Mueller Indictment of the Russians
By
Habib Siddiqui
The coordinators of these two Facebook events were two seemingly polarized Facebook groups — one called the "Heart of Texas" with 250,000 likes, and the other titled “United Muslims of America" (UMA) with 320,000 likes. But a federal investigation into Russia's influence on the 2016 election has linked both accounts to the same St. Petersburg troll hub.
Habib Siddiqui
On Friday (Feb.
16, 2018) a federal
grand jury in Washington DC indicted 13 Russian nationals and a
Kremlin-linked internet firm (Internet Research Agency) on charges that
they meddled in the US presidential election of 2016. The
US government said Russian entities began a concerted years-long effort as early as
2014, dedicated to undermining
the American political system and sow discord.
Per indictment, the Internet
Research Agency had a graphics department, a data analysis department, an SEO (search-engine
optimization) department, an IT department and a finance department — a fake
news version of what a real newsroom would look like. It employed Russian computer specialists, divided into day teams and night teams,
who created hundreds of social media accounts that eventually attracted
hundreds of thousands of online followers. They posed as Christian activists,
anti-immigration groups and supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement. One
account posed as the Tennessee Republican Party and generated hundreds of
thousands of followers, prosecutors said.
The indictment shows the scale of that effort -
“information warfare against the United States of America”, eventually
involving 80 staff in St. Petersburg, a budget of more than a million dollars a
month, hundreds of social media accounts, stolen identities of American
citizens — and even visits into the United States by Russians traveling under
visas obtained through misrepresentation.
The U.S. Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said the indictment is “a reminder that
people are not always who they appear on the Internet. The indictment alleges
that the Russian conspirators want to promote social discord in the United
States and undermine public confidence in democracy. We must not allow them
to succeed.”
According to
the 37-page indictment, the
Internet Research Agency served as a hub from which the defendants and other
co-conspirators used social media platforms –
YouTube, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter - to “sow discord in the
US political system”. Some of the defendants, posing as US citizens, also
communicated with unsuspecting individuals associated with the Trump campaign
and other political activists.
The charges
– which include conspiracy to impair, obstruct and defeat ‘the lawful
governmental functions of the United States’, wire fraud, bank fraud and
aggravated identity theft – are the most direct allegations to date of illegal
Russian meddling in the election. These were brought by Special Counsel
Robert Mueller, who is investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Mueller identified 13 digital advertisements paid for by the Russian
operation. All of these attacked Mrs. Clinton or promoted Mr. Trump. “Hillary
is a Satan, and her crimes and lies had proved just how evil she is,” one
advertisement stated.
According to the Washington Post, the Internet Research Agency staff
began tracking social media sites related to political issues back in early
2014. By early 2016, the Agency-controlled social media groups had collected
hundreds of thousands of followers. It bought ads for “March for Trump” event
on March 23. An April 2016 ad read: “JOIN our #HillaryClintonForPrison2016″. Two ads in
May 2016 read: Ad: “Donald wants to defeat terrorism… Hillary wants to
sponsor it” and “Vote Republican, vote Trump, and support the Second
Amendment!”. After both Trump and Clinton clinched the nomination of their
respective parties, an ad in June read: “Trump is our only hope for a better
future”.
The Agency also
bought Facebook ads on June 24, 2016 to promote a “Support Hillary, Save
American Muslims” rally under the name of a Facebook group called “United Muslims
of America”, which did not exist. On July 5, 2016 “United Muslims of America”
orders posters for its rally, including one attributing a quote to Clinton: “I
think Sharia Law will be a powerful new direction of freedom.” [Suffice it to
state that the ad was used as a fear-mongering tactics for ordinary Americans against
Islam and Ms Clinton.] On July
9, 2016, the “Support Hillary, Save American Muslims” rally was
held in D.C. On July 12, 2016, an
Agency group buys Facebook ad for a rally in New York called “Down with
Hillary.” The ads in the next four months were all in support of Trump and
against Clinton.
As can be seen, the Russian agency was playing groups on both
sides of the politics; it also promoted bigotry against Islam to galvanize
evangelical and conservative support for Trump.
One of its success stories pertains to mobilizing protesters
and counter-protesters on May 21, 2016 when the two groups met in front of the
Islamic Da'wah Center in Houston. One group, wearing "White Lives
Matter" shirts, came to oppose the opening of a new library in the religious
center. The other group, waving signs reading "Muslims are welcome
here," showed up to support the center and the community it served. The
energized clash of protesters was not physically violent, but Houston police
showed up to make sure it stayed that way.
Interestingly, unknown to everyone involved, both rallies
were organized by the Russian agency - a group of distant internet trolls located
in St. Petersburg. "What neither side could have known was that Russian
trolls were encouraging both sides to battle in the streets and create division
between real Americans," said U.S. Senator Richard Burr, chairman of the
Senate Intelligence Committee, in a hearing on Capitol Hill.
The coordinators of these two Facebook events were two seemingly polarized Facebook groups — one called the "Heart of Texas" with 250,000 likes, and the other titled “United Muslims of America" (UMA) with 320,000 likes. But a federal investigation into Russia's influence on the 2016 election has linked both accounts to the same St. Petersburg troll hub.
Senator Burr said that the
Russian government spent a grand total of $200 to advertise these dueling
events on Facebook. Then, it seems, they let social media do the rest. It was
later noted by the news media that the "Heart of Texas" organizers
never showed up in the rally for “Stop Islamization of Texas” (promoted presumably
by hatemongering bigots like Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer of ‘Stop Islamization of
America’ or SIOA)
although its call had drawn some anti-Muslim bigots to the rally. Many
Houstonian also rallied in support of Muslims to show their disdain for
anti-Muslim bigots. “We had a legitimate counter protest and civil rights
concern,” wrote protester Chris Martin in an email to the Current. [Note: SIOA rouses public
fears about a ‘vast Islamic conspiracy to destroy’ American values. The
hate-group is modeled after a European organization with the same agenda, Stop
Islamization of Europe (SIOE). As noted by the ADL website, their ability to
cultivate relationships with other like-minded anti-Muslim bigots and
organizations internationally and domestically, including radical Dutch
politician Geert
Wilders and David Yerushalmi, has further
enabled them to reach broader audiences and expand their activity. Yerushalmi
is one of the driving forces behind Shariah related conspiracy theories.]
Both the UMA and Heart of
Texas Facebook groups were later shut down by Facebook. The Heart of Texas
Facebook page had some 249,000 likes shortly before it was suspended.
Its posts included diatribes against refugees, conspiracy theories about the
death of Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia and Islamophobic sentiment. One
post called for 'No More Mosques in America.' Another complained:
"Since when has this country turned into a liberal cesspool
full of all sorts of ethnic and sexual minorities?"
On
October 26, 2016, Heart of Texas raised the issue of voter fraud, warning:
"There are many grounds for believing the Liberals are going to usurp
power in the White House and push into it Hillary Clinton at any cost."
Voter
fraud was a topic of discussion at that time, in part because Donald Trump had
raised it on the campaign trail.
The
Heart of Texas Facebook page was full of stilted, ungrammatical English. One
post declared: "All those in favor of gun control rise your hand."
Another: "Texas Police Is the Best," and another, "The Election
is RIGGED, the US are BROKEN."
After the election, the Russians kept up their efforts to foment dissent in
America. On November 12, 2016, they staged two rallies in New York on the same day.
One had the theme, “Show your support for President-Elect Trump” while the
other was called, “Trump is NOT my President.” They also organized a rally
entitled “Charlotte Against Trump” in Charlotte, NC, on Nov. 19.
Lawmakers on Capitol Hill
have already verified that Russian government-funded groups spent at least
$100,000 on political Facebook ads preceding the presidential election. If $200
can buy you an orchestrated clash on the streets of a city like Houston
thousands of miles away, imagine what they could have done with more money!
Mueller’s probe is also looking into whether members of Donald Trump’s
campaign colluded with the Russian government. According to the New York Times,
Mr. Trump’s eldest son met with a Russian lawyer in
hopes of receiving political dirt on Mrs. Clinton; one adviser has admitted
being tipped off in advance to Russian hacking of Democratic emails; another
was in contact with a Twitter account used by Russian hackers; a federal judge
found probable cause that a third adviser was an unlawful Russian agent. President
Trump has denied there was any collusion.
Whether any of that violated federal law is the biggest question facing Mr.
Mueller. While Friday’s indictment did not answer such a question, it did paint
a damning picture of a Russian operation that was multipronged, well financed
and relentless.
One of those
indicted is a businessman by the name of Yevgeny Prigozhin with ties to
Russian President Vladimir Putin. He is an entrepreneur from St Petersburg who
has been called “Putin’s chef” by Russian media. His restaurants and catering
businesses have hosted the Kremlin leader’s dinners with foreign dignitaries.
Mr Prigozhin
said on Friday he was not upset about his indictment for alleged election
meddling in the US, the RIA news agency reported. “The Americans are very
emotional people, they see what they want to see. I have great respect for
them. I am not at all upset that I am on this list. If they want to see the
devil, let them,” Prigozhin is quoted as saying.
Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Reuters he was not yet familiar with the US
indictments of Russian nationals. “We have not yet familiarized ourselves (with
the indictments),” Mr Peskov told the news agency.
None of the defendants was arrested — Russia does not generally extradite
its citizens to the United States. But prosecutors use such indictments to name
and shame operatives, making it harder for them to work undetected in the
future. If they travel abroad, they risk capture and extradition.
Mueller deserves
our thanks for taking a dead aim at the central mandate in the investigation.
If foreign meddling is not checked soon, I am afraid that the 2018 mid-term
congressional election would also be compromised. America needs to respond fast
to stop such meddling.
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