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Author Archives: RomanInUkraine
Police Colonel who defended Horlivka last years joins Kharkiv PD
A woman from Lviv region becomes WORLD CHESS CHAMPION!!!
Ukrainian victory over Russia on the chess board. Ukrainian Mariya Muzychuk has defeated Russian-grandmaster Natalija Pogonina by a score of 2:1 making the 22-year-old from the Lviv region the new Women’s World Champion.
The tournament was held in the Russian resort-city of Sochi where the previous Winter Olympics were held. New world champion Muzychuk goes home with USD 60,000 in prize money and assumes the new title of Grandmaster, the highest title a person can hold in the chess world. She’ll have a few months to enjoy her win, before she’ll defend her world title in October.
http://uatoday.tv/sport/ukrainian-maria-muzychuk-wins-world-chess-championship-419753.html
Zaharchenko, who is wanted for the Maidan killings, joins Russian duma as advisor
Last month Russia hosted a conference for Europe’s radical right
Yet another politician thrown into a dumpster!
Progress really is being made. The people aren’t afraid anymore.
Ukrainian justice chief thrown into the trash in Ivano-Frankivsk
Examiner: Russia’s top 120 lies about Ukraine
Russia Lies – Collection of Articles about Russian Trolls
Sept 11, 2014, Russians faked a news story about a Taliban Attack on a Louisiana Chemical Plant
Great technical analysis of Russian Troll Twitter accounts: https://globalvoices.org/2015/04/02/analyzing-kremlin-twitter-bots/
Interview with One of Putin’s Trolls (November, 2014) – http://euromaidanpress.com/2014/11/02/the-sad-life-of-putins-troll-army/
Documents Show How Russia’s Troll Army Hit America
The adventures of Russian agents like The Ghost of Marius the Giraffe, Gay Turtle, and Ass — exposed for the first time. (June, 2014)
http://www.buzzfeed.com/maxseddon/documents-show-how-russias-troll-army-hit-america#.oaJO2RPxq
The Kremlin’s Troll Army
http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2014/08/the-kremlins-troll-army/375932/
Account of an investigation into a Russian Troll center:
Traces the Origins of Russian Social Media Propaganda – Never-before-seen Material from the Troll Factory
“We followed the operations of the secretive so called troll factory in Saint Petersburg on the spot for three days.”
http://kioski.yle.fi/omat/at-the-origins-of-russian-propaganda
Revealed: How Russia’s ‘troll factory’ runs thousands of fake Twitter and Facebook accounts to flood social media with pro-Putin propaganda
-Army of professional trolls running fake accounts for Vladimir Putin
-Workers are reportedly paid £500 a month for exhausting 12-hour shifts
-Told they must bombard sites with more than 130 comments a day
-Staff not allowed to talk to each other or form friendships
‘One of us would be the ‘villain,’ the person who disagrees with the forum and criticizes the authorities, in order to bring a feeling of authenticity to what we’re doing, he told Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
‘The other two enter into a debate with him — “No, you’re not right; everything here is totally correct.”
‘We create the illusion of actual activity on these forums.’ . . .
”Write whatever you want, just stick the word Obama in there a lot and then cover it over with profanities.”
On another occasion he was told to repeatedly post on websites that the majority of German’s supported Putin and his policies and were unhappy with Merkel.
Inside the factory the trolls are not just targeting Russian sites but those around the world, including the UK.
The trolls are often given five key words which they must make sure each of their posts are littered with. He claimed workers faced sanctions from manager if they were missing from their comments. . . .
Inside the Kremlin’s hall of mirrors
Late last year, I came across a Russian manual called Information-Psychological War Operations: A Short Encyclopedia and Reference Guide (The 2011 edition, credited to Veprintsev et al, and published in Moscow by Hotline-Telecom, can be purchased online at the sale price of 348 roubles). The book is designed for “students, political technologists, state security services and civil servants” – a kind of user’s manual for junior information warriors. . . .
In 1999, Marshal Igor Sergeev, then minister of defence, admitted that Russia could not compete militarily with the west. Instead, he suggested, it needed to search for “revolutionary paths” and “asymmetrical directions”. Over the course of the previous decade, Russian military and intelligence theorists began to elaborate more substantial ideas for non-physical warfare – claiming that Russia was already under attack, along similar lines, by western NGOs and media.
In 2013 the head of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, Valery Gerasimov, claimed that it was now possible to defeat enemies through a “combination of political, economic, information, technological, and ecological campaigns”. . . .
[In 2007] Russian media, which are popular in Estonia, reported that he was killed by police (he was not), that Russians had been beaten to death at the ferry port (they had not), that Russians were tortured and fed psychotropic substances during interrogation (they were not). . . .
“Sometimes we wonder whether the point of the attacks is only to make us sound paranoid and unreliable to our Nato allies,” Ilves suggested. “And thus undermine trust in the alliance.”
A guiding tactical concept in the Russian information war is the idea of “reflexive control”. According to Timothy L Thomas, an analyst at the US army’s Foreign Military Studies Office, and an expert in recent Russian military history and theory, reflexive control involves “conveying to an opponent specially prepared information to incline him voluntarily to make the predetermined decision desired by the initiator of the action”. In other words, to know your adversary’s behaviour patterns so well you can provoke him into doing what you want.
One well-known example during the cold war would take place at the annual Red Square army parades, when the USSR would show off its nuclear weapons and ballistic rockets to the world. The Soviets knew this was one of the very few moments western analysts would be able to see their arsenal, and they would plant fake nuclear weapons with exceptionally big warheads meant to send the west into a panic about the power and innovation of Soviet weaponry. “The aim,” writes Thomas, “was to prompt foreign scientists, who desired to copy the advanced technology, down a dead-end street, thereby wasting precious time and money.” . . .
The mantra of Margarita Simonyan, who heads RT, is: “There is no such thing as objective reporting.” . . .
The Russian Military Asked Me to Publish Its Propaganda
On Friday, March 20th, I spoke at the University of the District of Columbia Law School in Washington, D.C., as part of a series of teach-ins about peace organized by SpringRising.org. While there, a young man in a suit with a Russian accent approached me. He gave me his card, which says at the top “Embassy of the Russian Federation.” It identifies him as a Major and as The Air Attaché Assistant. His name: Alexsei G. Padalko. The card includes the address of the Russian Embassy in Washington, two phone numbers, a fax number, and a gmail email address. His name appears on lists of diplomats on the websites of the Russian Embassy and the U.S. State Department.
Alexsei bought one of my books, which I signed, but he said he had another he hadn’t brought with him and wanted signed, and he wanted to discuss working together for peace. I said I’d meet him the next day at a coffee shop. When we met, he began talking about having information about Ukraine. He wanted to slip me articles already written and pay me to publish them under my name. He claimed a personal interest in peace and a desire to keep this secret from his employers. It was fine to email him, he said, but he’d have to give me the articles in person. I told him that I would not post articles as by me if not by me, and I would not post them with a pseudonym for someone working for the Russian (or American or any other) military, but if he wanted to give me information to report on under my name in articles I researched with multiple sources, I would keep the confidentiality of any source entirely. I, of course, had told him I wouldn’t take any money for anything. And he didn’t explain where the money would have come from. . . .
http://warisacrime.org/content/russian-military-asked-me-publish-its-propaganda
One professional Russian troll tells all
RFE/RL: Marat, you wrote on your blog that your time at Internet Research gave you enough material for an entire book. Why did you decide to write there? Entertainment? Adventurism?
Marat Burkhard: Yes, adventurism is the right word. Because in my opinion, this kind of work doesn’t exist anywhere else.
RFE/RL: Was it hard to get the job?
Burkhard: Yes, it was hard. You have to write sample texts first, and then they decide if you’re suitable for the work. They weed people out that way.
RFE/RL: What kind of texts?
Burkhard: First they make you write something neutral — Vegetarianism: Pros And Cons. After that, the assignments start to get more to the point — for example, what do I think about humanitarian convoys in Donetsk?
RFE/RL: Were you forced to hide your real beliefs?
Burkhard: Yes, I’m pro-Western. . . .
In the propaganda proxy wars, a favorite KGB trick was to hire opinion “shapers” from the opposing side to propagate Kremlin ideology outside of Russia, especially in western countries. . . .
This bizarre event left us puzzled. A dissident spewing Kremlin propaganda? An American professor who deflects and avoids simple questions about the person he invited, as he put it “as a personal favor to him”. All of this forced us to research the persona of the speaker, as well as his inviting party from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
What we found was both shocking and unsettling.
It didn’t take long to discover that Mr. Kagarlitsky is regarded as a Kremlin mole by most reputable political left leaders in Russia. Russian journalists have established that Kagarlitsky has been working with the Kremlin since 2005, possibly earlier. His primary function has been to discredit and confuse the Russian left-wing movement outside the immediate circle of the Russian Communist Party.
Kagarlistky, who presents himself as a political prisoner and a dissident, in fact, was a witness for the prosecution during a KGB “show” trial of Mikhail Rivkin in 1983.
http://euromaidanpress.com/2015/02/26/american-misadventures-of-putins-puppets/
Analysis: Why do Kremlin Propagandists lie?
– Habit
– Cynicism
– No fear of consequences in “weak” Western society.
www.kyivpost.com/opinion/op-ed/alexei-bayer-what-drives-russian-propagandists-387173.html
Putin’s Internet Propaganda War Is Much Bigger And Weirder Than You Think, Now Extending Into The States
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20150603/10055831206/putins-internet-propaganda-war-is-much-bigger-weirder-than-you-think-now-extending-into-states.shtml
A series of incredibly well-constructed hoaxes using fake YouTube videos, fake Wikipedia entries, and thousands of Twitter accounts — many of which were designed to pollute the global discourse pool here in the States. Author Adrian Chen headed to St. Petersburg to track down and talk to whistleblower Lyudmila Savchuk, who goes into greater detail than ever before about the program:
The Columbian Chemicals hoax was not some simple prank by a bored sadist. It was a highly coordinated disinformation campaign, involving dozens of fake accounts that posted hundreds of tweets for hours, targeting a list of figures precisely chosen to generate maximum attention. The perpetrators didn’t just doctor screenshots from CNN; they also created fully functional clones of the websites of Louisiana TV stations and newspapers. The YouTube video of the man watching TV had been tailor-made for the project. A Wikipedia page was even created for the Columbian Chemicals disaster, which cited the fake YouTube video. As the virtual assault unfolded, it was complemented by text messages to actual residents in St. Mary Parish. It must have taken a team of programmers and content producers to pull off.
And the hoax was just one in a wave of similar attacks during the second half of last year. On Dec. 13, two months after a handful of Ebola cases in the United States touched off a minor media panic, many of the same Twitter accounts used to spread the Columbian Chemicals hoax began to post about an outbreak of Ebola in Atlanta. The campaign followed the same pattern of fake news reports and videos, this time under the hashtag #EbolaInAtlanta, which briefly trended in Atlanta.
Also, IMPORTANT:
Also, by working every day to spread Kremlin propaganda, the paid trolls have made it impossible for the normal Internet user to separate truth from fiction.
“The point is to spoil it, to create the atmosphere of hate, to make it so stinky that normal people won’t want to touch it,” Volkov said, when we met in the office of Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation. “You have to remember the Internet population of Russia is just over 50 percent. The rest are yet to join, and when they join it’s very important what is their first impression.” The Internet still remains the one medium where the opposition can reliably get its message out. But their message is now surrounded by so much garbage from trolls that readers can become resistant before the message even gets to them.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/07/magazine/the-agency.html
Why are Russian trolls spreading online hoaxes in the U.S.?
September 11, 2014, there is an explosion at a chemical factory in St. Mary Parish in Louisiana. The video is soon posted on YouTube, Twitter is flooded with chatter, including screen shots of news Web sites, a local TV station, and, it appears, CNN’s.
A video surfaces of ISIS taking responsibility for the explosion and local residents receive text messages warning them of toxic fumes in the area. Big news, except there was no explosion, the video was a fake, as were the news Web sites that reported it, and the footage of the Islamic State group taking credit.
The social media posts were not what they seemed. As reported in a cover story in The New York Times Magazine, it was all the work of the Internet Research Agency, a shadowy Russian organization based in a nondescript building in Saint Petersburg. . . .
I think the big picture is you have to go back to 2011, when there were huge anti-Putin protests in Russia. And those were all organized on Facebook, on social media, led by tech-savvy bloggers and readers who came up through the Internet.
And after that, it became a real priority for the Kremlin to basically crack down on the Internet, make sure that nothing like that happened again. And these trolls, this kind of work, from what I have gathered from talking to activists, it’s really to kind of pollute the Internet, to make it an unreliable source for people, and so that normal Russians who might want to learn about opposition leaders or another side of things from the Kremlin narrative will just not be able to trust it.
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/russian-trolls-spreading-online-hoaxes-u-s/
My life as a pro-Putin propagandist in Russia’s secret ‘troll factory’
Lyudmila Savchuk tells how she was ordered to blog about ‘great Putin’ and ‘bad opposition’ to the Kremlin
Malware upvotes pro-Russian videos
http://globalvoicesonline.org/2015/05/04/pro-russian-videos-get-fake-views-with-help-from-malware/
Whistleblower reveal pro-Kremlin troll-factory secrets; staff were told to call Ukraine ‘Nazis
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3138847/Putin-s-secret-troll-factory-branded-Barack-Obama-monkey-Ukraine-Nazis-mum-went-undercover-expose-dirty-tricks.html
June 2014 — Analysis of Russian Twitter Trolls.
http://ukraineatwar.blogspot.com/2014/05/how-to-spot-russian-twitter-troll.html?spref=tw&m=1
HA! Russian ‘troll factory’ sued for underpayment and labour violations
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jun/24/russian-troll-factory-sued-underpayment-labour-violations-vladimir-putin
Earlier this month, Adrian Chen penned a disturbing article for the New York Times Magazine outlining how online trolls based in Russia were attempting to manipulate Americans through false media and political misdirection. These Russian trolls are now attempting to discredit his story by wiping it from the internet.
Chen’s piece, called “The Agency“, details a massive operation with ties to the Russian government that perpetuates false news stories, propaganda and general trolling against anti-Russian rhetoric . . . .
Chen’s chilling story became all the more disturbing when his meticulous sourcing of troll accounts, and even the damning YouTube video, were wiped from the internet. All three of the Facebook pages Chen mentioned as part of the trolling network made up of mostly politically-motivated accounts (Spread Your Wings, Art Gone Conscious, and Celebrities Against Obama) mysteriously disappeared in the past week. Their Twitter counterparts also vanished.
The only thing left are the #ColumbianChemicals tweets, all posted by accounts with barely a handful of followers, abandoned months ago.
So what happens now? While the Russia troll army deletes the evidence Chen meticulously provided, they have continued with smaller media stunts, just as fake. Other examples include a supposed Chicago Tribune banner referencing Ukraine.
Another interview with a former troll house employee:
“First thing in the morning, we’d come in, turn on a proxy server to hide our real location, and then read the technical tasks we had been sent,” he said.
The trolls worked in teams of three. The first one would leave a complaint about some problem or other, or simply post a link, then the other two would wade in, using links to articles on Kremlin-friendly websites and “comedy” photographs lampooning western or Ukrainian leaders with abusive captions.
Marat shared six of his technical task sheets from his time in the office with the Guardian. Each of them has a news line, some information about it, and a “conclusion” that the commenters should reach. One is on Putin offering his condolences to President François Hollande after the Charlie Hebdo shootings in Paris.
“Vladimir Putin contacted the French leader immediately, despite the bad relations between Russia and the west,” reads the section explaining the conclusion the troll posts should reach. “The Russian leader has always stood against aggression and terrorism in general. Thanks to the president’s initiatives, the number of terrorist acts inside Russia has decreased dramatically.”
The other task sheets demand glowing reviews of the YotaPhone, a Russian-made smartphone, abuse and teasing for Jennifer Psaki, the former US state department spokeswoman, and three relate to Ukraine and the west’s plans there.
The desired conclusion of one reads: “The majority of experts agree that the US is deliberately trying to weaken Russia, and Ukraine is being used only as a way to achieve this goal. If the Ukrainian people had not panicked and backed a coup, the west would have found another way to pressure Russia. But our country is not going to go ahead with the US plans, and we will fight for our sovereignty on the international stage.”
To add colour to their posts, websites have been set up to aid the troll army. One features thousands of pasteable images, mainly of European leaders in humiliating photoshopped incidents or with captions pointing out their weakness and stupidity, or showing Putin making hilarious wisecracks and winning the day.
Many of them have obvious racist or homophobic overtones. Barack Obama eating a banana or depicted as a monkey, or the Ukrainian president, Petro Poroshenko, in drag, declaring: “We are preparing for European integration.” The trolls have to post the photographs together with information they can pull from a website marketed as a “patriotic Russian Wikipedia”, featuring ideologically acceptable versions of world events.
The entries for the Maidan revolution in Kiev explain that all the protesters were fed special tea laced with drugs, which is what caused the revolution.
The trolls were firmly instructed that there should never be anything bad written about the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DNR) or the Luhansk People’s
Republic (LNR), and never anything good about the Ukrainian government.. . . .
“Of course, if every day you are feeding on hate, it eats away at your soul. You start really believing in it. You have to be strong to stay clean when you spend your whole day submerged in dirt,” he said.
The most prestigious job in the agency is to be an English-language troll, for which the pay is 65,000 roubles.
Kid from Mariupol return after Easter in Lviv
Galicia’s role is reminding Ukraine of their culture.
Russian warships in English Channel ‘to conduct anti-aircraft and anti-submarine military drills’
Why does Russia lie so much?
I think the generous thing to do is to attribute thier lying to their impossibly expansive and indefensible frontier — perhaps it led to their valuing strength above all else (even truth).
The less generous, but probably just as accurate, observation is that they are the bastard child of the Golden Horde, and inherited her institution, her mentality, and her crest — a two headed eagle.
Russia Lies — Russian Reporter reluctantly admits they had to broadcast fake story about girl who was killed
Plan for Crimea Annexation Presented to Putin while Yanukovych still President
English-language translation of Russian ‘road map’ for annexing eastern Ukraine
It’s recommended to put forth three slogans which would gradually stem from one another:
– The demand to “federalize” (or even confederalize) as a guarantee for these regions that pro-Western and nationalistic forces would not interfere in their internal affairs;
– Eastern and south-eastern Oblasts’ entry to the Customs Union on the regional level, independently from Kyiv, that would enable normal functioning and development of their industry;
– The direct sovereignization with subsequent joining Russia, as the only guarantor of sustainable economic development and social stability.
http://www.kmu.gov.ua/control/en/publish/article?art_id=247956386&cat_id=247511908
Russian militant slams east Ukrainians for refusing to fight for ‘Russian World
Russian militant leader Arsen Pavlov, who is well known by his call sign “Motorola” has criticised residents of the Donbas region of Ukraine for fleeing and not taking up arms against the government. Pavov said in a video posted online that miltant groups fighting Ukrainian forces would do better if able-bodied Donbas residents weren’t fleeing to other parts of Ukraine, Russia, Poland, and Belarus.
Arsen ‘Motorola’ Pavlov, Russian militant: “If every resident of Donbas, every resident of the Luhansk and Donetsk People’s Republic, and those in Russia, Belarus, Poland, and those in the occupied terrorities could find in themselves the strength and ability to come here with weapons to defend their land.”
Apparently, the Pentagon is looking for Ukrainian Speaker
North Korea and Russia forge ‘year of friendship’ pariah alliance
Cohen: Communism memorial a monumental folly
Who would have though someone named Cohen might oppose a memorial to victims of Communism?
http://ottawacitizen.com/opinion/columnists/communism-memorial-a-monumental-folly
The Soviet Union Dumped A Bunch of Nuclear Submarines, Reactors, and Containers into the Ocean
Before the London Convention of 1972, an international agreement that prohibited marine dumping, countries were free to use the oceans as a trash heep for nuclear waste. Though the Soviets signed the treaty in the late 1980s, it wasn’t until after the break up of the Soviet Union in 1991 that the Russians opened up to the international community about the extent of the Arctic dumping campaign.
‘There could be environmental consequences if something goes wrong.’
Two years ago, the Russian government provided a tally: two submarines, 14 reactors — five of which contain spent nuclear fuel — 19 other vessels sunk with radioactive waste on board, and about 17,000 containers holding radioactive waste. The last known dumping occurred in 1993.
Of particular concern are the two submarines, the K-27, which was dumped into the Kara Sea in 1981, and the K-159, which sunk in 2003 into the Barents Sea, while being towed for dismantling.
British Trainer: Half Ukrainian fighters killed by poor kit and friendly fire
Weapons discipline!
AN ELITE soldier who resigned from the British MobArmy to train Ukrainian forces fighting Russian-backed separatists has revealed the true extent of disarray in Kiev’s military.
He said the string of bloody defeats for Ukraine, including last week’s fall of Debaltseve, was due largely to a failure of command and a lack of skills and discipline.
The 40-year-old, a naturalised Briton of Ukrainian descent, who served in Afghanistan and the Middle East, said Ukraine’s forces, made up largely of volunteers and conscripts, suffer great casualties because of frequent incidents of friendly fire and the mishandling of weapons.
“Six out of 10 casualties among the Ukrainian volunteers occur because of blue-on-blue shooting [the army term for friendly fire] and the inability to handle weapons,” said the man, who would give only his nom-de-guerre Saffron.
http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/news/world_news/Ukraine/article1522268.ece
Russian media admits that regular Russian troops took Debaltseve
President of Russia Vladimir Putin arrogantly scoffed at the defeat of the Ukrainian military in Debaltseve, gloating at their “shame” of losing the battle “to yesterday’s coal miners and tractor drivers.” In reality, Ukraine is fighting against Russian military that is hiding behind the fraying veil of local “separatists.” Much like Russia’s “little green men” in Crimea, Ukraine is crawling with regular Russian troops and armaments. Russia is using its most sophisticated weaponry in eastern Ukraine, including the truck-mounted SA-22 surface-to-air missile system (Pantsir-S1). Ukraine does not possess these types of weapon systems, which immediately dispels ludicrous claims of separatists about “capturing” weaponry from the Ukrainian armed forces.
Russian media dropped the pretense of tractor-driving local separatists with the recent report published by Ilya Barabanov in Russia’s newspaper “Kommersant.” It confirms longstanding reports by Ukrainian soldiers that they were fighting Russian regular troops, and not local militants, in Debaltseve. Barabanov writes: “20-year-old Misha was born in Yekaterinburg, 21-year-old Alex – in Mozdok, Artem is 22 years old, he is from the Slavyansk-on-Kuban, Dima is 23, he is from Vladikavkaz. Other guys are from Chita, Norilsk, Ulan-Ude. At the first glance, they have nothing in common. And yet, they do: the city of N, military unit *****, separate motorized infantry brigade ‘N’.”
Barabanov reports that Russian soldiers “without insignia” are now fighting in Debaltseve and other Ukrainian towns in Donbass. They are here on a “perpetual mission” to protect their “homeland” by fighting against another sovereign country. Russian military engages in combat on behalf of the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Lugansk “Peoples Republics.” Soldiers are led to believe they are protecting “freedom-loving Donbass” from the “Western aggression” and “Ukrainian beasts.” To hide the presence of Russian troops from journalists, their access into town was cut off. After the final assault, members of the military concealed their presence, local coal miners were placed as guards for the roadblocks and journalists were again allowed to enter the area.
Barabanov compares these events to the civil war in Spain, where Russian generals were commanding military operations under code names or pseudonyms. He knows the full names of all the participants interviewed for the report, but the editors of Kommersant weren’t willing to publish them at this point in time.
http://www.examiner.com/article/russian-media-admits-that-regular-russian-troops-took-debaltseve

