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Russian state-owned television station RT’s logo is seen at the window of the company's office in Moscow. RT said it will register as a foreign agent in the US. Photo: AP

‘The American Justice Department has left us with no choice’: Russian TV network will register as foreign agent in the US

The issue of Russian propaganda in the United States has become a hot topic in the wake of the 2016 presidential election

Russia

RT, a Moscow-headquartered website and television channel that the US government says is a propaganda outlet for the Kremlin, will register with US authorities as a foreign agent, its editor said on Thursday.

The registration follows a months-long back-and-forth between RT and the Justice Department over whether it was required by US law to register as an agent of the Russian government.

“The American Justice Department has left us with no choice,” RT’s editor in chief Margarita Simonyan said in a statement posted on the organisation’s website. “Our lawyers say that if we don’t register as a foreign agent, the director of our company in America could be arrested, and the accounts of the company could be seized. In short, in this situation the company would not be able to work. Between those consequences and registering as a foreign agent, we are forced to choose registration.”

The American Justice Department has left us with no choice ... the company would not be able to work
Margarita Simonyan, editor in chief

She added: “We will continue to work and continue to fight this as long as it’s possible.”

Formerly known as Russia Today, RT disputes that it is an agent of the Russian government, arguing that it offers alternatives to mainstream news coverage. US intelligence agencies have concluded that the network and website push relentlessly anti-American propaganda at the behest of the Russian government.

The Russian embassy in Washington, D.C., suggested Thursday that US-based news organisations with reporters in Moscow could face retaliation. In a statement, the embassy said RT was given “an ultimatum to register as a foreign agent by November 13” and if the company doesn’t comply, the US government is “threatening to start arresting staff” and freezing bank accounts.

The embassy warned that restrictions on the activities of Russian media “would inevitably entail immediate and reciprocal measures”.

Russian President Vladimir Putin was asked about the controversy at a foreign policy event last month. In response to a question from Simonyan, Putin said: “As soon as we see any efforts to limit our mass media, we will reciprocate immediately.”

Russian news media reported in October that the upper house of the Russian parliament had drawn up a blacklist of at least five US media outlets whose activities in Russia could be restricted in response.

A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.

A man tries on a virtual reality goggles at the stand of Russia's state-controlled broadcaster RT during the 10th Russian internet Week in Moscow. Photo: Agence France-Presse

A January assessment by US intelligence agencies described RT America TV as “a Kremlin-financed channel operated from within the United States, [which] has substantially expanded its repertoire of programming that highlights criticism of alleged US shortcomings in democracy and civil liberties.”

The assessment also said RT America “has positioned itself as a domestic US channel and has deliberately sought to obscure any legal ties to the Russian government [but] the Kremlin staff RT and closely supervises RT’s coverage, recruiting people who can convey Russian strategic messaging because of their ideological beliefs.”

The Kremlin staff RT and closely supervises RT’s coverage, recruiting people who can convey Russian strategic messaging
US intelligence agencies

The Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), passed in the run-up to the second world war as a means of exposing pro-Nazi propagandists in the United States, requires that Americans working on behalf of foreign governments register as such with the government.

The requirements are enforced by the Justice Department, but some critics, including the head of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Charles Grassley have said the department has a poor track record of making firms and individuals follow the law.

The issue of Russian propaganda in the United States has become a hot topic in the wake of the 2016 presidential election, as lawmakers and intelligence officials have pointed to thousands of social media accounts directed from Russia that posed as Americans voicing their opinions on domestic political issues. US intelligence agencies have concluded that Russia sought to interfere with the US election to help Donald Trump get elected.

As RT’s work has come under greater scrutiny from the Justice Department, the company has accused the United States of trying to infringe on the rights of a free press. Other foreign news organisations operating in the United States have filed under FARA with little observable impact on their business.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: rt kremlin agent
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