Re: [Salon] U.S. Accuses Russia of Spending Millions to Influence American Voters



Seems like a farce!!

On Thursday, September 5, 2024 at 07:58:04 PM GMT+5, Chas Freeman via Salon <salon@listserve.com> wrote:


[This looks a lot like an administration effort to ban foreign public diplomacy and American access to foreign opinion that, because it differs from our officially endorsed narrative, is labeled as 'disinformation.'  As such, it mirrors the efforts of other countries to ban U.S. public diplomacy instruments like Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia, etc.  Are we too not 'spending millions to influence... voters" in various countries?]

U.S. Accuses Russia of Spending Millions to Influence American Voters

Vladimir Putin’s inner circle has been directly involved in covert propaganda efforts, Justice Department says

Updated Sept. 5, 2024



Top U.S. officials shared evidence to support their claims that the Kremlin is actively trying to influence the November vote in favor of former President Donald Trump. Photo: Reuters

WASHINGTON—The Biden administration accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of orchestrating a covert campaign to influence the coming U.S. presidential election and erode international support for Ukraine, blaming the Kremlin for targeting American voters with political propaganda and disinformation.

The influence campaign, which American spy agencies have concluded is aiming to help Republican nominee Donald Trump reclaim the White House, involved Putin’s inner circle and included a scheme to surreptitiously bankroll an American media startup and direct Russian public-relations companies to promote state-sponsored narratives to influence the presidential race.

The Justice Department announced the seizure of more than 30 internet domains it said were being weaponized by the Russian government to direct malign influence efforts against the U.S. It identified Sergei Kiriyenko, a longtime senior aide to Putin, as overseeing the internet websites, which were designed to appear to readers as leading U.S. news sites but were, in fact, filled with Russian propaganda.

The department also announced charges against two Russian nationals employed at the Russian state-media organization RT. Kostiantyn Kalashnikov and Elena Afanasyeva are accused of conspiring to illegally and secretly send nearly $10 million to a Tennessee-based online media company to inject hidden Russian government messaging across social media to target American audiences. The Treasury Department also levied sanctions on 10 individuals, including RT’s editor in chief, and two entities in conjunction with the alleged election-meddling conspiracy.

Wednesday’s coordinated announcement amounts to the most aggressive effort by the Biden administration to call out foreign election influence activities in the 2024 cycle. Officials in both the Trump and Biden administrations have sought at times to warn the public about attempts to meddle in elections since the 2016 race, which was marred by revelations—many of which came after Election Day—of Russia’s multipronged cyber-interference operation, which also sought to aid Trump.

Russia is seen by U.S. intelligence agencies as the most capable foreign threat to the election. But Iran has also been aggressive this cycle as it has tried to harm Trump’s re-election prospects due to his perceived aggression against Tehran during his term in office, which included withdrawing from the Iran nuclear deal and assassinating a popular military leader. The Trump campaign revealed last month it had been hacked by what the Federal Bureau of Investigation determined were Iran-linked actors.

“We have never interfered in the internal affairs of the United States and do not intend to do so in the future,” said Russian Ambassador to the U.S. Anatoly Antonov in comments posted to the Telegram messaging app. “We categorically reject the false accusations against Russian information structures and demand the lifting of the administrative restrictions imposed on the work of our journalists in America.”

U.S. officials say Russia’s tactics have evolved since 2016, even as its intentions remain largely the same. Speaking at a press briefing Wednesday, Attorney General Merrick Garland said Kalashnikov and Afanasyeva directed the Tennessee company to contract with U.S.-based social-media influencers to share its content on their platforms.

“The company never disclosed to the influencers or to their millions of followers its ties to RT and the Russian government,” Garland said.

Since launching in 2023, the company has posted nearly 2,000 videos that have received more than 16 million views on YouTube alone, according to an indictment filed in Manhattan federal court.

The indictment refers to the outlet as “U.S. Company-1,” which describes itself as a “network of heterodox commentators that focus on Western political and cultural issues.” That language is a verbatim match of the description used by Tenet Media, which didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Russian President Vladimir Putin Photo: Sofya Sandurskaya/Zuma Press

China is also engaging in covert influence campaigns touching on the election and seeking to amplify divisions around hot-button issues, officials and disinformation experts say, but not favoring a particular candidate in the presidential race.

Top U.S. officials shared a batch of evidence to support their claims that the Kremlin is engaged in an active and aggressive push to influence the vote in favor of Trump. In a rare move, the Justice Department disclosed internal Russian strategy meeting notes that U.S. intelligence agencies had obtained, which reveal granular details about the Kremlin’s strategy. 

One Russian document listed “target audiences” including residents of swing states, such as Arizona and Pennsylvania, Hispanic and Jewish Americans, gamers, and users of the social-media site Reddit. It also detailed efforts to create online communities to unite voters who shared perceived Republican values.

RT has been in the crosshairs of the U.S. government for several years amid deteriorating relations between Washington and Moscow. The Justice Department required the network to register as a foreign agent in 2017 after U.S. spy agencies linked it to Russia’s interference ambitions in the 2016 presidential contest. Its American broadcaster was banned in the U.S. and elsewhere following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Responding to the Biden administration actions, RT said Wednesday in a mocking email that “2016 called and it wants its clichés back,” and “Three things are certain in life: death, taxes and RT’s interference in the U.S. elections.”

“For us, this is not funny,” Garland said in response. He added that advances in generative artificial intelligence and other evolving tradecraft had made Russia increasingly sophisticated in its election-influence operations.

“Therefore, it is a bigger threat than it ever was before,” Garland said.

Several government reviews, including a multiyear bipartisan investigation by the Republican-led Senate Intelligence Committee, concluded Russia interfered in the 2016 election to denigrate then-Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and boost Trump.

Russia is intent on again supporting Trump’s bid to re-enter the White House—as it also was assessed to have done in 2020—and has sought to undermine the Democratic campaigns of both President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, senior U.S. intelligence officials disclosed in July. The Kremlin-backed influence efforts were described at the time as a “whole of government” operation that relied on covert social-media use and other online propaganda efforts, as well as attempts to target specific voting groups, including swing state voters.

Officials at the time made clear that Russia was the “pre-eminent” threat to the election, as it was seen in past election cycles, due to its decades-old expertise in covert propaganda and its deep desire to undermine politicians—including Biden and Harris—whom it believes will continue to provide vital support to Ukraine’s war effort. 

Wednesday’s countermeasures are the second tranche of steps taken by the Justice Department seeking to publicize and undercut the Kremlin’s alleged influence operations. In July, officials announced a takedown of a Russia-linked disinformation bot farm that had been operating on X, formerly Twitter. The bots, numbering nearly a thousand accounts, relied on AI to create bogus user profiles and spammed posts in support of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

U.S. officials said the operation was financed by the Kremlin and organized by an employee of RT who is a member of a Russian intelligence service. It was the first time the U.S. had publicly accused a foreign government of using generative AI technology in support of a foreign-influence operation against Americans, officials said.

Write to Dustin Volz at dustin.volz@wsj.com and C. Ryan Barber at ryan.barber@wsj.com

Copyright ©2024 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the September 5, 2024, print edition as 'U.S. Says Kremlin Is Trying To Sway Election'.

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