Reuters, BBC, and Bellingcat
participated in covert UK Foreign Office-funded
programs to “weaken Russia,” leaked docs reveal
New leaked documents show Reuters’ and the BBC’s
involvement in covert UK FCO programs to effect
“attitudinal change” and “weaken the Russian
state’s influence,” alongside intel contractors
and Bellingcat.
By Max Blumenthal
February 24,
2021 "Information
Clearing House"
-
New leaked documents
show Reuters’ and the BBC’s involvement in covert UK
FCO programs to effect “attitudinal change” and
“weaken the Russian state’s influence,” alongside
intel contractors and Bellingcat.
The
U.K. Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) have
sponsored Reuters and the BBC to conduct a series of
covert programs aimed at promoting regime change
inside Russia and undermining its government across
Eastern Europe and Central Asia, according to a
series of leaked
documents.
The leaked materials
show the Thomson Reuters Foundation and BBC Media
Action participating in a covert information warfare
campaign aimed at countering Russia. Working through
a shadowy department within the FCO known as the
Counter Disinformation & Media Development (CDMD),
the media organizations operated alongside a
collection of intelligence contractors in a secret
entity known simply as “the Consortium.”
Through training
programs of Russian journalists overseen by Reuters,
the British Foreign Office sought to produce an
“attitudinal change in the participants,” promoting
a “positive impact” on their “perception of the
U.K.”
“These revelations show
that when MPs were railing about Russia, British
agents were using the BBC and Reuters to deploy
precisely the same tactics that politicians and
media commentators were accusing Russia of using,”
Chris Williamson, a former U.K. Labour MP who attempted
to apply public scrutiny to
the CDMD’s covert activities and was stonewalled on
national security grounds, told The Grayzone.
“The BBC and Reuters
portray themselves as an unimpeachable, impartial,
and authoritative source of world news,” Williamson
continued, “but both are now hugely compromised by
these disclosures. Double standards like this just
bring establishment politicians and corporate media
hacks into further disrepute.”
Thomson Reuters
Foundation spokesperson Jenny Vereker implicitly
confirmed the authenticity of the leaked documents
in an emailed response to questions from The
Grayzone. However, she contended, “The
inference that the Thomson Reuters Foundation was
engaged in ‘secret activities’ is inaccurate and
misrepresents our work in the public interest. We
have for decades openly supported a free press and
have worked to help journalists globally to develop
the skills needed to report with independence.”
The tranche of leaked
files closely resemble FCO-related documented
released between 2018 and 2020 by a hacking
collective calling itself Anonymous. The same source
has claimed credit for obtaining the latest round of
documents.
The Grayzone
reported in October 2020 on leaked materials
released by Anonymous which exposed a massive propaganda
campaign funded by the FCO to cultivate support for
regime change in Syria. Soon
after, the Foreign Office claimed
its computer systems had been penetrated by hackers,
thus confirming their authenticity.
The new leaks
illustrate in alarming detail how Reuters and the
BBC —two of the largest and most distinguished news
organizations in the world — attempted to answer the
British foreign ministry’s call for help in
improving its “ability to respond and to promote our
message across Russia,” and to “counter the Russian
government’s narrative.” Among the FCO’s stated
goals, according to the director of the CDMD, was to
“weaken the Russian State’s influence on its near
neighbours.”
Reuters and the BBC
solicited multimillion-dollar contracts to advance
the British state’s interventionist aims, promising
to cultivate Russian journalists through FCO-funded
tours and training sessions, establish influence
networks in and around Russia, and promote pro-NATO
narratives in Russian-speaking regions.
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Grants - This Is Independent Media
In several proposals to
the British Foreign Office, Reuters boasted of a
global influence network of 15,000 journalists and
staff, including 400 inside Russia.
The U.K.’s FCO projects
were carried out covertly, and in partnership with
purportedly independent, high-profile online media
outfits including Bellingcat, Meduza, and the Pussy
Riot-founded Mediazona. Bellingcat’s participation
apparently included an FCO intervention in North
Macedonia’s 2019 elections on behalf of the pro-NATO
candidate.
The intelligence
contractors that oversaw that operation, the Zinc
Network, boasted of establishing “a network of
YouTubers in Russia and Central Asia” while
“supporting participants [to] make and receive
international payments without being registered as
external sources of funding.” The firm also touted
its ability to “activate a range of content” to
support anti-government protests inside Russia.
The new documents
provide critical background on the role of NATO
member states like the U.K. in influencing the color
revolution-style protests waged in Belarus in 2020,
and raise unsettling questions about the intrigue
and unrest surrounding jailed Russian opposition
figure Alexei
Navalny.
Further, the materials
cast serious doubt on the independence of two of the
world’s largest and most prestigious media
organizations, revealing Reuters and the BBC as
apparent intelligence cut-outs feasting at the
trough of a British national security state that
their news operations are increasingly averse to
scrutinizing.
Reuters
Solicits Contract
A series of official
documents declassified in
January 2020 revealed that Reuters was secretly
funded by the British government throughout the
1960s and 1970s to assist an anti-Soviet propaganda
organization run by the MI6 intelligence agency. The
U.K. government used the BBC as a pass-through to
conceal payments to the news group.
The revelation prompted
a Reuters spokesman to declare that “the arrangement
in 1969 [with the MI6] was not in keeping with our
Trust Principles and we would not do this today.”
The Trust Principles
outline a mission of “preserving [Reuters’]
independence, integrity, and freedom from bias in
the gathering and dissemination of information and
news.”
In its own statement of
values, the BBC proclaims,
“Trust is the foundation of the BBC. We’re
independent, impartial and honest.”
However, the newly
leaked documents analyzed by The Grayzone
appear to reveal that both Reuters and the BBC are
engaged yet again in a non-transparent relationship
with the U.K.’s foreign ministry to counter and
undermine Russia.
In 2017, the non-profit
arm of the Reuters media empire, the Thomson Reuters
Foundation (TRF), delivered a formal tender offering
to “enter into a Contract with the Secretary of
State for Foreign Affairs, as represented by the
British Embassy Moscow, for the provision of a
project ‘Capacity Building in Russian Media.’” The
letter was signed by Reuters CEO Monique Ville on
July 31, 2017.
Reuters’ tender was a
response to a call for bids by the FCO, which sought
help in implementing “a programme of themed tours to
the U.K. by Russian journalists and online
influencers.”
Working through the
British embassy in Moscow, the FCO sought to produce
an “attitudinal change in the participants,”
promoting a “positive impact” on their “perception
of the U.K.”
In 2019, the FCO put forward a similar initiative,
this time articulating a more aggressive plan to
“counter the Russian government’s narrative and
domination of the media and information space.” In
effect, the British government was seeking to
infiltrate Russian media and propagate its own
narrative through an influence network of Russian
journalists trained in the U.K.
Reuters responded to
both calls by the FCO with detailed tenders. In its
first bid, the media giant boasted of establishing a
global network of 15,000 journalists and bloggers
through “capacity building interventions.” In
Russia, it claimed at least 400 journalists had been
cultivated through its training programs.
Reuters claimed to have
performed 10 previous training tours for 80 Russian
journalists on behalf of the British embassy in
Moscow. It proposed eight more, promising to promote
“U.K. cultural and political values” and “create a
network of journalists across Russia” bonded
together by a shared “interest in British affairs.”
Reuters’ tender
highlighted the institutional prejudices and
interventionist agenda that underlined its training
programs. Detailing a series of U.K. FCO-funded
programs dedicated to “countering Russian
state-funded propaganda,” Reuters conflated Russian
government narratives with extremism. Ironically, it
referred to its own efforts at weakening them as
“unbiased journalism.”
At the same time,
Reuters appeared to recognize that its covert
collaboration with the British Embassy in Moscow was
highly provocative and potentially destructive to
diplomatic relations. Recounting a U.K. FCO-funded
tour it ran for Russian journalists in the midst of
the Sergei Skripal affair, after the British
government accused Moscow of poisoning a turncoat
Russian intelligence officer who spied for Britain,
the tender stated, “[Thomson Reuters Foundation] was
in constant communication with the British Embassy
in Moscow, to assess levels of risk, including
reputational risk to the embassy.”
The mention by Reuters
of the Belarusian TV Station Belsat, and its
particular relevance “to the U.K. Government
Strategy’s capacity to detect and counter the spread
of Russian information” was notable. While
describing itself as “the first independent
television channel in Belarus,” Belsat is, as the
Reuters tender makes clear, a vehicle of NATO
influence.
Based in Poland and funded
by the Polish Foreign Ministry and
other EU governments, Belsat played an influential
role in promoting
the color revolution-style protests that erupted in
May 2020 to demand the ouster of Belarusian
President Alexander Lukashenko.
Ultimately, Reuters’
bid appears to have been successful, as it received
a July 2019 contract with the FCO’s Conflict,
Stability & Security Fund (CSSF). But neither entity
seemed to want the public to know about their
collaboration on a project designed to counter
Russia. The contract was marked “Strictly
Confidential.”
‘Weaken Russian
Influence’
The programs exposed
through the latest leak of documents operate under
the auspices of a shadowy division of the Foreign
and Commonwealth Development Office called Counter
Disinformation & Media Development (CDMD). Led by an
intelligence operative named Andy Pryce, the program
has shrouded in secrecy.
Indeed, the British
government has denied
freedom of information requests about
the division’s budget and stonewalled members of
parliament like Chris Williamson who sought data
about its budget and agenda, citing national
security to block their demands for information.
“When I tried to probe
further,” former MP Williamson told The
Grayzone, “ministers refused to let me have
access to any documents or correspondence relating
to this organization’s activities. I was told that
releasing this information could ‘disrupt and
undermine the program’s effectiveness.’”
During a meeting
convened in London on June 26, 2018, Pryce outlined
a new FCO program “to weaken the Russian State’s
influence on its near neighbors.” He solicited a
consortium of firms to assist the British state in
establishing new and seemingly independent media
outlets to counter Russian government-backed media
in Moscow’s immediate sphere of influence, and to
amplify the messaging of NATO-aligned governments.
Justified on the basis
of Russia’s supposed intention to “sow disunity and
course[sic] disruption to democratic processes,” the
campaign Pryce laid out was more aggressive and
far-reaching than anything Russia has been caught
doing in the West.
Pryce emphasized that
secrecy was of the essence, warning that “some
grantees will not wish to be linked to the FCO.”
A year later, the FCO’s
CDMD division outlined a program to run through 2022
at a cost of $8.3 million to the British taxpayer.
It aimed to establish new outlets and support
preexisting media operations “to counter Russia’s
efforts to sow disunity” and “increase resilience to
hostile Kremlin messaging in the Baltic states.”
Thus the British
government set out with an array of intelligence
contractors to dominate Baltic media with pro-NATO
messaging — and perhaps sow some disunity of its
own.
As seen below, the BBC
placed an apparently successful bid to participate
in the covert Baltic program through its non-profit
arm, known as BBC Media Action.
The BBC also proposed
to participate in a separate U.K. FCO media
propaganda program in Ukraine, Moldova, and Georgia.
It named Reuters and a now-defunct intelligence
contractor called Aktis Strategy, which participated
in previous FCO CDMD programs, as key allies in its
consortium.
The BBC identified
local partners like Hromadske, a Kiev-based
broadcast network born in the midst of the so-called
Maidan “Revolution of Dignity” in 2014 that relied
on ultra-nationalist muscle to remove an elected
president and install a pro-NATO regime. Hromadske
materialized almost overnight with seed
money and
logistical support from the U.S.
Agency for International Development (USAID) and billionaire
media mogul Pierre Omidyar’s Network Fund.
BBC Media Action
proposed working through Aktis to cultivate and grow
pro-NATO media in conflict areas like the Donbas
region of eastern Ukraine, where a proxy war has
raged since 2014 between the Western-backed
Ukrainian military and pro-Russian separatists. It
was textbook information warfare, weaponizing
broadcast media to turn the tide of battle in a
protracted, grinding conflict.
The U.K. FCO propaganda
campaign warned that “Kremlin-affiliated structures”
could undermine the project if it was exposed. For a
media organization that claims to place trust at the
heart of its charter of values, the BBC was
certainly operating under a high degree of secrecy.
The U.K. FCO’s meddling
in Eastern Europe and the Baltics created a feeding
frenzy among contractors seeking to provide
“capacity building” and media development assistance
on Russia’s periphery. Among the bidders were
Reuters and veteran FCO contractors that had
participated in an array of information warfare
campaigns from Syria to the British home front.
The Consortium
Among the intelligence
contractors bidding to participate in the U.K.
FCO-funded Consortium were the Zinc Network and
Albany Communications. As journalist Kit Klarenberg
noted in a February 18 report on
the recent FCO leaks, these firms “boast staff
possessed of [security] clearances, individuals who
previously served at the highest levels of
government, the military and security services. They
furthermore have extensive experience in conducting
information warfare operations on London’s behalf
the world over.”
Previously known as
Breakthrough, Zinc has contracted for the U.K. Home
Office to covertly
implement media projects propagandizing
British Muslims under the auspices of the Prevent
de-radicalization initiative. In Australia, Zinc
was caught
running a clandestine program to
promote support for government policies among
Muslims.
Ben Norton reported
for The Grayzone on
Albany’s record of “secur[ing] the participation of
an extensive local network
of over 55 stringers, reporters and videographers”
to influence media narratives and advance Western
regime-change goals in Syria, while conducting
public relations services on behalf of extremist
Syrian militias funded by NATO member states and
Gulf monarchies to destabilize the country.
In its bid for the U.K.
FCO media program in the Baltic region, Albany
proposed a series of satirical “interactive games”
like “Putin Bingo” to encourage opposition to the
Russian government and exploit “frustrations
experienced by Russians in the EU.”
Albany pitched a
Latvia-based outlet called Meduza as “a leading
proponent of these games.” A top website among
Russian opposition supporters, Meduza has received
financial support from
the Swedish government
and several billionaire-backed pro-NATO foundations.
As a U.K. FCO
contractor, the Zinc Network said it was “delivering
audience segmentation and targeting support” not
only to Meduza, but also to Mediazona, a supposedly
independent media venture founded by
two members of the anti-Kremlin performance art
group Pussy Riot.
One of Mediazona’s
founders, Nadya Tolokonnikova, shared
a stage with
former U.S. President Bill Clinton at the Clinton
Foundation’s 2015 conference. The following year,
Tolokonnikova trashed now-imprisoned
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, claiming,
“He’s connected with the Russian government, and I
feel that he’s proud of it.”
Besides delivering
“targeting support” for “independent” outlets
pushing the right line against the Kremlin, Zinc
proposed leveraging U.K. FCO funding into a program
of direct payments and gaming Google search results
in their favor. The intelligence cut-out was
explicit about its desire to reduce the search
visibility of the Russian government-backed
broadcaster RT.com.
Covertly Funded
Russian YouTubers
In a document marked
“private and confidential,” Zinc revealed the
Consortium’s role in setting up a “YouTuber network”
in Russia and Central Asia designed to propagate the
message of the U.K. and its NATO allies.
According to Zinc, the
Consortium was “supporting participants mak[ing] and
receiv[ing] international payments without being
registered as external sources of funding,”
presumably to circumvent Russian registration
requirements for foreign-funded media outfits.
Zinc also helped the
YouTube influencers “develop editorial strategies to
deliver key messages” while working “to keep their
involvement confidential.” And it carried out its
entire program of covert propaganda in the name of
“promoting media integrity and democratic values.”
Perhaps the most
prominent Russian YouTube influencer is Alexei
Navalny, a previously marginal nationalist
opposition figure who
was nominated for a Nobel Prize after becoming the
target of a high-profile poisoning incident that
brought relations between Russia and the West to its
post-Cold War nadir.
The Russian
government’s sentencing of Navalny to a 2.5-year
prison term for evading parole has inspired the
largest wave of anti-government protests since 2018,
when Navalny
helped sponsor national
demonstrations against the banning of the encrypted
messaging app Telegram.
In its bid for a U.K.
FCO contract, Zinc revealed that it played a
behind-the-scenes role “to activate a range of
content within 12 hours of the recent telegram
protests.” Whether those activities involved Navalny
or his immediate network was unclear, but the
private disclosure by Zinc appeared confirm that
British intelligence played a role in amplifying the
2018 protests.
Russian intelligence
services have released sting
video footage showing
Vladimir Ashurkov, the executive director of
Navalny’s FBK anti-corruption organization, meeting
in 2013 with a suspected British MI6 agent named
James William Thomas Ford, who was operating out of
the British embassy in Moscow. During the
rendezvous, Ashurkov can be heard asking for 10 to
20 million dollars to generate “quite a different
picture” of the political landscape.
In 2018, Ashurkov’s
name appeared in leaked documents exposing a covert,
U.K. FCO influence network called the Integrity
Initiative. As The
Grayzone reported,
the Integrity Initiative operated behind the cover
of a think tank called the Institute for Statecraft,
which concealed its own location through a fake
office in Scotland.
Run by a group of
military intelligence officers, the secret
propaganda group worked through clusters of media
and political influencers to escalate tensions
between the West and Russia. Listed
among the London cluster of
anti-Russian influencers was Ashurkov.
The Integrity
Initiative’s military directors outlined their
agenda in stark, unequivocal terms. As the leaked
memo below illustrates, they aimed to exploit the
media, think tanks and their influence network to
stir up as much hysteria about Russia’s supposedly
malign influence as possible. Since they embarked on
their covert campaign, nearly all their wishes have
come true.
Moldova’s
Elections
After Alexei Navalny’s
poisoning, he collaborated with the U.K.-based
“open source” journalism outfit Bellingcat to
pin the crime on Russia’s FSB intelligence services.
Though it is well established that Bellingcat is funded by
the National
Endowment for Democracy,
a U.S. government entity that supports regime-change
operations around the globe, the fact has never
appeared in the reams of fawning profiles that
corporate media outlets, including Reuters, have
published about the organization.
Bellingcat’s role as a
partner in the Zinc Network’s U.K. FCO-funded EXPOSE
Consortium may add an additional layer of suspicion
about the outlet’s claim to independence.
Indeed, Bellingcat was
listed in leaked 2018 documents as a key member of
Zinc’s “Network of NGOs.” Among the members in the
network was the Institute for Statecraft, the front
for the Integrity Initiative.
Bellingcat founder
Eliot Higgins has vehemently denied accepting
funding from the U.K. FCO or collaborating with it.
But after Zinc documents leaked in
early 2019, Higgins disclosed that some version of
the Zinc proposal had received the green light from
the Foreign Office.
Christian Triebbert, a
Bellingcat staff member who was named as a potential
trainer by the Zinc documents, and who now heads the
New York Times’ video investigations unit, claimed the
program consisted of benign workshops on “digital
research and verification skills.”
What he and Higgins did
not mention, however, was that Bellingcat had
apparently been dispatched by the Zinc Network to
“respond” to the 2019 parliamentary elections in
North Macedonia. Stakes were high as the elections
were likely to determine whether the tiny country
would enter NATO and join the EU. The pro-NATO
candidate triumphed,
and not without a little help from the British
Foreign Office and its allies.
According to the Zinc
proposal, Bellingcat provided training to the Most
Network, a Macedonian media outlet. It was joined by
DFR Lab, a project of the NATO-
and US government-funded Atlantic Council in
Washington, D.C.
After apparently
participating in the covert U.K. FCO-funded
intervention in North Macedonia, Bellingcat
published an article ahead of the country’s 2020
parliamentary elections entitled, “Russia’s
interference in North Macedonia.”
Several Zinc Network
documents list Reuters as a member of the U.K.
FCO-funded Consortium media intervention in the
Baltic states.
Asked by The
Grayzone how Reuters’ participation in U.K. FCO-funded
programs aimed at countering Russia conformed to the
news organization’s Trust Principles, spokesperson
Jenny Vereker stated, “This funding supports our
independent work to assist journalists and
journalism all over the world, as part of our
mission to strengthen a free and vibrant global
media ecosystem to support a plurality of voices and
preserve the flow of accurate and independent
information. This is because accurate and balanced
news coverage is a crucial pillar of any free, fair
and informed society.”
In recent years, the
BBC and Reuters have played an increasingly
aggressive part in demonizing the governments of
countries where London and Washington are seeking
regime change. Meanwhile, high-profile online
investigative outlets like Bellingcat have sprouted
up seemingly overnight to assist these efforts.
With the release of the
U.K. FCO documents, questions must be raised about
whether these esteemed news organizations are truly
the independent and ethical journalistic entities
they claim to be. While they hammer away at
“authoritarian” states and malign Russian
activities, they have little to say about the
machinations of the powerful Western governments in
their immediate midst. Perhaps they are reluctant to
bite the hand that feeds them.
Max Blumenthal is an award-winning journalist and
the author of books including best-selling Republican
Gomorrah,
Goliath,
The Fifty One Day
War
and The
Management of Savagery.
He has also produced numerous print articles for an
array of publications, many video reports and
several documentaries including Killing
Gaza and Je
Ne Suis Pas Charlie. Blumenthal
founded the Grayzone Project in 2015 to shine a
journalistic light on America’s state of perpetual
war and its dangerous domestic repercussions.
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