The NPR Politics Podcast - Why Did Tucker Carlson Echo Russian Bioweapons Propaganda On His Top-Rated Show?
Episode Date: March 29, 2022Russia pushed a conspiracy theory that the United States is helping Ukraine develop biological weapons. There's no evidence for that, but the idea did end up on Tucker Carlson Tonight — a Fox News s...how that reaches, on average, more than 3.5 million viewers with each episode. How did the conspiracy theory find its way from the Kremlin to American conservative media?This episode: White House correspondent Asma Khalid, voting reporting Miles Parks, and domestic extremism correspondent Odette Yousef.Connect:Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.orgJoin the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Find and support your local public radio station.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hi, this is Julia, and I just dropped my 17-month-old baby off at daycare for the first time, and
then I went on my first jog in 17 months.
You're listening to the NPR Politics Podcast, which was recorded at 2.06 p.m. Eastern Time
on Tuesday, March 29th.
Things may have changed by the time you hear this, but I will definitely still be working
on improving my lung capacity.
All right, here's the show.
I love it.
Those first few moments of liberation when you drop the kid off at daycare,
as much as you love them, they are bliss.
That's what spring's all about to me, too, is just getting that cardio back, man.
Winter, a lot of sitting around in winter.
Hey there, this is the NPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Asma Khalid. I cover
the White House. I'm Miles Parks. I cover voting and misinformation. And today on the show, how a
Russian conspiracy theory about an alleged Ukrainian bioweapons lab found fresh life on Fox News.
It turns out that our government has for some time funded biolabs in Ukraine that do,
among other things, research on, yes, biological weapons. This is not a conspiracy theory. It's true. So why is the U.S. government
doing this in Ukraine? That was Fox host Tucker Carlson on his show earlier this month. And I
want to be abundantly clear, despite what we all just heard him say, what he is describing is,
in fact, a conspiracy theory. To help us make sense of this all, we are joined
on the podcast today by a very special guest, Odette Youssef. She covers domestic extremism
for NPR. And Odette, we are really glad to have you on. Thanks for joining us.
Thanks for having me.
So you have done some really stellar reporting on this very topic. And I want to begin by
understanding what the basis for this specific conspiracy theory is.
Is there any element of reality behind it?
So, Asma, the conspiracy theory is that the U.S. is conducting research and developing biological weapons in these secret labs in Ukraine.
And that this is used as justification by the Kremlin for its attack in Ukraine.
So you mentioned that, you know, is there any truth to it? So it is true that the U.S.
is supporting some biological laboratories, research facilities in Ukraine. This is part
of a program at the Defense Department called the Biological Threat Reduction Program.
And basically, the U.S. supports Ukrainians on the ground who are working at these labs to study pathogens.
There's like 46 of these labs around Ukraine.
And the work they do at these labs is, for example, monitoring the spread of COVID-19 or trying to fight the spread of something called
like African swine fever. So, you know, they're keeping an eye on pathogens that would be, you
know, really harmful if released into the wider population. So Odette, as we heard just a couple
moments ago, the pernicious Russian version of the story that the U.S. is somehow developing
biological weapons with Ukraine has found a sympathetic audience in some corners of the story, that the U.S. is somehow developing biological weapons with Ukraine,
has found a sympathetic audience in some corners of the American right. You know,
we just heard Tucker Carlson speaking about it. How did that happen?
So, you know, I'll just take a step back, Asma, because the Russian narrative that the U.S.
is developing, you know, biological or chemical weapons is one that dates back
decades. I mean, back to, you know, the Soviet era. So, you know, to people who like follow
Soviet propaganda, this was really sort of just like a trick out of the old playbook.
And, you know, didn't really merit all that much attention. The reason that this one seems to have blown up is that right
around the beginning of Russia's war in Ukraine, there was one Twitter account of a QAnon adherent
who, you know, posted a map that, you know, allegedly was showing the locations of these bio labs in Ukraine and was sort of insinuating that
these were sites where the U.S. was developing biological weapons and that these were also being
targeted by Russia and, you know, sort of indicating, well, isn't this understandable?
That Twitter thread received thousands of retweets before the account behind it was actually taken down.
And it just seemed, you know, it seemed to snowball from there.
So, you know, it really got sort of a new life when it was picked up within the QAnon community. And then in early March, this question came up during an exchange
between Senator Marco Rubio and Undersecretary of State Victoria Nuland during a committee hearing.
I'm sure you're aware that the Russian propaganda groups are already putting out there all kinds of
information about how they've uncovered a plot by the Ukrainians to release biological weapons
in the country and with NATO's coordination. If there's a biological or chemical weapon incident
or attack inside of Ukraine, is there any doubt in your mind that 100% it would be the Russians
that would be behind it? There is no doubt in my mind, Senator, and it is classic Russian.
I mean, the thing is, I think just the very fact that this question came up during a Senate committee hearing is indicative of this narrative sort of breaking through to a more mainstream right.
And it was actually because of that exchange that this topic ended up getting an airing on Tucker Carlson's show on Fox News and reached a much more mainstream audience on the right.
I do think that point is really interesting, this idea that almost always, whatever the theory is,
is just being tweaked a little bit for this kind of the time of the moment. It's usually something
that has been floating around or that has been pushed by conspiracy theorists for years, if not
decades. And so I think that's important for people to understand, too, when they're thinking
about stories like this. So, you know, listening to what you're describing, Odette, I'm reminded
of this clip of tape that we have played on the podcast a couple of times now. This is from
Francis Haugen, the famous Facebook whistleblower who testified before Congress last year.
When I worked on civic
misinformation, we discussed the idea of the misinformation burden, like the idea that when
people are exposed to ideas that are not true over and over again, it erodes their ability to connect
with the community at large because they no longer adhere to facts that are consensus reality.
And Miles, I mean, this makes me think just broadly
about how misinformation,
I mean, here we're talking about this specific story,
allegations of a bio-lab, a conspiracy theory
that is not true, spread.
But basically what she's describing,
I mean, it's inherent to other stories as well.
This idea that if people you trust in your community
double down on ideas that aren't true,
it leaves you really vulnerable to
accept more things that are also not true. And I guess in this specific example, I'm thinking there
are so many people in corners of the American right who do not believe that President Biden
is the correct, rightful president. I mean, they still believe that he is an illegitimate leader.
And so, so many other aspects of how he has governed,
for them, seem up for debate. Yeah, absolutely. And I feel like it always comes back to this idea
of kind of information silos to me, where you have these corners where you're not getting
information from other places. I always think back to this Pew data point from 2020, where there was
a point where roughly 20% of Americans responded by
saying President Trump was doing a good job responding to the coronavirus, but more than 60%
of Fox News viewers, people who said they got most of their political news from Fox News,
said President Trump was doing a good job handling the coronavirus. And I feel like that
has stuck with me over the last couple years to just show how there are multiple realities
in America right now. All right, well, I have a lot more questions, but let us take a quick
break first, and we'll be back in a moment. And we're back. And you know, I've been thinking
a lot about the reasons that maybe conspiracy theories like this find fertile ground, and how
maybe it's tied in some
ways to the fact that the U.S. government has not always been honest with the American public. And
I realize that, you know, there are examples that aren't exactly parallel to what's going on here,
but, you know, you can look at issues like the non-existent weapons of mass destruction in Iraq
or domestic surveillance programs after 9-11, the government does have
a track record of being dishonest with the American public. And so maybe it is understandable
why people might be skeptical about official narratives coming out of Washington. And I'm
curious, Miles, what you make of that. Yeah, I mean, that's obviously true. But I think it's also kind of, I want to be clear on saying that I do not think this conspiracy theorizing would stop if push from local election officials to be more transparent, more honest about how things are working.
You know, starting live streams, for instance, of counting ballots or how things are certified.
And then you see these sorts of conspiracy theorists take clips and edit them of the live stream and, you know, basically add context that isn't really true. And so I think simultaneously, yes, it's true that the government has not always been honest, but then also you are going to have bad actors take whatever the
government does and kind of twist that message, even if they are honest. And that, I guess,
leads me back to this question about Tucker Carlson. And Odette, you know, when you have
this popular figure on Fox who is spreading information about this Biolab story in conservative
circles, how is that being received back in Russia? Because this is essentially the very storyline
that the Russian government is trying to spread. I mean, since it got a wide viewing to American
cable audiences, Russia has really dug in on this. You know, it's called for a couple of hearings on
this at the UN Security Council,
which, you know, at the last one, several members of the Security Council sort of denounced this as
like a charade. And, you know, it's recently sort of ramped things up with claiming that
figures such as Hunter Biden and George Soros are somehow connected to the financing of these bio labs.
This has been a major, yeah, major disinformation win for Russia. And they have taken this and run
with it. And, you know, Fox News, when NPR contacted Fox News for comment about this,
you know, they directed us to other comments that Tucker Carlson's made.
You know, he's called the Russian invasion wrong, saying Putin is to blame for the events in Ukraine.
But nonetheless, you know, he's given multiple airings to this conspiracy theory.
So before we wrap today's show, I know today we have talked a lot about this one particular
storyline, but it feels like the past couple of years, there have been so many different
conspiracy theories floating around our political sphere. And it feels like there's sort of a
psychological pull maybe in times of uncertainty. And I don't know how you combat this. And do you
have any sort of parting words of wisdom for us before we wrap today's show?
Yeah, I think part of this is just a lack of widespread news literacy.
You know, a lot of the doubts that are being sewn around the real function of these research facilities in Ukraine,
they're being posed on Tucker Carlson's show, for example, as questions that should be asked
of the government, rather than information that is citing specific sources that can provide
evidence that what they're saying is true, that biological weapons are in fact being,
you know, developed at these facilities, you know, that we haven't seen any evidence of that.
And then, you know, the other
part that I would add is that, you know, there is some research being done around something called,
you know, disinformation inoculation. And that is, you know, an area of study where people are
looking at how can we help people recognize that some messages are specifically targeting their fears, targeting their emotions,
and therefore they might be more susceptible to these kinds of disinformation campaigns.
And so it's important, I think, for people to sort of be aware of those cues when they're
hearing information, to be aware of whether it's targeting, you know, their fears, you know, trying to make them more feel more uncertain about the world that they're living in and then lead them to some sort of conclusion that might not be, in fact, based on evidence.
All right. Well, we will leave it there for today. Odette, thank you very much for coming on today's show. We appreciate it.
Thanks for having me.
I'm Asma Khalid. I cover the White House.
And I'm Myles Parks. I cover voting and misinformation.
And thank you all, as always, for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.