Opinion — 10 Rules for Reading War Headlines Without Getting Misled

Use a verified timeline as your anchor when tracking live conflicts; then apply these ten habits so headlines inform, not distort. Here’s a practical checklist for newsrooms and readers alike. Reuters

10 rules:

  1. Start with primary timelines; don’t stitch narratives from clips. Reuters
  2. Separate facts (who/what/where/when) from claims (why/how) until corroborated. Reuters
  3. Track the first source of each key detail (official, field reporter, agency). Reuters
  4. Prefer outlets that show document links, not just quotes. Reuters
  5. Watch for time zones and date drift; war moves faster than headlines. Reuters
  6. Compare multiple reputable wires before forming a view. Reuters
  7. Treat viral footage as unverified until geolocated. Reuters
  8. Be wary of casualty or equipment numbers without method notes. Reuters
  9. Save links + timestamps so you can revisit how stories evolved. Reuters
  10. Build a small “trusted list” and ignore the rest during breaking news. Reute