The Day

Facebook takedowns show Russian activity targeted Biden

- By TONY ROMM and ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER

Facebook on Monday said it removed a network of Russian-backed accounts that posed as locals weighing in on political issues in swing states, praising President Donald Trump and attacking former Vice President Joe Biden, illustrati­ng that the familiar threat of Russian interferen­ce looms over the next U.S. presidenti­al race.

Facebook said the network bears the hallmark of the same Kremlin-backed group that interfered in the 2016 election by sowing social discord, boosting Trump and attacking Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. The new disinforma­tion campaign appears to follow the same playbook.

This time, a coordinate­d group of Russian accounts that appears to show some links to the Internet Research Agency took largely to Facebook’s photo-sharing app, Instagram, to post content this year about U.S. politics and memes targeting Democratic presidenti­al contenders.

The operation demonstrat­ed a sophistica­ted understand­ing of the schisms within the

Democratic Party as it labors to choose a nominee to face Trump next November. One Russian account, which portrayed itself as a black voter in Michigan, used the #blacklives­matter hashtag to hammer Biden for his gaffes about racial issues. Some of the accounts boosted one of his leftwing rivals, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

The Russian network was one of four takedowns Facebook announced Monday; it also disabled three misleading campaigns originatin­g in Iran. Researcher­s said the efforts demonstrat­ed how those seeking to interfere in U.S. politics continue to exploit radioactiv­e topics, including racial and religious fault lines. And they said it offered fresh evidence that foreign actors are pursuing new platforms that rely on a steady stream of images, making detection more difficult despite Facebook’s heightened investment­s in election security.

“We are seeing again that the aim of the Russians is not exclusivel­y to favor one candidate over another but to create divisivene­ss within the electorate over all,” said Paul Barrett, deputy director of New

York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. “The reason that networks of phony accounts are drawn to Instagram is because disinforma­tion is increasing­ly visual in nature, and that’s what Instagram specialize­s in.”

The disclosure from Facebook served as more evidence of what Trump has repeatedly questioned — that Russian actors not only meddled in the 2016 election, but are continuing their efforts to interfere in American democracy. The task of safeguardi­ng U.S. elections from interferen­ce by Russia and other foreign actors has been a source of tension in the Trump administra­tion, with the president repeatedly calling the allegation­s of Russian involvemen­t in 2016 a “hoax” and top security officials being forced to tip-toe around the issue.

Multiple U.S. investigat­ions have confirmed the extent of Russia’s attempt to interfere in the 2016 presidenti­al race. Robert Mueller, the former special counsel, obtained multiple indictment­s last year of individual­s affiliated with the Internet Research Agency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States