 2,4 trillion (2024) foreign military aid
22 more rows

Why is Ukraine losing the war? ›

Western delays over sending aid mean the country is dangerously short of something even harder to supply than shells: the fighting spirit required to win. Morale among troops is grim, ground down by relentless bombardment, a lack of advanced weapons, and losses on the battlefield.

How many soldiers does Russia have? ›

How many soldiers does Russia have? Russian Armed Forces had 3.57 million troops as of 2024, with 37 percent of them, or 1.32 million, being active military personnel. Two million were reserve service members, and 250,000 were paramilitary forces.

What website shows Ukraine war? ›

ACLED's Ukraine Conflict Monitor provides near real-time information on the ongoing war, including an interactive map of the latest data from the start of Russia's invasion, a curated data file, and weekly situation updates.

What is the best site to help Ukraine? ›

Donations intended to go directly to people fleeing Ukraine may be directed to the following organisations
  • Caritas Ukraine.
  • Razom.
  • Voices of Children.
  • Vostok SOS.
  • Warehouse Centre for Humanitarian and Medical Aid to Ukraine.

Did Google remove Ukraine maps? ›

In 2014 , Google Maps disabled several features in Ukraine , including the ability to search for addresses and businesses , due to the ongoing conflict in the country . This left many residents of the capital city , Kyiv , without a reliable mapping solution .

What is the website ending for Ukraine? ›

ua is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Ukraine. To register at the second-level (example) domainname.ua, possession of the exact trademark (matching the domain name) is required.

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