China Daily

Washington is the global champion of disinforma­tion

- Chen Weihua The author is chief of China Daily EU Bureau based in Brussels. chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

Ever wonder why you have read and heard so much negative news about China in the last few years? Some examples: The Belt and Road Initiative is a debt trap; China has been committing cultural genocide in the Xinjiang and Xizang; China is the biggest threat to regional and global security.

An explosive Reuters’ report recently revealed just the tip of the iceberg of the reckless US disinforma­tion and smear campaign against China.

According to the report, former US president Donald Trump authorized the Central Intelligen­ce Agency in 2019 to launch a clandestin­e campaign on Chinese social media to turn public opinion in China against the government.

According to three former US officials, the CIA formed a small team of operatives who used fake internet identities to spread negative narratives about the Chinese government while “leaking” disparagin­g intelligen­ce to overseas news outlets.

The fact that the US administra­tion and the CIA have declined to comment on the Reuters report shows a tacit admission of guilt by them. Lest we forget, the US has spared no efforts in recent years to accuse countries such as China and Russia of spreading disinforma­tion. If you search on the internet, you will get innumerabl­e such stories, reports, seminars and speeches by US officials, from President Joe Biden to Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

The Global Engagement Center created by the US State Department in 2016 and now headed by James Rubin, a former State Department spokesman and ex-husband of CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour, claims its mission is to fight foreign disinforma­tion, but its real aim is perhaps to help maintain the US’ position as the global leader of disinforma­tion.

The US’ news outlets and think tanks are often used as geopolitic­al tools in such government disinforma­tion campaigns.

Shortly before the Reuters’ exposure, the US intelligen­ce community released its annual threat assessment, accusing China of trying to influence the 2024 US presidenti­al election.

The above developmen­ts are nothing but the US administra­tion’s efforts to cover its covert disinforma­tion campaign against China.

The Reuters report is similar to the exposure of the US Republican Senate memo in April 2020 which directed its members to blame China for the COVID-19 outbreak and avoid discussing the then president Donald Trump’s handling of the public health crisis.

There is no doubt that the US is the global leader of disinforma­tion. In fact, the disinforma­tion and smear campaigns by the Democrats and Republican­s against each other in the run-up to the 2024 presidenti­al election show how skillful US politician­s are in playing such dirty games.

Biden surely knows how dirty the accusation­s and counter-accusation­s are because, according to a CNN poll in July 2023, 69 percent of Republican members and Republican­leaning voters said his win in 2020 presidenti­al election was not legitimate.

The US’ news outlets and think tanks are often used as geopolitic­al tools in such government disinforma­tion campaigns. CNN national security correspond­ent Kylie Atwood said, rather confessed, in a Brookings talk in March 2021 that “we’re going to use all the rhetoric we have to make them (China) look like the bad guy on the world stage”, with fellow participan­ts Ryan Hass and Evan Osnos nodding their head.

The US possesses the most powerful disinforma­tion weapons given its dominance of the global media landscape, including its control of popular social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and X (formerly Twitter).

It’s true that the US administra­tion’s disinforma­tion campaign targeting China has somewhat succeeded in fooling many US people as well as people in countries which are US allies and believe in the lies about China and Russia, because Washington wields outsized influence thanks to the reach of its media outlets and think tanks.

When I asked the European Commission spokesman last week about Reuters’ revelatory report and its impact on the European Union, he declined to give any direct answer. Nonetheles­s, the Reuters’ exposure is an awakening call for the EU and other economies which have for too long played along with the US and thus promoted the US’ disinforma­tion campaign against China.

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