They would and they do. China does it too, naturally.
For example, at the very beginning of the BLM riots,
Over the last three days, Chinese ambassadors, Russian-backed news outlets and others with ties to Russia and China have tweeted more than 1,200 times about the United States, often using hashtags like #BlackLivesMatter and #Minneapolis (...)
The Spanish-language version of RT, the Kremlin-backed media outlet, has also been one of the most active social media actors since the crisis began, posting regular updates that depict the U.S. as a country on the edge. Its most-shared post came on May 30 when it linked the recent violence to Malcom X, asking if U.S. law enforcement was still mistreating African Americans.
Redfish, a Berlin-based media outlet whose funding also comes from Russia, has similarly posted regular updates from its Twitter handle about the U.S. protests, including a video of the Minnesota protests on May 31 that has been shared 3,400 times. "This is what an uprising looks like," read the tweet.
And that's just what they do in the open.
They would and they do. China does it too, naturally.
For example, at the very beginning of the BLM riots,
Over the last three days, Chinese ambassadors, Russian-backed news outlets and others with ties to Russia and China have tweeted more than 1,200 times about the United States, often using hashtags like #BlackLivesMatter and #Minneapolis (...)
The Spanish-language version of RT, the Kremlin-backed media outlet, has also been one of the most active social media actors since the crisis began, posting regular updates that depict the U.S. as a country on the edge. Its most-shared post came on May 30 when it linked the recent violence to Malcom X, asking if U.S. law enforcement was still mistreating African Americans.
Redfish, a Berlin-based media outlet whose funding also comes from Russia, has similarly posted regular updates from its Twitter handle about the U.S. protests, including a video of the Minnesota protests on May 31 that has been shared 3,400 times. "This is what an uprising looks like," read the tweet.
And that's just they do in the open.
They would and they do. China does it too, naturally.
For example, at the very beginning of the BLM riots,
Over the last three days, Chinese ambassadors, Russian-backed news outlets and others with ties to Russia and China have tweeted more than 1,200 times about the United States, often using hashtags like #BlackLivesMatter and #Minneapolis
(...)
The Spanish-language version of RT, the Kremlin-backed media outlet, has also been one of the most active social media actors since the crisis began, posting regular updates that depict the U.S. as a country on the edge. Its most-shared post came on May 30 when it linked the recent violence to Malcom X, asking if U.S. law enforcement was still mistreating African Americans.
Redfish, a Berlin-based media outlet whose funding also comes from Russia, has similarly posted regular updates from its Twitter handle about the U.S. protests, including a video of the Minnesota protests on May 31 that has been shared 3,400 times. "This is what an uprising looks like," read the tweet.
And that's just they do in the open.