Last year, Israel organized and funded influence operations that targeted U.S. lawmakers and citizens with pro-Israel messages to bolster support for Israel's actions in the Gaza war, according to officials involved in the operations and documents related to the operations.
The covert operation was commissioned by Israel's Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, a government agency that connects Jews around the world with the state of Israel, four Israeli officials said. The ministry allocated about $2 million to the operation and hired the Tel Aviv-based political marketing firm Stoic to run it, according to officials and documents.
The campaign began in October and is still active on the X platform. At its peak, hundreds of fake accounts posing as real Americans on X, Facebook and Instagram posted pro-Israel comments. The accounts targeted U.S. lawmakers, particularly House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York and Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia, both Black Democrats, with posts urging them to continue funding the Israeli military.
Many of the posts were generated by an artificial intelligence-powered chatbot called ChatGPT. The campaign also created three fake English-language news sites containing pro-Israel articles.
The Israeli government's connection to the influence operation had not been previously reported, though The New York Times confirmed the information from four current and former Ministry of Overseas Israeli Affairs officials and obtained documents about the operation. Israeli disinformation watchdog Fake Reporter identified the operation in March. Last week, Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, and OpenAI, which develops Chat GPT, also said they had discovered and disrupted the operation.
The covert operation shows the lengths Israel has gone to to sway U.S. public opinion on the Gaza war. The United States has long been one of Israel's staunchest allies, and President Biden recently signed a $15 billion military aid package for the country. But the conflict is unpopular with many Americans, who have called on Biden to withdraw aid to Israel as civilian deaths in Gaza mount.
According to social media experts, the operation is the first documented case of an Israeli government orchestrated campaign to influence the U.S. government. Coordinated government-sponsored campaigns are not uncommon but are typically difficult to prove. Iran, North Korea, China, Russia and the United States are widely believed to sponsor similar efforts around the world, but often conceal their involvement by outsourcing the work to private companies or operating through third countries.
“Israel's role in this has been reckless and likely ineffective,” said Achiya Shatz, executive director of Fake Reporter, adding that it would be “highly irresponsible to suggest that Israel has undertaken an operation to interfere in U.S. politics.”
Israel's Diaspora Ministry denied any involvement in the campaign and said it had no association with Stoich, which did not respond to requests for comment.
Meta and Open AI said last week that the campaign did not have a widespread impact. The fake accounts gained more than 40,000 followers across X, Facebook and Instagram, according to Fake Reporter's investigation. But Meta said many of those were likely bots and did not attract a large audience.
The operation began in October, just weeks after the war began, according to Israeli officials and documents about the operation. That month, dozens of Israeli tech startups received emails and WhatsApp messages inviting them to attend an emergency meeting to become Israel's “digital soldiers” during the war, according to messages viewed by The Times. Some of the emails and messages were sent by Israeli government officials, others were from tech startups and incubators.
The first meeting, held in mid-October in Tel Aviv, was an informal forum where Israelis could volunteer their skills to help the country's war effort, according to three people who attended, who said several officials from government ministries also attended.
According to a transcript of the meeting, participants were told they could become “warriors for Israel” and run “digital campaigns” for the country.
Israeli officials said the Diaspora Ministry commissioned the campaign to target the U.S. The budget was set at about $2 million, according to messages seen by The Times.
Stoich was hired to run the campaign. The company's website and LinkedIn describe it as a political marketing and business intelligence firm founded in 2017 by a team of political and business strategists. Israeli officials said other companies may have been hired to run the campaign.
Many of the campaign's fake accounts on X, Instagram and Facebook posed as fictitious American students, concerned citizens and local voters. The accounts shared articles and statistics supporting Israel's position on the war.
According to Fake Reporter's analysis, the operation targeted more than a dozen lawmakers, many of them Black Democrats, including Rep. Ritchie Torres, a New York Democrat who has openly held pro-Israel views, in addition to Jeffries and Warnock.
Some of the fake accounts responded to Torres' posts on X, commenting on anti-Semitism on college campuses and in major U.S. cities. In response to a December 8 post by Torres on X about fire safety, one fake account replied, “Hamas is causing the conflict,” referring to the Islamic extremist group. The post included hashtags alleging that Jews are being persecuted.
On Facebook, a fake account wrote to Jeffries' public page, asking if he had seen reports that the UN was employing Hamas members in Gaza.
Torres, Jeffries and Warnock did not respond to requests for comment.
According to an analysis by FakeReporter, the campaign also created three fake news sites with names like Non-Agenda and UnFold Magazine, which stole and rewrote articles from outlets like CNN and the Wall Street Journal to promote Israel's position in the war. Fake Reddit accounts then linked to the articles on the so-called news sites to further their promotion.
The efforts were sloppy: the profile pictures used by some of the accounts sometimes didn't match the fictional personas they had created, and the language used in posts was awkward.
In at least two instances, accounts with a profile picture of a black man posted that they were a “middle-aged Jewish woman.” The fake accounts shared pro-Israel articles in 118 posts with the same sentence: “This new information has forced me to reevaluate my opinions.”
Last week, Meta and OpenAI published a report attributing the influence campaign to Stoic. Meta said it removed 510 Facebook accounts, 11 Facebook Pages, 32 Instagram accounts and one Facebook group linked to the campaign. OpenAI said Stoic created fictional personas and bios to represent real people on the social media service that are being used to post anti-Muslim messages in Israel, Canada and the United States. Many of the posts remain on X.
Company X did not respond to a request for comment.
On his LinkedIn page, Stoick touted the ability to run AI-powered campaigns, writing, “Looking to the future, it's clear that AI's role in political campaigns will take a transformative leap forward, reshaping how campaigns are strategized, executed, and evaluated.”
By Friday, Stoick had removed the posts from LinkedIn.