The Prague Post - New anti-Ukraine disinfo campaign aims to bog down Western media

EUR -
AED 4.268611
AFN 77.172349
ALL 96.75238
AMD 444.681134
ANG 2.080528
AOA 1065.845045
ARS 1577.880633
AUD 1.783832
AWG 2.093625
AZN 1.979204
BAM 1.954846
BBD 2.340058
BDT 141.460983
BGN 1.954618
BHD 0.438137
BIF 3424.12942
BMD 1.162318
BND 1.506059
BOB 8.028083
BRL 6.350089
BSD 1.161833
BTN 102.510986
BWP 16.540859
BYN 3.957352
BYR 22781.431287
BZD 2.33676
CAD 1.632208
CDF 2725.635533
CHF 0.93036
CLF 0.028458
CLP 1116.403565
CNY 8.297785
CNH 8.289204
COP 4561.911876
CRC 585.214483
CUC 1.162318
CUP 30.801425
CVE 110.210756
CZK 24.27803
DJF 206.899057
DKK 7.468695
DOP 73.224275
DZD 151.512807
EGP 55.391195
ERN 17.434769
ETB 171.588684
FJD 2.641712
FKP 0.872763
GBP 0.870535
GEL 3.161686
GGP 0.872763
GHS 13.187566
GIP 0.872763
GMD 84.849434
GNF 10083.080619
GTQ 8.898658
GYD 243.041424
HKD 9.035104
HNL 30.515112
HRK 7.535772
HTG 152.025829
HUF 390.778197
IDR 19290.874333
ILS 3.8237
IMP 0.872763
INR 102.358424
IQD 1522.057411
IRR 48875.468402
ISK 141.593499
JEP 0.872763
JMD 186.139186
JOD 0.82412
JPY 176.047578
KES 150.113537
KGS 101.643987
KHR 4673.699668
KMF 493.985007
KPW 1046.128156
KRW 1654.623519
KWD 0.356739
KYD 0.968223
KZT 626.29444
LAK 25220.695208
LBP 104044.438306
LKR 351.998265
LRD 212.616268
LSL 20.115486
LTL 3.432023
LVL 0.703074
LYD 6.31392
MAD 10.667096
MDL 19.652327
MGA 5229.448632
MKD 61.606144
MMK 2440.426052
MNT 4179.692823
MOP 9.301122
MRU 46.48632
MUR 52.840011
MVR 17.801552
MWK 2014.317245
MXN 21.452426
MYR 4.918929
MZN 74.283907
NAD 20.115486
NGN 1696.251888
NIO 42.759138
NOK 11.721748
NPR 164.017273
NZD 2.031048
OMR 0.44692
PAB 1.161833
PEN 3.979858
PGK 4.882618
PHP 67.585304
PKR 328.91053
PLN 4.25542
PYG 8208.994957
QAR 4.237133
RON 5.088162
RSD 117.17306
RUB 91.517539
RWF 1686.469942
SAR 4.359123
SBD 9.574387
SCR 15.952844
SDG 699.131391
SEK 11.018747
SGD 1.506719
SHP 0.872039
SLE 27.023589
SLL 24373.225136
SOS 662.873742
SRD 45.307476
STD 24057.634292
STN 24.488053
SVC 10.16604
SYP 15112.584002
SZL 20.105191
THB 37.83868
TJS 10.723968
TMT 4.079736
TND 3.421831
TOP 2.722265
TRY 48.632475
TTD 7.884153
TWD 35.546593
TZS 2850.796262
UAH 48.526025
UGX 4011.043073
USD 1.162318
UYU 46.587271
UZS 14157.09297
VES 228.975118
VND 30615.454087
VUV 142.441817
WST 3.259521
XAF 655.634306
XAG 0.021935
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.141222
XCG 2.093978
XDR 0.816663
XOF 655.637125
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.619375
ZAR 20.132091
ZMK 10462.247436
ZMW 26.229203
ZWL 374.265897
  • CMSC

    0.1480

    23.868

    +0.62%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.4550

    43.695

    -1.04%

  • NGG

    0.3650

    74.615

    +0.49%

  • BTI

    -0.3250

    50.775

    -0.64%

  • RIO

    0.6850

    68.905

    +0.99%

  • BCC

    -0.5800

    73.54

    -0.79%

  • AZN

    -0.4500

    84.67

    -0.53%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    15

    +0.13%

  • BP

    0.2100

    33.32

    +0.63%

  • CMSD

    0.1680

    24.168

    +0.7%

  • SCS

    0.1200

    16.7

    +0.72%

  • RELX

    -0.1600

    45.27

    -0.35%

  • JRI

    0.0891

    13.9956

    +0.64%

  • VOD

    0.0450

    11.395

    +0.39%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    23.73

    +1.69%

New anti-Ukraine disinfo campaign aims to bog down Western media
New anti-Ukraine disinfo campaign aims to bog down Western media / Photo: SEBASTIEN BOZON - AFP

New anti-Ukraine disinfo campaign aims to bog down Western media

A message on X asked a major French channel to verify what seemed to be a Deutsche Welle report about a Ukrainian artist who "sawed down the Eiffel Tower."

Text size:

"I see these kind of stories every day. Official media don't talk about them, what should I believe?" "Kathe" asked BFMTV on December 4.

But this was no innocent question, this was part of an online disinformation campaign blamed on Russia that involves not just the spreading of anti-Ukrainian false news, but also challenges Western media outlets to verify it.

It first appeared in September, and is a "vast enterprise of diversion" targeting journalists, experts say.

It is seemingly part of Russia's war on Ukraine, almost two years on since Moscow launched an invasion that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.

The "Antibot4Navalny" collective that tracks inauthentic Russian-language accounts on X, formerly Twitter, has christened this new disinformation campaign, operation "Matryoshka", after the Russian stacking dolls that are placed one inside another.

In the space of a few hours, "Kathe" had also contacted dozens of other major French media such as Paris Match, FranceInfo, Le Figaro and Le Parisien.

The X account then remained inactive for two weeks before publishing a picture of graffiti, purportedly from Los Angeles and depicting Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky as a homeless person begging.

Subsequently, another X user asked various media to verify it.

The "Antibot4Navalny" collective trackers provided information that allowed AFP to identify scores of accounts that were also asking media to verify false stories.

The accounts AFP identified mostly appeared to have been dormant and then pirated.

These accounts posted frequently, sometimes as often as once per minute, in a tell-tale sign of false behaviour.

AFP analysis found that accounts requesting media to verify false news subsequently re-published them soon afterwards.

- 'Diversion for fact-checkers' -

Posts that are part of this campaign always target Ukrainians and attempt to foster the idea that Europe and the United States are weary of Kyiv.

Examples include thefts from the Paris catacombs by a Ukrainian, military aid misappropriated by Ukraine, doctored or fake graffiti of Zelensky, false adverts on New York's Times Square.

Most of these images were first posted by Russian users, generally on the Telegram social media platform and news blogs, according to AFP research.

This campaign followed in the wake of another in recent months called "Doppelganger", which consisted of posting anti-Ukraine fake images that impersonated Western media.

French Intelligence services attributed that to Russia, experts told AFP.

David Chavalarias, director of the French scientific research centre CNRS, said this campaign is about "diversion for fact-checkers" in order to keep them "occupied on crude subjects (that are) difficult to verify".

This campaign can also give visibility to false information, said Chavalarias.

"The goal seems to be to capture the attention of fact-checkers in order to interfere with their work," said researcher Julien Nocetti, who specialises in cyber issues.

He added that the objective also seemed to be to generate more long-term effects on the narrative of the war by testing the ability of certain content to go viral.

The Russians are learning "and there is a type of agility in testing different methods," he added.

A French security source told AFP that Russia is "looking for visibility, they want us to talk about them, for better or for worse".

- 'Battle of narratives' -

The same bots that took part in the "Doppleganger" campaign also shared anti-Ukrainian posts as part of the "Matryoshka" operation.

A December 2023 report by Insikt Group, the threat research division of US cybersecurity company Recorded Future, indicated that the "Doppleganger" campaign was still highly active on social media, using at least 800 bots dedicated to promoting fake news impersonating Ukrainian media.

According to German press last week, Germany has uncovered a vast "pro-Russian disinformation campaign" using thousands of fake X accounts to publish anti-Ukraine content alongside the visuals of German media.

"Ukraine continues to be the country most often targeted by information manipulation -- not by accident," European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said last week during a press conference about disinformation and foreign interference.

"We are engaging on a 'battle of narratives'," he added. "Security is no longer just a matter of weaponry... It is a matter of information.:

N.Simek--TPP