President Donald Trump touted his “total exoneration” on Sunday following the release of Attorney General William Barr’s summary of the special counsel’s report.

Some of the president’s closest allies echoed this celebratory sentiment. Vice President Mike Pence said Mueller’s conclusions were a “total vindication” of Trump. “No collusion and no obstruction,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) declared.

But Trump was not exonerated by special counsel Robert Mueller’s report — a fact that Barr made plain in his summary to Congress.

Mueller’s team did not find evidence to prove criminal collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia, Barr wrote. The attorney general and his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, also concluded that “the evidence developed during the Special Counsel’s investigation is not sufficient to establish that the President committed an obstruction-of-justice offense.”

But Barr added that while Mueller’s report “does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him” on the question of whether he obstructed justice.

It’s important to note that Mueller did not ― beyond not declaring Trump’s innocence ― make any conclusions in his report on whether or not the president committed obstruction of justice. His report “merely marshaled evidence on both sides,” The New York Times noted. Barr, who Trump appointed to the post of attorney general in December, and Rosenstein were the ones who pronounced the president’s guiltlessness.

There are also several major investigations into Trump and his associates that are currently ongoing, with more possibly to come.

These facts have not, however, stopped an exultant Trump from declaring his “complete and total exoneration.”