2016-07-15

Excellent article.

I disagree with the conclusion, however.  We seem to be winning the information warfare despite our best efforts not to. Based on the August 2015 Pew Report on global attitudes toward Russia, Russian only had three countries with a positive attitude towards Russia.  I, therefore, cannot jump to a conclusion without a proper study, be it a poll, survey, or done electronically.

My gut feeling is Jakub Kalensky is correct, but the Pew Report made me doubt the efficiency of Russian information warfare.  This despite all US efforts to counter Russian propaganda.  Oh, wait, we aren’t doing anything.

I just had coffee with Don Bishop, former President of the Public Diplomacy Council, experienced PA officer in the US Air Force, a former FSO, and an expert in Public Diplomacy from USIA.  We discussed exactly this and many, many other things.  Don brought up a very valid point, perhaps the American people are smart enough not to believe the mountain of propaganda that Russia is constantly flinging in our general direction.

Despite multiple calls by VP Biden, Sec State Kerry, Sec State Clinton, Senator John McCain and former Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul for more efforts to counter Russian propaganda, US efforts to date to counter Russian propaganda are nil.  There are bills in both the Senate and the House, both have a 5% chance of passing according to GovTrak.

Even diplomatic and senior efforts have not worked.  Despite President Obama, Secretary Kerry, and a myriad of cables, Russia still stokes the fires through propaganda, a Firehose of Fallacy.  Their provocations have barely reduced.

We discussed the Pew report of August 2015 on attitudes about Russia.  There has been no report since on this subject and it is sorely needed.

I am meeting with John Lansing, new CEO of the BBG, in August, and plan to raise this as one of the points.  Gallup does ‘measures’ now, but it is not timely and does not give the resolution the BBG needs to explain to Congress how effective US International Broadcasting efforts really are.  In advance, I plan to meet with the Director of Research to brief her on “a” recommended solution.

Currently everything we do is based on a gut feeling. The Pew Report confirmed that our gut feelings may be wrong. Nothing is perfect, but an electronic solution may be a leap forward in the right direction.

</end editorial>

By Georgi Gotev | EurActiv.com

Jul 13, 2016

A European Commission official has said that Russian propaganda was now powerful in all EU member states – but in some of them Moscow barely needed to make the effort, as local politicians were delivering its messages.

Speaking at a Brussels public event on the so-called “hybrid war” Russia is waging in Ukraine and other countries, Jakub Kalenski, a member of the European External Action Service task force assigned with studying Russian propaganda, said such disinformation was active in every European country.



EU LAUNCHES OPERATION TO COUNTER RUSSIAN PROPAGANDA

The European Union is set to launch its first operation in a new propaganda war with Russia, within days of EU leaders giving formal approval to the campaign at a summit yesterday (19 March).

EurActiv.com



TINY EU TASK FORCE SET UP TO COUNTER RUSSIAN PROPAGANDA

A small group of eight officials in the European External Action Service will engage in efforts to respond to massive Russian propaganda directed both at the home and international audiences.

EurActiv.com

In the Baltic countries, he said the target was the Russian-speaking population, via Russian TV channels.

But in the Visegrad countries – Poland, Czechia, Slovakia, and Hungary – he said the means of disinformation were different. There were, he said, dozens or even hundreds of disinformation websites. A Hungarian think tank counted some 100 of them, and there were some 70-80 in Czechia, and a similar number in Slovakia, he added.

In Scandinavia, he said tactics were different again, and their disinformation was done mostly by trolling. Internet trolls are people who sow discord by posting inflammatory comments under articles. Russian so-called ‘web-brigades’ consist of state-sponsored anonymous political commentators.

“And there are countries where you don’t even need media, because you have the politicians spreading the programmed messages for you”, he said.

Asked by EurActiv.com to name those countries, Kalenski replied: “I think you can find them yourself”.

He insisted that the Russian propaganda targeted not only the countries in Eastern Europe, but all European countries, and that the effort was achieving its goals.

Kalenski said that a representative of a Spanish think tank, which he didn’t name, told him that a majority of Spaniards believe that Russia is the victim of the aggressive West.

“Nobody had such privileged relations with the West as Russia. They were members of G8, they are members of WTO, their military personnel were in the NATO headquarters until very recently. If the relations deteriorated, it’s only their fault, but still a majority of Spanish society believes this disinformation”, the Commission official said.  According to another source – which he did not name – 50% of people in France believed that Kyiv started the war in Eastern Ukraine.

EU SETS UP ‘COMMUNICATION TEAM’ TO COUNTER RUSSIAN PROPAGANDA

European leaders will ask their foreign policy chief next week to draw up a plan to counter Russian “disinformation campaigns” over the conflict in Ukraine, draft conclusions of an EU summit showed.

EurActiv.com

Hybrid war ‘à la Russe’

Kalenski made the comments at a conference entitled “Russian hybrid war and politics in Europe”, organised by two Ukrainian think-tanks and the website EUtoday, which mostly covers news from Ukraine. No Russian representative attended the event.

Yuri Fedorov, a Ukrainian expert in Russian foreign and security policy and author of the book “Hybrid war à-la-Russe”, said that the hybrid war waged against his country is the first example of such warfare in history.

Fedorov argued that through disinformation, Russia conveyed the message that the Orthodox should remain loyal to Moscow, that Ukraine, Russia and Belarus were the same nation, and that as a result many Russians believed that the existence of an independent Ukraine was unacceptable.

“If Russian aggression in Ukraine is successful, it will be replicated in the Baltic countries and elsewhere”, he said.

Describing the current situation in eastern Ukraine, Fedorov said that the Ukrainian authorities had stopped the hybrid warfare in Kharkiv and in Odessa, and the Russian military was in a difficult situation in Donbas.

The Russian army is unable to move further without the massive use of aviation and traditional warfare – which is unacceptable for the Kremlin, he said.

Consequently, the new goal of Russia was that Ukraine changes its constitution, giving de facto veto power to the separatists and the ability to permanently destabilise the country. The EU should support Ukraine, because an unstable Ukraine would be “a nightmare” for the Union, he said.

The Minsk agreement (see background) provides for changes in the Ukraine constitution giving more autonomy for the separatist-held regions of Donetsk and Lugansk. However, Ukraine insists that changes in the constitution should come at the end of the process, when Ukraine would have regained sovereignty over these territories.

Yehor Bozhok, acting head of the Ukraine mission to NATO, said that Russia wanted “fake elections and legitimisation of terrorists”. “This is not in the Minsk agreement”, he added.

“Our goal is to achieve real ceasefire and real security on the ground, start preparation for local elections according to OSCE standards, with ODIHR (Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights) observation. That was the agreement achieved”, Bozhok said.

The Ukrainian diplomat said that NATO has been united in saying that before elections an absolute must is to create security conditions.

“But we do not see any sign of willingness from the Kremlin to implement what they subscribed”, he added.

LINKEVICIUS: NOT ALL IN THE EU ARE READING MINSK IN THE SAME WAY

Some member states are reading the Minsk agreements literally and believe there could be decentralisation in eastern Ukraine before the situation on the ground improves, the Lithuanian Foreign Minister Linas Linkevičius, told EurActiv.com in an exclusive interview.

EurActiv.com

BACKGROUND

The leaders of Germany, France, Russia and Ukraine (the so-called Normandy format) gave their support to a deal to end fighting in eastern Ukraine, following 17-hour long negotiations in the Belarussian capital Minsk on 12 February 2015.

The four leaders committed to respecting Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, according to a joint declaration.

Western leaders are closely observing the implementation of the Minsk agreement.

On 2 March 2015, European leaders said that they agreed that the OSCE needed a broader role as observers of the ceasefire, and weapons removal.

On 2 October 2015, the leaders of the Normandy format admitted that it would take time to organise elections in Ukraine that respect international standards and as a result, the so-called Minsk peace process would run into next year.

By Georgi Gotev | EurActiv.com

Source: http://www.euractiv.stfi.re/section/global-europe/news/thurs-commission-official-russian-propaganda-has-deeply-penetrated-eu-countries/?nl_ref=16778413&sf=ozywbee#aa

Filed under: #RussiaFail, CounterPropaganda, Information Warfare, Russia Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies, CounterPropaganda, information warfare, Russia, Russian propaganda, United States

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