• Resident Fellow, Baltics

Nika Aleksejeva

Nika Aleksejeva is a research fellow for the Baltics at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab), based in Latvia. Her research focuses on identifying, exposing, and explaining malign information influence campaigns across digital engagement spaces in the Baltic states and beyond. Her work has examined hostile Kremlin narratives concerning NATO’s enhanced forward presence (NATO eFP) in the Baltic states and Poland, disinformation surrounding COVID-19, the 2020 Belarus political crisis, and malign information influence campaigns related to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Aleksejeva was among the first to uncover Sputnik’s covert strategy for expanding its reach on Facebook in 2019, as well as early signs of information operations known as Ghostwriter, Secondary Infection, and Doppelganger. More recently, she investigated networks of pro-Kremlin Telegram channels disseminating Russia’s propaganda globally. Her work has been featured in prominent media outlets such as Huffington Post, BBC, NBC, AP, Der Spiegel, and Politico, among others.

With a background in journalism, Aleksejeva’s previous reported on business topics and produced data-driven stories on global economic trends and education. Prior to joining NATO Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence (Stratcom COE), she worked with Infogram, a data visualization platform. Dedicated to strengthening quality journalism and resilience to online disinformation, she supports Latvian journalists by curating the School of Data branch in Latvia.

March 2023

Networks of pro-Kremlin Telegram channels spread disinformation at a global scale

by Nika Aleksejeva, Sayyara Mammadova

Three networks comprising fifty-six channels targeted Telegram users in twenty countries and ten languages
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February 2023

Russian War Report: DFRLab releases investigations on Russian info ops before and after the invasion

by Digital Forensic Research Lab

On the week of the one year anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the DFRLab released two new reports on narratives tracked used to justify the war both pre- and post invasion.
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February 2023

Narrative warfare

by Nika Aleksejeva, Andy Carvin, Eto Buziashvili

In the weeks and months leading up to Russia invading Ukraine on February 24, 2022, the Kremlin and pro-Kremlin media employed false and misleading narratives to justify military action against Ukraine, mask the Kremlin’s operational planning, and deny any responsibility for the coming war. Dive into a full accounting of the road to war.
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