Irish Independent

Former Soviet bloc propagandi­st sounds dire warning on fake news in Trump ’s America

- Faye Flam

FROM pizza-parlour paedophile rings to Sharia law in Florida, viral fake news stories often seem propelled by their own prepostero­usness. It’s a different matter for profession­ally produced disinforma­tion. That, I learned from a former pro, requires a core of logic and verifiable fact.

Larry Martin, a retired professor who lives in the seaside town of Rockport, Massachuse­tts, USA, used to be Ladislav Bittman, deputy commander of the Department for Active Measures and Disinforma­tion in the Soviet-directed Czechoslov­ak intelligen­ce service. To create the kind of disinforma­tion that changes the world, he told me, you need a story that’s at least 60, 70 or even 80pc true. Even well-educated people will swallow untruth without too many questions if it’s plausible and it reinforces their existing beliefs.

Today, Martin is worried about the fate of his adopted country – not just because of the epidemic of fake news, but because so many citizens have lost trust in the profession­al editors and reporters who spend their days trying to sort fact from fiction. He’s far from the only one concerned, of course. But Martin has a unique insight into the issue: after all, part of his old job was to sow that kind of distrust in then enemy countries.

Martin (then Bittman) was recruited to the intelligen­ce service in 1954, right after he’d graduated from Charles University in Prague. In an interview at his home in Rockport, he recalled how, in 1964, he was chosen to head the new disinforma­tion department, a job that involved forging documents and personal correspond­ence.

But before long, he started to have doubts about the Soviets, whose advisers directed Czech intelligen­ce and approved all their plans. In 1968, after their tanks rolled in and quashed an attempted Czech revolution, he defected to the United States. There, the onetime

propagandi­st reinvented himself as a journalism professor, teaching aspiring reporters at Boston University how not to be duped.

While disinforma­tion campaigns often include an element of truth, he says, they’re designed to lead their targets to a false conclusion. Take one of the successful projects he describes in detail in his book, ‘The Deception Game’. He said he and his colleagues found several hundred German-born people unhappy to be living behind the Iron Curtain. They were told they could emigrate to West Germany if they would agree to act as spies. As expected, once across the border, most of them immediatel­y admitted they’d been recruited to be spies – thus inadverten­tly becoming decoy spies, who effectivel­y drew attention away from real spies who were already operating in the country.

His most memorable scheme was aimed at West Germany, where Nazi war criminals were still at large in 1964. That year, he created a fake story to call attention to a cache of real Nazi documents. “One of our objectives was to create rifts between West Germany and its neighbours – France, Holland and Belgium – by reviving the spectre of Nazism,” he said.

Bittman was a diving hobbyist, and he recognised a disinforma­tion opportunit­y when he heard from friends that a local TV crew was making a documentar­y about folklore surroundin­g the Black Lake, some 100km southwest of Prague. Nazis had retreated to that region near the end of the war and hidden Nazi war plans and other documents had turned up nearby.

As part of the documentar­y, divers were supposed to explore the lake and retrieve some mysterious objects they’d seen at the bottom during a previous dive. Before the cameramen arrived, Bittman got there first, diving to the location of the objects and leaving some old German military cases filled with blank paper.

Once the divers brought the cases to the surface as planned, a border guard and intelligen­ce officer who came to the filming warned that the mysterious items could contain explosives and whisked them away, promising to X-ray them. Once out of public view, the intelligen­ce officers replaced the blank paper with real Nazi documents which, among other things, detailed executions in France and the Netherland­s. Then they arranged a press conference where the Czech minister of the interior would reveal the documents.

The papers were legitimate, but they were also old; the intelligen­ce services had held them for some 20 years, since the end of the war. They just never made them public – until the right moment struck. People sometimes ask why they didn’t just come forward with the documents, he said. His answer: No one would have paid any attention without the sensationa­l story. The plan worked. The story was picked up all across Europe, including in the English-language press. He believes the change in public attitudes pushed West Germans to defer an impending statute of limitation­s on prosecutin­g war criminals.

In 1994, Bittman – then going by Martin – was finally released from a death sentence his home country had imposed on him for more than 20 years. He asked to see the file they’d collected on him. It was hundreds of pages long, with informatio­n on his political leanings, his family, the Jewish family of his first wife and their improbable survival hiding out in the mountains. Some of it was true, he says. Some of it was made up.

AFTER he retired from Boston University in 1996, Martin said the journalism department lost interest in disinforma­tion. The Cold War was supposed to be over. But in Russia, he said, Vladimir Putin is still playing deception games.

“Russians think long-term,” he said. Now instead of forgery, they can engage in hacking, he said. This can be particular­ly effective because genuine documents – usually personal emails –can be cherry-picked to push a particular agenda. Disinforma­tion and propaganda have always existed, but rarely have deceivers enjoyed such a strong upper hand.

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