Was there a connection between Russian Facebook propaganda and a foiled terrorist attack in Kansas City?

Levin explained how the three suspects were known to be very active on Facebook and social media, where they shared anti-Muslim material. However, there is no publicly available information to suggest they did or did not share or even have or have not seen the Russian-made material. It is only a possibility due to Facebook’s ad-promotion algorithms, which attempt to promote content based on users’ perceived interests, and to the fact that some of the Russian ads garnered a large audience.

“One post alone could have 1.2 million impressions — that’s significant,” Levin said.

“We’re not connecting this to any particular Facebook post, but these guys were very active on Facebook. These ads work in related streams. They may not have seen a particular post, but they could have seen another related one.”

In May 2018, the U.S. Congress released an archive of political Facebook ads bought by Russians during 2016 (archive link). These were typically aimed at different ends of the political spectrum as well as key demographic groups. For example, some fake pages targeted African-Americans, while others targeted groups like Christians or Texans. Many of the ads espoused anti-immigrant, anti-refugee, and anti-Muslim messages. For example, one ad depicted Hillary Clinton in a hijab and said she was in favor of implementing Islamic Sharia law. In addition to ads, some of the Russian Facebook pages tried to organize public rallies in the U.S., albeit with extremely limited success.

On the other hand, there is no concrete data to measure how much of an impact this activity had on the outcome of the 2016 presidential election. In October 2017, Facebook stated that approximately 10 million people had seen the ads. However, it is not clear how many of those people were eligible to vote in the election. Facebook also determined that only 44 percent of the ads were displayed prior to the election. The rest were either displayed afterward or not seen at all. Some of the ads, such as ones associated with the Russian-created page “Memopolis,” apparently have no political content.

What Levin found significant was how the Internet Research Agency, the Russian organization behind the ad buys, followed events in the U.S. news cycle and tailored some of their ads to address hot-button issues at the time. But he stressed that people need to look at the bigger picture. If Russia was able to have an influence on U.S. politics, the reasons must first be sought at home.

“Our data is very useful, but it has to be in the context of something larger,” he said. “Tribalism is widespread. Trust in institutions is very low. The communal bonds that hold people together have unraveled, and people feel isolated. Bottom line is, what Russia has been able to do is show that when a country isn’t connected together by various common threads, including philosophical ones, it’s easy to disrupt these countries and their allies.”

This article is published courtesy of Polygraph.info