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Fact Check: Are there AK rifle-sized rats infesting Russian trenches?

Fact Check: Are Russian Trenches Infested with Rats the Size of AK Rifles?

It ⁣sounds too good to be true — or, at the very least, good‍ enough that we​ want ​it to be true: Rats the size of AK-47 rifles are infesting Russian trenches in Ukraine.

In the very best of circumstances, this is what would be ⁢labeled on Wikipedia as “[citation needed].”

More than likely, however, it’s a social⁣ media hoax.

So let’s back‍ up ⁢to the origin of ​this story, which came from a user on the Russian social media⁣ service‌ VK. The post was echoed on Western social media by OSINTtechnical; for the uninitiated, “OSINT” means “open source intelligence,” or intelligence⁣ that can be gleaned through openly available sources.

On Thursday‌ evening, the account​ tweeted ⁣a photo​ of a gargantuan member of the order Rodentia that appeared ‌to have, ⁤to quote John Cleese’s character in Monty Python’s iconic “Dead ‍Parrot” sketch, “shuffled off ⁤his mortal coil, ⁣run down the curtain and joined the bleedin’ choir​ invisible.” ⁢It was,⁢ in Python parlance, ⁣an ex-rodent.

“Russian trenches⁢ are apparently dealing with a⁣ slight infestation by ⁤rodents of‌ unusual size in Donetsk Oblast,” OSINTtechnical said in a post on X along with​ the photo, which showed the rat next ⁤to a military rifle.

Now, as a former resident ⁤of⁣ the New York ⁣City area who used the subway ‌ on‌ a‍ daily basis, ​I can tell you this: I have seen me some rats in ⁣my lifetime. I have seen many fewer AK-47s, but I know the size difference. So do social⁣ media posters:

Now, to be fair, OSINTtechnical is generally reliable, ⁢and it apparently believes the VK “milblogger” — military ⁢blogger, one​ whose ‍account focuses primarily or specifically on military matters ⁣— is too.

Unfortunately, said ‍“milblogger” has either taken the picture down or had the picture taken down for him. (VK, like many social media networks based in autocratic ‌countries — and ‌even some that aren’t ‌— can tend to​ be⁤ very, um, persnickety when it⁢ comes to what you can say and what you can’t.)

However, as outlet Insider noted when reporting‌ on OSINTtechnical’s potential whoopsie, “Photos and videos show rat-infested Russian trenches along the front line,” and “Rats have long infested trenches in war and can spread diseases to troops, as they famously did in World War ​I.”

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“One troop, Lieutenant Rayner of⁢ the 3rd Brigade of the Canadian Field Artillery, said in February 1918: ‘The‌ darn rats are as⁤ big ⁢as rabbits & as friendly. Was looking out through the ⁤peephole trying to get a line on Fritzies [the Germans] flash & one of ​them came & sat right in front of the compass,⁣ I reached for my ‍gun but he ⁤moved too‍ quickly for me,’ according​ to The Canadian Center for ​the Great War,” Insider noted in its report.

Furthermore, it’s not as if there isn’t evidence that Russia has a serious rat problem as its invasion ​of Ukraine continues to be ⁢bogged​ down in the kind of⁣ warfare we’re not used‍ to‌ seeing⁢ in ⁢the 21st century:

So, is there an AK-47-sized rat problem in Donetsk?

One post does not evidence make, particularly when that post has been deleted.

Furthermore, there are⁢ other rodents larger than the pestilent rat that one might have to‌ deal with. The ‌largest ​member⁤ of the⁣ order, the capybara, is ⁤the size of a medium-ish dog — although good luck finding the outlier in the order, a South American native, in Ukrainian trenches.

A ‍more realistic explanation, if⁤ this photo is real, is the nutria ⁣— ‌“a giant orange-toothed rodent also known⁢ as coypu or river ⁣rat, and found in ⁣southern Russia,” the U.K.’s ⁣ Guardian reported in 2016 when nutria burgers were a ‍Moscow foodie rage.

Or, as is so often the case, this could be more disinformation​ in a conflict where​ the truth, if it’s⁢ even⁤ knowable given⁤ the shifting conditions on the ground, is impossible to ascertain from a single,‌ now-deleted photo ‌gleaned from a Russian-run social media network.

It’s ‍tempting to believe ⁢because we want Russia to lose — or, at the very⁣ least,‍ we ⁢want this to be so unpleasant for Moscow that it agrees ⁢to an advantageous peace.

In an era of Photoshop, AI and a massive disinformation complex​ on all sides, however, we can’t ‍merely believe our eyes⁤ —⁤ sadly.


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The post Fact Check: Are Russian Trenches ​Infested with Rats ​the⁤ Size of⁣ AK Rifles? appeared first on The Western Journal.

What is the origin‌ of the claim that​ Russian trenches​ in Ukraine are ‍infested with rats the size of AK rifles?

Fact Check: Are Russian Trenches ⁣Infested with Rats the Size of‍ AK Rifles?

It sounds too good to be true — or, at the very least, ⁣good enough that we want⁤ it to be true: Rats the size of AK-47 rifles are infesting Russian trenches in Ukraine.

In the ​very best of circumstances,⁤ this is what would be ‍labeled on ⁢Wikipedia as ‍“[citation needed].”

More ‍than likely, however, it’s a social media ⁤hoax.

So ⁤let’s ⁣back‍ up to the ⁢origin ⁢of this story, which ⁣came from a user‍ on the‍ Russian social‌ media service VK. The post was echoed ⁢on Western social media by OSINTtechnical; for the uninitiated, ⁢“OSINT” ​means “open source⁤ intelligence,” or intelligence that can⁣ be‌ gleaned through openly available sources



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