Zvezda’s publication was not an isolated event. In a matter of one week in 2015, different Russian media outlets spread the same sensational message about the existence of EU-financed “concentration camps” in Ukraine.
Now, four years later, the case remains a textbook example of how a proactive disinformation campaign works.
Reactive pro-Kremlin disinformation
In some situations, pro-Kremlin disinformation is reactive. Reactive disinformation is used when the Russian side has a particularly bad case and often when Moscow is accused of violating international norms. This makes reactive disinformation fundamentally defensive. It floods the information space with different, even conflicting answers to the question what has really happened; or it tries to dismiss the accusations against the Kremlin with ridicule.Defensive disinformation as decoy flare: When Russian authorities have a particularly bad case and are put in a defensive position, pro-Kremlin media always use the same technique.
Proactive pro-Kremlin disinformation
Contrary to the flat denials of facts and free imagination characterizing reactive disinformation, proactive disinformation tries to base its message on an element of truth. The facilities shown by Zvezda and other pro-Kremlin media actually existed, and they were in fact EU-financed. But it was not a concentration camp and it was not meant for the detention of separatist fighters. And the EU had nothing to hide: In 2011, when the facility was to be built, the EU published a statement describing how it had “allocated €30 million to enable the European Union–Ukraine Readmission Agreement to deal with illegal migrants, strengthen national migration policy, and to build seven Temporary Holding Facilities as well as two Migrant Custody Centres over the next two and a half years.” In this and other cases of proactive disinformation, the problem is the framing, i.e. the use of the manipulative phrase “concentration camp” to create a politically and emotionally highly charged narrative.Strengths and weaknesses
So what are the strengths and the weaknesses of these two different disinformation methods? The strength of reactive disinformation lies in its instrumentalization of the democratic principle that different opinions should be heard. By presenting its smokescreens as if there were relevant alternative viewpoints, reactive disinformation appeals to our instinct of fairness: it hopes that audiences will accept at least some degree of compromise, based on the false equivalence between the facts and the disinformation. The weakness of reactive disinformation is that once its claims have been picked apart by fact-checking and investigative journalists, it loses its power – and the masterminds behind the disinformation are exposed as not trustworthy. In other words, reactive disinformation can only buy time. Proactive disinformation has its strength in it that it focuses on one narrative and keeps on repeating just that one narrative until it gains traction. By applying an element of truth, it also makes the work of fact-checkers, and thereby the exposure of the disinformation, more difficult. The disinforming actor can choose to focus exclusively on issues of sensitivity for its counterpart – in the case of the concentration camp narrative, the disinformation touches on migration and the relationship between the EU and Ukraine.Does proactive disinformation have any weaknesses?
The question that remains is what risks proactive disinformation campaigns take if any. If audiences who are not the primary target group of a proactive disinformation campaign are exposed to the manipulative framing, it makes the disinforming actor look problematic. For example, it will probably be clear to those who are normally not under the influence of pro-Kremlin disinformation that the concentration camp narrative is a way of making Ukraine an acceptable target of the Kremlin’s aggression by associating the authorities in Kyiv with Nazism.Ukraine Under Information Fire: For the last five years, Russian state media have used proactive disinformation in attempts to turn Ukraine into an acceptable target of aggression.
Further reading:
- Defensive Disinformation as Decoy Flare: Skripal and Flight MH17
- “Concentration Camps in Europe – Again” – A Guide to the Emotions Disinformation Exploits
- “Finland Puts Russian Kids in Prison” – Disinformation that Shaped the Minds of Millions
- Dependent Media – Russia’s Military TV Zvezda
- How Russian propaganda denigrates Ukraine with disinformation
- Ukraine-related narratives dominate Russian propaganda – disinformation watchdogs