France blames Russia over bot campaign linked to antisemitic graffiti

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France Blames Russia Over Bot Campaign Linked To Antisemitic Graffiti
Stars of David on house in Paris, © Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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By Associated Press Reporters

France has said it has been the target of a Russian online destabilisation campaign that used bots to whip up controversy and confusion about spray-painted Stars of David that appeared on Paris streets.

French officials said the online campaign also fed alarm about surging antisemitism in France during the Israel-Hamas conflict.

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The 250 or so quickly erased blue stars are now the subject of French police investigations seeking to determine whether the marks were antisemitic, as Paris’ police chief and others initially suspected, and if they were organised from outside France.

The stars’ stencilling on walls in Paris and its suburbs last month quickly fomented debate and alarm on social media and concerns about the safety of France’s Jewish community, the largest in Europe.


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Since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, triggering their latest and deadliest war, French authorities have counted more than 1,150 antisemitic acts.

That’s nearly three times more than all acts against French Jews in 2022, the Interior Ministry said.

In a statement on Thursday evening, France’s foreign ministry pointed a finger of blame at Russia, saying a Russian network of bots whipped up controversy about the stars with thousands of posts on X, the platform previously known as Twitter.

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“This new operation of Russian digital interference against France testifies to the persistence of an opportunistic and irresponsible strategy aimed at exploiting international crises to sow confusion and create tensions in the public debate in France and in Europe,” the statement said.

It said the bots were affiliated with a Russian network – Recent Reliable News (RRN), also identified as Doppelganger.

The Russian activity was detected by Viginum, a French state digital watchdog set up in 2021 after hackers targeted Emmanuel Macron’s successful campaign for the French presidency in 2017.

The core mission of Viginum is to detect and analyse foreign digital efforts to influence online public debate in France.

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Viginum determined that a network of 1,095 bots affiliated with RRN published 2,589 posts on X in under two weeks, “contributing to the controversy surrounding the stencilled Stars of David,” the French foreign ministry said.

Viginum also found that the RRN network appeared to have been informed about the graffiti before other posters on X, the ministry said.

It said RRN bots first posted about the stars on the evening of October 28 – 48 hours before other photos of the stars started to appear on X.

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