U.S. government loses to Russia's
disinformation campaign: advisers
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[December 21, 2016]
By Joseph Menn
(Reuters) - The U.S. government spent more
than a decade preparing responses to malicious hacking by a foreign
power but had no clear strategy when Russia launched a disinformation
campaign over the internet during the U.S. election campaign, current
and former White House cyber security advisers said.
Far more effort has gone into plotting offensive hacking and preparing
defenses against the less probable but more dramatic damage from
electronic assaults on the power grid, financial system or direct
manipulation of voting machines.
Over the last several years, U.S. intelligence agencies tracked Russia's
use of coordinated hacking and disinformation in Ukraine and elsewhere,
the advisers and intelligence experts said, but there was little
sustained, high-level government conversation about the risk of the
propaganda coming to the United States.
During the presidential election it did - to an extent that may have
altered the outcome, the security sources said. But U.S. officials felt
limited in investigating Russian-supported propaganda efforts because of
free speech guarantees in the Constitution.
A former White House official cautioned that any U.S. government attempt
to counter the flow of foreign state-backed disinformation through
deterrence would face major political, legal and moral obstacles.
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"You would have to have massive surveillance and curtailed freedom and
that is a cost we have not been willing to accept,” said the former
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "They (Russia) can
control distribution of information in ways we don't."
Clinton Watts, a security consultant, former FBI agent and a fellow at
the nonprofit Foreign Policy Research Institute, said the U.S.
government no longer has an organization, such as the U.S. Information
Agency, that provided counter-narratives during the Cold War.
He said that most major Russian disinformation campaigns in the United
States and Europe have started at Russian-government funded media
outlets, such as RT television or Sputnik News, before being amplified
on Twitter by others.
Watts said it was urgent for the U.S. government to build the capability
to track what is happening online and dispute false stories.
"Those two things need to be done immediately," Watts said. "You have to
have a public statement or it leads to conspiracy theories."
A defense spending pill passed this month calls for the State Department
to establish a "Global Engagement Center" to take on some of that work,
but similar efforts to counter less sophisticated Islamic State
narratives have fallen short.
The U.S. government formally accused Russia of a campaign of cyber
attacks against U.S. political organizations in October, a month before
the Nov. 8 election.
U.S. 'STUCK'
James Lewis, a cyber security expert at the Center for Strategic &
International Studies who has worked for the departments of State and
Commerce and the U.S. military, said Washington needed to move beyond
antiquated notions of projecting influence if it hoped to catch up with
Russia.
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"They have RT and all we know how to do is send a carrier battle group,"
Lewis said. "We're going to be stuck until we find a way deal with
that."
Watts, who said he has tracked tens of thousands of pro-Russia Twitter
handles since 2014, believes many of the most effective stories stoke
fear of war or other calamities or promote a narrative of corrupt
Western politicians, media and other elites.
He and others said Sputnik shows the intensity of the Russian effort.
Launched two years ago as a successor to the official Russian wire
service and radio network, Sputnik does not merely parrot the Kremlin
political line, according to experts. It has gone out of its way to hire
outsiders with social media expertise, including left and right-leaning
Americans who are critical of U.S. policies.
Sputnik News did not respond to a request for comment.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during his annual
state of the nation address at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia,
December 1, 2016. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/File Photo
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During the election campaign, one of the most prominent fulltime
Sputnik writers and commentators, Cassandra Fairbanks, shifted from
an ardent anti-police protestor and supporter of socialist U.S.
Senator Bernie Sanders to a vocal backer of Republican Donald Trump.
Fairbanks said in an interview with Reuters that Sputnik had not
told her to advocate for Trump, now president-elect. She said she
was swayed by Trump's opposition to overseas wars and international
trade agreements.
"I did my best to push for him," Fairbanks said, "but that was of my
free will."
A woman in her thirties with more than 80,000 Twitter followers,
Fairbanks was an activist with the hacking movement known as
Anonymous before she joined Sputnik.
The day before the election, Fairbanks said on a YouTube channel
that it was "pretty likely" that the authors of emails hacked from
the account of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton's campaign
manager John Podesta were using code words for pedophilia when they
spoke about pizza.
The assertion fed the falsehood that Clinton supporters were
operating a child sex ring out of a Washington-based pizza parlor.
The channel, with 1.8 million subscribers, was run by Alex Jones, a
radio host who has said the 9/11 attacks were an "inside job."
Joe Fionda, a veteran of the Occupy protests who worked briefly for
Sputnik in 2015, said the organization’s articles and social media
efforts overall were aimed at praising Russian President Vladimir
Putin's allies such as Syria and dwelling on negative news in the
United States, including police misconduct.
Some U.S. officials and political analysts have said Putin could
believe businessman Trump would be friendlier to Russia than
Clinton, especially when it came to economic sanctions.
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Fionda said spreading hacked emails was a priority at Sputnik. He
said his job included trying to create viral memes on a Facebook
page called Mutinous Media, which did not list a Sputnik connection.
Former workers of the Democratic National Committee, one of the
groups infiltrated by Russian-backed hackers, said the U.S.
government should consider providing funding for the technological
defense of major political parties. They said that once hacked
emails began appearing online, party functionaries were constantly
behind in responding.
They also said that the staff of Democratic President Barack Obama
had been overly concerned about not appearing to defend its own
party's candidate.
Obama has asked spy agencies to deliver an analysis of Russian
meddling in the election that will include discussion of propaganda
operations, Office of the Director of National Intelligence General
Counsel Robert Litt told Reuters.
Asked on Tuesday whether he thought the U.S. government had been
caught off guard, Litt said: "I'm not touching this with an 11-foot
pole. It is a very important issue that the intelligence community
is looking at very carefully, and it will issue a report in due
time."
(Reporting by Joseph Menn; editing by David Rohde and Grant McCool)
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