Russia focusing on American social media stars to covertly influence
voters
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[September 09, 2024]
By Christopher Bing, Katie Paul and Raphael Satter
(Reuters) - Russia is increasingly turning to American social media
stars to covertly influence voters ahead of the 2024 presidential
election, according to U.S. officials and recently unveiled criminal
charges.
“What we see them doing is relying on witting and unwitting Americans to
seed, promote and add credibility to narratives that serve these foreign
actors’ interest,” a senior intelligence official said in a briefing on
Friday. “These foreign countries typically calculate that Americans are
more likely to believe other Americans’ views.”
The approach is widely viewed by American security agencies as one of
Russia’s preferred tactics this cycle in order to make their foreign
psychological operations appear more authentic. Broadly, these missions
typically seek to anger Americans, highlight societal divisions and
emphasize partisan talking points while questioning the U.S.
government’s effectiveness and role in global security, experts say.
“We're focusing on these tactics because the American public should know
that content that they read online, especially on social media, could be
foreign propaganda, even if it appears to be coming from fellow
Americans,” another senior U.S. intelligence official said in a July
briefing with reporters on election security. “In short, foreign
influence actors are getting better at hiding their hand and using
Americans to do it.”
TENET
On Wednesday, the Justice Department revealed criminal charges against
two former employees of Russian media outlet Russia Today, or RT, who
they say were covertly funding an American political media company.
The indictment outlines an alleged scheme where the Russians sent about
$10 million to two media business owners, Lauren Chen and Liam Donovan,
who then paid American conservative influencers to create videos and
social media posts. Some of the commentators had at different times
shared anti-Ukraine content, which aligned with the effort’s priorities.
Chen and Donovan did not respond to a request for comment.
While the indictment does not name the accused media outlet, Reuters
found it is a Tennessee-based firm named Tenet Media, which publicly
describes itself as the home for “fearless voices.” Tenet did not
respond to repeated requests for comment. Historically, it has employed
several prominent social media figures, including podcaster Tim Pool and
former journalist Benny Johnson, among others.
The indictment notes that Chen and Donovan knew they were accepting
money from the Russian operatives, but that the commentators they paid
appeared unaware of the arrangement.
Tenet manages a YouTube channel and various other social media profiles,
where it publishes videos and audio recordings from its contributors.
According to court documents, Tenet’s founders directed one unnamed
commentator to make false claims online to their viewers that it was
Ukraine and not ISIS who was responsible for a deadly terrorist attack
in Moscow in April.
Pool and Johnson released statements late Wednesday acknowledging the
indictment against Tenet. Pool said “never at any point did anyone other
than I have full editorial control of the show” and that “I as well as
the other personalities and commentators were deceived and are victims.”
Johnson similarly wrote in a statement that he was “disturbed by the
allegations in today’s indictment, which make clear that myself and
other influencers were victims in this alleged scheme.”
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People pass the Cobb County Republican Party's booth at the Pigs and
Peaches country festival in Kennesaw, Georgia, U.S. August 17, 2024.
REUTERS/Megan Varner/File Photo
Experts say the scheme fits a historical trend.
“Paying journalists or front media outlets was a very established
process for laundering propaganda during the Cold War for example,
this is sort of a digital update to that,” said Renee DiResta, a
digital disinformation analyst. “That they use influencers rather
than journalists is interesting — a recognition of where the
influential voices in the community are.”
DOPPELGANGER
In a related but separate filing made on Wednesday, the Justice
Department also exposed a different Russian operation, known as
Doppelganger, that impersonated actual Western news outlets and
shared false information about U.S. political candidates and the war
in Ukraine. This effort was allegedly orchestrated by the Russian
government through a group of Russian marketing agencies named
Social Design Agency, Structura National Technology and ANO Dialog.
Among the evidence submitted to the court, prosecutors cited
internal presentations from the Russian marketing agencies that
explained their approach and tools. A key element of the program,
according to the documents, involved identifying western influencers
who share sympathetic views and finding ways to collaborate with
them.
One presentation notes how they “work with influencers among
proponents of traditional values who stand up for ending the war in
Ukraine and peaceful relations between the US and Russia and who are
ready to get involved in the promotion of the project narratives.
Among them are actors, politicians, experts in different areas,
media representatives, social organizations’ activists and
clergymen, etc.”
A second presentation states the Russian companies are actively
monitoring a total of 2,800 influencers, 600 of whom are based in
the U.S., including radio hosts, bloggers and comedians.
“Russian influence actors have undertaken distinct efforts during
this election cycle to build and use networks of U.S. and other
Western personalities to create and disseminate Russian friendly
narratives,” said the senior intelligence official. “These
personalities post content on social media, write for various
websites with overt and covert ties to the Russian government and
conduct other media efforts.”
It is not clear how or when the FBI warns American social media
stars they are being co-opted in a foreign influence operation.
During the July briefing with reporters, a senior intelligence
official said “it's a complicated answer” that is “obviously case
specific” and which requires consultation from the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence, or DNI, which oversees the U.S.
intelligence community.
On Friday, a DNI official said that so-called “defensive briefings”
to warn Americans they are a target of foreign influence had picked
up steam.
(Reporting by Christopher Bing)
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