April 13, 2020 | BY Jim Garamone , DOD News
Under the rubric of "not wasting a good crisis,"
Russia, China and others are using the coronavirus pandemic to spread
disinformation to further their goals, Pentagon officials said.
The Defense Department is working with the State Department,
allies, partners and other agencies to curb this trend, Pentagon officials said
in a telephone briefing for reporters last week.
"We've seen increasing unity of effort in response to
COVID, both within Western democracies, but also across allies and partners, to
include terrific sharing of medical lessons learned," said Laura Cooper,
the deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia.
Cooper specifically pointed out instances where the Russian
government sought to sow disinformation in the West.
"I think the most pernicious disinformation that we
have to contend with is the disinformation that is sowing global … mistrust and
confusion," she said. "These are messages that are endangering global
health because they're undermining the efforts of governments, of health
agencies and of organizations that are in charge of disseminating accurate
information about the virus to the public."
An example of this disinformation came to light in March,
when Russia Today and Sputnik broadcast that hand-washing was ineffective
against coronavirus. Another "alternative news source" in Russia
reported that there was no pandemic and that the deaths in Italy were the
common flu, she said.
In early January, Russian news outlets broadcast that they
had discovered a cure: They hadn't. Further, they stated that it was really
U.S. pharmaceutical companies that were spreading rumors about the virus to
drum up business. It wasn't, Cooper said.
"You can see how they could cause individual citizens
to act in ways that contradict good advice that they are being given by public
health officials," Cooper said.
While Russia may be the most egregious culprit, China is
also involved in the disinformation process, Chad Sbragia, the deputy assistant
secretary of defense for China, told reporters. "In terms of specific
disinformation campaigns, the one … that [I] was most concerned with … was the false accusation that COVID-19
began with a U.S. Army service member bringing that to China somehow," he
said. "That was just patently false and, frankly, unhelpful. It's those
kind of activities that we see that are just not what the global environment
community needs at this time."
Given that the virus first appeared in China and that
Chinese medical professionals had first-hand experience in how to combat COVID,
the United States was disappointed with the Chinese Communist Party's
propaganda and disinformation campaign effort to shift responsibility of the
pandemic to others — "which was unfounded, futile and really
counterproductive," Sbargia said.
Iran has been particularly hard-hit by the pandemic, and the
Iranian government has also spread disinformation, saying the United States was
responsible for the virus.
"We're seeing a variety of actors around the world who
are using COVID-19 to target or blame Western allies, or the United States in
particular," Cooper said. "And I really think … of it as a global
disinformation ecosystem where a news item that generates in one part of the
world then gets amplified and picked up elsewhere."
U.S. officials have been exposing this disinformation,
Cooper said. "We're calling on all countries — Russia included — to rein
in malign actors that are spreading misleading, disruptive information about
the virus," he added.
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