Thousands of European content producers have allegedly been contracted to spread pro-Russian propaganda, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot has claimed

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot has accused Russia of seeking to manipulate French and other European social media influencers in an attempt to meddle in European elections. 

Addressing the French parliament’s foreign affairs committee on Wednesday, Barrot said there was evidence that confirmed the claim, adding that France is being targeted by “several types” of foreign digital interference.

“The operating methods deployed are varied, and they evolve frequently,” he said as quoted by AFP.

The minister pointed to recent elections in Moldova and Romania, which he said illustrated “the massive use of influencers on social networks,” particularly on X, to disrupt the vote.

Barrot’s claims follow a report by French daily Le Monde, which claimed this week, citing intelligence services sources, that more than 2,000 European content producers have been contracted by Moscow. 

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The report claimed that people close to the Kremlin allegedly paid around 20 influencers – present on TikTok and Instagram – in several European countries to publish videos spreading Russian propaganda. 

The actions are part of a “manipulation operation” on social networks launched in the spring of 2022, shortly after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict, and aimed at “frightening European public opinion,” Le Monde wrote.

Barrot said on Wednesday that investigations are ongoing, calling on content creators and their subscribers to be “extremely vigilant about these threats.”

“We must understand the threat. Present a united front and choose the right tools to respond to it,” he said.

European countries, and particularly France, have repeatedly accused Russia of disinformation operations aimed at influencing EU elections, an allegation that Moscow strongly denies.

In April, Barrot claimed that France was being “pounded” by Russian disinformation that could distort the result of the EU parliamentary elections. 

Some analysts have suggested that blaming Moscow was a unifying moment for the bloc in dealing with the issues that divide it.

The Kremlin has repeatedly rejected the widespread but unsubstantiated Western accusations of election meddling, describing them as a trend that “if something happens, blame Russia first.” 

Last month, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that accusations of Russian meddling in Romania’s presidential election were “absolutely groundless” and that Moscow is “not in the habit of interfering in elections in other countries.”