Active measures The secret history of disinformation and political warfare

Thomas Rid, 1975-

Book - 2020

"This revelatory and dramatic history of disinformation traces the rise of secret organized deception operations from the interwar period to contemporary internet troll farms"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Thomas Rid, 1975- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
vi, 513 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 437-491) and index.
ISBN
9780374287269
  • What Is Disinformation?
  • 1921-1945: Deceive
  • 1. The Trust
  • 2. Japan's Mein Kampf
  • 3. The Whalen Forgeries
  • 1945-1960: Forge
  • 4. American Disinformation
  • 5. The Kampfgruppe
  • 6. LC-Cassock, Inc.
  • 7. Faking Back
  • 8. Kampfverband
  • 9. Red Swastikas
  • 10. Racial Engineering
  • 1961-1975: Compete
  • 11. Dezinformatsiya Rising
  • 12. The Book War
  • 13. Operations Plan 10-1
  • 14. The X
  • 15. The Fifth Estate
  • 1975-1989: Escalate
  • 16. Field Manual 30-31B
  • 17. Service A
  • 18. The Neutron Bomb
  • 19. Peacewar
  • 20. Nuclear Freeze
  • 21. Nuclear Winter
  • 22. AIDS Made in the USA
  • 23. The Philosophy of "AM"
  • 1990-2014: Hack
  • 24. Digital Measures
  • 25. First Digital Leaks
  • 26. Anonymous
  • 27. Sofacy
  • 2015-2017: Leak
  • 28. Election Leaks
  • 29. Guccifer Two
  • 30. Trolled
  • 31. The Shadow Brokers
  • A Century of Disinformation
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The shadow war of lying--and truth-telling--between Russia and the U.S. is explored in this revealing study of covert propaganda. Rid (Rise of the Machines), a strategic studies professor at Johns Hopkins University, revisits attempts by Soviet/Russian and American intelligence agencies (plus a few by the East German Stasi and others) to influence foreign governments and public opinion by spreading false claims or leaking true information. He examines dozens of operations, including the Bolsheviks' establishment of a fake Tsarist group to confuse their real Tsarist foes in the 1920s, CIA forgeries of East German magazines in the 1950s, Soviet-sponsored conspiracy theories that AIDS started as an American bioweapon, and the Russian hacking and publishing of Democratic National Committee emails during the 2016 election. There are plenty of clever, clandestine capers in Rid's well-researched, briskly paced narrative, as well as shrewd analysis of the subtleties of making disinformation both damaging and believable, and the difficulty of knowing whether it is effective. The excellent discussion of Russian pro-Trump social media propaganda concludes that "it is unlikely that trolls convinced many, if any, American voters," and that its main impact was the media hysteria it generated. Rid skillfully illuminates and demystifies this ballyhooed but much-misunderstood subject. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Johns Hopkins professor of strategic studies delves into the murky historyand current pervasivenessof disinformation.Rid, whose previous book, Rise of the Machines, focused on cybernetics, opens in 2016, as the Russians were employing disinformation to influence the American presidential election, and then moves back in time to offer a well-packed history beginning in the 1920s. "This modern era of disinformation," he writes, "began in the early 1920s, and the art and science of what the CIA once called political warfare' grew and changed in four big waves, each a generation apart." The first wave occurred as the widespread access to radio offered an effective new technology for enemy governments hoping to influence listeners to revolt against their own governments. The second wave occurred during the Cold War, with the CIA as the main culprit. The third wave encompassed the 1970s, with a massively funded Soviet bureaucracy as the main culprit. The fourth wave has extended into the present, with labyrinthine government spy bureaucracies losing ground to renegade computer hackers operating 24/7. While the digital era in general and the internet in particular have altered the tactics of government spy agencies, the author demonstrates in massive detail how such destabilization has flowed in multiple directions for the past century. The U.S. government, mostly through the CIA, has mounted countless campaigns to harm so-called communist nations, especially during the post-World War II era. On the communist side, Rid emphasizes the relentless disinformation campaigns emanating from the Soviet Union/Russia as well as from East Germany before its reunification with West Germany. The chronological narrative will demand significant effort from lay readersnot due to lack of clarity by the author, whose style is engaging, but because every extended case study requires separating partial truths told by the spy agency from the vast untruths that are necessarily part of the mix. For readers interested in current politics, Rid offers expert opinion that Russia is actively working to erode the foundation of U.S. democracy.A dense but highly relevant and useful study, especially as we approach the 2020 election. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.