In global game of influence, China turns to a cheap and effective tool:
fake news
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[September 28, 2024]
By DIDI TANG and DAVID KLEPPER
WASHINGTON (AP) — When veteran U.S. diplomat Kurt Campbell traveled to
the Solomon Islands to counter Beijing's influence in the South Pacific
country, he quickly saw just how far China would go to spread its
message.
The Biden administration’s Asia czar woke up one morning in 2022 to a
long article in the local press about the U.S. running chemical and
biological labs in Ukraine, a claim that Washington calls an outright
lie. Started by Russia, the false and incendiary claim was vigorously
amplified by China's vast overseas propaganda apparatus.
It was another example of “clearly effective Russian and Chinese
disinformation," Campbell told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in
July.
Two years later, the claim still reverberates online, demonstrating
China's sprawling effort to reshape global perceptions. The campaign,
costing many billions per year, is becoming ever more sophisticated
thanks to artificial intelligence. China's operations have caught the
attention of intelligence analysts and policymakers in Washington, who
vow to combat any actions that could influence the November election or
undermine American interests.
The key tactic: networks of websites purporting to be legitimate news
outlets, delivering pro-China coverage that often parallels official
statements and positions from Beijing.
Shannon Van Sant, an adviser to the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong
Foundation, tracked a network of dozens of sites that posed as news
organizations. One site mimicked The New York Times, using a similar
font and design in what she called an attempt at legitimacy. The site
carried strongly pro-Chinese messages.
When Van Sant researched the site's reporters she found no information.
Their names didn't belong to any known journalists working in China, and
their photos bore telltale signs of being created with AI.
“Manipulation of the media is ultimately a manipulation of readers and
the audience, and this is damaging to democracy and society,” Van Sant
said.
Liu Pengyu, spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in the U.S., said
allegations that China uses news websites and social media to spread
pro-Beijing information and influence public opinion in the U.S. “are
full of malicious speculations against China, which China firmly
opposes.”
In addition to its state media, Beijing has turned to foreign players —
real or not — to relay messages and lend credibility to narratives
favoring the Communist Party, said Xiao Qiang, a research scientist at
the School of Information at the University of California, Berkeley.
Xiao also is editor-in-chief of China Digital Times, a bilingual news
website that aggregates information from and about China.
Beijing's methods are wide-ranging and links to the government are often
difficult to prove, Xiao said. But whether it's journalists with
American-sounding names or an Indian influencer, the consistently
pro-Beijing messages give them away.
"The implicit message is the same — that the Chinese Communist Party
works for its people,” Xiao said.
Analysts at the cybersecurity firm Logically identified 1,200 websites
that had carried Russian or Chinese state media stories. The sites often
target specific audiences and have names that sound like traditional
news organizations or defunct newspapers.
Unlike Russia or Iran, which have displayed clear preferences in the
U.S. presidential campaign, Beijing is more cautious and focused on
spreading positive content about China.
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Visitors pass the Chinese Communist Party flag at the museum of the
Communist Party of China in Beijing, Oct. 19, 2023. (AP Photo/Louise
Delmotte, File)
While the sites aren't owned by China, they run Chinese content.
When Logically looked at content specifically about the U.S.
election, 20% could be traced back to Chinese or Russian state
media.
“There's a decent likelihood that these articles could influence
U.S. audiences without them even knowing where it comes from,” said
Alex Nelson, Logically's senior manager for strategy and analysis.
According to the Gallup World Poll, more countries surveyed view the
U.S. positively, but the share of countries where views of both the
U.S. and China are negative overall is higher than 15 years ago,
signaling the U.S. doesn’t appear to be making gains over China.
Some U.S. officials want to increase spending to even the playing
field. The House of Representatives this month approved a bill that
would authorize $325 million annually through 2027 to counter
China’s global influence, including its disinformation campaigns.
The measure still needs Senate approval.
“We are in a global competition for influence with China, and if you
want to win it, then you cannot do it on a middle-power budget,”
said Rep. Gregory Meeks, a Democrat from New York.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has demanded a systematic buildup of
Chinese narratives that would give his country a global voice
“commensurate with” its international stature.
Beijing has invested in state media such as the Xinhua news agency
and China Central Television to convey its messages to global
audiences in various languages and platforms. Media groups at the
local level are creating “international communication centers” to
build an overseas presence with websites, news channels and social
media accounts.
Beijing also has struck media partnerships worldwide, and the
article Campbell read in the Solomon Islands is likely a result of
those.
China’s outreach is tied to the global race for economic dominance
in electric vehicles, computer chips, AI and quantum computing, said
Jaret Riddick, a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Center for
Security and Emerging Technology.
“The countries that lead on emerging technologies will be the
countries that have a great advantage going forward,” Riddick said.
To tell its story, Beijing has not shied away from using fake
personas. A 2023 State Department report detailed the case of a
published writer named Yi Fan, originally described as a Chinese
foreign ministry analyst. Yi morphed into a journalist, then became
an independent analyst.
Yi's details changed, but the message did not. Through published
commentaries and writings, Yi trumpeted close ties between China and
Africa, praised Beijing’s approach to environmental sustainability
and argued that China must counter distorted Western narratives.
Then there was Wilson Edwards, a supposed Swiss virologist quoted in
Chinese media as a COVID-19 expert who criticized the U.S. response.
But Swiss officials found no evidence he existed.
“If you exist, we would like to meet you!” the Swiss Embassy in
Beijing wrote on social media.
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AP writer Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux contributed from Washington.
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