It turns out Russia hasn’t only been trying to undermine
American politics, but American biotech agriculture as well.
Hawai`i has for a decade or so been a hotbed of anti-science,
anti-biotech activism. Now it turns out that a Russian anti-GMO disinformation campaign
has been operating in parallel, and also in parallel with Russian interfence in
American elections.
A new review betrays the existence of a Russian disinformation
conspiracy to undermine the West’s initiatives to use biotechnology to make
food healthier, and to make agriculture more sustainable.
Researchers at Iowa State University conducted the probe
into the Russian attack on agriculture. Their
paper is entitled “Sowing the seeds of skepticism: Russian state news and the
anti-GMO movement.”
It turns out that many of the memes of the anti-GMO movement
may be Russian plants. And the authors of the Iowa State paper pulled no
punches: “Biotech news coverage in English-language Russian media fits the
profile of the Russian information warfare strategy described in recent
military reports.”
They suggested that the Russian anti-GMO program had one purely
financial goal: to promote Russian agricultural products
“Distinctive patterns
in Russian news provide evidence that Russia is conducting a coordinated
campaign to turn public opinion against genetically modified organisms. The
recent branding of Russian agriculture as the ecologically clean alternative to
genetically engineered foods is suggestive of an economic motive behind the
information campaign against western biotechnologies,” the paper said.
Another goal is simply to weaken the United States by promoting
divisiveness, said Carolyn Lawrence-Dill, an ISU associate professor and co-author
of the paper.
Some American anti-GMO organizations were quick to attack
the study, but by impugning the motives of the authors, rather than denying the
validity of the study. Indeed, Henry Rowlands of the site Sustainable Pulse, doubled down. He said the Russian news
organizations are just fine, and in fact more acceptable than American media on
this topic.
“The ISU researchers failed to ask the question as to why
the U.S. media does not cover the GMO issue regularly, despite a growing
consumer interest in and backlash against the technology. It may seem unusual
to some, but on this topic the Russian media has more freedom than the U.S.
media,” Rowlands said in this article on the organization’s website.
Rowlands challenged the fairness of the paper’s authors, on
grounds that Iowa State gets money from the grain industry. But that’s a
stretch. Iowa state is also a leading research institution on organics.
The disinformation campaign appears to operate out of two
Russian news sites, RT News and Sputniknews. Between them they used the
term GMO more often than the total of five U.S. news sites across the political
spectrum: Huffington Post, Fox News, CNN, Breitbart News and MSNBC.
They were RT News scare stories about GMO mosquitoes: “GMO
mosquitoes could be cause of Zika outbreak.”
And this: RT News: GMO corn “contains a startling level of
toxic chemicals.”
Paradoxically, RT News also had the headline, “GMO crops not
harming human health, but not boosting yields.”
And from Sputnik “GMO only causes problems,” and “Mass
cultivation of genetically modified crops may damage biodiversity.”
The paper makes the point that the Russians aren’t alone in
opposing biotech: “High profile individuals such as Dr. Oz and organizations
like the Center for Food Safety, Right to Know, Greenpeace, and the Organic
Consumers Association garner considerable attention as they actively oppose the
creation and release of biotech animals and crops for agricultural production,
promote product boycott movements, and calls for policymakers to enact both
mandatory labeling laws and outright bans.”
The Iowa paper says Russian news sites use anti-GMO “click
bait,” to link stories provocatively in ways that puts biotech in a bad light.
For example, a story on birth defects in mothers infected with Zika was linked
to the piece on GMO mosquitos being implicated in Zika.
“These campaigns are long marches, not short sprints.
Intentional misinformation campaigns can provide emotional energy and
additional attention to topics deemed important for guiding public opinion well
into the future,” the Iowa State paper said.
It is no secret and the Russian news organizations don’t deny
that Russia’s goal is to promote its own non-genetically engineered crops. RT
News admitted as much when it published this piece: “Russia looks to become
leading organic food exporter as Europe sees future in GMO.”
The Iowa State paper concludes with the assessment that
Russia’s effort has multiple purposes, and that another of them to undermine science
in the West.
“The threat of Russia’s misinformation campaign is not
limited to sowing seeds of division in the US and Europe and bolstering Russian
economic power - there is also the potential to erode public trust in science,
an institutionalized pillar of western intellectual tradition. Whether their
anti-science campaign will gain measurable traction remains to be seen.”
The paper has only been out for a few days, but it has
already gained significant attention.
“Iowa Researchers Find Negative GMO Reporting in Russian
Press,” says MSN.com.
Fake news or disinformation, a translation of the Russian word dezinformatsiya,
comes from the KGB’s propaganda playbook. And it is familiar to Americans now,
given our increasing knowledge of Russian interference in elections and
election campaigns.
The New York Times, in a 2016 article, said “disinformation is
regarded as an important aspect of Russian military doctrine, and it is being
directed at political debates in target countries with far greater
sophistication and volume than in the past.”
© Jan TenBruggencate 2018
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