Is the West at war with disinformation or dissent?
By: Rachel Marsden
As populism rises in the West, so do crackdowns on narratives that deviate
from those of the state.
When US President Joe Biden announced on April 27 that a new Disinformation
Governance Board would serve the Department of Homeland Security, it was just
the latest turn of the screw on freedom.
This time, it’s an affront to citizens’ right to a diversity of information.
It’s one thing to correct inaccurate information, but this new entity seems more
oriented towards narrative-policing that cracks down on the interpretation of
information rather than the accuracy of it. Headed by a former communications
advisor to the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, Nina Jankowicz, one of the board’s
first responsibilities will be to address “disinformation coming from Russia as
well as misleading messages about the US-Mexico border,” according to CBS News.
Interesting that these two issues – immigration and foreign conflicts – are
currently viewed as two of Washington’s most significant failures, which have
given rise to populist dissent. Make no mistake, it’s the dissent that’s the
ultimate target.
The fact that a former Ukraine government spin doctor was viewed as the best
person to head up the new initiative tells you everything you need to know about
its true purpose. Jankowicz published a book in 2020 whose title suggests that
she believes the West to be in an online war with Russia. ‘How to Lose the
Information War: Russia, Fake News, and the Future of Conflict,’ portrays
Western narratives as truthful and Russian narratives as “fake news.” Doing so
obscures the fact that the mainstream Western media has not been immune to
propagating narratives peddled by the state that could retroactively be
considered fake news or war propaganda. Meanwhile, Russian media has often
provided a platform for those seeking to express – or access – dissenting
analysis or information that falls outside of the Western media bubble. Clearly,
there are some ‘democracies’ that are bothered by this.
The appetite of Western nations to ensure that their citizens are only fed
information that they control through their own highly concentrated government
or corporate subsidized media isn’t new. It’s just getting more voracious.
Perhaps it’s because the more authoritarian their agenda becomes, the more
populist sentiment increases and gives rise to events such as Brexit or the
election of Donald Trump, as well as trends such as opposition to US-backed
conflicts, the rise in popularity of various populist political parties in
Europe, and demonstrations against pandemic mandates, which just happen to be
associated with government-issued QR codes.
Dissent is the enemy of authoritarian ambition. Supposedly free countries have
manipulated their citizens into believing that censorship of certain views is
for people’s own safety and security – hence why the military in Canada, the UK,
and France, and now Homeland Security in the US, are involved in narrative
policing. In reality, their efforts seem to be more about ensuring citizens’
compliance with their own agenda.
The fusion of domestic security and disinformation came to light as early as
2016, when the European Parliament grotesquely conflated Islamic terrorist
propaganda with Russian media, in what seemed to be itself a propaganda effort
to undermine the Russian media by equating these two totally unrelated things.
But one by one, Western governments have placed free speech under national
security control.
France, for example, handed off responsibility for online information
arbitration to its domestic intelligence agency (the DGSI) and has reportedly
considered involving defense-funded startups in the effort.
Canada has also turned to its security apparatus to shape Canadians’ information
landscape – at least twice. The Communications Security Establishment, the
country’s electronic spying agency, has been tweeting its own interpretations of
disputed events occurring in the fog of the conflict in Ukraine as indisputable
fact, while routinely denouncing Russia’s interpretation as invalid.
But Canada’s security establishment isn’t at its first rodeo in attempting to
prevent citizens’ thinking from deviating from the state’s messaging. Under
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the country’s armed forces deployed a
months-long, military-grade propaganda campaign, which employed tactics honed
during the war in Afghanistan, to mind-bend unsuspecting Canadians towards
Trudeau’s Covid narrative, CBC News reported last year.
Not to be outdone, the psychological warfare specialists of the 77th brigade of
Britain’s armed forces have also worked to shape messaging both in favor of the
government’s Covid policies and against anything contrary out of Russia. “One
current priority is combating the spread of harmful, false and misleading
narratives through disinformation. To bolster this effort, the British Army will
be deploying two experts in countering disinformation. They will advise and
support NATO in ensuring its citizens have the right information to protect
themselves and its democracies are protected from malicious disinformation
operations used by adversaries,” Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said last year.
The fact that public safety and disinformation have suddenly become routinely
conflated should be worrisome to defenders of whatever remnants of democracy
that we still have left. Terrorism, health and now disinformation have all
served as pretexts for the rapid erosion of our freedoms – all under the guise
of protecting us from bad actors. But are we really safer? Or are we just
increasingly less free?
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN