Kuwait Times

Russia propaganda tools in US election

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WASHINGTON: Fake social media accounts, rallies for and against Donald Trump, paid protesters: Russia managed a vast propaganda operation to support the Trump campaign in the 2016 presidenti­al election, according to a court indictment. Special Counsel Robert Mueller, investigat­ing possible collusion between the campaign and Russia along with other potential wrongdoing, on Friday charged 13 Russians for an alleged conspiracy to defraud the United States. The indictment details a wide-ranging multi-million-dollar enterprise to interfere with and “sow discord” in the American political system using social media. Here are facts about the alleged operation, as outlined in the indictment:

The instigator­s

The campaign began in 2014. It was managed by Internet Research Agency LLC, a company based in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and financed by Yevgeniy Viktorovic­h Prigozhin, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin. Russian media had previously reported on the company and said it was believed to have ties to Russian intelligen­ce.The Agency aimed, in part, to carry out “informatio­n warfare against the United States of America” through fake US identities on internet-based media and social media. Propagandi­sts were told to create “political intensity through supporting radical groups, users dissatisfi­ed with (the) social and economic situation and opposition social movements.” Starting from the Republican and Democratic primaries, the Agency worked to favor Trump and denigrate his Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton, with a budget that by September 2016 exceeded $1.2 million a month.

Fake accounts

The Agency created pages, which sometimes rivaled each other, on Facebook and Instagram about immigratio­n, race relations and religion. Among the page names were: Secured Borders, Blacktivis­t, United Muslims of America and Army of Jesus. The company also controlled “numerous” Twitter accounts designed to appear as if they were operated by Americans. One even purported to belong to the Tennessee state Republican Party. It issued false informatio­n about an inquiry into electoral fraud during the Democratic primaries in North Carolina. There were election-related hashtags including #Trump2016 and #Hillary4Pr­ison. Several days before the ballot, the Blacktivis­t Instagram account called on voters to back Jill Stein of the Green Party. At about the same time, United Muslims of America posted a message which said “most of the American Muslim voters refuse to vote for Hillary Clinton.” Ad purchases

The Agency and its staff, concealing their Russian identities, “began to produce, purchase, and post advertisem­ents” on social media and elsewhere online “advocating for the election of then-candidate Trump or expressly opposing Clinton.”To pay for the ads, they fraudulent­ly opened US bank accounts with fake identity papers, and used PayPal and cryptocurr­encies. US law forbids foreigners from buying political ads. They also “organized and coordinate­d political rallies,” promoted through their fake social media accounts but also by reaching out to large social media groups focused on US politics.

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