Russia's disinformation campaign in Armenia gains momentum
A rise in disinformation is targeting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his government in the run-up to the Armenian parliamentary election next June, say experts. The sheer volume of messages suggests Russia-linked activity is part of a coordinated campaign rather than isolated cases.
While Kremlin-linked propaganda is not new in Armenia, both the scale and sophistication of recent efforts have been described as intensifying as the election approaches.
"The dissemination of narratives has become more organized, circulates more quickly and is significantly more targeted," Hasmik Hambardzumyan, editor-in-chief of the independent Armenian fact-checking media outlet Fact Investigation Platform, told DW.
She added that AI-generated photos, audio and deepfakes are appearing in Armenia's information space for the first time.
"The goal seems to be undermining trust in Armenian institutions, discrediting Armenia's Western engagement and opening political space for more Kremlin-friendly actors," said researchers Sopo Gelava and Givi Gigitashvili of the Digital Forensics Research Lab (DFRLab), which conducts open-source research.
Gelava and Gigitashvili highlighted the emergence of "hostile narratives" circulating across Russian and pro-Russian media ecosystems, depicting the Armenian government as corrupt, morally compromised or secretly aligned with Western intelligence. These messages target Armenian institutions domestically and seek to undermine Armenia's reputation in the West.