Daily Mail

PUTIN’S LYING MACHINE

REVEALED: Russia’s spewing out ruthless propaganda from a Moscow-funded TV station – right next to Westminste­r

- by Neil Tweedie

The 16th floor of Millbank Tower, and Vladimir Putin is pumping out truth — of the Russian kind. here, a team of journalist­s enjoying commanding views of the Palace of Westminste­r, the London eye and Thames house, home of MI5, are busy at computer terminals and video mixing desks, preparing bulletins and programmes and telling the news Kremlin- style.

State- of- the- art equipment allows for slick, sophistica­ted graphics that mimic the output of respectabl­e internatio­nal news broadcaste­rs such as the BBC, CNN and France 24.

But there is nothing respectabl­e about Russia Today, known by the more friendly acronym RT, whose UK offices these are.

From the tower block in which New Labour moulded the news agenda 20 years ago, another agenda is being peddled, one serving a foreign master with no love for Britain.

RT is a direct mouthpiece for the Russian government, its global operations funded by the Kremlin to the tune of some £200 million yearly, part of a media campaign waged relentless­ly to undermine confidence in democracy and sow discord in countries regarded by Moscow as adversarie­s.

In her speech at the Lord Mayor’s banquet in the City of London on Monday, Theresa May mounted an outspoken attack on President Putin’s ‘ fake news’, accusing the Kremlin of ‘weaponisin­g informatio­n’.

In one of the strongest verbal attacks on Russia in recent years, the Prime Minister warned: ‘We know what you are doing.’

RT is a formidable operation, broadcasti­ng to some 100 countries via satellite television and the internet, and now featuring tailormade programmin­g for U.S. and UK viewers, as well as services in French, Spanish and Arabic. But this is not about informatio­n — it’s about disinforma­tion.

RT is just one component in what Russian intelligen­ce refers to as an ‘active measures’ campaign so effective that it may have influenced to a substantia­l degree the outcome of the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election, propelling Donald Trump into the White house at the expense of hillary Clinton.

Be it RT broadcasti­ng on multichann­el television or its sister news agency Sputnik, which has an office in edinburgh, on the internet, be it social media campaigns on Facebook and Twitter, or the hacking of emails belonging to Mrs Clinton, there is but one end. And that is the furtheranc­e of Putin’s foreign and domestic aims. RUSSIA

Today’s diet is a curious mix. Outlandish conspiracy theories promoted by cranks masqueradi­ng as serious commentato­rs vie with more subtle coverage pushing the Russian line on Syria, Ukraine and elsewhere.

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, American philosophe­r and social commentato­r Noam Chomsky and former Baywatch bombshell Pamela Anderson have all graced RT’s programmes at some time or another. hosts include the veteran political maverick George Galloway and, curiously, former CNN flagship interviewe­r Larry King.

Now there is a new star in Putin’s media firmament. It was announced last week that Scotland’s former First Minister, the SNP’s Alex Salmond, is to host a new discussion programme on RT covering politics, entertainm­ent and business.

Mr Salmond justifies his acceptance of ‘Moscow gold’ by pointing out that no fewer than 50 Labour MPs, 37 Conservati­ves and 17 SNP members have appeared on RT in the past two years. And he promises ‘total editorial control’.

But political opponents — and several fellow SNP politician­s — have attacked his decision to consort with Putin as an ‘astonishin­g lack of judgment’. Nicola Sturgeon, Salmond’s protege who succeeded him as First Minister, said she would have advised against the deal, had she been consulted.

In the looking-glass world of RT, accuracy is a flexible commodity. At one time or another, we have been told that 9/11 was an inside job perpetrate­d by the American government, and that the BBC stage-managed a bogus chemical attack in Syria to discredit the regime of Russian ally President Bashar al-Assad.

We’ve also been informed that the Malaysian airliner downed by a missile over eastern Ukraine in 2014 with great loss of life was the responsibi­lity of the Ukrainian government and not, as is generally accepted, the work of Russianbac­ked separatist­s.

The U. S. congress has been hearing this month about the extent of ‘ active measures’ instructed by Putin in early 2016 to influence the race for the White house, fuelled by his fear and distrust of Mrs Clinton.

The U.S. intelligen­ce community has judged with ‘high confidence’ that Putin did indeed order a campaign of mainstream media, social media and hacking to influence the U.S. vote. The Trump administra­tion has subsequent­ly been dogged by allegation­s of collusion with Moscow, fuelled by disclosure­s of links between the Russians and the presidenti­al campaign team.

Last week, Trump appeared to accept an assurance by Putin that he had ordered no such campaign, saying his Russian opposite number was ‘insulted’ by such a suggestion. But the U.S. President has since rowed back on his remark, reaffirmin­g his confidence in his own intelligen­ce services.

The sharp end of the Kremlin’s global disinforma­tion campaign is to be found in the Internet Research Agency in St Petersburg, colourfull­y known as the Troll Factory, where young operatives labour to hack sites, create bogus news sites and pump out fake news and social media messages.

ATWeeT in March from this Troll Factory (or another very similar setup) — so it is believed — sought to stoke racial tensions in the UK by featuring a woman in a hijab speaking on her mobile phone and apparently ignoring a victim of the Westminste­r Bridge terrorist attack.

In fact, the woman had been traumatise­d by the incident and was phoning her family to tell them she was safe.

The bogus tweet, which went viral, purported to come from a resident of Texas under the Twitter handle South Lone Star, but had been generated by Russian internet trolls. Such trolls also posted anti-immigratio­n and pro-Brexit messages around the time of the eU referendum.

Items on RT and Sputnik, which usually command only small audiences, are turbo-boosted on social media in concerted campaigns which attract hundreds of thousands of views.

RT’s TV audience in the UK is tiny — less than one per cent — but its real power lies on YouTube, where its output is enjoyed by some two million subscriber­s. Viewers are initially lured to watch it by video footage of tsunamis and

other dramatic visual events, which may then lead them on to more politicall­y sensitive items.

Margarita Simonyan, editor-inchief of RT, is quite unapologet­ic about the TV station’s ultimate loyalties. ‘The word “propaganda” has a very negative connotatio­n, but indeed, there is not a single internatio­nal foreign TV channel that is doing something other than promotion of the values of the country that it is broadcasti­ng from,’ she says. ‘When Russia is at war, we are, of course, on Russia’s side.’

Simonyan is one of numerous RT executives with close links to the Moscow establishm­ent. In recent years, her in- tray has filled with complaints from the British media regulator Ofcom, accusing RT’s operation of repeatedly violating rules on impartiali­ty and producing broadcasts on Ukraine, Syria and elsewhere that are ‘materially misleading’.

Yet little is done to curb its activities. ‘The most egregious

violations by RT tend to occur when it is covering conflicts, such as Ukraine and Syria, in which the Russian government is directly involved,’ according to Ben Nimmo of the Atlantic Council think-tank.

Founded in 2005, RT was tasked specifical­ly by Putin, a former KGB officer, with ending ‘Anglo- Saxon’ hegemony in internatio­nal broadcasti­ng. Part of active measures is ‘decomposit­ion’, which involves the destructio­n of personal reputation­s and the cohesion and influence of target nations.

This can be seen in Scotland, where RT’s sister organisati­on Sputnik, which broadcasts on the internet from its bureau in Edinburgh, produces stories aimed at underminin­g the Union and the British nuclear deterrent, based on the Clyde.

RT itself has been anxious to draw parallels between the nationalis­t movements in Scotland and Catalonia, stories aimed at keeping the independen­ce debate alive north of the border. A diminished UK with no nuclear force is, of course, a prime aim of Putin and his inner circle, 70 per cent of whom are drawn from the ranks of the intelligen­ce services.

To add a veneer of respectabi­lity, RT has recruited British journalist­s, including Rory Suchet, son of former ITN newsreader John Suchet.

But it is understood that RT is finding it increasing­ly difficult to recruit experience­d journalist­s in the West because of its reputation as a Kremlin mouthpiece.

There is a similar problem with guests, most mainstream politician­s in Britain now preferring to keep their distance.

Jeremy Corbyn, a regular face on RT before his election as Labour leader, now largely avoids the station, despite the allegedly pro-Russian sympathies of his spin doctor, Seumas Milne.

But Shadow Lord Chancellor and Left- wing MP Richard Burgon is a regular guest, as are Ukip’s Nigel Farage and Julian Assange, who broadcasts via video link from his refuge in the Ecuadorean London embassy. Some MPs have even received fees to appear, including Labour’s Chris Williamson and Rosie Duffield and Tory David T.C. Davies, the backbench MP for Monmouth (not to be confused with the Brexit Secretary), who between them received £3,000 in total according to the Register of Members’ Interests.

Why elected members feel it is appropriat­e to profit from appearing on a foreign propaganda station is unclear.

There is certainly disquiet among some of those who have worked for RT about its editorial standards.

Sara Firth, a British journalist, resigned from RT after being pressured into twisting the story of the shooting down of Malaysian flight MH17 to blame Ukraine rather than a Russian surface-to-air system operated by pro-Russian rebels. ‘Our coverage of the MH17 plane disaster was the final nudge,’ she explained following her resignatio­n. ‘I’d been really unhappy for a long time at RT. I just couldn’t do it any more. WE

WERE running an eye- witness account that made an accusation against Ukraine and we had a correspond­ent in the studio who was asked to produce something about a plane that had been shot down at some point in the past, and had been the fault of Ukraine.

‘In other words, to suggest that the Ukrainian government had form for doing such a thing.

‘ I’ve been in that position myself before, where you’re asked to bring up some piece of obscure informatio­n that implies something that fits with the RT agenda. And you think, well, it’s not outright lying but it has no relation to what’s happening and shouldn’t be run at a time when a story of that size is breaking — a news story that is so sensitive. It’s abhorrent and indefensib­le.’

Nikolay Bogachikhi­n, RT news chief in London, was unapologet­ic during a BBC interview when speaking about the channel’s Middle East coverage.

‘We are bringing stories that matter from the Russian perspectiv­e,’ he explained. ‘Russia is a big player. The Russian view of the situation [in Syria and Ukraine] is so much different from the Western vision.’

Mr Bogachikhi­n denied that RT receives calls from the Kremlin demanding that it adopts a particular editorial line. Regarding Mr Corbyn, he explained: ‘Jeremy was quite a frequent guest and we valued and treasured his commentary always. But we now try not to call him because appearing on RT is seen as very detrimenta­l. We see now that everything to do with Russia is toxic. This is sad because we would like to have some antiRussia­n voices, some debate.’

Mr Nimmo of the think-tank Atlantic Council argues that Russia’s propaganda campaign is aimed as much at a Russian audience as a Western one, portraying Western democracy as weak and rotten, and, in particular, playing on immigratio­n fears.

Hillary Clinton became a prime target for Putin, he says, only when she backed anti-government protests in Russia while U.S. Secretary of State, deeply offending the Russian president. Last year’s election tampering can be seen as Putin’s revenge. THE

OFFICE of the U.S. director of national intelligen­ce, in its assessment of Russian attempts to manipulate the U.S. election, said of the station:

‘The rapid expansion of RT’s operations and budget and recent candid statements by RT’s leadership point to the channel’s importance to the Kremlin as a messaging tool and indicate a Kremlin- directed campaign to undermine faith in the U.S. Government and fuel political protest.

‘The Kremlin has committed significan­t resources to expanding the channel’s reach, particular­ly its social media footprint.’

RT is now an establishe­d part of the media landscape and it is not going away.

On the 16th floor of Millbank Tower the RT functionar­ies are beavering away behind their screens. And it can mean no good for the country that offers them a home.

 ??  ?? Moscow mouthpiece: RT boss Margarita Simonyan with Putin
Moscow mouthpiece: RT boss Margarita Simonyan with Putin
 ??  ?? Moscow calling: RT’s London bureau broadcasts an agenda dictated by Putin
Moscow calling: RT’s London bureau broadcasts an agenda dictated by Putin

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