In mid-March 2025, a battle-scarred yard in Piatykhatky, southern Ukraine, became the scene of a suspected war crime captured from two angles in the sky. The Associated Press obtained synchronized videos filmed by Ukrainian and Russian drones that document Ukrainian soldiers emerging at gunpoint from a ruined house, laying face-down, and—after being searched—being methodically shot by men wearing Russian uniform markings. The Russian drone edit, circulated on pro-Kremlin channels with ominous music, cuts away while the captives are still alive; the Ukrainian drone footage continues, showing three armed men stepping forward, firing repeatedly, and ultimately killing all four prisoners at close range. Independent visual investigators, including the Center for Information Resilience, reviewed the material and called it one of the clearest examples of an execution rather than combat, noting the absence of a firefight and the deliberate sequence of shots. Ukrainian authorities have opened a war-crimes investigation. Moscow’s Defense Ministry did not respond to AP’s queries, and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisted Russia treats POWs in accordance with international law. The episode lands amid a documented surge in executions of captured Ukrainian service members: Ukrainian prosecutors say at least 245 POWs have been killed since the invasion began, while the U.N. Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine has recorded 91 extrajudicial killings of Ukrainian POWs since August 2024, compared to a single confirmed case of a Russian POW killed by Ukrainian troops in the same period. The AP also situates the footage within a broader accountability challenge: as geopolitical pressure grows for a negotiated settlement, and some leaders echo Kremlin narratives, the incentives and infrastructure for justice risk eroding. Together, the dual videos illustrate how propaganda edits aim to preempt culpability while raw evidence points to unlawful killing—and how, in a war increasingly mediated by cameras, truth and impunity are fighting their own parallel battle.