The Jewish Chronicle

Iran’s global propaganda network threatens the UK

- BY JAKE WALLIS SIMONS, DEPUTY EDITOR, AND NEIL DOYLE

Iran-run websites are trying to destabilis­e British society’

THE STAGGERING scale of Iran’s global disinforma­tion network can be revealed today by the JC, in a dossier that has been passed to GCHQ.

Hundreds of Tehran-based websites and many thousands of social media accounts are spewing out antisemiti­c propaganda, pushing an Iranian agenda and sowing seeds of discord in Western countries.

These sites and accounts — which we forensical­ly traced to the Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps (IRGC) — routinely disseminat­e viciously antisemiti­c material, including cartoons of bloodthirs­ty Israeli soldiers in league with Saudi Arabia and the United States, and extensive Holocaust denial.

In signs of their attempts to destabilis­e British society, the Iran-run sites strategica­lly praised British leftwing figures like Rebecca Long-Bailey and George Galloway, attempted to undermine the authority of the BBC over its coverage of Prince Philip’s death, and carried anti-British cartoons showing UK missiles fired at children.

In March, the JC disclosed Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon’s ties to hardline Tehran sympathise­rs, exposing how Iran is supporting the SNP in an apparent bid to fracture British unity.

In related developmen­ts:

The FBI closed down dozens of Iranian news sites accused of spreading disinforma­tion — including state-owned Press TV and al-Masirah TV, run by Yemen’s pro-Iran Houthi movement — on Tuesday (though several were online again within hours at new domains);

On Friday, Iran elected a controvers­ial new ultra-conservati­ve president, Ebrahim ‘the Butcher’ Raisi, who was responsibl­e for the massacre of 30,000 activists in Iranian prisons in 1988;

The Henry Jackson Society thinktank published a report revealing how Iran is actively interferin­g in British political, cultural and religious life, both in the real world and online, including in Scotland.

Last October, the American Department of Justice made headlines when it announced that it had shut down over 100 web domains traced to the

IRGC. These included “global covert influence campaign” sites with names like Real Progressiv­e Front, American Herald Tribune, Another Western Dawn News and Critical Studies.

George Galloway, the firebrand former MP who contested the Batley and Spen by-election this week, has written for the American Herald Tribune.

Our investigat­ion disclosed that many of the websites shut down by the Department of Justice are still operationa­l, having simply migrated to slightly different web addresses.

The disinforma­tion sites target numerous countries in different languages, representi­ng a concerted Iranian effort to influence hearts and minds across the globe.

The scale and depth of Tehran’s online propaganda operation is revealed as Western powers continue to negotiate a return to President Obama’s nuclear deal under his former ally Joe Biden.

While American and European diplomats sit around a table with regime representa­tives, western enforcemen­t agencies are locked in a game of cat-andmouse with propaganda sites that pop up faster than they can be closed down.

In a 100-page report published this month, the Henry Jackson Society disclosed how Tehran possesses a “determined network of supporters within Parliament” who lobby for its geopolitic­al interests.

A number of British charities, schools and mosques have ties to the regime, it said, and these real-world efforts are supported by a wave of online propaganda.

The report’s author, Dr Paul Stott, said: “The Iranian government is a hostile one.

“It holds British citizens hostage, using them as bargaining chips, and seeks to interfere in the constituti­onal arrangemen­ts of the UK via the tool of online disinforma­tion.”

He added: “Regardless of the negotiatio­ns between the West and Iran over its nuclear ambitions, Iran also seeks to weaken our social cohesion.”

Key nodes in Tehran’s disinforma­tion network, uncovered by the JC, include the Internatio­nal Union of Virtual Media (IUVM), an umbrella organisati­on that spreads Iranian government narratives and spawns new sites and social media accounts.

Our investigat­ion found that IUVM is one of a series of IRGC-linked ‘archive’ sites that contain a wealth of material — including articles, pictures, cartoons and videos — pushing an Iranian agenda. These free resources are used to feed new pro-regime sites and social media ‘bots’ (automated accounts that masquerade as human users), some of which pose as journalist­s or official news sources.

The IRGC uses social media ‘botnets’ to amplify antisemiti­c and anti-Israel narratives in an attempt to sway public opinion via Twitter in countries across the globe.

A ‘botnet’ is a coordinate­d army of bots used to echo and magnify state propaganda to give it greater impact. They tweet and retweet messages with identical text or common themes en masse, to get certain topics trending.

Detecting bots has become increasing­ly difficult as spammers, hackers and propagandi­sts use new techniques to evade detection by the big tech firms.

Articles in the IUVM archive used as ammunition for such online assaults include: ‘Lifting the siege of the Palestinia­n people is now important and necessary’, and ‘the crimes of the Israel regime are a war crime that must be punished according to internatio­nal law’.

Another archive, styled as an online Islamic ‘academy’, contained religious tracts, speeches and articles written by Shi’ite clerics, to aid in the Islamic propaganda cyber war worldwide.

The IUVM news website appears at first glance to resemble a legitimate outlet. Its English language version, IUVM Press, was shut down by the Department of Justice last year, but remains live after switching its name from ‘.net’ to ‘.news’.

This week, its top stories were headlined: ‘The USA is the world’s mass destructio­n machine’ and ‘Putting lipstick on a pig: Why Washington is fawning over Israel’s new government’.

It has attempted to sow further discord in the West by peddling conspiracy theories about Covid-19, blaming America for the virus.

The IUVM also focusses on other regions, producing Syria-related propaganda on both Facebook and YouTube while evading social media moderators by adding a hyphen to its name. Another key node in Iran’s disinforma­tion network, which focusses on Britain, is Vision Plus, a TV station linked to the IRGC.

In a prominent article last year, it praised hard-left Labour Party MP Rebecca Long-Bailey for saying that she would “never apologise” for supporting the Palestinia­n cause.

Another story, published on 25 April, criticised the BBC for “moment-to-moment coverage of the death of a 99-year-old man (the Duke of Edinburgh)” when Brit

Tehran possesses a determined lobby network in Parliament’

ish missiles had allegedly killed two children in Yemen.

The story appeared timed to damage trust in the corporatio­n by capitalisi­ng on Ofcom complaints about the extensive coverage of Prince Phillip’s death.

Like other Iranian propaganda outlets, Vision Plus has outwitted enforcemen­t agencies by changing its name.

It was originally called MWF Press. The station still goes by that name on Telegram, with 6,501 subscriber­s.

Although its Twitter account has been suspended, it has almost 25,000 followers on Instagram and 2,500 on Facebook. Its YouTube channel, The Fact Series, has about 1,100 subscriber­s.

One of its videos featured an interview with the controvers­ial British journalist Yvonne Ridley, who shot to fame in 2001 after being captured by the Taliban in Afghanista­n.

Ms Ridley, who now has more than 45,000 Twitter followers, converted to Islam and became a virulent critic of Israel and the United States. She is a former chair of the national council of George Galloway’s now-defunct Respect Party.

Mr Galloway, who was sacked from TalkRadio after claiming Tottenham Hotspur’s Champions League defeat meant there would be “no Israel flags on the cup”, was polling at six per cent in Batley and Spen in the run-up to the vote this week.

Iran’s online network is not limited to attacks on Britain and the West. Another of its key assets is the Iraqbased Al-Ghadeer TV, now active under

Iran seeks to weaken British social cohesion by online means’ a ‘.net’ address after the original ‘.tv’ version was shut down in December.

Al-Ghadeer is a satellite TV station owned by the Badr Organisati­on, a pro-Iranian militia which has been compared with Hezbollah in Lebanon.

As the Badr Brigades, the IRGCbacked Shia force attacked US troops after the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

The Tehran-run website trumpets blatant Iranian propaganda, advertisin­g the supposed success of the country’s ‘Fakhra’ anti-Covid vaccine.

It also claimed that Iranian electricit­y firms were poised to win big contracts in Iraq, and suggested that “the Zionists want revenge on the Iranian people” due to Tehran’s supposed success in getting sanctions eased.

Al-Ghadeer operates at least eight social media accounts. On Instagram, it has 200,000 followers, while on YouTube

it has nearly 85,000 subscriber­s.

More than 64,000 people are following its page on Facebook, and it has 1,270 fans on TikTok. The outlet also has 19,000 subscriber­s to its Telegram channel, which often disseminat­es virulently anti-Israel material.

Its main Twitter account, which has pumped out over 80,000 tweets, has 390,000 followers.

An analysis shows that many of these are bots, amplifying tweets and getting hashtags trending in an effort to manipulate public opinion.

This was seen in May, when along with other outlets, it started pushing the #QudsDay hashtag.

Quds Day is an annual event initiated

Apple and Google are hosting IRGC linked apps on their stores’

by Iran in 1978 to express hatred of Israel and the West and support for the Palestinia­ns. It is known for its volatile crowds and flag-burning.

On 7 May, Al-Ghadeer tweeted comments made by Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khanenei describing Israel as a “terrorist camp” hostile to the Muslim world, including the hashtag #QudsDay. Iran’s state-owned television outlet, Press TV, began tweeting in English using the hashtag. It was joined by other Iranian media outlets, including Iran Internatio­nal, Tasnim News Agency, Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), ILKE and Mehr News Agency.The hashtag was tweeted tens of thousands of times. An analysis of 782 of the most popular showed that 282 were posted by bot accounts. 400 were judged to be sent by humans, with 100 unclassifi­ed.

Tens of thousands of genuine Twitter users picked up the hashtag, including BBC Hindi, which has 3.5 million followers; BBC Arabic presenter Rasha Qandeel, who has more than 270,000 followers; BBC Middle East reporter Sebastian Usher, and Dutch ex-MEP Bas Belder. This greatly extended its reach and authority.

Many Quds Day messages were retweets of an account called Soureh Design, which claims to be run by a student in Tehran and showed apparently huge pro-Iran marches in Yemen.

Soureh Design has tweeted 450,000 times since September 2013. This equals 160 tweets a day, or one every nine minutes round the clock. One of the highest profile accounts that retweeted the post on Yemen was Socialist Voice, which names Jeremy Corbyn’s son Tommy as one of its 78,500 followers.

Our investigat­ion also found that Apple and Google are hosting IRGClinked apps, including one representi­ng the al-Masirah TV satellite channel. Run by Yemen’s pro-Iran Houthi movement, its site was seized this week. The tech giants are also offering an app developed by a Revolution­ary Guards front called the Iraqi Radio and Television Union, which enables access to live media broadcasts.

The findings raise questions about the role of Silicon Valley in aiding the spread of propaganda, and whether they have breached financial sanctions on the Iranian regime.

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 ??  ?? Top and bottom: A selection of anti-Israel and anti-Western images found on websites run by the propaganad­a wing of Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards
Top and bottom: A selection of anti-Israel and anti-Western images found on websites run by the propaganad­a wing of Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards
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 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? Left: The new Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi. Top: An Iran propaganda cartoon linking Israel with American police brutality. Bottom: An image from an Iranian disinforma­tion site seeking to undermine British confidence in the BBC with images of UK missiles being fired at children in Yemen
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES Left: The new Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi. Top: An Iran propaganda cartoon linking Israel with American police brutality. Bottom: An image from an Iranian disinforma­tion site seeking to undermine British confidence in the BBC with images of UK missiles being fired at children in Yemen
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