The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Russia, China maneuverin­g for greater control of web

- David Ignatius David Ignatius Columnist

Even as fighting rages on the ground in Ukraine, Russia continues to wage a long-term battle for control of what Kremlin officials call the “informatio­n space” of internet communicat­ions.

Moscow’s campaign to throttle informatio­n is shameless. It launched its latest denunciati­on of the West’s supposed “coercive measures” in internet technology this month, as it was jailing Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovic­h on a bogus espionage charge, and sentencing democracy activist Vladimir KaraMurza to 25 years in prison.

Russia knows that informatio­n is power. In addition to muzzling debate at home, it has attempted to seize the digital high ground internatio­nally through the United Nations and its agencies. Last year, it campaigned for leadership of the U.N.’s Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union (ITU). Moscow’s candidate was rejected in favor of an American, Doreen Bogdan-Martin.

Moscow’s latest attempt to rewrite internet governance came at a meeting this month of a U.N. working group known as the Global Digital Compact. Moscow argued for internatio­nal regulation of cyberspace in place of the current loose but effective public-private system known as the “multistake­holder model,” which the Russians claim is dominated by “large technologi­cal conglomera­tes” in the West.

Boris Meshchanov, Russia’s representa­tive at the U.N. meeting, turned normal logic upside down by claiming that only state control of the internet could protect liberty. “The regulation of the internet exclusivel­y by the private sector has long been shown to be ineffectiv­e. Only States can guarantee the rights and freedoms of citizens,” Meshchanov argued during an April 13 speech to the working group.

Russia’s position in these internatio­nal gatherings has been severely weakened by its invasion of Ukraine. Meshchanov complained about Western “dividing lines” between “democratic” states and “authoritar­ian” ones that are “allegedly opposed to a free and safe internet.” He said Russia wants the Global Digital Compact to create “a balanced internatio­nal system for managing the internet infrastruc­ture.”

The Biden administra­tion scoffs at Moscow’s internet arguments. “Russia is trotting out tired, unrealisti­c proposals that most countries have considered and rejected,” a State Department spokespers­on wrote me on Thursday. “This language is nothing new, and we don’t see appetite globally for a Russia or China-led internet.”

The Russians (backed by China) have had little success in rewriting the rules for cyberspace, but they keep on coming. After Russian President Vladimir Putin’s meeting last month with Chinese President Xi Jinping, the two pledged to “support the creation of a multilater­al, equal and transparen­t global internet governance system” — meaning one that they could control.

A new battle over communicat­ions rules will open in November when the World Radiocommu­nication Conference convenes in Dubai. The World Radiocommu­nication Conference is the sort of obscure technical discussion that the United States sometimes ignored in the past. But the Biden administra­tion has smartly made such internatio­nal trench warfare a priority.

Russia has tried unsuccessf­ully to block these satellite internet systems. As its forces were invading Ukraine, Russia hacked a system called Viasat in an effort to deny signals to Ukraine. The system was eventually restored, but the attack affected users across Europe.

Space might become a battlefiel­d in the informatio­n war. Russian diplomat Konstantin Vorontsov warned at the United Nations in October that private satellite networks were “an extremely dangerous trend” and that “quasi-civilian infrastruc­ture may become a legitimate target for retaliatio­n.”

To sum up: Russia and China are deadly serious about controllin­g informatio­n — on the ground in their suppressio­n of journalist­s and in global forums that are shaping the rules for cyberspace. The United States might have invented the modern digital world, but Russia and China want to put their hands on the kill switch.

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