By Prof. Marcello Ferrada de Noli. Emeritus professor of epidemiology, esp. injury epidemiology, MED.DR. (Karolinska Institute, Sweden), fmr. Research fellow at Harvard Medical School. Founder, Swedish Professors and Doctors for Human Rights (SWEDHR).
Part 1. Introduction *
(Part 2 here) (Part 3 here) (Part 4 here) (Part 5 here)
In “Black knight NGOs and international disinformation”,[1] Associate professors Karina Shyrokykh and Martin Kragh describe Swedish Professors & Doctor for Human Rights (SWEDHR) as “a small but influential NGO”,[2] who had a “significant role –whether intentionally or not– in the international disinformation campaign surrounding key events in the Syrian Civil War” [3]. In their words, our organization is “one of the most durable examples of online disinformation involving a black knight NGO”.[4] “As such, the @SWEDHR case is noteworthy in itself”, write the authors. [3].
As chairperson of SWEDHR, it is not for me to comment the authors’ conclusions above concerning the notability or relevance they accredit to SWEDHR in the geopolitical debate. Nevertheless, about what they call “disinformation”, I will show here that our output has been exactly the opposite –meaning, what we authored in The Indicter were analyses based in verifiable facts, ergo, true information. Accordingly, referring the authors’ theoretical discourse developed in their article, what is instead debatable is their concept of “disinformation”, their reasoning on “legitimacy” regarding our organization, and the equivocal descriptions they report about our academic and research capacity. And regarding the scholarly relevance of their empirical investigation tested in that article, its results did not achieve a scientific value. See a) below.
Here some main observations to the paper by Shyrokykh and Kragh that I will comment in the analyses further in this series:
- a) A noted deficiency in Shyrokykh and Kragh’s paper appears to be that the results are deprived of statistical significance between the variables studied. In other words, it would not have relevance as empirical study and thus fail to accomplish the authors’ proposed design. Other methodological flaws are discussed in further analyses of this series.
- b) Their categorization of “disinformation campaigns”, and hence its “disinformation” content, are bluntly and symmetrically described by the authors as all production that “intend to obfuscate and sow doubt about the integrity and intentions of mainstream Western journalists, state agencies, and multilateral organizations”. [5]
In their own words, “disinformation” would be for Shyrokykh and Kragh’s all what opposes or criticizes the narratives delivered by Western journalists, state agencies, and multilateral organizations. All which may constitute an invalid logical argument known since John Lock’ times as the argumentum ad verecundiam fallacy: [6]
- i) first, the authors attribute credibility exclusively to the West governmental authorities they adhere to,
- ii) for the authors, only narratives therein should be considered reliable source, because they emanate from a certain political authority which the authors postulate should be considered as reliable. Thus, such narratives should not be questioned, since that it would constitute “disinformation”.
The above presents a serious challenge to freedom of speech, particularly while authorities in the European Union and those in the respective countries’ governments, are in process of censoring analyses which may question their official narratives (those spread by “mainstream journalists, state agencies, and multilateral organizations”) via, for instance, the “European Union Digital Services Act”.
- c) A third problem in the Shyrokykh’s and Kragh’s filtering paradigm based in the authority criteria (according to them, the only analyses to be consider “legit” and “credible” are those emanated from the authorities and their trusted media ) is that the authorities’ stance towards free speech (e.g., admissibility of criticism regarding established media narratives which the authors accept as legitim, solely) may change according to national elections of those authorities. And this is exactly what newly happened in the U.S.
One prominent stance of the new elected government in the U.S. was their condemnation to the limitations to free speech. One utmost illustration is the address by US Vice President JD Vance in the recent Munich Security Conference.
All which leads to the following problematization of Shyrokykh’s and Kragh’s thesis:
Is power per se, the authority, which would be paramount in the loyalty of the media outlets and of their academic defenders? Or is the ideology, the political philosophy, or even the geopolitical perspective represented by those in government and about which the established media and “disinformation experts” would agree with, or disapprove?
In Sweden, for instance, the established media that Kragh & Shyrokykh would consider as the only solid and reliable is nowadays hard criticizing the U.S. government, including questioning the statements of President Trump and Vice President Vance referred to breaches on freedom of speech in European countries.
On the other hand, the fact that some previous governmental storylines had comprised false narratives, or plain constructed propaganda –or not confirmed information and/or not based on demonstrated biased sources– is nothing that Shyrokykh and Kragh care to mention in their article. Take as an example the weapons of mass destruction governmental narrative.
- d) One clear illustration of the authors flawed presentation of our organization, is that along their text of 25 pages in their article, they change 60 times our legal acronym “SWEDHR” to “SDHR”! Why? We have never, ever, signed as “SDHR” or any such acronyms other than the official SWEDHR.
As a result, if any reader of their article would wish a verification about the stands by “SDHR” or news about it in any search site, it would obtain zero results.[7] Instead, if a reader search for our real name “SWEDHR”, for instance in Yahoo.com, it will give 15,100 search results referred to our organization Swedish Professors and Doctors for Human Rights (SWEDHR), [8] starting with a description and link to a Wikipedia article about our organization Swedish Professors and Doctors for Human Rights, SWEDHR.[9]
- e) The authors describe that analyses authored by Ferrada de Noli were incorporated as documents and/or cited in the United Nations organizations “most notably during discussions in the United Nations Security Council and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)…[etc.]” and archived in the proceedings of the OPCW meetings.[10]
Nevertheless, while complaining on the above, it appears as most remarkable that Shyrokykh and Kragh, at the same time they label those analyses as “disinformation”, they do not attempt to rebut those findings (and in fact they could not). In no place in their article, they specify which of our analyses or conclusions would be wrong, and why. They do not mention or elaborate about any of the (verified) facts we referred in the studies we published, despite these are the very articles in The Indicter on which they claim to “base” their allegations on “disinformation”. Those publications (six articles) are listed in the References section of “Black knight NGOs and international disinformation”. Have they read them, or instead a priori just disregarded its contents by default?
- f) While their uttered focus is the “disinformation” impact of our NGO in the Syrian war 2015-2019,[11] in the calculation of their data they do not cluster the issues that the computed posts referred to. The truth is that not of all posts referred to the Syrian War.
- g) Empirically, the authors make their case by computing 2,370 posts [11] by @Swedhr, @The_Indicter and @professorsblogg (which the authors wrongly present as an “official” SWEDHR account) in the period 2015-2019.The truth is that, in one way or another, the output in the three X accounts (@The_Indicter, @SWDHR, @Professorsblogg), refer, and often link, to corresponding contents of articles published in The Indicter magazine.
And the facts show instead that in the period analysed by the authors (2015-2019), most articles do not correspond to the theme “Syria”, or related (such as “White Helmets”, or “gas attacks”, “OPWC”, etc.). Not at all. The main content of the articles in The Indicter 2015-2019 were instead referred to the Julian Assange human-rights case. This is the accurate material distribution in the period: [12]
Among N= 123 articles referring to the Julian Assange case, the Syria war, and the Ukraine war, the breakdown of the issues is the following: Julian Assange human rights case, n= 72 (59%); the Syria war and related, n= 47 (38%); and the Ukraine war, n=4, 3.3%.
- h) As in a typical Strawman fallacy [13] scheme, the authors first attribute to SWEDHR statements that are not ours, not said nor written by us, only to afterwards artificially build up an argument to “refute” …something that in fact we have never uttered. This is, for example, their attack on SWEDHR, but based on an op-ed article authored by an independent investigator who has no connection at all with SWEDHR, neither to The Indicter editorial team.
- i) The authors give a wrong, and hence misleading, description of the true academic status of the SWEDHR members and leadership. The description of our academic background is not only erroneous or insufficient but also conveys the use of an ethos fallacy –meaning an argument which “unfairly attack the credibility of the opponent“. By diminishing or outright denying (like in the case referred to paediatric specialist Dr Leif Elinder, see below) the academic and/or professional capacity of SWEDHR members, also the result of our investigations would appear inadequate to the readers –and thus also the expertise impact of our organization.
Shyrokykh and Kragh affirm that we at SWEDHR “claim competence in medicine” or “attempt to legitimize itself as a group of medical experts”.[14] Whereas they know well –as it appears in the signatures of our articles listed in their Reference section which they should have read –but also in the Journal of the Swedish Medical Association– that both the chair (this author) and the vice chair of SWEDHR (Prof. Anders Romelsjö), not only hold the Medicine doktorsexamen (MED.DR.) from the Karolinska Institute (Sweden), but we are also titled in Sweden professor emeritus (“title of distinction in value of meritorious academic services”). Both of us been previously employed at the Karolinska Institute and/or Harvard Medical School. All the rest of SWEDHR members that have been signatories of professional opinions appearing in our analyses in The Indicter are medical doctors of different specialities. And one of the doctors is an examined maxillofacial surgeon.
- j) Further on their topic of SWEDHR “claimed” competence, Shyrokykh and Kragh’s question paediatric competence in SWEDHR [15] as to whether our medical team was able to analyse the White Helmets malpractice in infant victims. Whereas knowing (as they would have read our article in The Indicter which they quote) that Dr. Leif Elinder, then member in SWEDHR board of directors, is a Swedish specialist in that field. He wrote in the exact same article quoted by Shyrokykh and Kragh [16]: “After examination of the video material, I found that the measures inflicted upon those children, some of them lifeless, are bizarre, non-medical, non-lifesaving, and even counterproductive in terms of life-saving purposes of children”.
In sum, by trying belittling SWEDHR doctors’ actual competence in various medical fields, or down to the level of insinuating that it is all just a “claim” of medical competence, Shyrokykh and Kragh appear discrediting the validity of our findings and, above all, dispute the legitimacy of our organization. These are to be considered typical ad-hominem fallacies [17].
Recapping, here in this series, I will deconstruct Shyrokykh and Kragh’s “disinformation” concept, I will contest on multiple bases the research value of their faulty investigation, as well I shall debunk the misrepresentations that the authors spread on the NGO Swedish Professors and Doctors for Human Rights SWEDHR. Further, I will criticize the unfounded characterization of “illiberal” that the authors wrongly ascribe to our organization.
Finally in this Introduction:
Shyrokykh and Kragh argue that SWEDHR “has become an element in the international disinformation of key belligerent states in the Syrian Civil War”. And that being the reason they give why they have focused on our work –namely, to illustrate what “black night NGOs” does and represent. And they feel the need to clarify that SWEDHR was “created in 2014 by Marcello Ferrada de Noli” –a detail that does not add neither to the theses nor to the conclusions or main purpose of their work. But, above all, they publish all this now, in December 2024, whereas the happenings referred in their article occurred nearly a decade ago, during the past Syrian war. The Assad government is gone. What would be then the real reason for this attention they nowadays give to articles that I published so many years ago on a subject quasi obsolete?
SWEDHR has since 2014 denounced war crimes committed by Ukrainian forces against the population of the Donbass region. The SWEDHR chair has been since almost a decade prominently listed in the “Myrotvorets” register –also popularly known as the Ukrainian “hit list”. In that list figure those depicted as “criminal enemies of Ukraine”.
Author Karina Shyrokykh, Ukrainian, is the spokesperson of the “Nordic Ukraine forum”, [18] and she is at present collecting money in Sweden to assist Ukrainian military operations in Russia’s Kursk –in concrete to finance military equipment for the 47th Separate Mechanized Brigade ‘Magura’; [19]
Martin Kragh is known for his biased research on Russia,[20] and he was a prominent lobbyist for Sweden’s membership in NATO. He is also listed as researcher in the Atlantic Council Portal. [21] Further, exposures regarding the British Intelligence-related secretive project “Integrity Initiative” named Martin Kragh, as the British organisation’s “Cluster Coordinator” for Sweden and Scandinavia. [22] Which he has of course denied. I had previously debated Kragh’s conclusions on the role of SWEDHR in “Propaganda for war by proxy: Rebuttal to Martin Kragh’s flawed analysis in Swedish J Social Sciences 2020. Part 2: The falsehoods”.[23]
Considering that the article by Shyrokykh and Kragh here commented refers to happenings occurred nearly a decade ago in the past Syrian war– it leads to this question: Why their article –containing references ad hominem to me, as the SWEDHR founder– appears in the middle of my present work in denouncing the absence of democracy, of civil liberties and breaches of human rights in present Ukraine?
For, at the contrary the ideological description that Shyrokykh and Kragh is doing about SWEDHR and The Indicter –where in “Black knight NGOs and international disinformation” they describe us as being “illiberal”, and “pro authoritarian”– the leitmotiv across all our activities is and has been exactly the opposite.
As The Indicter logo reads, “We denounce war crimes, human rights abuses, and State assaults to privacy and civil liberties”.
—
* This article was was updated 21 Feb 2025.
The series analysing “Black knight NGOs and international disinformation” continues in:
Part 2. Credibility in Publishing: Does ‘Perceived Legitimacy’ Outweigh Factual Accuracy?
Part 3. What is Disinformation According to the Experts in Disinforming
REFERENCES
- Shyrokykh, Karina & Kragh, Martin: “Black knight NGOs and international disinformation”. European Security, 17 Dec 2024.
- Id, page 3.
- Id., page 9.
- Id., page 4.
- Id., Introduction.
- Locke, John (1689), “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding” (chapter ‘Of Wrong Assent, or Error’). Pauline Phemister ed., OUP Oxford, 2008. ISBN 9780199296620.
- Search for SDHR in Yahoo.com: https://tinyurl.com/zzfrfd9c. Retrieved 21 February 2025.
- Search for SWEDHR in Yahoo.com: https://tinyurl.com/3yrjxfjy. Retrieved 21 February 2025.
- Wikipedia, Swedish Professors & Doctors for Human Rights. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_Doctors_for_Human_Rights (Retrieved 28 Dec 2024)
- Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
- Id., page 13.
- See “The Indicter Geopolitical magazine”
- Aikin, Scott & Casey, John (2023). “Straw Man Arguments. A Study in Fallacy Theory”, page 53. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781350284708.
- Shyrokykh & Kragh, op.cit., page 9.
- Id., page 8.
- Ferrada de Noli, M. “White Helmets video: Swedish doctors for human rights denounce medical malpractice and macabre ‘misuse’ of children for propaganda aims”. The Indicter 6 March 2017. (Reference “2017b” in Karina & Kragh, op.cit.)
- Walton, Douglas (1998). “Ad Hominem Arguments”. Page 2 in section “Abusive and Circumstantial”. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-0922-0.
- The Local (Sweden), “Solidarity brings hope: why Swedish support matters for us Ukrainians”, 2 March 2022
- Karina Shyrokykh’s Linkedin post: “Support the 47th Brigade – Join Our Effort!” (Retrieved 28 December 2028)
- Ferrada de Noli, M. “Poltava’s geopolitical aftermath and the warmongering of Swedish elites”. The Indicter, 24 March 2021.
- Atlantic Council Portal
- Ferrada de Noli, M., “Integrity Initiative scandal reaches Sweden amidst deceiving media debate on Martin Kragh”. The Indicter, 15 Mar 2019.
- Ferrada de Noli, M., “Propaganda for war by proxy: Rebuttal to Martin Kragh’s flawed analysis in Swedish J Social Sciences 2020. Part 2: The falsehoods”.
- Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
- Id., page 7.
- Id., page 8.
- Id.
- Ferrada de Noli M. “Sweden’s Extraordinary Renditions and Arbitrary Detentions”, The Indicter, https://theindicter.com/extraordinary-renditions-and-arbitrary-detentions/
- Ferrada de Noli M. United Nations HR sanctioned Sweden for violating the UN’s Absolute Ban on Torture
- Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 8.
- Chen, Jing (2016). “How petitions assist decentralized authoritarianism in China”. Lexington Books, New York. ISBN 9781498534529. Page 165.
- Provisions on defamation – the crimes of defamation and insult – are found in chapter 5 in the Swedish criminal code.
- “The Strawman fallacy is a logical fallacy that involves misrepresenting an opponent’s position in order to make it easier to attack.” In “Logical Fallacies –Strawman”.
- Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 10.
- Id., page 12
- Larson, Adam. Analysis of evidence contradicts allegations on Syrian gas attacks. The Indicter, 5 April 2017.
- Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 8.
- Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
- Id.
- Id.
- Ferrada de Noli M. “Fighting Pinochet”. Libertarian Books Europe, Stockholm, 2022.
- Ferrada de Noli M.
- Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
- Ferrada de Noli M., “How Sweden bribed its way to a seat in the UN Security Council using millions taken from the public budget for aid to poor countries”, The Indicter, 28 Dec 2026.
- Epoch Times, “Platsen i FN:s säkerhetsråd kostade 27 miljoner”, 16 Jul 2027.
*Continues in Part 2 of this series (click on link below):
Part 2. Credibility in Publishing: Does ‘Perceived Legitimacy’ Outweigh Factual Accuracy?
Part 3. What is Disinformation According to the Experts in Disinforming
*[Third Part of this rebuttal to “Black knight NGOs and international disinformation” available here January 6, 2025] [The present texts may be subject to updates; References to be added]
REFERENCES
1. Shyrokykh, Karina & Kragh, Martin: “Black knight NGOs and international disinformation”. European Security, 17 Dec 2024.
2. Id, page 3.
3. Id., page 9.
4. Id., page 4.
5. Id., Introduction.
6. Locke, John (1689), “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding” (chapter ‘Of Wrong Assent, or Error’). Pauline Phemister ed., OUP Oxford, 2008. ISBN 9780199296620.
7. “SDHR” https://tinyurl.com/yex6z4p4 (Retrieved 30 Dec 2024)
8. “SWEDHR” https://tinyurl.com/bdz6zx2b (Retrieved 30 Dec 2024)
9. Wikipedia, Swedish Professors & Doctors for Human Rights. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_Doctors_for_Human_Rights (Retrieved 28 Dec 2024)
10. Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
11. Id., page 13.
12. See “The Indicter Geopolitical magazine”
13. Aikin, Scott & Casey, John (2023). “Straw Man Arguments. A Study in Fallacy Theory”, page 53. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781350284708.
14. Shyrokykh & Kragh, op.cit., page 9.
15. Id., page 8.
16. Ferrada de Noli, M. “White Helmets video: Swedish doctors for human rights denounce medical malpractice and macabre ‘misuse’ of children for propaganda aims”. The Indicter 6 March 2017. (Reference “2017b” in Karina & Kragh, op.cit.)
17. Walton, Douglas (1998). “Ad Hominem Arguments”. Page 2 in section “Abusive and Circumstantial”. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-0922-0.
18. The Local (Sweden), “Solidarity brings hope: why Swedish support matters for us Ukrainians”, 2 March 2022
19. Karina Shyrokykh’s Linkedin post: “Support the 47th Brigade – Join Our Effort!” (Retrieved 28 December 2028)
20. Ferrada de Noli, M. “Poltava’s geopolitical aftermath and the warmongering of Swedish elites”. The Indicter, 24 March 2021.
22. Ferrada de Noli, M., “Integrity Initiative scandal reaches Sweden amidst deceiving media debate on Martin Kragh”. The Indicter, 15 Mar 2019.
23. Ferrada de Noli, M., “Propaganda for war by proxy: Rebuttal to Martin Kragh’s flawed analysis in Swedish J Social Sciences 2020. Part 2: The falsehoods”.
24. Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
25. Id., page 7.
26. Id., page 8.
27. Id.
28. Ferrada de Noli M. “Sweden’s Extraordinary Renditions and Arbitrary Detentions”, The Indicter, https://theindicter.com/extraordinary-renditions-and-arbitrary-detentions/
29. Ferrada de Noli M. United Nations HR sanctioned Sweden for violating the UN’s Absolute Ban on Torture
30. Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 8.
31. Chen, Jing (2016). “How petitions assist decentralized authoritarianism in China”. Lexington Books, New York. ISBN 9781498534529. Page 165.
32. Provisions on defamation – the crimes of defamation and insult – are found in chapter 5 in the Swedish criminal code.
33. “The Strawman fallacy is a logical fallacy that involves misrepresenting an opponent’s position in order to make it easier to attack.” In “Logical Fallacies –Strawman”.
34. Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 10.
35. Id., page 12
36. Larson, Adam. Analysis of evidence contradicts allegations on Syrian gas attacks. The Indicter, 5 April 2017.
37. Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 8.
38. Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
39. Id.
40. Id.
41. Ferrada de Noli M. “Fighting Pinochet”. Libertarian Books Europe, Stockholm, 2022.
42. Ferrada de Noli M.
43. Shyrokykh, K & Kragh, M., op.cit., page 9.
44. Ferrada de Noli M., “How Sweden bribed its way to a seat in the UN Security Council using millions taken from the public budget for aid to poor countries”, The Indicter, 28 Dec 2026.
45. Epoch Times, “Platsen i FN:s säkerhetsråd kostade 27 miljoner”, 16 Jul 2027.