The Storm-1516 campaigns rely on faked primary sources -- audio, video, photos, documents -- presented as evidence of the claims' veracity. They are then laundered through international news sources and influencers to reach their ultimate target: a mainstream Western audience.
At least 50 false narratives have been launched this way since last fall, according to a count NBC News assembled with researchers. The narratives aim to diminish Western support for military aid in Ukraine following Russia's invasion, a contentious issue in Congress. The videos also back the re-election of Donald Trump, who has pledged to halt military aid to Ukraine, while painting the former president as a victim of a "deep state." And they attack Vice President Kamala Harris.
In one fake video, a Ukrainian troll farm operative reveals the machinations behind a CIA plot to defeat Trump.
In another piece of propaganda, a woman says she was paralyzed as a child -- by Harris in a hit-and-run accident.
In a third, a "whistleblower" falsely claims Ukraine's leaders spent U.S. aid money on yachts.
The claims peddled by the actors and false primary sources in these videos fall apart upon basic inspection. Experts quickly identified Olesya, the Ukrainian troll, as an AI-generated fake. The 2011 hit-and-run never happened, according to San Francisco police, and KBSF-TV, the local news station behind the claims, does not exist.
And the companies that own the yachts told reporters they hadn't been sold. But the story spread anyway, and this time, far -- from small-time right-wing influencers to members of Congress, including Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, now the Republican vice presidential nominee.
Incredible freaking story! Everyone needs to read this and then think for themselves. The reporting is bone dry, Joe Friday - just the facts. And now we know where so many of the insane right wing memes and stories come from. Yes, Vladimir, it really is Russia.