Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 13 – Moscow is
preparing to mark the second anniversary of the EuroMaidan in Kyiv “in its own
way,” by unleashing a new disinformation campaign against Ukraine via Europe as
part of its continuing campaign to destabilize Ukraine and restore Russian
influence there, according to Andrey Latynin.
This disinformation campaign, the
Ukrainian commentator says, is intended to increase the shift in Western and
especially European opinion about Ukraine from concern about Russian actions to
worries about Ukraine’s inability to rapidly carry out reforms and fight
corruption (nr2.com.ua/publications/Kreml-sobiraetsya-atakovat-Ukrainu-iz-Evropy-111188.html).
Moscow then plans, Latynin suggests,
to play back European coverage in Ukraine to suggest that this criticism of
Ukraine emanates from there and thus promote among Ukrainians a sense of
isolation from the West and distrust about Ukraine in ways that keep the original
source of these stories hidden.
A campaign so organized, he says, “promises
to be quite successful: its organizers apparently are well informed about the
Ukrainian media scene” and know that Ukrainians no longer trust anything coming
from a Russian source. But “by
tradition,” Ukrainians are more trusting of those from Europe, independently of
the country or the publication.
Thus, Moscow’s disinformation
specialists view their chief task to get information into the hands of European
journalists about Ukraine and especially about Ukrainian government and
security officials and to suggest that these institutions are “disorganized”
and “disorienting” Ukrainians and others.
According to Latynin, he has
information that in the course of October, Russian agents approached
journalists in Germany, Belgium and France with “compromising information”
about leading Ukrainian government and especially security personnel. This information stressed the supposed
existence of high levels of corruption and incompetence among them.
The Russians “recommended” that the
European journalists “concentrate on how Ukrainian siloviki are ‘wasting time
on personal enrichment instead of on the struggle with Russian aggression at the
front and inside the country” and that their behavior was making any victory “impossible.”
The idea of this campaign is simple:
European journalists will write stories Moscow wants to see and put them in
their publications, and the Ukrainian outlets will pick them up and present
them with European rather than Russian datelines.
This campaign will also have the effect
of assisting Moscow in its ongoing effort to throw up obstacles on Ukraine’s
path to European integration by calling into question Kyiv’s commitment and
readiness to do so (apostrophe.com.ua/article/economy/2015-11-13/rossiya-gotovit-ukraine-novyie-trudnosti/2570).
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