How online disinformation campaign aided new war narrative for Putin

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Russian President Vladimir Putin

London/New Delhi, (Asian independent) A well-prepared online disinformation campaign on various social media platforms changed the whole narrative around the escalated Russia-Ukraine tensions, aiding Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to go to war over claims to protect the people “who have been suffering from abuse and genocide by the Ukrainian regime for eight years”, reports said.

A report in France24 has detailed how days after the Kremlin slammed Western “hysteria” over the Russian military buildup around Ukraine, the messaging from Moscow changed, following Putin’s decision to recognise the pro-Russian, self-declared republics of Donetsk and Luhansk in Eastern Ukraine.

The disinformation posts were first circulated in pro-Russian groups mostly on the encrypted messaging service Telegram, and then relayed by the state and pro-Kremlin media organisations to the world.

“Over the past few days, Russian state media has insisted that Putin has ordered troops on a apeacekeeping’ mission into eastern Ukraine to prevent what the Russian leader has called a agenocide’ of Russian-speakers by the government in Kiev,” the report mentioned.

Some of the disinformation examples were a photo of an alleged Ukrainian armoured vehicle on Russian territory, a video of Ukrainian troops on an “invasion” mission infiltrating Russia, and another clip supposedly showing Ukrainian or Polish “saboteurs” trying to blow up Russian tanks.

Fact-checkers have exposed such fake videos and images being posted by Russians on social media platforms.

“The video of soldiers ‘speaking Polish’ and trying to sabotage Russian tanks was dissected to reveal a montage of video and audio pieces,” Eliot Higgins, founder of investigative site Bellingcat, was quoted as saying.

Some of the footage was shot in early February, while editors added footage and sound from a video shot during a Finnish military exercise in 2010.

“The image of an alleged Ukrainian armored vehicle supposedly advancing into Russian territory was also promptly and effectively debunked,” the report said.

The Soviet-era vehicle in the photo does not belong to the Ukrainian arsenal, according to investigators at Oryx, an open-source platform.

Another claim that a shell fired from Ukrainian territory destroyed a Russian outpost on the border was supported by video by the FSB, one of Russia’s key intelligence services, according to the report.

The Conflict Intelligence Team (CIT) analysed the video and found that the closest Ukrainian positions” are located more than 37 kilometres from the impact zone.

“We find this ‘incident’ to be yet another in a string of poorly staged pretexts for a possible operation against Ukraine,” CIT said in a tweet.

It’s not the first time that Putin has used the term “genocide” in Ukraine’s context.

“This is what he had already done in 2014 before launching the invasion of Crimea,” Stefan Meister, a specialist in Russian security and disinformation at the German Council on Foreign Relations, was quoted as saying.