Gulf Today

THE RUSSIAN AGENDA

ON POLITICS

- BY WILL GORE

With just over a fortnight to go until the US midterm elections, many eyes will be on the lookout for evidence of Russian meddling.

Two years ago, Russia’s efforts not only resulted in the hacking of Democratic Party computers but also the widespread disseminat­ion of conspiracy theories, straight up fake news, and divisivene­ss by wellfunded trolls. Donald Trump might still not be keen to accept that this was so – but more or less everyone else seems to, including the FBI. Even the president acknowledg­ed it once, before hurriedly back-tracking.

As to whether the interferen­ce propelled Trump to the White House, well that is a different question – and probably one which will be debated for years to come. This time round, there will be greater scrutiny of online communicat­ions around the election so perhaps less obvious room for Kremlinord­ered shenanigan­s. Yet experts who spoke to The Independen­t’s Oliver Carroll last week suggested that US election systems remain vulnerable to attack. Would Russia risk a direct assault on voting technology though?

Indeed, with Donald Trump having vacillated over whether to be Vladimir Putin’s chum or his enemy, it is not necessaril­y clear what outcome the Russian government might prefer to see in the midterms. The decision of the US apparently to withdraw from the Intermedia­te-range Nuclear Forces Treaty this weekend was certainly met with a frosty reception in Moscow, and will play to the notion that if anybody is shoving the world back to Cold War-era politics, it’s Trump, not Putin.

Neverthele­ss, on Friday the US Department of Justice conirmed that a Russian woman had been indicted on charges related to engaging in “informatio­n warfare against the United States”. Elena Alekseevna Khusyaynov­a, a resident of St Petersburg, is accused of being the operator of Project Lakhta, which sought – according to the US authoritie­s – to “sow discord in the US political system and undermine faith in our democratic institutio­ns”.

Khusyaynov­a and her team of trolls are said to have gone to considerab­le lengths to take on the guise of American political activists, posting social media comments on a range of controvers­ial topics in order to “create political intensity through supporting radical groups and to aggravate the conlict between minorities and the rest of the population”.

Not all the trolls were said to have taken on the same ideologica­l perspectiv­es. Indeed, there is evidence from other examples that such individual­s sometimes operate multiple accounts in order to disagree with themselves: the core aim being simply to create the impression of disunity among the resident population.

According to US investigat­ors, Project Lakhta was bankrolled – to the tune of £27m – by Evgeny Viktorovic­h Prigozhin and two irms under his control (both of which have already been indicted by the Mueller enquiry in relation to 2016 election meddling, along with Prigozhin himself). Prigozhin goes by the moniker “Putin’s cook”, having made his name (and gained Putin’s favour) in the restaurant industry.

On the face of the new charge then, Russian attempts to “game” election discourse in foreign states are continuing apace. European government­s and institutio­ns are bracing themselves for similar interferen­ce with regard to key elections on the continent next year too.

What, however, would Russian meddling mean for the US midterms? If trolls have already been hard at work, and have been spotted – as the charge against Khusyaynov­a would suggest – then their work has arguably been done. After all, the key objective is not to aid the Republican­s but to undermine American faith in democratic government and its institutio­ns.

Indeed, if enough people in the US believe that the activities of Russian actors have the potential to impact the election result, then there will inevitably be room to debate the veracity of the result. The irony is that this will not necessaril­y be to the beneit of the Democrats. In the event that the party’s candidates have a good day on 6 November, Trump will doubtless deploy the same narrative about foreign interferen­ce that many of his opponents did after the presidenti­al election of 2016.

This, in the end, is why government­s and tech corporatio­ns must do more to protect the integrity of electoral processes from external interventi­on: because the victim is not an individual candidate, or even a particular political party, but democracy itself.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain