By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Foreign Propaganda
Russian propaganda
has made its way into the United States, unfortunately, and it’s infected a good
chunk of my party’s base,” Representative Michael McCaul, the Texas Republican
who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told the news
platform Puck in March.
Nancy Pelosi, the
California Democrat and former House Speaker, made a related claim earlier this
year when commenting on protesters who were demanding a cease-fire in Israel’s
war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip. “For them to call for a cease-fire is Mr. Putin’s
message,” Pelosi told CNN, invoking the Russian president. She added:
“Make no mistake, this is directly connected to what he would like to see. Same
thing with Ukraine. It’s about Putin’s message. I think some of these
protesters are spontaneous and organic and sincere. Some, I think, are
connected to Russia.”
Such statements, from
across the political spectrum, have several troubling things in common. They
blame foreign interference for problems whose origins are clearly domestic.
They imply that foreign disinformation is effective at influencing a significant
proportion of U.S. citizens; it is not. And they are often presented without
evidence.
To be clear, foreign
influence operations can impose some costs on open societies that encourage the
unfettered exchange of ideas. However the self-serving and misleading way that
some public officials and researchers talk about propaganda does not serve
American democracy, especially during a contentious election season. When
officials exaggerate the efficacy and impact of foreign influence operations,
the ones who benefit the most are the very regimes that produce it.
To avoid
inadvertently assisting adversaries, American officials and
investigators must steer clear of two pitfalls. Downplaying the
threat of foreign disinformation campaigns risks making it easier for bad
actors to take advantage of an unprepared public. But the reverse is also true:
overstating the power of propaganda risks amplifying not only the original
falsehood, but also an even more corrosive and polarizing narrative—that
American politicians are somehow remote-controlled, and that U.S. citizens don’t
have agency.
Who’s Parroting Who?
Often, Russian
disinformation echoes talking points by the American far right, rather than the
other way around. Last fall, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a
Republican from Georgia, wrote on X, “Anyone who votes to fund Ukraine is
funding the most corrupt money scheme of any foreign war in our country’s
history.” She included a link to a debunked article published by the Strategic
Culture Foundation, a Russian intelligence front already sanctioned by the
Treasury Department for its role in interfering with U.S. elections in 2020.
The article falsely claimed that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s
advisers had bought two yachts for $75 million. Two weeks after Green’s tweet,
Senator J.D. Vance, a Republican from Ohio, repeated the false claim on a
podcast hosted by Steve Bannon, a right-wing provocateur who served as a
high-level adviser to President Donald Trump. “There are people who would cut
Social Security, throw our grandparents into poverty,” Vance fulminated. “Why?
So that one of Zelensky’s ministers can buy a bigger yacht?”
At first glance, it
would appear that Vance and Greene were indeed parroting Russian propaganda
disseminated by an organization linked to the Kremlin that had been sanctioned
by the U.S. government. In fact, the yacht rumor had been quietly circulating on
the conspiratorial fringes of the American right for some time. Vance himself
had made the claim as early as July 2023. Speaking at the Turning Point Action
Conference, a far-right gathering in West Palm Beach, Florida, Vance told a
packed auditorium that he did not wish to “immiserate our grandmothers and
grandfathers to send another yacht to Volodymyr Zelensky.” Five months later,
the Russians picked up the right-wing talking point, dressed it up as a
reported fact, and amplified it.
This dynamic, whereby
American conspiracy theorists and foreign intelligence operatives feed off one
another in a vicious circle, is not new. During the Cold War, the K.G.B.
carried out active measures against Moscow’s rivals, exploiting existing social
fissures by, say, picking up and amplifying rumors in a target country. Then as
now, foreign operatives rarely invent political divisions or conspiracy
theories: they magnify existing ones.
In the 1980s, the
Soviet and the East German security services conducted a propaganda campaign
codenamed Operation Denver, promulgating the baseless claim that the U.S. Army
created HIV in a biological warfare lab at Fort Detrick, Maryland. This
pernicious and polarizing myth had a far reach. In 2005, long after the breakup
of the Soviet Union, the American pop stars Kanye West and Adam Levine released
a hit single that included the lyric “I know the government administered AIDS.”
But it would be a mistake to attribute that rumor, or the extent of its reach,
to outside influence peddlers. Historians have demonstrated that communist
intelligence agencies did not invent the myth. Rather, the performers latched
on to a conspiracy theory that had emerged on its own in the United States,
after far-left activists had concocted the story and initially spread it. The
fire had already been lit; the communists merely added fuel.
In a counterintuitive
twist, for U.S. adversaries, a propaganda campaign may receive its biggest
boost after it has been uncovered. The U.S. government exposed and sanctioned
the Strategic Culture Foundation as a front for Russian intelligence well before
Greene cited it as a source on social media. Yet Russia’s foreign intelligence
agency did not shut down the exposed front; it doubled down by pushing out more
fake news stories. Russian intelligence officers are likely designing their
campaigns so that such falsehoods will gain even more traction once the
subterfuge is revealed. Once exposed as propaganda, a phony story about
Zelensky’s advisers’ purchasing luxury yachts serves to amplify the idea that
politicians, political commentators, and some significant portion of the voting
public are unwitting stooges of foreign influence or even in cahoots with the
enemy. More than foreign interference itself, it is this corrosive mistrust
that poses the gravest threat to American democracy.
Tone Down The Hype
As the U.S.
presidential election approaches, an unhealthy fixation on foreign
disinformation has researchers and organizations rushing to publicize bold
claims about the reach of foreign influence. There are powerful incentives to
overhype the extent and power of foreign disinformation campaigns. For some
investigative outfits and firms, a big exposé can bring press
coverage, bigger budgets, investment dollars, grants, and reputational gains,
even if the exposed activity does not warrant so much attention.
Overhyped reports can
make Russia’s active measures that much more successful. Before exposing a
foreign influence operation, public officials and analysts at research
organizations and security companies must ask themselves a few hard questions.
Are their claims directly backed up by hard evidence—evidence that they are
able and willing to share with the broader research community? Will exposure
breathe new life into a concocted story? And will it undermine the public's
trust in public institutions and the media, thus serving the interests of
adversaries?
Journalists, too,
should not draw dubious lines from cause to effect, repeat shaky claims about
who is responsible, assert without appropriate evidence that an attempted
disinformation operation was successful, quote sources without scrutinizing
their assertions, or speculate about why a suspected adversary may have engaged
in deceptive practices.
News outlets covering
the investigative reportage of other organizations and statements by public
officials must take greater care not to repeat misleading claims. The very
incident that prompted McCaul’s remarks about his own party being “infected” by
Russian propaganda illustrates this dynamic. NBC News reported on McCaul’s comments, subtitling its article,
“How Republican lawmakers echo Russian propaganda”; the story claimed that
Republicans were “parroting” covert foreign disinformation. Outlets ranging
from The Wall
Street Journal to
the BBC have made similar claims. A closer look at the
facts in these cases, however, reveals the opposite: that Russian
disinformation was parroting the American far right.
Disrupting propaganda
efforts by malign foreign actors is important work, but it must be done
thoroughly, accurately, and proportionally. Exaggerating the effects of foreign
influence campaigns serves only the foreign operatives. It fosters a
conspiratorial outlook, in which shadowy enemies are supposedly creating wedge
issues, dissenters are merely parroting foreign spies, and trust in open
democratic debate is eroded. Most importantly, false claims of clandestine
foreign interference absolve U.S. leaders of responsibility for the health of
our political discourse.
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