The Jerusalem Post

Russian outlet’s anti-Clinton videos still up on YouTube

- • By GREG GORDON and PETER STONE

WASHINGTON (TNS) – On Aug. 6, 2016, RT – the US arm of Russia Today – published a video on YouTube featuring the fugitive founder of the transparen­cy site WikiLeaks making what seemed an outlandish claim about Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton.

Under the title “Clinton and ISIS Funded by the Same Money,” Julian Assange held documents purporting to show that clandestin­e financial support had flowed to the Middle Eastern terror group from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, both also big donors to the Clinton Foundation, the global charity she had helped run with her husband, former President Bill Clinton.

The Assange video, one of two that RT posted that day on Google, Inc.’s YouTube subsidiary, had been viewed 1.2 million times as of Wednesday.

That number may still grow. Even amid all the furor about Russia’s exploitati­on of US social media, the video was still available for viewing on YouTube Wednesday as Democratic senators pressed a top official from Google at a hearing to explain why RT maintains a big YouTube presence nine months after US intelligen­ce agencies labeled it a key player in Moscow’s election-year cyberattac­ks on the United States.

Google allowed RT to post a series of hyperbolic and misleading videos about Clinton during the heat of last year’s presidenti­al race, apparently on the basis of the First Amendment – despite the existence of a law barring foreign entities from trying to influence US elections.

“YouTube has become RT’s go-to platform,” Democratic Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia said at a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing Wednesday. He said RT America has posted 1,100 videos to the site.

At separate hearings, that panel and its House counterpar­t heard public testimony from the three goliaths of social media – Google, Facebook, Inc. and Twitter, Inc. – about how Russia used their platforms last year to post content aimed at inflaming Americans’ difference­s and underminin­g Clinton.

“I must say, I don’t think you get it,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-CA, told lawyers for the Silicon Valley companies. “What we’re talking about is a cataclysmi­c change. What we’re talking about is the beginning of cyber warfare. What we’re talking about is a major foreign power with the sophistica­tion and ability to involve themselves in a presidenti­al election and sow conflict and discontent all over this country.”

RT America boasts on its web site that it has rung up 5 billion views on YouTube, more than any other entity.

Google cites free speech in explaining why RT is allowed to operate more than two dozen YouTube channels, many in foreign languages. The company also maintains that RT has yet to violate any of its policies prohibitin­g such content as hate speech, bullying, deceptive practices or language inciting violence.

Last week, Twitter barred RT and Sputnik from buying ads on its platform, citing last January’s intelligen­ce report.

Feinstein asked Google Senior Vice President and General Counsel Kent Walker why the company didn’t remove RT’s “preferred status,” which put it in a group of popular channels marketed to advertiser­s, after the intelligen­ce agencies issued their declassifi­ed report; it noted that RT’s “consistent­ly negative” coverage of Clinton “focused on her leaked emails and accused her of corruption, poor physical and mental health and ties to Islamic extremism.”

Google pulled RT’s premium status in early October, but said that was done only because RT viewership had declined.

“We think that the key to this area is transparen­cy,” Walker testified. “Americans should have access to informatio­n from a wide variety of perspectiv­es, but they should know what they’re getting. And so we already, on Google, provide informatio­n about the government-funded nature of RT. We’re looking at ways to expand that to YouTube and potentiall­y other platforms.” He noted that RT also broadcasts over cable and satellite television stations and advertises in newspapers, magazines and airports.

At a separate hearing on Tuesday before a Senate Judiciary subcommitt­ee, another Google attorney, Richard Salgado, acknowledg­ed that RT earns money from advertisin­g placed on its videos. He said he would advise the panel of the amount at a later date.

Several of RT’s YouTube posts last year took hyperbolic or unfounded shots at Clinton, the then-frontrunne­r in the presidenti­al race.

Besides the one tying Clinton to ISIS, there was another posted the same day headlined: “Julian Assange Special: Do WikiLeaks have the E-mail That’ll Put Clinton in Prison?”

RT’s most widely watched election-related YouTube post, titled “Trump Will Not Be Permitted to Win,” played off Donald Trump’s repeated assertions that the election would be rigged and drew 22 million views, according to the report by four US intelligen­ce agencies.

In his opening statement, Walker told the senators: “We are dealing with difficult questions that balance free expression issues, unpreceden­ted access to informatio­n and the need to provide high quality content to our users. There are no easy answers here, but we are deeply committed to getting this right.”

A Google spokeswoma­n Wednesday declined to comment on the issue of whether RT breached a federal law barring foreign influence on federal elections.

RT America did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The Justice Department recently advised RT’s parent, the company originally known as Russia Today, and another Russian news agency, Sputnik, to register as foreign agents under a law covering foreign-backed entities that seek to influence US policy. State-run media organizati­ons have in the past been exempt from the law’s requiremen­ts.

Mike Carpenter, a former top Pentagon official who specialize­d in Russia matters, told McClatchy that RT and Sputnik favor YouTube because it can reach large and prime audiences. “YouTube is the medium of choice for that segment of the population which is looking for alternativ­e points of view.”

Ironically, Russia learned the value of YouTube for pushing content in part through bitter experience.

“The Russians discovered this to their own chagrin in 2011-12 when You Tube became the repository of videos showing people ballot stuffing in the Russian parliament­ary elections,” Carpenter said; the videos were recorded by concerned citizens using their cell phones.

RT also figures in a Justice Department special counsel’s investigat­ion into Kremlin meddling in the 2016 election because of a lavish anniversar­y gala it hosted in Moscow in late 2015 attended by retired Army Gen. Michael Flynn, who later served briefly as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser. Flynn appeared in a photo seated near Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Flynn, who resigned in February amid controvers­y over his contacts prior to Trump’s inaugurati­on with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, later reported that RT paid him at least $45,000 to speak at the event.

Google, which says it has assigned thousands of people to prevent exploitati­on of its platforms, has avoided the most intense controvers­ies surroundin­g Russia’s social media barrage. The company says it found that Kremlin operatives that bought thousands of ads on Facebook and made thousands of tweets spent only $4,700 on search engine and display ads on its platforms, though it is still investigat­ing.

Many of the Facebook ads were released Wednesday in conjunctio­n with the hearings.

 ?? (Finbarr O’Reilly/Reuters) ?? WIKILEAKS FOUNDER Julian Assange holds a document containing leaked informatio­n at a news conference in London in 2012.
(Finbarr O’Reilly/Reuters) WIKILEAKS FOUNDER Julian Assange holds a document containing leaked informatio­n at a news conference in London in 2012.

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