Graham Phillips: The Propagandist at the Interrogation Table & Now Suspected War Criminal

An expanding UK war-crimes inquiry raises deeper questions about foreigners who insert themselves into other people’s wars.

SHAUN PINNER

NOV 19, 2025

Phillips Interrogating Aiden Aslin

When people in Britain who follow the Russia–Ukraine war hear the name Graham Phillips, many picture a fringe YouTuber, the eccentric who “ran off to Donbas,” resurfacing with shaky footage and Kremlin talking points dressed up as “independent journalism.” But for those who lived through Russian captivity, for anyone forced in front of a camera under threat, deprivation, or fear, the reality is far darker. Many former POWs describe these encounters not as journalism, but as participation in an environment of coercion, humiliation, and forced statements, behaviour that may fall foul of the Geneva Conventions.

I recognise this dynamic because similar practices were used against me by RT, Russia Today, and other state-run outlets during my captivity. For much of that time I was blindfolded, isolated, beaten, and repeatedly filmed for propaganda. Russia has long used Western-accented interviewers to resonate with foreign audiences, a tactic that, in many cases, appears aimed at reinforcing Kremlin narratives.

A UK Investigation Widens

Today, UK authorities appear to be examining these issues more closely, not only in relation to Phillips but possibly other Western-accented figures who inserted themselves into Russia’s machinery of abuse. Reports suggest the inquiry also includes allegations of degrading treatment of Ukrainian dead, as well as the filming of POWs under coercive conditions.

Phillips has been under UK sanctions for years, but sanctions were only the beginning. In recent months, as reported by The SunMetropolitan Police war-crimes investigators expanded an inquiry into British nationals alleged to have collaborated with Russian military or intelligence structures. Those reports say investigators are assessing whether filmed interrogations involving prisoners of war could constitute breaches of international law.

Last night, Phillips responded to The Sun by boasting about a video involving pigs, originally posted in August 2022. In it, a Russian soldier picks up the ID of a deceased Ukrainian before Phillips asks: “Is Yuri tasty?”
He then adds in Russian: “It’s a buffet… He’s also eating — munching, munching! They’re not even shy.”

The investigation appeared to take a step forward when Scotland Yard officers travelled to Alabama to interview former US serviceman Alexander Drueke — whom I recently interviewed for Voices from the Front.

If any allegations are substantiated, the implications would be serious. For now, the investigation is ongoing and no conclusions have been reached.

My interview with Drueke:


Interrogation Under Duress Is Not Journalism

Article 34 of the Geneva Conventions states that the remains of those who die in detention or during hostilities “shall be respected.” The ICRC also requires all parties to take “all possible measures” to prevent the dead from being despoiled.

Interrogations, meanwhile, must be carried out by authorised military personnel, not foreign civilians, activists, or political content-creators.

Phillips also filmed a visibly mistreated British POW, Aiden Aslin. Whether the conduct shown meets the legal threshold for wrongdoing is for investigators to determine, but the ethical concerns are self-evident.

POWs are not free agents. They are isolated, threatened, starved, beaten, or recovering from injuries. Filming them, let alone prompting them with leading questions, raises profound moral and legal concerns.

Both Drueke and Aslin have publicly described similar circumstances: a camera suddenly pushed in their face, pressure to answer in a certain way, and the constant fear that displeasing their captors could make things worse.

In my own case, individuals responsible for my mistreatment were often present during filming by Roman Kosarev of RT. I was never asked for consent, and refusal was impossible. Several recordings were taken immediately after electrocution, beatings, or stabbing.

Russia clearly understood the propaganda value of using a British face. For Phillips, it appeared to offer a route to notoriety.

Useful Idiot — Or Something More Serious?

Phillips has long styled himself as a “journalist” or “independent commentator.” Yet even Moscow now seldom maintains that pretense. He embedded with separatist and Russian units, operated in areas controlled by intelligence services, and accessed facilities that legitimate reporters simply do not receive.

Aslin’s coerced appearance remains one of the most criticized POW videos of the war’s early months. Whatever Phillips claims, nothing in that footage resembles accepted journalistic practice.

Investigators may eventually conclude whether any criminal intent or facilitation occurred. Those findings are not yet established. But the footage itself sits squarely in a space where serious legal questions arise.

The Legal Net Tightens

The UK has already sanctioned Phillips and seized assets. The central question now is whether any criminal liability exists.

Key facts:

• British nationals can be prosecuted for war crimes committed abroad.
• The ICC may investigate cases involving alleged harm to protected persons.
• Much of the material in question is self-recorded, a recurring trait of Russian propaganda.

The fact that British officers are interviewing American former POWs suggests the investigation is active, international, and more advanced than a basic fact-finding exercise.

Ultimately, courts, not commentators, will determine if any laws were broken.

Phillips with Igor Girkin

A Larger Question: When Foreigners Insert Themselves into War

For years, many dismissed Phillips as a clownish provocateur. But allegations of involvement in coercive interrogations or degrading treatment of the dead are not trivial.

And this raises a wider question: what happens when Westerners or foreign volunteers insert themselves into other people’s wars?

Many arrive believing they are “telling the truth,” “helping the cause,” or living a romanticized battlefield ideal. But conflicts involving war crimes and systematic brutality operate within legal frameworks far beyond the understanding of most outsiders.

A foreigner with a camera or a rifle can easily become part of a system they do not comprehend, drawn into actions they would never imagine at home, and exposed to criminal liability they never anticipated.

Ukraine, Syria, Iraq, Libya, modern conflicts are filled with Westerners who arrived with conviction and left with legal cases, broken reputations, or lifelong trauma.

War zones are not playgrounds for adventurists or ideologues.
Foreigners who involve themselves without understanding the legal, ethical, and human cost risk becoming complicit in things they never intended, and accountable for things they never imagined.

© 2025 shaun pinner
548 Market Street PMB 72296, San Francisco, CA 94104
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British ex-civil servant accused of Ukraine war crimes

Graham Phillips, 46, is being investigated over claims he filmed pigs eating the remains of Ukrainian soldiers

Graham Phillips is the first British person to be investigated over alleged war crimes in Ukraine and is said to have breached the Geneva Convention
Graham Phillips is the first British person to be investigated over alleged war crimes in Ukraine and is said to have breached the Geneva Convention

19 November 2025

A former civil servant has been accused of carrying out war crimes in Ukraine.

Graham Phillips, 46, is being investigated by the Metropolitan Police’s war crimes team over claims that he filmed pigs eating the remains of Ukrainian soldiers.

He is also accused of mistreating Aiden Aslin, who was held as a prisoner of war by Russia for five months in 2022.

Phillips has previously been compared to Lord Haw-Haw, the British pro-Nazi propagandist who was hanged for high treason in 1946.

In a video seen by The Sun, which first reported on the claims, a Russian soldier picks up an identity card belonging to a dead Ukrainian soldier before Phillips asks: “Is Yuri tasty?”

Phillips adds in Russian: “It’s a buffet! He’s also eating! Munching, munching and munching! They’re not even shy.” He later says “eat, be healthy” and adds: “It turns out he was useful for someone.”

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He is the first British person to be investigated over alleged war crimes in Ukraine, and is said to have breached the Geneva Convention.

Phillips (left)
Graham Phillips (left) appeared to admit filming the video but denied he had breached international law

The footage was passed to Scotland Yard’s war crimes team, which is part of SO15, the Counter Terrorism Command.

A spokesman told The Sun an investigation was launched in 2022, and that its officers were liaising with the Crown Prosecution Service.

A Counter Terrorism Policing spokesman told the newspaper: “We can confirm that officers from the Counter Terrorism Policing war crimes team are conducting an investigation into allegations against a UK national alleged to have committed war crimes in the ongoing Ukraine-Russia conflict.

“The matter was referred to the war crimes team in March 2022 and after it was initially assessed under the jointly established police and Crown Prosecution Service guidelines an investigation was subsequently opened.

“The investigation remains ongoing, and officers continue to liaise with colleagues from the CPS as part of this.”

No arrests have been made and no one has been interviewed under caution, the spokesman added.

Phillips appeared to admit filming the video, but denied he had breached international law.

He told The Sun: “Why should I have intervened in that incident with the pigs? Those Ukrainian soldiers came to Donbas to murder the civilians of Donbas, who want to be with Russia, not part of the Ukrainian Nazi regime. 

“They ended up becoming pig fodder. I could say it was pigs eating pigs, but that would be an insult to the pigs.

“In over three and a half years of this ‘investigation’, the Metropolitan Police haven’t once contacted me. If I were ever to be formally accused, or charged of a breach of international law, I would of course, of sound, clear conscience and in absolute honesty, co-operate fully and defend myself fully.”

Downing Street said any British nationals aiding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could be prosecuted on their return to the UK.

A spokesman said: “Any reports of British nationals taking part in [Vladimir] Putin’s illegal invasion are deeply concerning, and they should be in no doubt that they will be held to account for any criminal actions. And that includes potential prosecution on their return for any offences under UK law.

“And anyone supporting Putin’s despicable regime should reflect on the bloodshed and pain that [the Russian president] continues to cause, both in Ukraine and through his weaponisation of grain and energy during this war.”

4 comments

    • Phillips is a low-rent Lord Haw-Haw.
      Unfortunately the UK has bigger Haw-Haws :

      Nigel Farage and the putlerist who campaigns for all charges against nazi Phillips to be dropped : Peter Hitchens.

  1. About Shaun Pinner :-

    “Shaun Pinner is a former soldier of the British Army who joined the Ukrainian Armed Forces as a contracted fighter in 2018 and fought during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. During the siege of Mariupol, he was captured and sentenced to death in a show trial by the Supreme Court of the self-proclaimed statelet Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), but was freed in September 2022 in a prisoner exchange. In December 2022 he was awarded the state ‘Order of Courage, 3rd Degree’ in a decree by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for “selfless acts in the defence and sovereignty of Ukraine”.

    (Wiki).

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