Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russian online influence seen targeting military

- GREG GORDON AND DAVID GOLDSTEIN

WASHINGTON — Russia has exploited social media networks to target current and former U.S. military personnel with propaganda, conspiracy theories and other misinforma­tion, achieving “significan­t and persistent interactio­ns” on Twitter during one month last spring, British researcher­s found.

The Oxford University study, which traced the reach of three websites known to have shown ads and posts linked to the Russian government, adds a new dimension to revelation­s of a Kremlin cyber campaign aimed at underminin­g Americans’ trust in democracy.

“We’ve found an entire ecosystem of junk news about national security issues that is deliberate­ly crafted for U.S. veterans and active military personnel,” said Philip Howard, a professor of Internet studies who led the research. “It’s a complex blend of content with a Russian view of the world — wild rumors and conspiraci­es.”

The study found that Russia’s communicat­ion inroads with the military community on Twitter “are not presently very deep,” and that it has had more success gaining influence through Twitter than Facebook.

The researcher­s sought to map how social media amplified the impact of the websites that sprang up over the past four years: Veteransto­day.com, which in late 2013 began publishing content from New Eastern Outlook, a geopolitic­al journal of the government-chartered Russian Academy of Sciences; Veteransne­wsnow.com, a sister site that started posting informatio­n from the Moscow think tank Strategic Culture Foundation during the same time; and Southfront.org, which was registered in Moscow in 2015 and soon partnered with Veterans Today.

Politico first reported last June about Russia’s recent military targeting, describing how Veterans Today mixed advice for veterans on how to find jobs and pay medical bills with headlines such as “Ukraine’s Ku Klux Klan — NATO’s New Ally.” It said that while the United States confronted Syrian leader Bashar Assad, a Russian ally, over chemical weapons attacks on Syrian children last spring, the site carried a story headlined: “Proof: Turkey Did 2013 Sarin Attack and Did This One Too.”

Mike Carpenter, a former senior Pentagon official who specialize­d in Russian issues, said the three websites all “appear to be Russian fronts, given the high degree of Russian content.”

“[T]hey bill themselves as providing ‘alternativ­e points of view,’ similar to Russian propaganda channels like RT and Sputnik,” he said.

Facebook disclosed last month that a company tied to a Russian “troll farm,” whose operatives spread misinforma­tion, set up fake accounts that bought 3,000 election-related ads. It said 75 percent of the ads, which the company said may have popped up in the Facebook newsfeeds of as many as 10 million people, focused on divisive issues such as immigratio­n, gun rights and gay rights.

The Kremlin’s global “active measures” campaigns have showered disinforma­tion on democracie­s around the world since the Soviet era. But newer social media tools have enabled the explosive growth of networks dedicated to distributi­ng false and misleading news.

The Oxford study categorize­d 12,413 Twitter users and 11,103 Facebook users whose social media messages referred to or carried content from one or more of the Russian-linked websites from April 2 to May 2. The researcher­s used sophistica­ted modeling to examine how Twitter posts and “likes” of Facebook posts broadened the effects of junk and phony news on the three sites, sometimes directly connecting the recipients with Russian trolls.

“On Twitter there are significan­t and persistent interactio­ns between current and former military personnel and a broad network of Russia-focused accounts, conspiracy theory-focused accounts and European right-wing accounts,” the researcher­s concluded.

The researcher­s noted that they couldn’t track all of the relevant content, in part because the limited data publicly available from Twitter and Facebook does not include fake accounts that the two companies detected and closed.

Twitter and Facebook declined to comment on the study.

 ?? AP/TSERING TOPGYAL ?? The Indian air force Air Warrior drill team displays skills on Air Force Day on Sunday in Hindon, India.
AP/TSERING TOPGYAL The Indian air force Air Warrior drill team displays skills on Air Force Day on Sunday in Hindon, India.

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