| BRUSSELS
Russian military helicopters fly in formation, with warships seen on the water, during celebrations for Navy Day in the Black Sea port of Sevastopol, Crimea, July 26, 2015. REUTERS/Pavel Rebrov/File Photo
NATO accused
Russia of escalating a disinformation campaign since the Kremlin's 2014 seizure
of Ukraine's Crimea region, saying Russian websites such as Sputnik and RT had
posted false stories, the alliance's spokeswoman said on Saturday.
There is
increasing concern among senior NATO and European Union officials over Russia's
ability to use television and the Internet to spread what they say is fake
news.
The defense
alliance of 28 democracies says it has recorded more than a score of Russian
myths in the last two years which it has attempted to knock down with
factsheets, interviews, rebuttals and videos.
"NATO has
been dealing with a significant increase in Russian propaganda and
disinformation since Russia's illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014,"
spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said in an email.
She said a
website set up by NATO in 2014 "catalogs 32 Russian myths about NATO
systematically used by Sputnik, RT and a range of other outlets owned or
controlled by the Russian government".
Lungescu said
the most recent disinformation occurred earlier this month when Russian news
website life.ru published a fabricated voice recording of NATO
Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg with a Russian prankster pretending to be
Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko.
"Such a
call never took place and this was an obvious example of disinformation,"
she said.
The Kremlin,
Russian government, RT, Sputnik and Life could not immediately be reached for
comment.
The Russian
authorities have in the past denied seeking to interfere in the internal
affairs of other states. Russian state-funded media deny acting as the
propaganda arm of the Kremlin. They say they present an alternative viewpoint
that is ignored by the mainstream Western media.
Lungescu cited another example of disinformation in
July last year when Sputnik, RT and other Russian websites issued reports about
a fire raging at a NATO base in Izmir, claiming it was a deliberate sabotage
after the failed coup in Turkey.
"We engaged with Sputnik, RT and others to
correct, as there was a forest fire at some distance from the base, but with no
connection to it."
(Additional reporting by Christian Lowe in Moscow;
editing by Mark Heinrich)
No comments:
Post a Comment