Lodi News-Sentinel

Russia’s latest info war tactic: Spoofing foreign media

-

The Russian government is supporting operations that impersonat­e internatio­nal media outlets as part of its disinforma­tion campaigns, which have become more sophistica­ted and active since its invasion of Ukraine, according to a European Union study.

Print and TV media are the most frequent targets of Moscow’s impersonat­ion, with magazines seeing their entire style copied by Russian actors to give legitimacy to the content, in particular when targeting Ukraine, said a report on foreign informatio­n manipulati­on published Tuesday by the E.U.’s External Action Service.

The study cited four incidents where fake cover pages imitating the visual style of European satirical magazines were created to attack Ukraine and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Two videos imitated Al Jazeera and Euronews, claiming that Ukrainian football fans were detained in Doha because of Nazi behavior during the World Cup, and that a German auction house was going to destroy Russian artworks. The content was rapidly picked up and amplified by channels attributed to Russian state-linked outlets, the report said.

“This war is not only conducted on the battlefiel­d by the soldiers, it is waged in the informatio­n space trying to win the hearts and minds of the people,” E.U. foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said in a speech Tuesday. “We have plenty of evidence that Russia is behind coordinate­d attempts to manipulate public debates in open societies.”

The E.U. is struggling to counter Russian disinforma­tion efforts, which officials have said is aimed at underminin­g the bloc’s unity in supporting Ukraine. As part of its efforts, the E.U. required major social media platforms to prepare reports on their efforts to comply with the bloc’s new code on disinforma­tion, which will be released Thursday. Several commission­ers in Brussels have been particular­ly critical of Twitter Inc’s new owner Elon Musk.

“I am concerned about the fact that Twitter fired a vast amount of staff in Europe, I understand also those who deal with disinforma­tion,” European Commission Vice President Vera Jourova said in prepared remarks Tuesday. “If you want to effectivel­y detect and take action against disinforma­tion and propaganda, this requires resources. Especially in the context of Russian disinforma­tion warfare.”

In the study released Tuesday, the E.U. agency analyzed a sample of 100 informatio­n manipulati­on cases between October and December. With 60 cases linked to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Moscow’s aim is to distract audiences, deflect blame or direct attention to different topics, the report found.

Borrell likened the current actors behind informatio­n manipulati­on to Joseph Goebbels, Adolf Hitler’s chief propagandi­st, but with a lot more powerful capacity of multiplyin­g lies at the “speed of light, reaching everyone everywhere.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States