The Freeman

Disinfo campaigns target key Ukraine arm... Western support

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From images of fake anti-Ukraine billboards to posts showing false graffiti against Ukraine's leader, pro-Russian disinforma­tion online is targeting Western backing after two years of war.

AFP's fact-checkers have debunked false content that is intended to support or encourage the idea of a growing public fatigue in Europe and the United States.

These campaigns can often take aim at already combustibl­e topics like migration or political affiliatio­ns --topics that could further heat up as June's European Union elections approach.

The disinforma­tion efforts "create the idea that European and American money is being sent unnecessar­ily," said Valentin Chatelet, research associate for Atlantic Council's Digital Analysis Laboratory (DFRLab).

"There is always a desire to torpedo negotiatio­ns... especially with Western players because they are the main financial backers and arms suppliers," Chatelet added.

European Union leaders in early February overcame months of opposition from Hungarian leader Viktor Orban to agree on 50 billion euros ($54 billion) of aid for Ukraine, in a move they hailed as a strong message to Russia.

Across the Atlantic, fresh funding for Ukraine from its biggest backer has gotten snared in domestic US politics in an election year.

The disinforma­tion aims to "erode European support for Ukraine... maligning and scapegoati­ng Ukrainian refugees," says US-based political researcher Elina Treyger.

Specifical­ly, the campaigns highlight the economic and energy fallout on Europeans of the war sanctions against Russia, Treyger added.

Existing problems

Pro-Russian disinforma­tion is most effective when it builds on existing and divisive issues like immigratio­n and purchasing power, experts say.

"The most successful narratives are the ones that tap into something that's already an issue, it's much harder to build from scratch," said Treyger.

"By multiplyin­g the content so much, you'll inevitably hit your target", agreed Jakub Kalensky of the European Centre of Excellence for Combating Hybrid Threats (Hybrid CoE).

When the war in Ukraine began, for example, the Middle East and Africa were targeted with tailor-made narratives based on anti-American, anti-Western and colonial sentiments, explained associate professor Christine Dugoin-Clement from IAE Paris.

Another tactic is to divert journalist­s with informatio­n overload.

One campaign, the so-called "Operation Matryoshka", has aimed to keep journalist­s busy by spreading anti-Ukraine fake news and then challengin­g Western media to verify it.

Another extensive operation, the "Doppelgang­er" operation, which was attributed to Russia by French intelligen­ce, uses visuals that mimic Western media.

European elections

The widespread use of pro-Russian disinforma­tion has also impacted elections in Europe, with fear mounting ahead of the European Parliament's June elections.

"There will be disinforma­tion operations on Ukraine (and) on a whole host of current European issues to promote a conservati­ve or nationalis­t agenda", said Chatelet.

From December 2023 onwards, a vast "pro-Russian disinforma­tion campaign" in Germany created more than 50,000 fake X-accounts (formerly Twitter) to stir up anger about the country's support for Ukraine, according to German daily Der Spiegel.

The Russian Ministry of Defense claimed it "eliminated" around 60 fighters, mainly "French mercenarie­s", in a strike in northeaste­rn Ukraine's Kharkiv in January.

In the wake of these accusation­s, several lists, including one claiming to reveal the identity of around 30 "dead French mercenarie­s", were broadcast by Telegram channels and pro-Kremlin activists. French volunteers in Ukraine denied the allegation­s, three of them directly to AFP.

Théo Marie-Courtois Agence France-Presse

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