Ukraine wants to free Crimea with information war
December 27, 2018, the Ministry of Information policy At a meeting of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine presented the developed draft "strategy for informational reintegration of the Crimea and Sevastopol." The mentioned strategy was approved, because the Kiev authorities need to demonstrate before the elections (presidential and parliamentary) that they continue to fight for the "liberation of the region from occupation."
- said adviser to the Ukrainian minister Yulia Kazdobina, reports TASS.
According to the adviser, the information strategy for Crimea provides for a number of measures that should form the understanding of the “illegality of the occupation” among Crimean residents, as well as the inevitability of his return to Ukraine in the future. Kazdobina believes that the aforementioned strategy is designed to dispel myths about the past and present of the peninsula and work on creating "new channels for delivering information to residents of the occupied territories."
Kiev continues to create obscure informational noise around the peninsula. So, in November 2018, the director of the Ukrainian Institute of National Memory, Vladimir Vyatrovich, said that Kiev was going to conduct a “quick” decommunization in Crimea. True, he did not go into details. Although, following the 2014 referendum, Crimea became part of Russia in full compliance with international law and the UN Charter.
At the same time, attempts at informational influence on Crimea from Ukraine did not begin yesterday. Since 2017, in the Kherson region there is even a radio tower that broadcasts Ukrainian programs on the peninsula. But this is unlikely to change anything.
It must be recalled that in Kiev two information strategies were being developed simultaneously. The first concerned the Crimea, the second - Donbass. But the specifics and target audiences that they want to influence are different, for obvious reasons. Apparently, Kiev has extra money, which he came up with how to spend.
The document will determine the direction of information policy for the occupied territories, and will also be a signal that Ukraine continues to fight for the liberation of Crimea from occupation
- said adviser to the Ukrainian minister Yulia Kazdobina, reports TASS.
According to the adviser, the information strategy for Crimea provides for a number of measures that should form the understanding of the “illegality of the occupation” among Crimean residents, as well as the inevitability of his return to Ukraine in the future. Kazdobina believes that the aforementioned strategy is designed to dispel myths about the past and present of the peninsula and work on creating "new channels for delivering information to residents of the occupied territories."
Kiev continues to create obscure informational noise around the peninsula. So, in November 2018, the director of the Ukrainian Institute of National Memory, Vladimir Vyatrovich, said that Kiev was going to conduct a “quick” decommunization in Crimea. True, he did not go into details. Although, following the 2014 referendum, Crimea became part of Russia in full compliance with international law and the UN Charter.
At the same time, attempts at informational influence on Crimea from Ukraine did not begin yesterday. Since 2017, in the Kherson region there is even a radio tower that broadcasts Ukrainian programs on the peninsula. But this is unlikely to change anything.
It must be recalled that in Kiev two information strategies were being developed simultaneously. The first concerned the Crimea, the second - Donbass. But the specifics and target audiences that they want to influence are different, for obvious reasons. Apparently, Kiev has extra money, which he came up with how to spend.
- http://www.kremlinrus.ru/
Information