Canadian professor's website helps Russia spread disinformation, says U.S. State Department

Ahead of u.s. elections, state department identified site as major 'kremlin-aligned' proxy.

globalresearch.ca

University of Ottawa professor's website under scrutiny for Kremlin-aligned disinformation

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As U.S. authorities guard against dirty tricks from foreign adversaries in the run-up to the Nov. 3 presidential election, an unlikely source has come under new scrutiny as a major conduit of Russian-linked disinformation: a Montreal-based website run by a retired University of Ottawa professor.

The platform, Global Research, features a Canadian domain name and offers an ever-expanding collection of conspiracy theories, such as the myth that the 9/11 attacks and COVID-19 pandemic were both planned in order to control the population. The website also hosts articles experts have attributed to a Russian spy agency.

With more than 275,000 Facebook followers and a potential readership in excess of 350,000 per article, the site has the biggest reach among "Kremlin-aligned" disinformation sites, according to the U.S. State Department.

"This is part of a larger effort to sow disarray and distrust within Western democracies," said James Andrew Lewis, a senior researcher at the Washington, D.C.-based think-tank Center for Strategic and International Studies.

U.S. intelligence agencies found Russian state actors mounted a multi-faceted assault before the 2016 U.S. election in an effort to undermine the candidacy of Hillary Clinton and bolster Donald Trump's odds of winning. They say the operation involved spreading false claims and amplifying divisive debates within American society online.

Russia was "so successful in 2016, I'm sure they'll try the same thing again in 2020," Lewis said, "and this website is part of that effort."

Michel Chossudovsky, the University of Ottawa professor emeritus of economics who runs the site, told CBC News through a lawyer that his platform is not a Russian-aligned disinformation site and urged a reporter not to embark on a "witch hunt." In an email, the lawyer also said his client would not agree to an interview.

The FBI has identified such proxy sites as one of the main tools used by Russia this year to sow discord and denigrate Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.

globalresearch.ca

FBI Director Christopher Wray told a congressional committee in September that the agency has again observed "very active efforts" by Russia to affect the election through "malign foreign influence," including the use of social media, state media and proxies.

Experts say the Canadian-based website fits into the broad network used by Russia to attain its objectives, but also say it is unknown whether there is any co-ordination with Moscow.

A collection of conspiracy theories

Since 2001, Global Research has acted as the online component of the Centre for Research on Globalization, a self-styled "independent research and media organization" run by Chossudovsky.

Along with more than 40 "research associates" and writers, the website lists a post office box within a convenience store as its mailing address, just down the street from Montreal City Hall.

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Chossudovsky, once a frequent guest on the Russian state TV network RT, serves as the site's editor and is one of its main contributors. He has regularly questioned the seriousness of COVID-19, recently labelling it a "manufactured pandemic."

Disinformation researchers have previously singled out Russia and China as drivers of coronavirus conspiracy theories. One of Global Research's articles, featuring the unsubstantiated claim that the virus first came from a U.S. source, was tweeted in March by a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman and later deleted.

Marcus Kolga, founder of the website  DisinfoWatch , said platforms like Global Research give outlandish narratives "an air of legitimacy that they wouldn't otherwise have," what's known as "information laundering."

WATCH | Disinformation researcher says sites like this help legitimize outlandish theories:

globalresearch.ca

Retired professor lends credibility to disinformation

On Tuesday, for example, Global Research posted a piece underscoring Joe Biden's unproven "cognitive decline." The same article also warned of "the imminent danger of a Kamala Harris presidency," suggesting that as a prosecutor, she disproportionately jailed Black men because of a vendetta against her Jamaican-American father.

The website has also published articles sympathetic to the Russian-backed regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and other pieces critical of NATO, the Western alliance that has sought to contain Moscow's aggression.

The Globe and Mail reported in 2017 that Global Research had become the target of an investigation by NATO's information warfare specialists, who suspected the site was playing a role in amplifying Russian-aligned narratives with little basis in fact.

'No other outlet had half as much reach'

This year, a U.S. State Department report identified Global Research as being part of a network of proxy sites that, while having no visible ties to Moscow, "serve no other purpose but to push pro-Kremlin content."

"It provides plausible deniability for Kremlin officials when proxy sites peddle blatant and dangerous disinformation, allowing them to deflect criticism while still introducing pernicious information," reads the report, published by the State Department's anti-foreign propaganda arm, the Global Engagement Center.

Based on analysis of web traffic on seven such sites from February to April of this year, the report pointed to the Canadian-based platform as the Kremlin-aligned disinformation site with the biggest potential audience. "At more than 350,000 potential readers per article, no other outlet had half as much reach as Global Research," it said.

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Kolga, who is also a senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, an Ottawa-based think-tank, said it's hard to contain disinformation once it's posted on such websites and then shared by users on social media — especially on less regulated message boards such as 4Chan and in groups of QAnon believers.

What's more, Kolga said, is that when the main voice of a disinformation website is tied to a respected university, "it makes it believable. That is the problem here."

globalresearch.ca

One-time colleagues distance themselves

Chossudovsky's CV says he joined the University of Ottawa's economics department in 1968 and was promoted to the rank of full professor in 1979. In 2001, the faculty of social sciences granted him its Excellence in Teaching Award for "outstanding performance." The university's website still lists him as professor emeritus.

Two other U of O professors, Marcel Mérette and Yazid Dissou, who appear alongside Chossudovsky in a 2014 picture on his website, said they weren't aware the photo was being used in that way until a CBC reporter brought it to their attention. Both sought to distance themselves from Chossudovsky.

Mérette, currently the university's deputy provost, said he does "not endorse or support the views and opinions expressed by the former professor Chossudovsky on the website or in any other medium."

Dissou, an economics professor, similarly said he doesn't want to be associated with Chossudovsky's "activities or ideas," calling him a "former colleague who retired from the department more than six years ago."

Chossudovsky's website also features photos of him in discussion with the late Cuban communist leader Fidel Castro. Chossudovsky's CV notes he holds Canadian, British and Irish citizenships and that he's been interviewed on such mainstream news outlets as CBC, CTV and BBC.

globalresearch.ca

In 2005, Jewish advocacy organization B'nai Brith complained to the university after the group became aware of Holocaust denial material on Chossudovsky's website. 

"We remain concerned that the website still promotes conspiracy theories, including anti-Semitic ones," B'nai Brith Canada CEO Michael Mostyn said in an email to CBC.

He pointed to a range of wild claims on the site, including the unfounded allegations that Israel worked with the U.S. to intentionally unleash COVID-19 and that Israel and Jewish-American politicians staged the 9/11 attacks.

Chossudovsky declined to answer emailed questions from CBC about his links to Russia and the source of his website's funding. Instead, his Montreal-based lawyer, John Philpot, told CBC that Chossudovsky "pursues legitimate journalism as he has done for almost 20 years."

Philpot also said, "please (do) not embark on the type of witch hunt which has become common practice south of the border."

Some authors linked to GRU, report says

Research from Stanford University's Internet Observatory, a program examining abuse in information technologies, found links tying Global Research to Russian military intelligence agency operations. The 2019 study , commissioned by a U.S. Senate intelligence committee, analyzed online content that Facebook attributed to the spy agency commonly known as the GRU.

globalresearch.ca

Based on the research, the State Department said Global Research published or reposted articles by at least seven authors using aliases — or "sock puppet personas," according to the Stanford report — to hide their ties to the GRU. The content remains accessible on the website.

According to a U.S. Justice Department indictment unsealed this week , six alleged officers from the same agency were charged in the U.S. for an array of cyberattacks around the world. The GRU was also linked to a hack of Democratic Party emails in 2016.

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In an interview, Stanford research scholar Shelby Grossman said the team looked for evidence that disinformation stemming from the spy agency wound up in the mainstream press.

"It didn't really succeed," she said, as the articles were only published on fringe sites such as Global Research. She said the content was more likely to reach audiences who already tended to believe in conspiracy theories and "weird, Russian-aligned views."

"That being said ... this is still dangerous," she said. "This kind of content can further polarize people to hold incorrect beliefs."

Clarifications

  • A previous version of this story described Michel Chossudovsky as a frequent guest on the Russian state TV network RT. The story has been updated to clarify that Chossudovsky was a frequent guest in the past. Apr 19, 2021 12:50 PM ET

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

globalresearch.ca

Senior Reporter

Thomas is a CBC News reporter based in Toronto. In recent years, he has covered some of the biggest stories in the world, from the 2015 Paris attacks to the Tokyo Olympics and the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II. He reported from the Lac-Mégantic rail disaster, the Freedom Convoy protest in Ottawa and the Pope's visit to Canada aimed at reconciliation with Indigenous people. Thomas can be reached at [email protected].

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Canadian website criticized as Kremlin mouthpiece depicts Russian invasion as 'peacekeeping mission'

The globalresearch.ca defence of the attack on Ukraine adds to an online influence that experts already consider large and troubling

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The world’s media and many of its leaders depicted Russia’s invasion of Ukraine this week as an unprovoked, brazen attack on a sovereign and democratic nation.

Canadian website criticized as Kremlin mouthpiece depicts Russian invasion as 'peacekeeping mission' Back to video

A Montreal website with surprising reach offered a rather different take on the events.

Articles on globalresearch.ca insisted that it was not an invasion at all but a war Russia didn’t want. It was a “peacekeeping mission” to protect people of Ukraine’s restive Donbas region, even as Moscow’s forces poured into the country from multiple directions.

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The Russians were simply trying to “liberate” parts of eastern Ukraine held by Russian-backed separatists, globalresearch.ca writers said, their main targets being “Ukrainian Nazi groups and movements.”

The articles, some by the website’s own authors and others from partner sites, both mirrored Russia’s own propaganda about the invasion and disseminated misleading or false information.

For the site run by a retired University of Ottawa economics professor, in other words, it was business as usual.

Those are the type of narratives that add fuel to fringe extremists

Globalresearch.ca has been repeatedly criticized for perpetuating conspiracy theories on everything from airline contrails to killer vaccines and spreading untrue Russian-government spin on world events.

A 2020 U.S. State Department report singled it out as the most impactful of seven “proxy sites” that disseminate Russian disinformation, while the NATO-allied Strategic Communications Centre criticized it for “information laundering” — giving a supposedly respectful Western sheen to the Kremlin’s fake news.

Seven authors responsible for 108 articles on the site were identified by Facebook as pseudonyms created by GRU, Russia’s foreign military intelligence agency.

Get a dash of perspective along with the trending news of the day in a very readable format.

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The globalresearch.ca defence of the attack on Ukraine adds to an online influence that experts already consider large and troubling.

“We have to take this extremely seriously as a threat to our information environment,” said Marcus Kolga, director of the DisinfoWatch organization and a senior fellow with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute. “Those are the type of narratives that add fuel to fringe extremists.”

The site is tied to the Centre for Research on Globalization, founded by retired professor Michel Chossudovsky, once a left-leaning member of the University of Ottawa economics department.

He won the institution’s Excellence in Teaching award in 2001 but some of his extra-curricular exploits have been more contentious, and not just the website.

According to slobodan-milosevic.org , he offered himself up as a witness in the defence of the Serbian leader when Slobodan Milosevic was tried over Bosnian war crimes. After a 2010 interview with Fidel Castro, Chossudovsky described the late autocratic leader of Cuba as a man of “tremendous integrity” and committed to “the advancement of humankind.”

He once appeared regularly on Russia Today, the state-controlled television network often accused itself of disseminating propaganda and disinformation. A book of his outlining a conspiracy theory about the 9/11 attacks was found on Osama bin Laden ’s bookshelf after his death.

Chossudovsky is still listed on the university’s website as a professor emeritus, an honorary title given to superannuated faculty members.

Ironically, the university recently launched what it calls the Information Integrity Lab , a project dedicated to “the preservation of truth and countering the ill effects of disinformation.”

“If I were running a large university, a nationally recognized university, I would certainly be kind of concerned about my reputation,” said Kolga about Chossudovsky’s online presence.

University spokeswoman Isabelle Mailloux did not comment on why Chossudovsky is still listed among faculty of the economics department, but said he no longer has ties with the school.

“The University of Ottawa is aware of recent statements made by retired professor Chossudovsky and does not support the views expressed in them, nor does it endorse the contents of his website,” she said in a statement.

Chossudovsky himself could not be reached for comment. He has said little in the Canadian media about the website but did tell The Globe and Mail through a lawyer in 2017 that he is not affiliated with or supported by Russia’s government or any other.

Begun in 2001, globalresearch.ca lists a stable of its own writers and posts articles from other online sources, some of which are also listed by the State Department as Russian proxy sites. The overall tone is anti-U.S. and anti-West and often supportive of authoritarian adversaries of America and its allies.

Authors have promoted falsehoods that 9/11 was a U.S.-fabricated operation to justify American wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, that COVID vaccines could cause permanent genetic damage and lead to humans being “owned,” and that an American climate-change project will harvest “life molecules” from the atmosphere and render the earth inhospitable to plant life.

In the first months of the pandemic, it posted articles suggesting the coronavirus was actually introduced to China by U.S. soldiers , contrary to the findings of Chinese and foreign scientists. The claim was then repeated in tweets by China’s foreign ministry spokesman.

It was a classic example of how globalresearch.ca acts as a sort of information laundering service, recycling disinformation and propaganda often devised by Russian agents, then having its articles quoted back by Kremlin-controlled media  — or Beijing in the COVID case, said Janis Sarts, head of StratCom, in a 2020 National Post interview .

“When Russia needs to refer to a Western source, this is typically the site that is quoted,” he said.

Its impact became apparent in 2017 after the website Donbas News International claimed erroneously that the U.S. was sending 3,600 tanks to Europe for “war preparation against Russia.” That post gained limited traction initially. But it received a “significant boost” after globalresearch.ca ran the article, adding a reference to former U.S. president Barack Obama’s “political insanity,” reported the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab.

“The decision to include an obvious fake fits its editorial stance,” the Washington, D.C.-based organization commented.

The State Department Global Engagement Center’s report described globalresearch.ca as “deeply enmeshed in Russia’s broader disinformation and propaganda ecosystem.”

And it stood out among those seven proxy sites, the report noted. With 350,000 potential readers per article, it had more than twice as much reach as the other six in 2020.

Its reach this week included Kim Dotcom, the New Zealand-based Internet entrepreneur facing fraud charges in the U.S. He tweeted to his 727,000 followers that Russia’s invasion was a result of American foreign policy and linked to a globalresearch.ca article on “U.S. foreign policy disasters.”

To Kolga, the real impact of the site is in spreading fake news among a relatively small group of credulous readers who can — as shown by the QAnon movement or the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol — cause considerable harm.

It mirrored Russian-created falsehoods about the pandemic and COVID-19 vaccines, helping divide North American society, and it’s clear how it will portray Moscow’s war against Ukraine, he said.

“Anything that can make the Russians and Vladimir Putin look good and make the Ukrainians and NATO, the West and democracy look bad, that’s what’s going to get promoted.”

• Email: [email protected] | Twitter: tomblackwellNP

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