Russia amplified hurricane disinformation to drive Americans apart,
researchers find
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[October 24, 2024]
By DAVID KLEPPER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Russia has helped amplify and spread false and
misleading internet claims about recent hurricanes in the United States
and the federal government's response, part of a wider effort by the
Kremlin to manipulate America's political discourse before the
presidential election, new research shows.
The content, spread by Russian state media and networks of social media
accounts and websites, criticizes the federal response to Hurricanes
Helene and Milton, exploiting legitimate concerns about the recovery
effort in an attempt to paint American leaders as incompetent and
corrupt, according to research from the Institute for Strategic
Dialogue. The London-based organization tracks disinformation and online
extremism.
In some cases, the claims about the storms include fake images created
using artificial intelligence, such as a photo depicting scenes of
devastating flooding at Disney World that never happened, researchers
say.
The approach is consistent with the Kremlin’s long-standing practice of
identifying legitimate debates and contentious issues in the U.S. and
then exploiting them. Previous disinformation campaigns have harnessed
debates about immigration, racism, crime and the economy in an effort to
portray the U.S. as corrupt, violent and unjust.
U.S. intelligence officials and private tech companies say Russian
activity has increased sharply before the Nov. 5 election as Moscow
tries to capitalize on an opportunity to undermine its chief global
adversary.
By seizing on real concerns about disaster recovery, Russia's
disinformation agencies can worm their way into U.S. discourse, using
hot-button issues to undermine Americans' trust in their government and
each other.
“These are not situations that foreign actors are creating," said
Melanie Smith, director of research at ISD. “They're simply pouring
gasoline on fires that already exist.”
The content identified by ISD included English-language posts obviously
meant for Americans, as well as Russian-language propaganda intended for
domestic audiences. Much of the disinformation took aim at the Federal
Emergency Management Agency and the Democratic administration of
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. She is her party's
nominee in the White House race against former President Donald Trump.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine remains the Kremlin's prime motivation for
spreading lies about the hurricane response. If Russia can persuade
enough Americans to oppose U.S. support for Ukraine, that could ease the
way for a Moscow victory, officials and analysts have said.
U.S. intelligence officials have said Russia's disinformation seems
designed to support Trump, who has praised Russian President Vladimir
Putin and disparaged the NATO alliance and Ukraine's leaders. Posts
linked to Russia routinely denigrate Harris, saying she is ignoring the
pleas of storm victims. By contrast, a recent post from Russian state
media company RT called Trump “a mystical figure of historic
proportions.”
Intelligence officials confirmed Tuesday that Russia created a
manipulated video to smear Harris’ running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim
Walz.
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People gather at a FEMA Disaster Recovery Center at A.C. Reynolds
High School in Asheville, N.C.,, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Makiya
Seminera)
Russia has rejected claims that it trying to meddle in the U.S.
election. The Russian Embassy hasn't responded to messages this week
seeking comment about recent allegations by researchers and
intelligence officials.
Researchers at ISD found that Russian disinformation agents
exploited weak content moderation on U.S.-owned social media
platforms such as X to spread their content far and wide. Before it
was purchased and renamed by Elon Musk, the platform once known as
Twitter required labels on content from authoritarian state media.
Musk rescinded that rule and gutted the platform's content
moderation efforts, leading to a surge in foreign propaganda, hate
speech and extremist recruitment.
Often the false or misleading claims come from fake accounts or
websites that mimic Americans or legitimate news outlets, making it
difficult to determine their true origin. Unsuspecting Americans
then repost and spread the content.
In July, American intelligence officials warned that “unwitting
Americans” were helping do Russia's work for it.
Vast armies of fake or automated accounts help spread the material
further.
Researchers at the Israeli tech firm Cyabra analyzed popular posts
on X that criticized FEMA for its storm response. A significant
number could not be verified as belonging to a real person;
one-quarter of all the responses to popular posts were deemed fake.
The posts were seen by users over half a billion times.
In response, a spokesperson for X pointed to the platform's system
that allows users to add context to posts with false claims. The
company did not respond to questions about its labeling policy.
“The false claims, ranging from FEMA diverting funds to aid migrants
to conspiracy theories about weather manipulation, undermine public
trust in government as we near election day, which could seriously
impact voter confidence," Cyabra researchers said in a report.
Politicians also have helped spread Russia's talking points.
Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., gave an interview to the Russian state
media outlet Sputnik News for a piece that played up criticism of
the hurricane response. He told Sputnik that the federal response
was "nonexistent," a claim easily debunked by photos and videos of
FEMA recovery workers as well as the firsthand accounts of local
leaders and residents in hard-hit regions.
Gosar repeated another misleading claim that “billions of FEMA
disaster funds” had been given instead to immigrants without legal
status. In truth, money that funds U.S. border control and
immigration programs comes from a different source than disaster
funds.
Gosar's office did not respond to messages seeking comment
Wednesday.
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