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Home » How To Fight (And Win) An Information War: Peter Pomerantsev (Transcript)

How To Fight (And Win) An Information War: Peter Pomerantsev (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Propaganda expert Peter Pomerantsev’s talk titled “How To Fight (And Win) An Information War” at TEDxMidAtlantic 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Engaging Audiences in Alternative Realities

How can one engage audiences that seem to be living in an alternative reality? How do we reach people who seem smitten, besotted with the propaganda of sadistic strongmen? That’s the sort of happy stuff that I work on, that I write books about, that I research at university, and that has become very, very personal for me in the last couple of years. I was born in Ukraine, and since the full-scale invasion began, I’ve been going to Ukraine a lot to work with an NGO called the Reckoning Project to document war crimes and to tell the truth about them to an often skeptical world.

I’m afraid there’s a lot of atrocities that we document. I was in the town of Bucha when it was liberated from Russian forces, entered the village to see hundreds of bodies strewn around, being placed in a mass grave. And these people were killed not because a missile landed on them by accident. They were just shot for fun by Russian soldiers just to prove they had the power over them.

There was no military sense to this atrocity. And I remember talking to a Ukrainian general as we watched these dead bodies being piled into a grave, and he was in shock. He’d liberated the village. But he was also in shock because he’d actually spent a lot of time in Russia itself.

The Disconnect Between Reality and Propaganda

He’d actually studied to be a soldier there. He had lots of former students that he’d studied with there, former colleagues. And ever since the war had begun, he’d been calling them saying, “Please do something to stop this horrific war.” And they just throw the phones down.

And so many Ukrainians were calling their Russian relatives, their now former friends, and saying, “Please do something to stop this war. At least don’t stop your sons from going to fight in this war.” And at the other end, they’d hear people who they’d known all their lives answering in the clichés of Russian propaganda, saying, “You’re making it up. You’ve made some sort of mistake.” Or saying, “You know, probably your side just bombed itself by accident.” Or saying, “It’s all fake. You’re making it all up.” And on Russian TV at the time, you’d hear these increasingly absurd propaganda pieces about atrocities like Bucha.

I’ll give you one example. After the atrocities of Bucha were discovered to the world, mainstream Russian TV, 7 p.m., so it’s not some sort of kooky YouTube channel, mainstream Russian TV was claiming that the British secret services had engineered a fake atrocity in Bucha. The whole thing was staged. You know why and how they knew it was staged by the British? Because the place was called Bucha, which in English sounds like “butcher.” And only the English, this very literary people, would concoct an atrocity in a place which sounded like the word butcher. And that was their proof. And people would repeat this absurd propaganda.

The Challenge of Reality Denial

And look, Russia is an extreme, a horrific example of people not wanting to live in reality. But I’ve been living in the U.S. a couple of years and I see quite a lot of it here. Tens of millions, maybe more people who seem to genuinely believe that the last election was rigged despite sort of court cases proving that it wasn’t. So what can we do about it?

You know, I’m in a community of researchers, of academics, of journalists who’ve been trying many things for the last sort of decade really. We’ve tried fact-checking. But we’ve also found that, you know, when facts challenge people’s identity, they kind of just bounce off. We’ve found worthy, we’ve tried worthy journalism, you know, these great liberal newspapers lecturing people about how important it is to save democracy.

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I’ve written many columns by that myself. But I know that I’m preaching to the converted. I know that I’m within my own, you know, liberal echo chamber basically. How do we get beyond that? How can we reach the people who are somehow under the sway of this propaganda?

Learning from History: Sefton Delmer’s Approach

And in a kind of despair, I started to turn to history. Might there be something in history that gives us a clue about what we can do today? And that’s how I discovered a very strange and somewhat forgotten story about a covert British operation to subvert Nazi propaganda, perhaps the most or one of the most reality-denying, sadistic, dehumanizing propagandas ever, Nazi propaganda.

And it was led by this man. His name was Sefton Delmer, a largely forgotten person, but very, very famous in his day. Sefton Delmer kind of shared a lot of the frustrations that I have. He felt that, you know, at the start of the Second World War, liberal media, in his case, the German service of the BBC or various kind of like exiled pro-democracy groups who were still trying to communicate with the German people, trying to persuade them not to follow Hitler into his genocidal wars, he felt that they were doing it all wrong.

They were lecturing people, a bit like we do today about how democracy dies in darkness, how we must stop fascism. He felt all of that, just like a lot of media today, is trapped in its own echo chamber preaching to the converted. He wanted to do something different, and he knew what he was talking about. He’d grown up in Germany.

He was British, but he grew up in Germany. He’d then been a journalist in the 1920s inside Germany, and he got very close to the Nazi elites when they were still rising.