The Commercial Appeal

Chinese propaganda efforts become more like Russia’s

- Nomaan Merchant and Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON – China has long been seen by the U.S. as a prolific source of anti-american propaganda but less aggressive in its influence operations than Russia, which has used cyberattac­ks and covert operations to disrupt U.S. elections and denigrate rivals.

But many in Washington now think Beijing is increasing­ly adopting tactics associated with Moscow – and there’s growing concern the U.S. isn’t doing enough to respond.

U.S. officials and outside experts cite recent examples of China-linked actors generating false news reports with artificial intelligen­ce and posting large volumes of denigratin­g social media posts. While many of the discovered efforts are amateurish, experts think they signal an apparent willingnes­s from Beijing to try more influence campaigns as part of a broader embrace of covert operations, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligen­ce.

“To us, the attempt is what stands out,” one U.S. intelligen­ce official said.

An increasing­ly pessimisti­c mood in Washington about Beijing’s expansive political and economic goals and the possibilit­y of war over Taiwan is driving calls for the U.S. to make a stronger effort to counter Chinese influence abroad.

Lawmakers and officials are particular­ly concerned about countries that comprise the “Global South” in Africa, Asia and Latin America, where both the U.S. and China have huge economic and political interests. Many of those countries have population­s that support both sides – what an official called “swing states” in the narrative battle.

“This should be a whole of government effort,” said Illinois Rep. Raja Krishnamoo­rthi, the top Democrat on a newly formed House committee focusing on the Chinese Communist Party.

“The CCP is going around the world bad-mouthing the U.S., bad-mouthing our institutio­ns, bad-mouthing our form of government,” Krishnamoo­rthi said. “We have to counter this because ultimately it’s not in the best interests of the United States.”

China’s embassy in Washington said in a statement that Beijing “opposes the fabricatio­n and disseminat­ion of false informatio­n” and blamed the U.S. in turn for making social media “into its tool to manipulate internatio­nal public opinion and its weapon to stigmatize and demonize other countries.”

“On this issue, it is for the U.S. side to reflect on itself and stop shouting ‘catch a thief,’” said embassy spokesman Liu Pengyu.

Chinese state media and affiliated channels, as well as social media influencer­s with vast followings, routinely spread ideas the U.S. labels exaggerate­d, false or misleading. In recent weeks, China’s foreign ministry has called attention to the train derailment that released toxic chemicals in Ohio as well as allegation­s the U.S. may have sabotaged pipelines used to transport Russian gas.

The Biden administra­tion has strongly rejected the allegation­s about the Nord Stream pipelines and defended its response in Ohio.

China has long been seen as less willing than Russia to take provocativ­e steps that could be exposed and more concerned about being publicly blamed. U.S. intelligen­ce judged that Russia tried to support Donald Trump in the last two presidenti­al elections, while China in 2020 considered but did not try to influence the election.

But some U.S. officials believe China is now undertakin­g or considerin­g operations it would not have in the past, according to the two people familiar with the matter. That’s partly due to fears in Beijing that they are losing a battle of narratives in many countries, one of the people said.

Officials noted public examples identified in recent weeks by groups that track disinforma­tion and influence.

The research firm Graphika recently identified Aigenerate­d videos that it linked to a pro-chinese influence operation. One video attacked the U.S. approach to stopping gun violence; another “stressed the importance of China-u.s. cooperatio­n for the recovery of the global economy,” according to Graphika. And threat analysts at Google said they disrupted more than 50,000 instances of posts and other activity last year linked to a pro-china influence operation known as “Dragonbrid­ge.”

The Ai-generated videos are clearly fictitious and Graphika said none of them had more than 300 views. Most Dragonbrid­ge posts, Google said, also reached a tiny audience.

The U.S. intelligen­ce official said Chinese tradecraft on social media was “uneven” and less sophistica­ted than what’s normally associated with the Kremlin. But that tradecraft – both in terms of social media operations and efforts to hide any linkage to Beijing – can be expected to improve over time and with practice, the official said.

And there are longstandi­ng concerns in Washington

about Tiktok, the viral video-sharing app whose U.S. operations are currently undergoing a national security review. There’s no public evidence that Beijing has used its sweeping powers over businesses in China to direct content on the app or launch government-sanctioned influence operations, but there’s a belief that China could do so quickly enough not to be caught or stopped.

China is increasing­ly viewed unfavorabl­y in the U.S., much of Europe, Australia, South Korea and Japan, according to Pew Research Center data published last year.

But in other countries in Asia as well as in much of Africa and Latin America, there are more positive attitudes about the Chinese government, often driven by Beijing’s economic investment­s and offers of infrastruc­ture and security assistance.

Last year’s Africa Youth Survey, composed of 4,500 interviews of 18- to 24-year-olds in 15 countries, found that 76% of respondent­s believed China had a positive influence in their country. Of the U.S., 72% said they believed American influence was positive.

In the event of a war over U.s.-backed Taiwan, experts believe shaping global attitudes and narratives will be key in ensuring military and diplomatic support for either side.

Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-wisconsin, who chairs the new congressio­nal committee on China, said in a statement after recently visiting Taiwan that Chinese influence operations are part of a broader strategy of “cognitive warfare.” He added that the committee would “work to expose the truth about the (Chinese Communist Party’s) pattern of aggression against America and our friends.”

The State Department’s Global Engagement Center is charged with countering Chinese messaging outside of both the U.S. and China. Speaking on condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the department, a State Department official responded to concerns that the U.S. doesn’t directly counter many lines of attack from Beijing.

“There was a decision made that we were not going to get in the business of playing whack-a-mole with specific lines of Chinese messaging,” the official said. “Frankly, there’s just too much of it. It would be like trying to put your finger in the dam to stop the leak.”

The State Department instead tries to fund programs exposing facts and ideas that China wants to suppress. The Global Engagement Center has funded third-party research of China’s crackdown in Xinjiang province against Uyghurs and other mostly Muslim ethnic groups. Beijing has long tried to frame its operations in Xinjiang as countering terrorism and radicalism in the face of internatio­nal criticism about its network of detention camps and its restrictio­ns on movement and religious expression in the province.

Embassy: Beijing ‘opposes the fabricatio­n and disseminat­ion of false informatio­n.’

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