Russian Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov claimed on Tuesday 21 April that Russia had "fully completed" the occupation of Luhansk Oblast, citing 1,700 square kilometres seized in 2026 across eighty settlements 1. The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington think tank that geolocates control changes from open-source footage, verifies roughly 340 square kilometres of Russian 2026 gains, no control of Lyman, and a net territorial loss since 1 March. Ukrainian forces contest fourteen settlements around Novoyehorivka, Hrekivka and Nadiia.
This is the fourth time Gerasimov has filed the same claim. The third filing in early April was relayed alongside a two-month Donbas seizure ultimatum . The exaggeration ratio has held at 5:1 across all four filings. ISW's March assessment that Russia cannot seize the fortress belt in 2026 sits on the same ledger. Ukrainian advances near Slovyansk and Kostyantynivka on 12 to 13 April were the confirmed direction of travel during the same fortnight.
The filing landed three days before the EU Council vote approving the €90 billion loan and the 20th sanctions package. A four-time false filing is no longer an operational assessment; Gerasimov is writing for three different audiences simultaneously. Russian state television lifted the "fully completed" headline into prime-time coverage within hours of the filing. Western deterrence analysts can test the claim against ISW and find the 5:1 gap, which converts the signalling cost into an information asymmetry. Ukrainian civilian morale sees a claim the General Staff can rebut from its daily engagement log. The map data and the filing are the two currencies of the same transaction: performance of strength over the week every institutional lever moved against Moscow.
