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E-book
Author Niblock, Ingram, author

Title China's messaging on the Ukraine conflict / Ingram Niblock with Dr. Samantha Hoffman and Matthew Knight
Published Barton, Australian Capital Territory : Australian Strategic Policy Institute, 2022

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Description 1 online resource (25 pages) : color illustrations
1 online resource
Summary In posts by Chinese diplomats, the US, NATO and the West were almost exclusively blamed or criticised for Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. Russia was not specifically blamed. The most common posts shared news relating to the conflict (including readouts of Xi Jinping's calls with world leaders), primarily from Chinese state media. Those articles usually presented China's and, where they aligned, Russia's views of the conflict. They frequently reported on the actions of Chinese officials reiterating China's position. Chinese diplomats repeated Russian conspiracy theories about US biological weapon labs in Ukraine with gusto and linked the alleged activities to conspiracy theories about the origin of Covid-19. Posts about Ukraine on Facebook mostly underperformed compared to regular posts, except in Europe. On Twitter, Ukraine material appeared to broadly perform better than non-Ukraine material, particularly when the content attacked or blamed the West. Chinese diplomats did not appear to specifically target the Chinese diaspora (by posting in Chinese) in posts about Ukraine to any significant extent on Facebook or Twitter. A selection of CGTN content on YouTube largely mirrored the narratives of the Chinese officials on Twitter and Facebook
Analysis Australian
Notes "First published May 2020."
ISSN: 2209-9689
Subject Propaganda -- China
Social media -- Political aspects
Russo-Ukrainian War, 2014- -- Government policy -- China
Government policy
Propaganda
Social media -- Political aspects
China
Genre/Form Electronic books
Form Electronic book
Author Hoffman, Samantha, author
Knight, Matthew, author
Australian Strategic Policy Institute.