A three-series multimedia project by the New York Times reveals how current Kremlin disinformation campaigns stem from a long tradition of weaponizing information. Titled “Operation Infektion,” the series tells the story of a “political virus,” invented decades ago by the KGB to “slowly and methodically destroy its enemies from the inside,” and which the Kremlin continues to deliberately spread to this day. EU vs Disinfo takes a closer look at each of the episodes and encourages you to watch them yourselves.

- First Commandment: look for cracks in target societies.
- Second Commandment: create a big lie – something so outrageous, no one will believe it is made up.
- Third Commandment: wrap that lie around a kernel of truth – disinformation is most successful when it has a small bit of truth in it.
- Fourth Commandment: conceal your hand – make it seem that the story came from somewhere else.
- Fifth Commandment: find yourself a ‘useful idiot’ – someone who would unwittingly push your message to wider audiences.
- Sixth Commandment: when the truth is uncovered – deny everything.
- Seventh Commandment: play the long game – efforts might not bear fruit for years, but accumulated over a longer period of time they will eventually have a political impact.
- Its flagship, TV channel RT (formerly Russia Today) wants global audiences to “question more” 24 hours a day in six languages. It is also fully funded by the Russian government and receives weekly instructions from Kremlin.
- Then there is Sputnik, established by a Presidential decree to “report on state policy of Russia abroad,” with “reporting” so deliberately misleading, that it prompted the President of France Emmanuel Macron to call out Sputnik along with the RT as “agencies of influence and propaganda, lying propaganda – no more, no less.”
- In addition to that, there are ubiquitous online sites in Kremlin’s arsenal, which intentionally conceal their links to Russia. Not least among them – the infamous Internet Research Agency (aka St. Petersburg’s “Troll factory”), which was at the center of Russian attempts to influence the public opinion on social media before the 2016 US Presidential election.
New York Times sheds light on decades-old tradition of Kremlin disinformation campaign.
Watch entire series on the NYT website.Read also:
- How Russia produces conspiracies on bio weapons to befog Skripal case
- Five ways Russia is generating a conspiracy smokescreen around the Skripal poisoning
- Four years on, Russian MH17 disinformation campaign still going strong
- Increased violence in Donbas coincides with spike in anti-Ukrainian aggressive rhetoric on Russian TV
- A guide to Russian propaganda. Part 3: Rapid fire conspiracy theories
- 15-point checklist of Putin regime’s propaganda techniques
- Perfection as a weapon of hybrid warfare