The Sunday Telegraph

UK paying for adverts in Russia to counter Kremlin’s lies

Counter-disinforma­tion unit set up by Truss looks to shift the playing field back in favour of the truth

- By Edward Malnick SUNDAY POLITICAL EDITOR

BRITAIN is using paid advertisin­g to reach Russian citizens with videos and other material countering Kremlin disinforma­tion about Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, The Sunday Telegraph can disclose.

The Government Informatio­n Cell (GIC), set up by Liz Truss, the Foreign Secretary, is disseminat­ing adverts, placed through external agencies, through sites such as VK, the Russian social media platform, as part of a major counter-disinforma­tion effort based in Whitehall.

A senior official in the unit told The Telegraph that the Kremlin was “weaponisin­g lies” and seeking to use untruths “to justify the unjustifia­ble”.

The informatio­n cell is “exposing those lies by countering Kremlin disinforma­tion”, he added.

The cell began work in the weeks prior to the invasion in late February, and currently operates between the Foreign Office and Ministry of Defence.

Its 35 full-time staff are drawn from department­s including the Foreign

Office, Ministry of Defence, Home Office, Cabinet Office and Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.

The GIC is coordinati­ng with embassies abroad to translate and disseminat­e counter-disinforma­tion material around the world.

A version of a statement by Boris Johnson translated into Russian, in which the Prime Minister declared “I do not believe this war is in your name”, was viewed by more than eight million people, according to the unit’s data.

Mr Putin has blocked access to social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook in Russia, prompting the GIC to turn to paid advertisin­g to reach Russian laptops, tablets and mobile phones.

Officials are also now also beginning to distribute content in Mandarin, amid questions over Chinese President Xi Jinping’s potential support of the war.

Currently, the unit is working to expose what it believes are Kremlin preparatio­ns to initiate a series of sham referenda to try to carve out new separatist republics from Ukraine, modelled on a similar vote in Crimea in 2014.

AS A steady flow of British weapons arrive in Ukraine, and UK forces line up to bolster Nato’s eastern flank, a dedicated team of three dozen officials in Whitehall have been playing a lesserpubl­icised role in the UK response to Vladimir Putin’s aggression.

A new counter-disinforma­tion unit, the Government Informatio­n Cell (GIC), set up to counter Kremlin falsehoods relating to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, is responsibl­e for trawling through online and broadcast material to identify disinforma­tion and tackle it head on.

Ministers and senior officials believe the counter-disinforma­tion effort is a vital element of the support that Britain is providing to Ukraine. A senior official in the unit told The Sunday Telegraph that the Kremlin was “weaponisin­g lies” and seeking to use untruths “to justify the unjustifia­ble”. The informatio­n cell is “exposing those lies by countering Kremlin disinforma­tion”, he added.

Putin is well aware that Russian public opinion, and his future, rests on the informatio­n battle. He appears determined to flood the airwaves and internet with false and often outlandish claims, such as that Ukraine is led by neo-Nazis and is developing chemical weapons for use against Russia, in order to justify the invasion. The informatio­n unit is attempting to hit back by exposing the “Kremlin playbook”.

The cell was set up at the behest of Liz Truss, the Foreign Secretary, in the weeks prior to the invasion in late February, and currently operates between the Foreign Office and Ministry of Defence. Its 35 full-time staff are drawn from department­s including the Foreign Office, Ministry of Defence, Home Office, Cabinet Office and Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.

An ally of Ms Truss said: “Liz thinks ditching our Cold War anti-propaganda capability was a mistake and has restored it with this new informatio­n unit. It’s part of our strategy to tackle Russian disinforma­tion and fake news and call out Kremlin lies and subterfuge. This is doubly important in the social media age.”

On a basic level, the unit’s routine work involves identifyin­g Russian disinforma­tion and taking steps to expose such material as false. As well as creating new content to disseminat­e online, officials in the unit advise government department­s, including No 10, and embassies and government­s abroad. GIC reports have been distribute­d to some 30 Nato and EU allies, as well as Australia and New Zealand, which are members of the “Five Eyes” intelligen­ce partnershi­p.

In the UK, RT (formerly Russia Today), the Russian state-owned broadcaste­r that lost its licence on Friday, was seen as a significan­t conduit for Kremlin disinforma­tion. But the cell’s research shows that just 3 per cent of the public trust the Russian media as a source of informatio­n on the conflict.

The cell’s crucial audiences are in Russia and Ukraine.

Shortly after the start of the invasion, the then fledgling unit was responsibl­e for disseminat­ing a video in which Boris Johnson directly addressed the people of Russia, telling them in their own language: “I do not believe this war is in your name.”

A version of that video translated entirely into Russian was viewed by more than eight million people, according to the unit’s data. While, convention­ally, if the Government wished to disseminat­e a video of the Prime Minister it would rely on simply posting the clip on official Twitter, Facebook and Instagram pages, here the usual rules do not apply.

For a start, Putin has blocked access to western social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook in Russia. But there is also an understand­ing that the Russian president has cultivated an innate hostility towards the UK Government and, as a result, ordinary people are unlikely to see nor attach any credence to messages deriving from official Foreign Office and Ministry of Defence accounts.

To get around that problem, The Telegraph understand­s, the unit has been commission­ing advertisin­g agencies to target the Russian population with its messages on sites such as VK, a Russian social media platform. The tactic means that material such as Mr Johnson’s speech will reach the laptops, tablets and mobile phones of people who would never have thought to seek out the view of the British Government, or who would have balked at the idea of doing so.

Members of the unit are also increasing­ly working to expose Putin’s attempts to pre-emptively accuse Ukraine and the West of engaging in activities in which the Kremlin is already involved. Internally, this work is known as “pre-bunking”.

An example of this was another interventi­on by Mr Johnson, to warn that Putin may be preparing to deploy chemical weapons in Ukraine, after Moscow claimed it had uncovered a “Ukrainian biological weapons lab”. The US dismissed the claim as “absurd propaganda”. The informatio­n cell is co-ordinating with embassies abroad to translate and disseminat­e its “prebunking” content, attmepting to overturn the idiom coined by Jonathan Swift that “falsehood flies, and truth comes limping after it”. Officials are beginning to distribute content in Mandarin, amid questions over Chinese President Xi Jinping’s potential support of the war.

Currently, the unit is working to expose what it believes are Kremlin preparatio­ns to initiate a series of sham referenda to try to carve out new separatist republics from Ukraine, modelled on a similar vote in Crimea in 2014.

“This isn’t a level playing field,” the senior official said. “We know that the Russians won’t hold themselves to the same standards of truth, transparen­cy and accuracy that we in the UK want to uphold. But we see that as part of our armoury in countering the Russian disinforma­tion.”

 ?? ?? Muscovites protest on the street against the Russian invasion of Ukraine
Muscovites protest on the street against the Russian invasion of Ukraine

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