une 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The
FBI has publicly justified its suppression of
dissenting online views about US foreign policy if a
media outlet can be somehow linked to one of its
adversaries. The Bureau’s justification followed a
series of instances in which Silicon Valley social
media platforms banned accounts following
consultations with the FBI.
In a particularly notable
case in 2018, the FBI encouraged Facebook, Instagram and
Google to remove or restrict ads on the American Herald
Tribune (AHT), an online journal that published critical
opinion articles on US policy toward Iran and the Middle
East. The bureau has never offered a clear rationale,
however, despite its private discussions with Facebook
on the ban.
The FBI’s first step
toward intervening against dissenting views on social
media took place in October 2017 with the creation of a
Foreign Influence Task Force (FTIF) in the bureau’s
Counterintelligence Division. Next, the FBI defined any
effort by states designated by the Department of Defense
as major adversaries (Russia, China, Iran and North
Korea) to influence American public opinion as a threat
to US national security.
In February 2020, the FBI
defined that threat in much more specific terms and
implied that it would act against any online media
outlet that was found to fall within its ambit. At a
conference on election security on February 24, David K.
Porter, who identified himself as Assistant Section
Chief of the Foreign Influence Task Force,
defined what the FBI
described as “malign foreign influence activity” as
“actions by a foreign power to influence U.S. policy,
distort political sentiment and public discourse.”
Porter described
“information confrontation” as a force “designed to
undermine public confidence in the credibility of free
and independent news media.” Those who practice this
dark craft, he said, seek to “push consumers to
alternative news sources,” where “it’s much easier to
introduce false narratives” and thus “sow doubt and
confusion about the true narratives by exploiting the
media landscape to introduce conflicting story lines.”
“Information
confrontation”, however, is simply the literal Russian
translation of the term “information warfare.” Its use
by the FTIF appears to be aimed merely at justifying an
FBI role in seeking to suppress what it calls
“alternative news sources” under any set of
circumstances it can justify.
While expressing his
intention to target alternative media, Porter
simultaneously denied that the FBI was concerned about
censoring media. The FITF, he said “doesn’t go around
chasing content. We don’t focus on what the actors say.”
Instead, he insisted that “attribution is key,”
suggesting that the FTIF was only interested in finding
hidden foreign government actors at work.
Thus the question of
“attribution” has become the FBI’s key lever for
censoring alternative media that publishes critical
content on U.S. foreign policy, or which attacks
mainstream and corporate media narratives. If an outlet
can be somehow linked to a foreign adversary, removing
it from online platforms is fair game for the feds.
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The Lies And
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The strange disappearance of
American Herald Tribune
In 2018, Facebook deleted
the Facebook page of the American Herald Tribune (AHT),
a website that publishes commentary from an array of
notable authors who are harshly critical of U.S. foreign
policy. Gmail, which is run by Google, quickly followed
suit by removing ads linked to the outlet, while the
Facebook-owned Instagram scrubbed AHT’s account
altogether.
Tribune editor Anthony
Hall
reported at the time that
the removals occurred at the end of August 2018, but
there was no announcement of the move by Facebook. Nor
was it reported by the corporate news media until
January 2020, when
CNN elicited a confirmation
from a Facebook spokesman that it had indeed done so in
2018.
Furthermore, the FBI was advising Facebook on both
Iranian and Russian sites that were banned during that
same period of a few days.
As Facebook’s chief security officer Alex Stamos
noted on
July 21, 2018, “We have proactively reported
our technical findings to US law enforcement, because
they have much more information than we do, and may in
time be in a position to provide public attribution.”
On August 2, a few days
following the removal of AHT and two weeks after
hundreds of Russian and Iranian Pages had been removed
by Facebook, FBI Director Christopher Wray
told reporters at a White House
briefing that FBI officials had “met with top
social media and technology companies several times”
during the year, “providing actionable intelligence to
better enable them to address abuse of their platforms
by foreign actors.”
He remarked that FBI officials had “shared
specific threat indicators and account information so
they can better monitor their own platforms.”
Cybersecurity firm
FireEye, which boasts that it has contracts to support
“nearly every department in the United States
government,” and which has been used by Department of
Homeland Security as a primary source of “threat
intelligence,” also influenced Facebook’s crackdown on
the Tribune. CNN
cited an unnamed official of
FireEye stating that the company had “assessed” with
“moderate confidence” that the AHT’s website was founded
in Iran and was “part of a larger influence operation.”
The CNN author was
evidently unaware that in U.S. intelligence parlance
“moderate confidence” suggests a near-total absence of
genuine conviction. As the 2011
official “consumer’s guide” to US
intelligence explained, the term “moderate
confidence” generally indicates that either there are
still differences of view in the intelligence community
on the issue or that the judgment ”is credible and
plausible but not sufficiently corroborated to warrant
higher level of confidence.”
CNN also
quoted FireEye official Lee
Foster’s claim that “indicators, both technical and
behavioral” showed that American Herald Tribune was part
of the larger influence operation. The CNN story linked
to a
study published by FireEye
featuring a “map” showing how Iranian-related media were
allegedly linked to one another, primarily by
similarities in content.
But CNN apparently hadn’t bothered to read the
study, which did not once mention the American Herald
Tribune.
Finally, the CNN piece
cited a 2018 tweet by Daily Beast contributor Josh
Russell which it said provided “further evidence
supporting American Herald Tribune’s alleged links to
Iran.” In
fact,
his tweet merely documented
the AHT’s sharing of an internet hosting service with
another pro-Iran site “at some point in time.”
Investigators familiar with the problem know that
two websites using the same hosting service, especially
over a period
of years, is not a reliable indicator of a coherent
organizational connection.
CNN did find evidence of
deception over the registration of the AHT. The outlet’s
editor, Anthony Hall, continues to give the false
impression that a large number of journalists and others
(including this writer), are contributors, despite the
fact that their articles have been republished from
other sources without permission.
However, AHT has one
characteristic that differentiates it from the others
that have been kicked off Facebook: The American and
European authors who have appeared in its pages are all
real and are advancing their own authentic views. Some
are sympathetic to the Islamic Republic, but others are
simply angry about U.S. policies: Some are Libertarian
anti-interventionists; others are supporters of the 9/11
Truth movement or other conspiracy theories.
One notable independent
contributor to AHT is Philip Giraldi, an 18-year veteran
of the CIA’s Clandestine Service and and an articulate
critic of US wars in the Middle East and of Israeli
influence on American policy and politics. From its
inception in 2015, the AHT has been edited by Anthony
Hall, Professor Emeritus at University of Lethbridge in
Alberta, Canada.
In announcing yet another
takedown of Iranian Pages in October 2018, Facebook’s
Gleicher declared that “coordinated inauthentic
behavior” occurs when “people or organizations create
networks of accounts to mislead others about who they
are what they’re doing.” That certainly doesn’t apply to
those who provided the content for the American Herald
Tribune.
Thus the takedown of the
publication by Facebook, with FBI and FireEye
encouragement represents a disturbing precedent for
future actions against individuals who criticize US
foreign policy and outlets that attack corporate media
narratives.
Shelby Pierson, the CIA
official appointed by then director of national
intelligence in July 2019 to chair the inter-agency
“Election Executive and Leadership Board,” appeared to
hint at differences in the criteria employed by his
agency and the FBI on foreign and alternative media.
In an interview with former
acting CIA Director Michael Morrell in February, Pierson
said, “[P]articularly on the [foreign] influence side of
the house, when you’re talking about blended content
with First Amendment-protected speech…against the
backdrop of a political paradigm and you’re involving
yourself in those activities, I think that makes it
more complicated” (emphasis added).
Further emphasizing the
uncertainty surrounding the FBI’s methods of online
media suppression, she added that the position in
question “doesn’t have the same unanimity that we have
in the counterterrorism context.”
Gareth Porter is an independent investigative
journalist who has covered national security policy
since 2005 and was the recipient of Gellhorn Prize
for Journalism in 2012. His most recent book is The
CIA Insider’s Guide to the Iran Crisis co-authored
with John Kiriakou, just published in February.-
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