Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google.
Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share
LONDON (AP) — Britain announced sanctions against Russian media and ideas outlets on Tuesday as the U.K’s top diplomat warned Western nations must raise their game to combat information warfare from “malign foreign states.”
Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said the U.K. was imposing sanctions on the microblogging Telegram channel Rybar and its co-owner Mikhail Sergeevich Zvinchuk, the Foundation for the Support and Protection of the Rights of Compatriots Living Abroad — also known as Pravfond and described by Estonian intelligence as a front for the GRU spy agency — and the Center for Geopolitical Expertise, a think-tank run by Russian ultranationalist ideologue Alexander Dugin.
Two China-based firms — i-Soon and the Integrity Technology Group — also were sanctioned “for their vast and indiscriminate cyber activities against the U.K. and its allies,” Cooper said.
In a speech at the Foreign Office in London, Cooper said Britain and its allies face escalating “hybrid threats … designed to weaken critical national infrastructure, undermine our interests and interfere in our democracies.”
“We should call this out for what it is: Russian information warfare. And we are defending ourselves,” Cooper said.
She said threats include physical attacks such as sabotage as well as disinformation campaigns “flooding social media with generative AI and manipulated videos” aimed at undermining Western support for Ukraine’s resistance to Russian invasion.
British officials point to fake websites and political ads during Moldova’s recent election and fake news sites carrying videos with false claims about Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his wife designed to undermine support for Ukraine.
Cooper delivered her speech to mark 100 years since the signing of the Locarno Treaties, a set of agreements among European nations that bolstered peace in Europe after World War I.
She stressed the importance of international cooperation at a time when U.S. President Donald Trump has been upending long-established alliances and sowing doubt about the United States’ commitment to NATO. A U.S. national security strategy published last week depicts Europe as a divided continent in decline and questions whether it will continue to be a reliable partner for the United States.
Cooper, who met U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington on Monday, said those talks “were incredibly clear about the strength of the US commitment to NATO.”
“What I see in Europe is strength,” she added. “The strength and commitment to the support for Ukraine and also strength to step up to the plate and to ensure that we are increasing our investment in defense.”
MulanMcNugget on December 10th, 2025 at 09:14 UTC »
Should look at who their out sourcing too in countries like Indian, Pakistan and Bangladesh something the twitter now banned feature has shown.
BarnabusTheBold on December 10th, 2025 at 09:10 UTC »
oh dear. Is there anyone more overstated in their influence than Dugin? He's really not the intellectual and strategic bohemoth that people keep pretending he is
For the record, numerous people have been put on the sanctions list just for wrongthink, especially since the ukraine war started. Sanctions lists aren't some factual repository, they're political hitlists put together for political/ ideological reasons (as opposed to say legal reasons) and without the need to actually provide any meaningful justification (though sometimes they do try). This should be self-evident based on Trump's use of them, but people still seem to pretend that only trump sanctions individuals for his own reasons.
Lone-T on December 10th, 2025 at 06:35 UTC »
SS: The UK slapped sanctions on Dec 10, 2025, against Russian disinformation engines—like Dugin's Center for Geopolitical Expertise and GRU-front Rybar Telegram channel—for AI-fueled fake news eroding Ukraine support, plus two unnamed Chinese cyber firms running indiscriminate hacks on Western infrastructure. Foreign Secretary Cooper branded it "information warfare" amid hybrid threats from manipulated videos to election meddling in Moldova, tying into Locarno Treaties' centennial pledge for Euro-peace. With Trump 2.0 rattling NATO and Rubio reaffirming U.S. ties, does this London salvo pioneer hybrid deterrence against Sino-Russian ops, or expose the West's lag in countering cheap digital sabotage that outpaces sanctions in a multipolar info-battlefield?