National security leaders must learn to fight disinformation at home, too
Take a good look at the propaganda machine. The total control of information and messages from the airwaves to the internet, the fawning over the infallible leader—it’s all quite impressive.
I’m not talking about Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin. I’m talking about America’s far-right media, on display at two conferences in Orlando last week, and every night on cable TV.
It’s hard to watch Russia’s version of journalism and not think of the American far-right’s version of it. Indeed, the connections are both direct and philosophical—and of import to national security leaders.
But there’s a deeper connection as well. America’s right-wing partisans wishthey had what Putin has: control of the information and messages that flow to the body politic. That’s not an accusation; it is their goal.