US and UK Intel Agencies Declare Cyberwar on Independent Media

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From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas
By Whitney Webb โ Nov 11, 2020 US โ
British and American state intelligence agencies are โweaponizing truthโ to quash vaccine hesitancy as both nations prepare for mass inoculations, in a recently announced โcyberwarโ to be commanded by AI-powered arbiters of truth against information sources that challenge official narratives.
In just the past week, the national-security states of the United States and United Kingdom have discreetly let it be known that the cyber tools and online tactics previously designed for use in the post-9/11 โwar on terrorโ are now being repurposed for use against information sources promoting โvaccine hesitancyโ and information related to COVID-19 that runs counter to their state narratives.
A new cyber offensive was launched on Monday by the UKโs signal intelligence agency, Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), which seeks to target websites that publish content deemed to be โpropagandaโ that raises concerns regarding state-sponsored COVID-19 vaccine development and the multi-national pharmaceutical corporations involved.
Similar efforts are underway in the United States, with the US military recently funding a CIA-backed firmโstuffed with former counterterrorism officials who were behind the occupation of Iraq and the rise of the so-called Islamic Stateโto develop an AI algorithm aimed specifically at new websites promoting โsuspectedโ disinformation related to the COVID-19 crisis and the US militaryโled COVID-19 vaccination effort known as Operation Warp Speed.
Both countries are preparing to silence independent journalists who raise legitimate concerns over pharmaceutical industry corruption orย the extreme secrecy surrounding state-sponsored COVID-19 vaccination efforts, now that Pfizerโs vaccine candidate is slated to be approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) by monthโs end.
Pfizerโs history of beingย fined billions for illegal marketingย and for bribing government officials to help them cover upย an illegal drug trial that killed eleven children (among other crimes) has gone unmentioned by most mass media outlets, which instead have celebrated the apparently imminent approval of the companyโs COVID-19 vaccine without questioning the companyโs history or that the mRNA technology used in the vaccine has sped through normal safety trial protocols and has never been approved for human use. Also unmentioned is that the head of the FDAโs Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Patrizia Cavazzoni, isย the former Pfizer vice president for product safetyย who covered upย the connection of one of its products to birth defects.
Essentially, the power of the state is being wielded like never before to police online speech and to deplatform news websites to protect the interests of powerful corporations like Pfizer and other scandal-ridden pharmaceutical giants as well as the interests of the US and UK national-security states, which themselves areย intimately involved in the COVID-19 vaccination endeavor.
UK Intelligenceโs New Cyberwar Targeting โAnti-Vaccine Propagandaโ
On Monday, the UK newspaperย The Timesย reportedย that the UKโs GCHQ โhas begun an offensive cyber-operation to disrupt anti-vaccine propaganda being spread by hostile statesโ and โis using a toolkit developed to tackle disinformation and recruitment material peddled by Islamic Stateโ to do so. In addition, the UK government has ordered the British militaryโs 77th Brigade, whichย specializes in โinformation warfare,โ to launch an online campaign to counter โdeceptive narrativesโ about COVID-19 vaccine candidates.
The newly announced GCHQ โcyberwarโ will not only take down โanti-vaccine propagandaโ but will also seek to โdisrupt the operations of the cyberactors responsible for it, including encrypting their data so they cannot access it and blocking their communications with each other.โย ย The effort will also involve GCHQ reaching out to other countries in the โFive Eyesโ alliance (US, Australia, New Zealand and Canada) to alert their partner agencies in those countries to target such โpropagandaโ sites hosted within their borders.
The Timesย stated that โthe government regards tackling false information about inoculation as a rising priority as the prospect of a reliable vaccine against the coronavirus draws closer,โ suggesting that efforts will continue to ramp up as a vaccine candidate gets closer to approval.
It seems that, from the perspective of the UK national-security state, those who question corruption in the pharmaceutical industry and its possible impact on the leading experimental COVID-19 vaccine candidates (all of which use experimental vaccine technologies that have never before been approved for human use) should be targeted with tools originally designed to combat terrorist propaganda.
Whileย The Timesย asserted that the effort would target content โthat originated only from state adversariesโ and would not target the sites of โordinary citizens,โ the newspaper suggested that the effort would rely on the US government for determining whether or not a site is part of a โforeign disinformationโ operation.
This is highly troubling given that the US recently seized the domains of many sites, including theย American Herald Tribune, whichย it erroneously labeled as โIranian propaganda,โย despite its editor in chief, Anthony Hall, being based in Canada. The US government made this claim about theย American Herald Tribuneย after the cybersecurity firm FireEye, a US government contractor, stated that it had โmoderate confidenceโ that the site had been โfounded in Iran.โ
In addition, the fact that GCHQ has alleged that most of the sites it plans to target are โlinked to Moscowโ gives further cause for concern given that the UK government wasย caught fundingย the Institute for Statecraftโs Integrity Initiative, which falsely labeled critics of the UK governmentโs actions as well as its narrativesย with respect to the Syria conflictย as being related to โRussian disinformationโ campaigns.
Given this precedent, it is certainly plausible that GCHQ could take the word of either an allied government, a government contractor, or perhaps even an allied media organizationย such as Bellingcatย orย the Atlantic Councilโs DFRLabย that a given site is โforeign propagandaโ in order to launch a cyber offensive against it. Such concerns are only amplified when one of the main government sources forย The Timesย article bluntly stated that โGCHQ has been told to take out antivaxers [sic] online and on social media. There are ways they have used to monitor and disrupt terrorist propaganda,โ which suggests that the targets of GCHQโs new cyberwar will, in fact, be determined by the content itself rather than their suspected โforeignโ origin. The โforeignโ aspect instead appears to be a means of evading the prohibition in GCHQโs operational mandate on targeting the speech or websites of ordinary citizens.
This larger pivot toward treating alleged โanti-vaxxersโ as โnational security threatsโ has been ongoing for much of this year, spearheaded in part by Imran Ahmed, the CEO ofย the UK-based Center for Countering Digital Hate,ย a member of the UK governmentโsย Steering Committee on Countering Extremismย Pilot Task Force, which is part of the UK governmentโs Commission for Countering Extremism.
Ahmed told the UK newspaperย The Independentย in Julyย that โI would go beyond calling anti-vaxxers conspiracy theorists to say they are an extremist group that pose a national security risk.โ He then stated that โonce someone has been exposed to one type of conspiracy itโs easy to lead them down a path where they embrace more radical world views that can lead to violent extremism,โ thereby implying that โanti-vaxxersโ might engage in acts of violent extremism. Among the websitesย cited by Ahmedโs organizationย as promoting such โextremismโ that poses a โnational security riskโ were Childrenโs Health Defense, the National Vaccine Information Center, Informed Consent Action Network, and Mercola.com, among others.
Similarly, a think tank tied to US intelligenceโwhose GCHQ equivalent, the National Security Agency, will take part in the newly announced โcyberwarโโargued in a research paper published just months before the onset of the COVID-19 crisis that โthe US โanti-vaxxerโ movement would pose a threat to national security in the event of a โpandemic with a novel organism.โโ
InfraGard, โa partnership between the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and members of the private sector,โ warned in the paper published last June that โthe US anti-vaccine movement would also be connected with โsocial media misinformation and propaganda campaignsโ orchestrated by the Russian government,โย as cited byย The Guardian. The InfraGard paper further claimed that prominent โanti-vaxxersโ are aligned โwith other conspiracy movements including the far right . . . and social media misinformation and propaganda campaigns by many foreign and domestic actors. Included among these actors is the Internet Research Agency, the Russian governmentโaligned organization.โ
An article published just last monthย by theย Washington Postย argued that โvaccineย hesitancy is mixing with coronavirus denial and merging with far-right American conspiracy theories, including Qanon,โ which the FBIย named a potential domestic terror threatย last year. The article quoted Peter Hotez, dean of the School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, as saying โThe US anti-vaccination movement is globalizing and itโs going toward more-extremist tendencies.โ
It is worth pointing out that many so-called โanti-vaxxersโ are actually critics of the pharmaceutical industry and are not necessarily opposed to vaccines in and of themselves, making the labels โanti-vaxxerโ and โanti-vaccineโ misleading. Given that many pharmaceutical giants involved in making COVID-19 vaccines donate heavily to politiciansin both countries and have been involved in numerous safety scandals, using state intelligence agencies to wage cyberwar against sites that investigate such concerns is not only troubling for the future of journalism but it suggests that the UK is taking a dangerous leap toward becoming a country that uses its state powers to treat the enemies of corporations as enemies of the state.
The CIA-Backed Firm โWeaponizing Truthโ with AI
In early October, the US Air Force and US Special Operations Command announced that they had awarded a multimillion-dollar contract to the US-based โmachine intelligenceโ company Primer. Perย the press release, โPrimer will develop the first-ever machine learning platform to automatically identify and assessย suspected disinformationย [emphasis added]. Primer will also enhance its natural language processing platform to automatically analyze tactical events to provide commanders with unprecedented insight as events unfold in near real-time.โ
According to Primer, the company โbuilds software machines that read and write in English, Russian, and Chinese to automatically unearth trends and patterns across large volumes of data,โ and their work โsupports the mission of the intelligence community and broader DOD by automating reading and research tasks to enhance the speed and quality of decision-making.โ In other words, Primer is developing an algorithm that would allow the national-security state to outsource many military and intelligence analyst positions to AI. In fact, the companyย openly admits this, stating that their current effort โwill automate the work typically done by dozens of analysts in a security operations center to ingest all of the data relevant to an event as it happens and funnel it into a unified user interface.โ
Primerโs ultimate goal is to use their AI to entirely automate the shaping of public perceptions and become the arbiter of โtruth,โ as defined by the state. Primerโs founder, Sean Gourley, who previously created AI programs for the militaryย to track โinsurgencyโย in post-invasion Iraq, asserted inย an April blog postย that โcomputational warfare and disinformation campaigns will, in 2020, become a more serious threat than physical war, and we will have to rethink the weapons we deploy to fight them.โ
In that same post, Gourley argued for the creation of a โManhattan Project for truthโ that would create a publicly available Wikipedia-style database built off of โknowledge bases [that] already exist inside many countriesโ intelligence agencies for national security purposes.โ Gourley then wrote that โthis effort would be ultimately about building and enhancing our collective intelligence and establishing a baseline for whatโs true or notโ as established by intelligence agencies. He concludes his blog post by stating that โin 2020, we will begin to weaponize truth.โ
Notably, on November 9, the same day that GCHQ announced its plans to target โanti-vaccine propaganda,โย the US websiteย NextGovย reported that Primerโs Pentagon-funded effort had turned its attention specifically to โCOVID-19 related disinformation.โ According to Primerโs director of science, John Bohannon, โPrimer will be integrating bot detection, synthetic text detection and unstructured textual claims analysis capabilities into our existing artificial intelligence platform currently in use with DOD. . . . This will create the first unified mission-ready platform to effectively counter COVID-19-related disinformation in near-real time.โ
Bohannon, who previously worked as a mainstream journalist embedded with NATO forces in Afghanistan, also toldย NextGov that Primerโs new COVID-19โfocused effort โautomatically classifies documents into one of 10 categories to enable the detection of the impact of COVIDโ on areas such as โbusiness, science and technology, employment, the global economy, and elections.โ The final product is expected to be delivered to the Pentagon in the second quarter of next year.
Though a so-called private company, Primer is deeply linked to the national-security state it is designed to protect by โweaponizing truth.โ Primer proudly promotes itself as having more than 15 percent of its staff hailing from the US intelligence community or military. The director of the companyโs National Security Group isย Brian Raymond, a former CIA intelligence officer whoย served asย the Director for Iraq on the US National Security Council after leaving the agency.
The company also recently added several prominent national-security officials to its board including:
โขย Gen. Raymond Thomasย (ret.), who led the command of all US and NATO Special Operations Forces in Afghanistan and is the former commander of both US Special Operations Command and Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC).
โขย Lt. Gen. VeraLinn Jamiesonย (ret.), the former deputy chief of staff for Air Force Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance who led the Air Forceโs intelligence and cyber forces. She also personally developed โstrategic partnershipsโ between the Air Force and Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and IBM in order โto accelerate the Air Forceโs digital transformation.โ
โขย Brett McGurk, one of the โchief architectsโ of the Iraq War โsurge,โย alongside the notorious Kagan family,ย as NSC Director for Iraq, and then as special assistant to the president and senior Director for Iraq and Afghanistan during the Bush administration. Under Obama and during part of the Trump administration, McGurk wasย the special presidential envoyย for the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS at the State Department, helping to manageย the โdirty warโย waged by the US, the UK, and other allies against Syria.
In addition to those recent board hires, Primerย brought on Sue Gordon, the former principal deputy director of National Intelligence, as a strategic adviser. Gordon previously โdrove partnerships within the US Intelligence Community and provided advice to the National Security Council in her role as deputy director of national intelligenceโ and had a twenty-seven-year career at the CIA. The deep links are unsurprising, given that Primer isย financially backed byย the CIAโs venture-capital arm In-Q-Tel and the venture-capital arm of billionaireย Mike Bloomberg, Bloomberg Beta.
Operation Warp Speedโs Disinformation Blitzkrieg
The rapid increase in interest by the US and UK national-security states toward COVID-19 โdisinformation,โ particularly as it relates to upcoming COVID-19 vaccination campaigns, is intimately related to the media-engagement strategy of the US governmentโs Operation Warp Speed.
Officially a โpublic-private partnership,โ Operation Warp Speed, which has the goal of vaccinating 300 million Americans by next January, is dominated by the US military andย also involvesย several US intelligence agencies, including the National Security Agency (NSA) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), as well as intelligence-linked tech giantsย Google, Oracle,ย andย Palantir. Several reportsย published inย The Last American Vagabondby this author and journalist Derrick Broze have revealed the extreme secrecy of the operation, its numerous conflicts of interest, and its deep ties to Silicon Valley and Orwellian technocratic initiatives.
Warp Speedโs official guidance discusses at length its phased plan for engaging the public and addressing issues of โvaccine hesitancy.โ According to the Warp Speed document entitled โFrom the Factory to the Frontlines,โ โstrategic communications and public messaging are critical to ensure maximum acceptance of vaccines, requiring a saturation of messaging across the national media.โ It also states that โworking with established partnersโespecially those that are trusted sources for target audiencesโis critical to advancing public understanding of, access to, and acceptance of eventual vaccinesโ and that โidentifying the right messages to promote vaccine confidence, countering misinformation, and targeting outreach to vulnerable and at-risk populations will be necessary to achieve high coverage.โ
The document also notes that Warp Speed will employ the CDCโs three-pronged strategic framework for its communications effort. The third pillar of that strategy is entitled โStop Mythsโ and has as a main focus โestablish[ing] partnerships to contain the spread of misinformationโ as well as โwork[ing] with local partners and trusted messengers to improve confidence in vaccines.โ
Though that particular Warp Speed document is short on specifics, the CDCโs COVID-19 Vaccination Program Interim Playbookย contains additional information. It states that Operation Warp Speed will โengage and use a wide range of partners, collaborations, and communication and news media channels to achieve communication goals, understanding that channel preferences and credible sources vary among audiences and people at higher risk for severe illness and critical populations, and channels vary in their capacity to achieve different communication objectives.โ It states that it will focus its efforts in this regard on โtraditional media channelsโ (print, radio, and TV) as well as โdigital mediaโ (internet, social media, and text messaging).
The CDC document further reveals that the โpublic messagingโ campaign to โpromote vaccine uptakeโ and address โvaccine hesitancyโ is divided into four phases and adds that the overall communication strategy of Warp Speed โshould be timely and applicable for the current phase of the COVID-19 Vaccination program.โ
Those phases are:
โขย Before a vaccine is available
โขย The vaccine is available in limited supply for certain populations of early focus
โขย The vaccine is increasingly available for other critical populations and the general public
โขย The vaccine is widely available
Given that the COVID-19 vaccine candidate produced by Pfizer is expected to be approved by the end of November, it appears that the US national-security state, which is essentially running Operation Warp Speed, along with โtrusted messengersโ in mass media, is preparing to enter the second phase of its communications strategy, one in which news organizations and journalists who raise legitimate concerns about Warp Speed will be de-platformed to make way for the โrequiredโ saturation of pro-vaccine messaging across the English-speaking media landscape.
Whitney Webb is a MintPress News journalist based in Chile. She has contributed to several independent media outlets including Global Research, EcoWatch, the Ron Paul Institute and 21st Century Wire, among others. She has made several radio and television appearances and is the 2019 winner of the Serena Shim Award for Uncompromised Integrity in Journalism.