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The Washington Post went from claiming that Russian bots were using alternative media outlets to spread "fake news" to admitting that they were actually sharing mainstream media stories that favored Trump.

During the 2016 election, the narrative that interference from "the Russians" had an impact on Donald Trump's success was alive and well, and it was pushed heavily by the Washington Post. However, the Post is now claiming that the propaganda it accused Russian bots of spreading was actually American, and it was "factually accurate."

In a new story titled "Russia used mainstream media to manipulate American voters," the Post admitted that instead of creating and spreading "fake news," the accounts it claimed were controlled by Russians actually focused on sharing stories from American mainstream media outlets, and one of their most used sources just happened to be The Washington Post.

Citing an analysis by Columbia University social-media researcher Jonathan Albright, the Post noted that the majority of the "Russian propaganda" spread by these accounts was made up of "factually accurate" stories from American sources:
"Some well-chronicled hoaxes reached large audiences. But Russian-controlled Twitter accounts, Albright said, were far more likely to share stories produced by widely read sources of American news and political commentary. The stories themselves were generally factually accurate, but the Russian accounts carefully curated the overall flow to highlight themes and developments that bolstered Republican Donald Trump and undermined his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton.

Among the tweets Albright studied, the most common links were to Breitbart News, followed by The Washington Post and the San Francisco Chronicle. The list of the top 25 linked sites had a conservative bent, with the Daily Caller, Fox News and the Gateway Pundit appearing."
While the Post did not admit it directly, the claim that so-called Russian accounts on social media were frequently sharing mainstream media reports that elevated Trump or criticized Clinton, is a far cry from the claims the Post made during the election.

In November 2016, the Post published a story titled, "Russian propaganda effort helped spread 'fake news' during election, experts say" in which it cited a list of 200 sites it accused of spreading Russian propaganda, compiled by "a group that insists on public anonymity." However, the group, which went by the name of "PropOrNot," lacked both credentials and evidence.

As The Free Thought Project reported following the hit-piece:
"Literally nothing in that Post article was true. None of the claims were backed by evidence, no research or investigation had been performed, nothing. WaPo just printed the claims of PropOrNot and inserted plausible deniability by failing to link to the list the site. A subsequent retraction at the top of the page was akin to plugging a crack in a dam that's already burst-damage to many reputable and award-winning outlets listed had already been done.

Additional stories from the Post - none including any proof - blamed The Russians for everything from meddling in the U.S. election to install Trump, to hacking into the power grid in Vermont. 'We're all in peril because Russia,' WaPo repeatedly claimed - without so much as a shred of evidence."
The latest update from the Washington Post on alleged Russian meddling also cited Clinton Watts, a former FBI agent who is now working for the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He claimed that instead of using obscure alternative sources, the "Russian accounts" on Twitter opted to share American mainstream media stories because it appeared to enhance their credibility.

"The Kremlin, they don't need to create a false narrative. It's already there," Watts said. "You're just taking a narrative and elevating it.

In the same way that the Washington Post is criticizing Twitter accounts for sharing links to their stories that promoted Trump or cast doubt on Clinton, the Post should also be held accountable for the many stories its outlet published pushing the narrative that Russian meddling and "fake news" were alive and well - only to then completely shift the story when the original claims fell apart.