The Secrets about Russia’s Influence Operation that Tulsi Gabbard Is Still Keeping from Us
Yesterday, I wrote about how utterly fucking ridiculous Tulsi Gabbard’s influence operation claiming a Deep State plot against Donald Trump because Barrack Obama knows the difference between a voting machine and the DNC server (which Tulsi claims not to know in her little project).
Her propaganda project is not without benefit. I mean, not only have I called on all the right wing members of Congress who’ve been duped by Tulsi to demand that Pam Bondi fire Kash Patel for covering this all up when he reviewed the same files in 2020. But Tulsi declassified a somewhat classified version of the 2017 ICA (there were two classified versions, a super classified version for President Obama, Trump, and the Gang of Eight, and a less-classified version for other members of Congress — this is the latter). So not only can we see what secrets about Russia’s 2016 interference Director Tulsi wants to keep from us, but we can compare the classified version with the publicly-released version to see what was sensitive in 2017 but no longer is.
There are a number of things that either did not exist in the public version or remain significantly redacted. For example:
- The classified version includes more discussion of the confidence levels. “We have high confidence in this assessment [that both SVR and GRU hacked political targets], the assessment described, “because it is based on a body of [redacted] intelligence reporting that reinforces and elaborates on publicly available commercial cyber analyses.” Elsewhere such language explains why some agencies were less certain.
- Speaking of Russian spooks targeting political targets, the classified ICA provided more details on the RNC hacks, which had been reported but never explained in detail. GRU hacked GOP targets in early July 2016, but (it appears) that server hadn’t been used for over six years. But that paragraph immediately precedes one of the only entirely redacted paragraphs in the assessment. A paragraph in a later section describing that “we saw Russian collection on some Republican-affiliated targets,” also includes three redacted lines.
- There’s a bit more detail on senior Russian officials, such as details about what hacked information was shared as intelligence, rather than used as an information operation.
- There’s an entire section on Russia’s targeting of state election infrastructure, including details on an Illinois hack that, I had been told by sources, was far more serious than publicly acknowledged. There’s one short paragraph addressing one of the several hacks revealed by Reality Winner. In general, the report was overly optimistic about Russian targeting of voting infrastructure, and simply didn’t imagine that Russia might steal registration data so it could conduct an attack like Cambridge Analytica.
- There’s a section explaining the ways that the attack could have been worse (though that claim is based, in part, on an assessment that “We did not detect extensive [redacted] influence operations as part of the Kremlin’s campaign.” Perhaps that part of the assessment would change as Robert Mueller investigated.
- There’s more detail on Russia’s past election interference (this section is worth comparing side by side), along with a map of operations spanning 2000 to 2016 (though the details remain classified). The ICA also predicted (in two still partly redacted paragraphs) that Germany’s fall 2017 election would be the next one targeted; it ended up being France’s May 2017 election.
Those are just interesting details, nothing really that (no matter how much Tulsi misrepresents all this) disrupts years of questions about the attributions.
There are just two passages I’m far more interested in.
In the section on the trolls, in the paragraph before one that addresses Yevgeniy Prigozhin’s role in funding it, there’s both a subheading and the first few lines of that section redacted.
I’m interested in that because, as I’ve gotten further from 2016, I’ve seen more reason to believe that the Russian effort to use trolls to make stuff go viral closely overlapped with the far right effort to do the same.
And finally — unsurprisingly — I’m interested in details about the Guccifer 2.0 attribution that wasn’t in the public report. The italicized language below is new in the classified report.
The Kremlin’s campaign aimed at the US election featured disclosures of data obtained through Russian cyber operations via WikiLeaks, as well as via the Guccifer 2.0 persona and DCLeaks.com, which are both likely GRU operations; GRU intrusions into US state electoral infrastructure; and overt propaganda. Russian foreign intelligence collection both informed and enabled the influence campaign, [redacted]
[snip]
Public Disclosures of Russian-Collected Data. We assess the GRU used both the Guccifer 2.0 persona and DCLeaks.com operationally to release US [victim] data obtained in GRU cyber operations publicly and in exclusives to media outlets. We have high confidence that Guccifer 2.0 and DCLeaks.com published GRU- hacked data, but moderate confidence that they were under direct GRU control [redacted]. We base our judgments on several factors: the information that was disclosed was information we assess the GRU accessed as part of its operations against US political targets; the initial data leak occurred the day after the US cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike publicized Russia’s intrusion into the DNC; and signals intelligence placed the operators of Guccifer 2.0 and DCLeaks.com in Russia.
Guccifer 2.0, who claimed to be an independent Romanian hacker, made multiple contradictory statements and false claims about his identity throughout the election; [redacted] intelligence indicated the persona was controlled from Russia, and press reporting suggests more than one person claiming to be Guccifer 2.0 interacted with journalists, based on [redacted] and interactions with the press.
Content that we assess was taken from [redacted] e-mail accounts targeted in March 2016 by a GRU cyber espionage unit subsequently appeared on DCLeaks.com in June.
On several occasions, the administrators of Guccifer 2.0 and DCLeaks.com logged in to accounts associated with those personas using a Russia-based mobile broadband provider [redacted] although they generally attempted to obscure the source of their Internet traffic.
Of particular interest, to me especially: the IC was pretty sure that Russia was using Guccifer 2.0 to disseminate the stolen files, but was less sure what the relationship between the persona and the spooks running it was. The passage includes the allegedly accidental log-ins via a Russian provider, which was reported years ago. But in early 2017, anyway, all this was ambiguous.
Given the conspiracy theories Tulsi is spewing, all these questions seem quaint now.
But the ambiguity from the period did carry over for some time later.
Links
A Dossier Steal: HPSCI Expertly Discloses Their Own Shoddy Cover-Up
Think of the HPSCI Report as a Time Machine to Launder Donald Trump’s Russia Russia Russia Claims
Tulsi Gabbard and John Ratcliffe Reveal Putin “Was Counting on” a Trump Win
Tulsi Gabbard Teams Up with Russian Spies to Wiretap and Unmask Hillary Clinton
The Secrets about Russia’s Influence Operation that Tulsi Gabbard Is Still Keeping from Us
Tulsi Gabbard Accuses Kash Patel of Covering Up for the Obama Deep State
On the subject of Russian influence on the 2016 election, you noted when Douglass Mackey was convicted in March 2023 that the “people with whom Mackey conspired are a collection of leading figures in the (Russian-backed) alt-Right.” As you probably noticed (but I didn’t until a few minutes ago when someone shared the link with me), a Second Circuit panel last week unanimously determined that the evidence did not prove that Mackey acted as part of a conspiracy and directed the trial judge to enter a judgment of acquittal.
It’s frustrating that the panel gives any weight to the fact that Mackey had never physically met any member of the “War Room” group but had only interacted with them online; where have they been for the past 25 years? It’s also irritating to me that the panel thinks it matters that the Clinton campaign managed to get an automatic corrective message sent to almost all of the people who received Mackey’s text to vote message, the more so because, as the panel notes regarding what “War Room” messages Mackey himself saw, that forum was getting a lot of messages and he might have missed those that pertained to the alleged conspiracy. Obviously the same could be true of voters who might have seen Mackey’s “text to vote” message but not the automated correction.
Here’s the link:
https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/69022819/137/1/united-states-of-america-v-mackey/
Yup. I think it’s a fair opinion.
The problem was that he was out of the chat rooms when there would have been an agreement (bc he was banned).
I think the opinion is pretty clear that if 241 permitted individuals to be charged, the charge would have stuck.
So I read the earlier post about the memo and this one. And I wondered why is she doing this now? Did some Congressional critter order it up? What’s the deal?
So I went looking and found the ODNI press release about it- https://www.dni.gov/index.php/newsroom/press-releases/press-releases-2025/4086-pr-15-25
Uh boy, it’s a frickin’ pretext to investigate, with the ultimate goal I assume of show trials, Obama and his administration’s intelligence community. It really focuses on Obama in all their little bullet points.
To say that the press release was hyperventilating and shrill in it’s accusations against Obama, almost like Steven Miller wrote it, would be an understatement.
I assume Gabbard released her hysterical book report at this particular time at the behest of Trump to change the discussion from the Epstein shitshow. In “normal” Trump world you wouldn’t release this on a Friday.
This is designed to give the press and the socials something to rage about over the weekend.
Bingo. The Epstein story is the mafia grandpa’s kryptonite. It’s also the critical Jenga block to their propaganda. I think they’ve been trying to suppress the Epstein story online and subsequently on air since bombing Iran.
I use Google News as my barometer of what’s trending, and it’s funny how Tucker’s Tulsi’s trending bait barely even hit the top headlines on Friday and has remained a backstory.
People love Obama. They are grasping at straws, and the walls are caving in.
“I assume Gabbard released her hysterical book report at this particular time at the behest of Trump … .”
Perhaps it is even implicit for those in his administration to protect the president in times of crisis by doing something provocative as a form of distraction. “Uh Oh, Donald is in trouble—time to release the squirrels.”
Tulsi is still trying to win back her place in Trump’s favor. I doubt this “book report” was done at his behest; its pathetic quality and sideshow focus would be beneath the guy bellowing “HOAX!” To me, this smacks of Gabbard and her followers (whoever those might be at this juncture) desperately jumping up and down yelling “Sir! Sir! Lookathis! Lookawhat WE made!”
Tulsi is interesting. Is she an opportunist? Compromised? Trump needs a distraction and she is conveniently without integrity. An Obama show trial would certainly provide a distraction.
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Any attempt to put Obama on trial would hit a pretty big, pretty new roadblock. Surely they’ve heard that presidents have immunity now? Even this SCOTUS would have to scramble like squirrels on meth to come up with an exclusionary clause for Democrats.
Nobody’s putting Obama on trial–although I’d love to see him mount a pro se defense to these clowns.
Same.
But not only the alt-right, other countries besides Russia. How many books were written on Russiagate? How many hours of news were devoted to Russiagate? And Mueller?
It was intriguing, exciting learning about espionage and active measures and Putin, but really something just has felt missing, more and more.
How many books were written about the alt right and the 2016 election? How many books were written about other countries involved in the 2016 election?
There were articles here and there about Nader and Zamel and Psy Group, but the attention given was just a fraction compared to Russiagate.
I get a similar feeling of something missing regarding the origins of Qanon. Which if you dig into, you see immediately goes straight through the alt-right, and relates to pizza gate and the 2016 election.
But there aren’t any books covering that. It wasn’t covered every night on MSNBC like Russia.
There is a book that comes to mind reading your post Z; “Black Pilled” by Elle Reeves written last year. She does a great job of documenting the rise of a group of bored incels and white nationalists on a fringe site, 4 Chan which became 8 Chan after a change of ownership, and the emergence of Q after that change of ownership.
From interviews with men drawn into this world it shows the evolution from being Red pilled, implying MAGAT, GOP political orientation, to black pilled, nihilistic conspiracy theorists who want Trump to burn it all down, and some who have gone so far down the rabbit hole that even Trump is no longer “pure” enough to fulfill their racist apocalyptic world view.
I can’t speak to any books on Putin’s Russia and their active measures across democracies from the U.S. to the EU but there has to be a book dedicated to that even if it’s not a state side publication.
I think you’re right with the origins at Pizzagate (Thanks to Jack Posobiec my least favorite Tumper on earth). No doubt, a lot propagandist mercenaries for hire like Zamel, Psy-Op, Cambridge Analytica, Steve Bannon, the Mercers etc have a role to play either specifically or overall.
Cyber is now the 5th domain of warfare after land, air, sea, and space. Social media manipulation of narratives and truth is proving a problem for which we don’t yet have solutions. That’s the biggie. Sunlight itself only works if it hasn’t been discredited ahead of time.
Here’s a read: QAnon Propaganda on Twitter as Information Warfare: Influencers, Networks, and Narratives
L. Dilley, W. Welna, F. Foster (Michigan State University).
https://arxiv.org/abs/2207.05118
Intro:
QAnon refers to a set of far-right, conspiratorial ideologies that have risen in popularity in the U.S. since their initial promotion in 2017 on the 4chan internet message board. A central narrative element of QAnon is that a powerful group of elite, liberal members of the Democratic Party engage in morally reprehensible practices, but that former U.S. President Donald J. Trump was prosecuting them. Five studies investigated the influence and network connectivity of accounts promoting QAnon on Twitter from August, 2020 through January, 2021. Selection of Twitter accounts emphasized on-line influencers and “persons of interest” known or suspected of participation in QAnon propaganda promotion activities. Evidence of large-scale coordination among accounts promoting QAnon was observed, demonstrating rigorous, quantitative evidence of “astroturfing” in QAnon propaganda promotion on Twitter, as opposed to strictly “grassroots” activities of citizens acting independently. Further, evidence was obtained supporting that networks of extreme far-right adherents engaged in organized QAnon propaganda promotion, as revealed by network overlap among accounts promoting far-right extremist (e.g., anti-Semitic) content and insurrectionist themes; New Age, occult, and “esoteric” themes; and internet puzzle games like Cicada 3301 and other “alternate reality games.” Based on well-grounded theories and findings from the social sciences, it is argued that QAnon propaganda on Twitter in the months circa the 2020 U.S. Presidential election likely reflected joint participation of multiple actors, including nation-states like Russia, in innovative misuse of social media toward undermining democratic processes by promoting “magical” thinking, ostracism of Democrats and liberals, and salience of White extinction narratives common among otherwise ideologically diverse groups on the extreme far-right.
Entire Paper as PDF:
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2207.05118
It’s quite a lot.
If you’re really interested in this stuff (I am and have been for some time) you need to study information warfare, memes (what they really are, how they work and why they’re hard to kill), A LOT of Soviet disinformation (because they were easily the best and we’re still living with the repercussions), Cognitive warfare and lethal media.
When you pour that all into a blender like Xitter/Facebook/Youtube you get the results we’re seeing today where the truth goes to die and is replaced by an android.
The greatest takeaway is not just to understand what Q is as a psyop, or who started it and who jumped on board etc, but WHY IT WORKS.
My favorite piece about Q-anon is here:
https://mssv.net/2020/08/02/what-args-can-teach-us-about-qanon/
Also, everyone seems to have forgotten this headline “DOJ says Russia paid right-wing influencers to spread Russian propaganda“ from less than a year ago.
https://www.npr.org/2024/09/07/nx-s1-5101895/doj-says-russia-paid-right-wing-influencers-to-spread-russian-propaganda
What I consider particularly galling is that Gabbard ran to Sean Hannity and essentially accused James Comey of trying to undermine Trump’s grand victory. The victory that would not have been except for James Comey.
Trump:
Hey Tulsi, your jobs on the line here and the Dems have the deck stacked against me with this Epstein hoax, get me out of it quick!
Tulsi:
I know Donnie, I’ll play the card that’s guaranteed to work with the base.
Tulsi:
Hey Obama, sing us one o’ them presidential work songs!!
Obama:
“I get no kick from champagne”….