China, Russia and Iran Accused of Exploiting AI Data Center Debate to Fuel US Divisions
State actors in China, Russia and Iran have sought to exploit the U.S. public
debate over the effects of the technology.
·
China,
Russia and Iran are reportedly using state
media and online influence campaigns to amplify public concerns
over AI data centers in the United States.
·
According
to threat intelligence firm Alethea,
these countries are attempting to turn the issue into a "domestic fracture point"
by exploiting existing public concerns rather than creating new ones.
·
Examples
cited include:
o A Chinese state newspaper publishing satellite
images of a US data center, claiming AI threatens Americans'
well-being.
o A comic reportedly created using ChatGPT by
China-linked actors blaming data centers for rising electricity
bills.
o A Russian influence video questioning the viability
of an AI data center project in Armenia.
·
Between
January and June 2026,
Chinese, Russian and Iranian state media mentioned data centers around
700 times, highlighting environmental, economic and political concerns.
·
The campaigns
focus on issues such as:
o Rising electricity consumption,
o Environmental impact,
o Noise pollution,
o Effects on local communities,
o AI's impact on jobs and the economy.
·
A Gallup poll (May 2026) found:
o 71% of Americans opposed having a data center
built near their homes.
o Opposition to nearby data centers was significantly higher than opposition to nuclear
power plants.
·
Some US
cities and counties have imposed temporary or permanent moratoriums on new data center construction due to local concerns.
·
US officials
and lawmakers argue that foreign adversaries are attempting to slow American AI development
and weaken US technological leadership by deepening domestic divisions.
·
OpenAI
disclosed that a small China-linked
operation used ChatGPT
to generate social media content criticizing AI data centers,
but reported little or no authentic
public engagement, and the related accounts were later removed.
·
China has
denied the allegations, calling them unfounded,
and stated that the US and China should cooperate on AI development and governance.
·
Analysts
note that while genuine public concerns over AI infrastructure exist, foreign influence
campaigns are attempting to amplify
and exploit those concerns rather than create them from scratch.
[ABS News Service/10.07.2026]
A state-owned newspaper in China recently published a satellite image
of a data center in Gainesville, Va., writing in English
that the development of artificial intelligence posed a threat to Americans’ physical
and financial well-being.
A comic strip made to look as if it had been published by a Maryland
news outlet — created with OpenAI’s ChatGPT by people in China, the tech company
said — circulated on X this year, blaming data centers
for soaring electricity bills. It showed a tycoon smoking a cigar and clutching
bags of cash.
A video shared on X by a known covert Russian influence operation
questioned the viability of a data center that an American
company, Firebird, is constructing in Armenia, the small Caucasus nation that has
been a focus of Kremlin pressure. “The country’s electrical grid instability may
render it useless,” the video’s narrator says.
All are examples of a push by foreign adversaries to seize on what
polls have shown is deep ambivalence — verging at times on hostility — about the
spread of the data centers needed to power A.I. in the
United States and elsewhere.
China, Russia and, to a lesser extent, Iran have sought to use state
media outlets to turn the controversy over data centers
in the United States into “a domestic fracture point,” according to a new
analysis by Alethea, a threat intelligence
company, which identified scores of articles and posts on social media this year.
These campaigns, whose impact on public opinion remains to be seen,
have raised alarms in Washington, where A.I. is seen as a top issue heading into
this year’s midterm elections.
The foreign efforts appear intended to stoke the debate over data
centers that has united political figures across the political
spectrum — from Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, a progressive, to Stephen K.
Bannon, the erstwhile adviser to President Trump.
“Foreign actors aren’t manufacturing American debates over the future
of A.I., they are exploiting them,” said Jessica Brandt, a former official with
the Office of the Director of National Intelligence who tracked foreign influence
efforts during the Biden administration.
The goal, she added, is to “deepen our divisions in order to dent
our appeal and weaken us from within.”
Republicans and business lobbying groups have seized on the role
of China, in particular, claiming that the country’s Communist Party wants to undercut
American leadership in a field that the Chinese, too, hope to dominate. They argue
that China’s propaganda is an effort to slow down American development.
“We can’t allow any effort by foreign adversaries to extort these
fears and undermine our technological development,” Senator Tom Cotton, Republican
of Arkansas, wrote to the acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, referring to genuine
public concerns.
The Trump administration, which after taking office dismantled many
of the government teams that tracked foreign influence operations, has begun to
recognize the political threat of the rising sentiment against A.I.
A Gallup poll in May found
that 71 percent of Americans were somewhat or strongly opposed to having a data
center built near them, almost 20 percentage points higher
than those who opposed construction of a nearby nuclear power plant. Many have broad
concerns about the effects of A.I. on jobs and the climate, while people who live
near data centers complain they are eyesores and emit annoying sounds. Some cities and counties have enacted temporary or permanent moratoriums on new construction.
In a recent interview on Fox Business, Doug Burgum, the interior
secretary, suggested that the outside influence campaigns had succeeded in building
opposition to data centers. “I think some of this propaganda
is being effective,” he said.
The foreign campaigns follow a familiar playbook that dates back
at least a decade. They often try to leverage official news organizations and social
media to fuel domestic discord around hot-button issues like guns, race and vaccines,
or even natural disasters like the wildfires in and around Los Angeles last year.
Between January and June, state media in China, Russia and Iran mentioned
data centers roughly 700 times, according to Alethea’s
analysis. That was an average of nearly four times a day, though it remained a small
fraction of overall published content about A.I. development.
The outlets have featured articles and posts aimed at an American
audience, as well as content highlighting criticism of data centers
by prominent Americans, like Tucker Carlson, the conservative commentator. In Iran,
state media has also highlighted links between American A.I. companies and Israel
and criticized the race to develop the technology as reckless.
Covert Russian information operations, previously identified by government
officials and researchers, have recently begun to focus on data centers as a wedge issue on social media, but so far their Chinese counterparts have not done so in the same way,
according to Alethea.
OpenAI did disclose last month that a small number of operatives
working in China used the company’s ChatGPT platform to generate covert social media
campaigns on X, including the comic strip.
Other posts by the operatives promoted claims that data centers were spiking electricity costs and criticized Mr. Trump’s
tariffs as a blunt tool used to win the technology race.
OpenAI, though, found “little to no authentic engagement” with the
campaigns, and the accounts at issue were ultimately removed from X. OpenAI did
not respond to requests for comment about Chinese or other foreign efforts.
(The New York Times has sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft,
accusing them of copyright infringement of news content related to A.I. systems.
They have denied those claims.)
Lobbyists have also weighed in to insinuate that American opposition
has been fomented with support from abroad.
Power the Future, an energy industry group, argued recently that
domestic opposition to data centers was manufactured by
environmental groups financed in part by foreign donors like Hansjörg Wyss, the
Swiss philanthropist and conservationist whose foundation is well known for supporting environmental issues.
In a statement, the Wyss Foundation said it did not provide grants
to oppose data centers. “These reports are false, misleading
and an attempt by special interests to manipulate the public into accepting data
centers,” the statement said.
Another pair of reports, by the Bitcoin Policy Institute, a cryptocurrency
advocacy group in Washington, also detailed what the group’s researchers called
an “extensive, multiyear influence campaign” by China to sway the A.I. race.
As evidence, the reports cited an invitation by Mr. Sanders for two
Chinese-government-linked academics to attend a conference on Capitol Hill in April.
They also criticized political donations to liberal organizations from Neville Roy
Singham, an American tech entrepreneur who is based in Shanghai and has long been
a subject of criticism for supporting Chinese propaganda
campaigns.
“There is an organic opposition to data centers,”
the author of the reports, Sam Lyman, said. “What we are calling for is simply transparency,
though, because we’ve been able to document an inorganic element that runs parallel
to this specific opposition movement.”
Mr. Sanders and Mr. Singham did not respond to a request for comment.
The Chinese government, through its embassy in Washington, disputed
accusations that it was trying to stoke protests in the United States — something
it has accused the United States of doing inside China.
“The allegations are completely unfounded and constitute smears and
defamation,” a spokesman, Liu Chang, said in response to questions, noting that
the United States and China needed “to work together to promote the development
and improve the governance of A.I. to make sure it will better contribute to social
progress.”
Not all of the anti-A.I. content online has an overtly political
purpose. Other actors appear to be exploiting the issue simply to build engagement.
Alethea tracked a network of inauthentic accounts on Facebook that
has been posting images appearing to highlight Americans’ opposition to data centers. They include images generated by artificial intelligence
showing, for example, a field of crops carved into a massive obscene hand gesture,
each tailored to users in different American states. “This is what Oklahoma thinks
of data centers,” one says.
The network has digital traces linking it geographically to Bangladesh,
Alethea found. It includes dozens of groups or accounts on Facebook and Instagram
that feature names like “Life in Texas” or “I Love Minnesota.” Amid a steady stream
of A.I. “slop” are posts opposing data centers.
McKenzie Sadeghi, a principal analyst at Alethea, called the posts
“rural rage bait.”
“Data centers are likely the ideal topic
for engagement-maximizing operators,” she said. “It is locally salient in all 50
states, fresh, and it maps onto pre-existing anti-China, anti-tax, ‘selling America’
grievance.”