Green Beret Nap Time Profile picture
Jun 5 8 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Active Measures, though started in Tsarist Russia and perfected under Soviet rule, are still a very active part of Russia’s foreign influence playbook within the US today, a thread:🧵 Image
Russia’s active measures doctrine isn’t just propaganda.

It’s political warfare: covert, deniable operations meant to shape events by confusing, dividing, pressuring, or discrediting an adversary, all while hiding Moscow’s involvement. Image
The playbook: find a real fault line, build fake or front identities, launder a message through “independent” voices, amplify it until real people argue about it, then deny involvement.

The goal is often less “convince everyone” than “make trust collapse.”

Sound familiar? Image
Cold War example: Operation Denver, often mislabeled “INFEKTION.”

KGB/Stasi pushed the false claim that AIDS came from U.S. bioweapons work at Fort Detrick by using “expert” material and media pickup to turn a lie into a global rumor. Image
Digital example: the Internet Research Agency.

DOJ alleged the St. Petersburg troll farm, funded by Yevgeniy Prigozhin, posed as Americans, bought ads, ran pages on race/guns/immigration, and organized rallies.

It exploited U.S. divisions rather than inventing them. Image
Cyber example: GRU hack and leak.

U.S. indictments say GRU Units 26165/74455 stole emails and staged releases through “DCLeaks” and “Guccifer 2.0.”

That is classic active measures: stolen truth plus fake sources and strategic timing. Image
Modern example: Doppelganger.

DOJ says Russian firms linked to the Presidential Administration cloned real news sites, used fake profiles and influencers, and pushed content to reduce support for Ukraine and influence voters.

Same doctrine, newer infrastructure. Image
The warning sign is not “a message I dislike.”

It’s hidden sponsorship, fake identity, emotional wedge issue, laundering through trusted messengers.

Active measures work when information consumers react before checking provenance.

The antidote is transparency, context, and receipts.

Question everything.Image

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More from @GBNT1952

May 30
This is the new narrative being pushed about the FY2027 NDAA, claiming it would "merge" the U.S. and Israeli militaries so they can frame it as "colonization."

This is propaganda being proliferated by our enemies, plain and simple. Let's break down what the FY2027 NDAA, specifically Section 224 means, a thread:🧵Image
Here is what Section 224 actually does:

It creates a United States and Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative and designates a DoD executive agent to synchronize R&D, testing, evaluation, integration, acquisition pathways, and industrial cooperation with Israel.

That is not a military merger.

I will post the entirety of Section 224 in the follow on posts so that you can read it for yourself.Image
Words matter.

“Integration” in this context does not mean integrating the U.S. Army with the IDF.

It means integrating useful technology into U.S. systems, programs of record, fielded platforms, and acquisition pipelines. This includes things like sensors, counter drone systems, missile defense, AI, Cyber, Electronic Warfare, and anti-tunnel tech.Image
Read 9 tweets
Apr 28
Did a Texas based, Muslim run nonprofit really send $750 million to Yemen? Does our government even know this happened?

The Islamic Nonprofit Problem in America, the Massive Amounts of Tax Free Money Sent Abroad, and Their Ties to Radical Islam, a thread:🧵 Image
For the full free article, please visit my Substack: open.substack.com/pub/gbnt1952/p…
A closer look at a network of nonprofits, religious leaders, and international financial channels tied to Yemen raises serious questions about transparency and oversight.

This thread breaks down connections between:

Waqf Owais Alqarni

Pure Hands

Key individuals like Mohamed Alhajaji, AbdulHakim Mohamed, and Nasser Gobah

What emerges is a transnational system spanning the U.S., Turkey, Yemen, and beyond.Image
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Read 13 tweets
Apr 10
Alexander Dugin's Multipolar Information War Against The West, a thread:🧵 Image
For the full narrative of this thread, please check out the article here at my Substack: gbnt1952.substack.com/publish/post/1…
What you are seeing from influencers and podcasters right now is not random. It is not new, and it is definitely not organic.

There is a framework behind it. A system that rewards certain narratives and pushes them to the top.

Most people have never heard the name Alexander Dugin.

But they are hearing versions of his ideas every single day, and they do not even realize it.Image
Read 17 tweets
Apr 2
There are still many people who just don’t understand how the world works and, because of that lack of knowledge, they question what is going on in Iran and why.

So, let’s discuss the Iran conflict from a strategic level of warfare perspective, a thread:🧵
At the highest level, this conflict is not really about a single event or even a single country.

It is about control, influence, and shaping the global system.

Iran has spent decades building a strategy that avoids direct war with stronger powers like the United States. Instead, it built a network of proxies across the Middle East.

Groups like Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and militias in Iraq and Syria allow Iran to project power without exposing itself to full retaliation.

This is important to understand, because it changes how war is fought.

Iran was not trying to win a traditional war.

It was trying to create constant instability. The goal was to weaken governments, stretch its enemies thin, and make the region difficult to control.

This is what we would call a deliberate system of “asymmetric warfare,” where Iran uses indirect pressure instead of direct confrontation.

Right now, that strategy is still active.

Iran’s proxies are not just sitting in place. They are escalating.

Recent reporting shows increased attacks and even sleeper cell activity across the Gulf states, which are key US partners.

When Iran is applying pressure everywhere at once, it forces the United States and its allies to respond in multiple places instead of focusing on one front.

Now, let’s step back and look at geography.

The Strait of Hormuz is the center of gravity. Around 20 percent of the world’s oil passes through that narrow waterway.

A huge portion of that oil goes to Asia, especially China. Whoever can threaten or control that strait holds leverage over the global economy.

That is why the current conflict matters far beyond the Middle East.

Iran has shown it can disrupt, or even shut down that flow, which immediately spikes energy prices and hits global supply chains.

When that happens, Asian economies feel it first and hardest.

From a strategic perspective, this is one of the few pressure points that can directly impact China’s growth and stability.

So, if you remove Iran from that equation, or even weaken its ability to threaten and control the strait, you change the balance.

The US grabbed ahold of the leash that China had on Iran.

It’s ours now.

In doing so, we have reduced one of the biggest risks to global energy flow.

And, at the same time, we have gained indirect leverage over China, because its economy depends heavily on stable energy imports moving through that exact route.
Now, if we bring China into the picture more directly and their push to proliferate their Belt and Road Initiative, the picture really starts to focus.

China does not see the chaos created by Iran and its proxies as purely a problem.

In many ways, it sees it as an opportunity. China’s strategy in the Middle East is not built on military dominance like the United States.

It is built on economic positioning, long term infrastructure, and influence that grows quietly over time.

When Iranian proxies create instability, it weakens governments, strains economies, and creates gaps in control.

That is where China steps in.

It does not need to create the chaos. It simply benefits from it.

Countries dealing with internal pressure or regional threats become more willing to accept Chinese investment, loans, and infrastructure deals because they need stability and growth fast.

That feeds directly into the Belt and Road Initiative, which is designed to tie those countries economically to China over time.

Iran itself plays a key role in this system. It is not just a rogue actor. It is also a partner to China.

Iran sits in a critical geographic position that connects Central Asia, the Middle East, and Europe.

That makes it a natural hub for Belt and Road routes.

And China has invested heavily in that relationship because it gives them access to trade corridors that bypass Western controlled routes and pressure points.
Read 5 tweets
Mar 26
I want to break down Alexis Wilkins’ thread carefully, because the core issue she is pointing at is real: the American information space is under constant pressure from propaganda, coordinated amplification, and foreign influence.

The mistake would be to dismiss that threat just because not every piece is fully mapped, a thread:🧵Image
She's not just arguing that people online were mean, dishonest, or reckless.

She's arguing that across multiple political flashpoints, the same amplification patterns, the same recurring accounts, and the same narrative pressure points show up again and again.

That deserves scrutiny, and to disregard it completely is to either ignore reality or acknowledge bias against the possibility of her statements being accurate.Image
Her thread is strongest where it identifies a broader truth: very little in today's information environment is fully organic.

Narratives don't just spread on their own anymore.

They're pushed, accelerated, rewarded, and amplified by systems and actors that understand exactly how outrage, tribalism, and repetition shape perception.Image
Read 13 tweets
Mar 16
Today, influencers across the political spectrum like Jackson Hinkle, Nick Fuentes, Candace Owens, Tucker Carlson, Harry Sisson, JojoFromJerz, Aaron Rupar, Ian Carroll, and Mario Nawfal employ propaganda methods to increase their viewership and engagement reach, a thread:🧵 Image
For a more in depth article on how they accomplish this and how they are using military doctrinal information operations, please check out my Substack below (and please Subscribe and restack to help grow my account) 👇
Propaganda has been a tool for controlling narratives and manipulating public opinion for over a century. Historical regimes like the Nazis and Soviets mastered the art through several key tactics:

Demonizing enemies, spreading disinformation, using emotional appeals like fear and outrage, and creating "us vs. them" divisions to rally support and maintain power.

The Nazis glorified Hitler as a savior figure while scapegoating Jews as existential threats to German society. They used films, posters, and mass rallies to stir hatred and normalize violence against their targets. Joseph Goebbels, Hitler's propaganda minister, understood that repetition and emotional manipulation could override rational thought.

The Soviets controlled all media to repeat state approved lies until they became accepted as truth. They portrayed the West as imperial aggressors bent on destroying the worker's paradise. Dissent was crushed, and alternative narratives were systematically erased from public discourse.

These tactics work because they aren't always obvious to the people consuming them. They chip away at trust in facts and push hidden agendas through emotional manipulation and selective information. Recognizing these patterns helps you identify when you're being fed propaganda without even realizing it.Image
Read 12 tweets

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