State Department Creates Unit to Track Russian War Crimes

Washington on Tuesday announced a new program to capture, analyse, and make widely available evidence of Russia-perpetrated war crimes and other atrocities in Ukraine, TURAN's U.S. correspondent reports.
The program, dubbed Conflict Observatory, will be available online through the ConflictObservatory.org website. Its information will help refute Russia’s disinformation efforts and shine a light on abuses, the State Department said in a statement.
Officials in Washington expect international partner organizations to join the program.
"However long it takes, we are committed to seeing that justice is served" - State Department's spokesperson Ned Price told reporters.
The program received an initial $6 million investment and is expected to secure future funding from the European Democratic Resilience Initiative.
"We are working through partnerships with U.S. academia and the private sector to assist current and future quests for justice following months of fighting and mounting evidence of these widespread, large-scale atrocities that have been committed" - Price explained.
The move came as the International Criminal Court announced Tuesday morning that it was sending its largest forensics team ever to Ukraine.
Asked whether the U.S was committed to share its findings with the ICC, Price told TURAN's correspondent that Washington supports "all international investigations" into the atrocities in Ukraine. "... We support those conducted by the ICC.
"We will continue to pursue all appropriate venues to see accountability. And accountability means accountability; and no country – no matter how large, how potentially powerful, what types of weapons they may have in their arsenal – can escape accountability for the types of atrocities that we have seen Russia’s forces perpetrate against the Ukrainian people" - Price said in response to TURAN's questions on holding Russia accountable.
"We have already made the assessment that Russia’s forces have committed war crimes. Our task now is to support those, to support the important work of those who are seeking to build criminal cases against those who are responsible for this, whether at the tactical level or those who at much more senior levels may have given orders or may have been complicit in the war crimes that have occurred," he added.
Alex Raufoglu
Washington D.C.
Latest news
Latest newsThe Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Forms New Government Amid Protests Over Defense Minister Dismissal
16.Jul.2026
Ursula von der Leyen Arrives in Ukraine with a New Aid Package and Drone Agreement
15.Jul.2026
Uzbekistan Bets on Georgian Ports as Tashkent Expands Its Trade Route to European Markets via the Black Sea
14.Jul.2026
Turkmenistan and the USA Explore New Areas of Cooperation as Ashgabat Hosts U.S. Senator Steve Daines
13.Jul.2026
Engineers Instead of Soldiers: Kazakhstan Hosts Its First Engineering Technologies Championship
12.Jul.2026
Transit Instead of Confrontation: Russia Expands Cargo Shipments to Armenia via Azerbaijan
12.Jul.2026
Europe Accelerates Rearmament: EU Countries Prioritize Missiles, Air Defense Systems, and Drones
10.Jul.2026
Russia Begins Using New FPV Drones to Strike Ukraine's Energy Infrastructure
10.Jul.2026
US Ready to Lift Sanctions on Turkiye and Restore Its Participation in the F-35 Program
09.Jul.2026
Trump Announces Transfer of License to Ukraine for Patriot Interceptor Missile Production
09.Jul.2026

19 Jul 2026


