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Russia’s useful idiots are out in force here at home

Russian President Vladimir Putin is waging war on two fronts right now: on the ground in Ukraine and online in western democracies around the world. (Vyacheslav Prokofyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

 

For as long as it’s been in conflict with America and its democratic allies, Russia has tried to defeat them from within. It used any number of propaganda techniques over the decades to foment division, sow dissent, and undermine the consensus around democratic principles and ideals. And then, long after it looked like the cold war had been won by the West, social media came along and inadvertently handed Vladimir Putin his most powerful weapon yet.

The U.S. Department of Justice’s indictment of two employees of RT for covertly financing and directing a Tennessee-based online content creation company is just the latest example of how that weapon works. While neither the company nor the content creators it hired to do Russia’s work were named, the facts laid out in the indictment point toward Tenet Media and right-wing influencers like Tim Pool, Dave Rubin, Benny Johnson, and Canada’s own Lauren Southern. Indeed, the co-founders of Tenet Media, Lauren Chen and Liam Donovan, are both Canadians. 

Russia has long relied on so-called “useful idiots” to carry its ideological and political water, but these particular idiots belong in the useful idiocy hall of fame. Using the nearly $10 million provided by the Russians, Tenet paid the six influencers as much as $400,000 a month for their work, which involved producing content that focused on topics like inflation, immigration, and foreign policy. The goal, according to the indictment, was “amplifying U.S. domestic divisions in order to weaken U.S. opposition to core Government of Russia interests, such as its ongoing war in Ukraine.”

So far, their defence has been either that they didn’t know who was behind the wildly excessive payments for their work or that — get this — they were actually the real victims here. It’s not clear yet whether any of them have returned the money they were victimized with, or if they even plan to. But as The Line’s Jen Gerson and Matt Gurney wrote on their Substack, ignorance isn’t much of a defence here. “What this suggests to us is either that many of these personalities have been groomed by Russian intelligence for years prior to the existence of Tenet; or that this funding scheme was consciously directed toward personalities whom Russian agents felt could be reliably swayed or influenced. This hardly absolves anyone, now does it?”

This underscores a pretty big weakness in our increasingly influencer-oriented intellectual ecosystem, one where people with no real background or training in journalism often command the largest audiences. It’s bad enough that we have a growing roster of propaganda-curious podcasters, YouTubers, and other social media entrepreneurs who seem more interested in feeding the algorithms with outrage and controversy than pursuing the truth. But with Twitter’s transformation from a digital public square into a clearinghouse for conspiracy theories and outright falsehoods, the dogs of digital warfare have truly been unleashed. 

That’s as true here in Canada as it is south of the border. We may not be Russia’s primary target, but we are still in its crosshairs. As former CSIS director Richard Fadden told the CBC, "The Russians' overarching objective is to increase the level of discontent in our institutions — and institutions in all of the Western countries. There is no rational reason that I can think of why Canada would be exempted."

Press Progress editor Luke Lebrun noted in a recent piece that the Russian-funded Tenet Media influence campaign yielded 50 videos on Canada, with the majority produced by — you guessed it — Lauren Southern, the Rebel Media alumnus who traveled to Russia in 2018 to meet with a neo-fascist philosopher and Putin ally named Alexander Dugin. Southern’s videos, unsurprisingly, focus on the very same red meat that feeds the rest of Canada’s far-right online ecosystem, from paranoia around “mass” immigration and trans rights to inflation, housing and the innumerable evils of Justin Trudeau. 

None of this is to suggest Southern or any of the right-wing Canadian influencers that appear in her videos (convoy enthusiast Katrina Panova and True North personality Harrison Faulkner) are knowingly taking cash from Russians to hold and share their views. It’s to suggest something potentially worse: that they never needed to be paid to hold and share them in the first place. As American Sunlight Project co-founder Nina Jankowicz told the New York Times, “they chose influencers who were already engaging in rage bait, exploiting the pre-existing fissures in our society for clicks.”

This indictment and the small handful of influencers it appears to implicate is almost certainly just the tip of the iceberg. RT’s editor-in-chief, Margarita Simonian, has said that her organization has built “an enormous network, an entire empire of covert projects,” all with the aim of influencing western audiences. There’s also a separate FBI affidavit unsealed last week that shows a sanctioned Russian company called Social Design Agency (SDA) has a list of 2,800 people who are active on social media in the U.S. and 80 other countries, one that includes “television and radio hosts, politicians, bloggers, journalists, businessmen, professors, think-tank analysts, veterans, professors and comedians.”

Russia has long relied on "useful idiots" to advance its agenda in the west. Now, with the spread of social media and the rise of YouTube influencers, it has a veritable smorgasbord of them to choose from -- including right here in Canada.

It’s safe to assume that there are at least a few Canadians on that list. Some may even be familiar to us. So what can we do? First and foremost, we need to be absolutely clear about the fact that foreign interference isn’t just an issue when it comes to our elected officials. There are clearly efforts underway to influence the broader intellectual environment in which they operate, and the ongoing collapse of the mainstream media has created a void — and an opportunity — that the Russians and other state-level operators will happily exploit. 

Gerson and Gurney suggest this might be an opportunity for those on the right to take a harder look at the information they’re consuming and sharing. “We at The Line actually have some small hope that the indictment in full will prompt at least some soul searching among the conservative information ecosystem.” I am not nearly so optimistic. As we’ve seen time and again, people — conservatives, yes, but also progressives — default to the sources that tend to flatter their pre-existing biases and beliefs. We’re not naturally wired to seek out competing or conflicting sources of information, and we’re not being properly equipped to sort fact from fiction. 

The Russians, of course, know all this, and are using it to their advantage. What we need is a government that’s able to properly regulate social media companies in a way that maximizes the opportunities for free expression and minimizes the rewards associated with spreading conflict and division. Until then, we’re all just casualties in a digital war we never signed up to fight. 

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