Social media turn on Putin, the past master

By Carole Cadwalladr Sun 6 Mar 2022 22.00 AEDT 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/mar/06/social-media-turn-on-putin-the-past-master


Disinformation and fake accounts were used against the west for years – now the 
Kremlin is under attack

One of the wildest aspects of the first Great Information War is not just that 
you can follow Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in real time, minute by minute and 
step by step, but you can also join in.

Because in 2022, information is power. And one of the many huge unexpected 
geopolitical shifts of the last week is that this power has been returned to 
the people.

In Russia on Friday, Vladimir Putin, a man who is now scared of his own shadow, 
took the extraordinary step of attempting to outlaw information.

He banned Facebook. He shut down Twitter.

He passed a new law that declares journalism a criminal offence: any journalist 
found to have published “fake news” on the war in Ukraine now faces up to 15 
years in prison.

It is, like so many things in the last week, incredible, unprecedented, 
horrifying – but more importantly it’s also desperate and absurd. Because in 
2022 you can’t ban information. It’s like trying to ban oxygen.

It’s the kind of move that one of his grey-faced Soviet predecessors might have 
made. It’s as modern and up-to-date as a typewriter.

Only a fool would make predictions right now, but here’s one anyway: it proves 
that Putin, the founding father of what’s come to be known as “information 
war”, just lost the information war.


Anything can and may happen. But having dominated the dark arts of 
disinformation for the last eight years, the Kremlin’s invincible mastery of 
the information space has been exposed as a sham, a fiction, another lie. Putin 
has put on the equivalent of a pair of bell-bottoms and is dad-dancing across 
the internet.

Meanwhile Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy isn’t just commanding his 
armed forces: he’s commanding TikTok, Instagram, Twitter, Telegram. He’s 
simultaneously available across all social media platforms – hybrid warfare’s 
first hybrid leader.

Every tank is being tracked and added to open source maps and databases. This 
is a country of 44 million people recording every twitch their invaders make

If this sounds like wishful thinking, it is. Russia’s war on journalism and 
journalists, like its war on Ukraine, is unspeakably chilling. But it’s also 
like watching Stalin take on the TikTok kids.

Meanwhile, Zelenskiy has not just put out a call for foreign fighters – anyone 
prepared to get on a train and pick up a gun – he’s also being assisted by a 
crack squad of armchair intelligence officers.

Because one of the most remarkable aspects of the war so far is how anyone with 
a smartphone can play a role in the extraordinary Ukrainian resistance. “Osint” 
researchers – open source intelligence gatherers – are methodically scouring 
the internet for the latest photos and videos coming out of Ukraine and 
verifying and geolocating them in real time.

Every tank is being logged. Every truck and every troop movement is tracked, 
registered and added to open source maps and databases.

This is a country of 44 million people recording every twitch their Russian 
invaders make. It’s a firehose of real-time information that, with the help of 
this volunteer army, is being turned into real-time military strategy.

On Monday, I chaired a panel with Eliot Higgins, founder of the online 
investigative organisation Bellingcat, who has pioneered so many of these open 
source techniques and whose team has been responsible for many of its most 
astounding feats – identifying Sergei Skripal’s poisoners, to name just one.

What distinguishes this war, Higgins says, is that it’s the first time the 
Osint community has mobilised in real time.

“It happened in Syria,” he said. “But it took time.” And in that time lag, 
lies, disinformation, confusion dominated.

This time around, he said, the disinformation just hasn’t had the chance to 
take root – a result not just of this great civilian information army but of US 
intelligence too. It took the unprecedented step of releasing its findings to 
the world ahead of the invasion. It informed us that there would be fake news 
about fake bombs, and when there were, we watched them being debunked in real 
time.

The world is terrible and dark, and so much of this is on us: it’s the 
corruption of our governments with their offshore structures and 
oligarch-friendly libel laws that is responsible for so much of this.

That and the insanity of allowing Silicon Valley monopolies to police the 
platforms that provided Putin with his attack surface. All this has come back 
to bite Nato on its arse, and there are truly terrifying possibilities ahead. 
But not since 2010 and the Arab spring has it felt so acutely like technology 
could be the people’s friend.

The first stage in Putin’s invasion was an attack on information. He distorted 
reality, injecting the toxin of fake news – a strategy that he deployed against 
us

It’s also why we must, must, must call out the fundamental untruth that 
underpins this, the Kremlin’s war on truth. Russia did not invade Ukraine last 
week. It invaded Ukraine in 2014. And it’s not just at war with Ukraine. It’s 
at war with us too. In February 2014 it launched a joint military assault on 
Ukraine and the west.

We didn’t know it then. But we do now. Because the first stage in Putin’s 
invasion of Ukraine was an attack on information. He distorted reality, 
injecting the toxin of fake news – a military strategy that he deployed against 
us at the exact same moment across the exact same platforms.

We knew this because it’s laid out in forensic and exhaustive detail in what 
may be one of the most misunderstood documents of modern times: the Mueller 
report. We just failed to understand what it meant.

But now we can and must understand, because the curtain has been lifted.

Putin has been at war with us for the last eight years. A man we realised last 
week is the Wizard of Oz. He’s a man hiding behind a curtain, a veil of lies. A 
man hiding behind a curtain with a stash of nuclear warheads.

We finally have the light we need to see him for who he is, to understand the 
war he has been waging against us in plain sight, aided by his quisling western 
allies – Fox News and all the chocolate soldiers of “the war on woke”. It just 
may be too late.

There hasn’t been such a stark and universal moment of moral clarity for 82 
years.

This is lies versus truth. It’s darkness versus light. It’s Stalin versus the 
TikTok kids.

But Stalin has the nukes. He has the thermobaric weapons. He has the means and 
motivation to flatten not just Kyiv but the rest of us too. And what happens 
next is anybody’s guess.

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