The Peterborough Examiner

NATO told Russian election meddling an evolving threat

- KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX — A NATO draft report says the problem of Russian meddling in democratic elections continues to evolve and alliance members must be ready to meet the threat.

U.S. Democratic congresswo­man Susan Davis told a NATO science and technology committee meeting in Halifax Sunday that Russian cyber interferen­ce comes largely in the form of disinforma­tion that has specific goals in mind.

“Disinforma­tion campaigns spread false informatio­n about our institutio­ns and about our politics and they seek to diminish public faith in liberal democratic institutio­ns and undermine the very fabric of our societies,” said Davis.

She said Russian interferen­ce was detected in the early stages of the recent midterm elections in her country, although not on the scale seen during the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Davis said tech companies shut down hundreds of fake accounts that aimed to disrupt elections.

“I want to emphasize that the accounts identified and deleted were not only Russian, but also Iranian. And moreover, the U.S. government now also believes that other states are emulating Russia’s tactics including China.”

In a report updated since first presented at a meeting in Warsaw last May, Davis urges NATO member government­s and parliament­s to adopt measures such as regular risk assessment­s of election infrastruc­ture and to consider mandating post-election security audits among other initiative­s. She said allied countries should strive to establish “common best practices.”

Discussion­s during the weekend parliament­ary assembly meeting have also focused on other measures including the applicatio­n of sanctions and the use of NATO Article 4, said Davis. Seldom used, a member state under Article 4 can convene a meeting of the alliance to “consult” when it feels its independen­ce or security are threatened.

Davis said last year’s election in the Netherland­s can serve as a “great example” of what successful adaptation can achieve.

“The Netherland­s were able to secure public trust in their last elections by actively working to make them secure,” she said. “Our Dutch friends held elections without significan­t disruption and I think their thorough preparatio­n is really a key factor.”

Davis noted that prior to the election the Dutch government reached out to the U.S. government in an attempt to learn lessons from the 2016 elections in the U.S. She said it also moved to ban the electronic counting of ballots and put in place a factchecki­ng function for newspapers that citizens could refer to.

“We have to conduct regular risk assessment­s of election infrastruc­ture to remain abreast of the emerging vulnerabil­ities and develop strategies to secure them and recognize that our adversarie­s are always changing their tools as well,” said Davis.

She added that government­s can’t just act alone and will also have to partner with the commercial technology sector to secure elections. Davis advocated for better informatio­n sharing between government and nongovernm­ent sectors on cyber and hybrid threats.

“The reality is there is no substitute for that. That is something critical as we move forward.”

Giorgi Kandelaki, of the associate Georgian delegation, told the committee he was the victim of a Russian-inspired disinforma­tion campaign on Facebook, in which he was falsely quoted as making negative comments about the Orthodox church.

He said he was later told by a Facebook official that his experience with did not violate the site’s community standards.

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