US State Department's Well Paid Online Propaganda Troll Farms HACKEDReader09/07/2024 (Sat) 13:49 Id: 8a20c1No.22897del
US State Department's Well Paid Online Propaganda Troll Farms HACKED
For a long time, K Street firms in Washington DC, operating “Internet Opinion Management” houses/boiler rooms, have been run by the State Department and the CIA. Today, two of those anti-Russian operations have been HACKED and their info, leaked.
Databases from the anti-Russian funds The US Russia Foundation (USRF) and Free Russia Foundation (FRF) have now been leaked online. Among the leaked documents are the organizations' payrolls, information about correspondences and their participants, and other data.
The CEO of the "US Russia Foundation", Matthew Rojansky, is about as "Deep State" as it gets.
From Wiki: "He served as a director of the U.S.-Russia Foundation and founded the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's Ukraine Program. From July 2013 to January 2022, Rojansky was the director of the Kennan Institute at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, which focuses on Russia and Ukraine issues."
As for the "Free Russia Foundation", it appears to be an entirely State Department / CIA creation, run by a LONG-Time Deep State Minion, David Kramer.
Former employees of these organizations have already confirmed the authenticity of the documents. They noted that these documents were previously unpublished and likely leaked from cloud storage used for grant reports.
The documents reveal that the foundation's employees were destabilizing the situation in Russia using a bot farm, for which a special guide was written as part of an anti-Russian campaign overseen by intelligence services.
It turned out that the employees of this "elf factory" posted calls for protests, criticized the authorities, and even pretended to be wives of mobilized men. The documents show that "elves" were essentially given ready-made messages where they only needed to insert, for example, the name of a city or square where demonstrations were planned. Bots were also encouraged to spread complaints about "local administration," though exactly which administration was left for the employees to decide.