The United States is feeding Pentagon propaganda to internet users in Latin American countries using a new AI-laden content mill, an investigation by The Intercept has found.
La Tilde quietly began development early this year and appears to still be a work in progress, pitching itself as a modern media brand for Latin American audiences with articles published in both Spanish and English. Its name references the accent mark emphasizing vowels in Spanish; ânews with an accentâ is the siteâs catchphrase.
âThe tilde is not an ornament. It is a millennial arrow designed to provide direction, save space, and turn up the volume,â a narrator states in a promotional video for the site bearing telltale signs it was AI-generated, such as a newspaper whose sloppily rendered headline reads âSO THEE HOUTIERRER TO TO GHAHOBATEE,â followed by imagery of two medieval monks. âThat is why we place the accent on what matters. From the regional pulse and your well-being, to the big ideas and the global context.â
So far, La Tildeâs coverage amounts to an unusual blend of personal finance tips (âWhy instant payments matter so much for your business and your walletâ) and articles extolling the value of U.S. military operations in Latin America (âOperation Absolute Resolve: The mission that captured NicolĂĄs Maduro and set a new standard for precision and coordinationâ).
Its article on the U.S. abduction of the Venezuelan president praises the mission in Trumpian prose, calling it âThe Perfect Operation â Coordination, Timing and Precision at an Unprecedented Scale,â and âa military operation of coordination and accuracy never seen before.â Citing âinformation obtained exclusively by La Tilde,â it describes the operationâs tactical brilliance, flawless execution, and incredibly precise coordination of military assets in the air and on the ground.
If this reads like Pentagon a press release, thatâs because it is. An explanation for its glowing coverage of the U.S. military can be found after clicking a small link tucked at the bottom of the site. âLa Tilde is a product of an international media organization publicly funded from the budget of the United States Government,â its About page reads.
This easily missed disclosure language is identical to two other Pentagon-sponsored propaganda sites recently revealed by The Intercept .
Targeting audiences, foreign or domestic, with state-run information campaigns remains a politically sensitive topic, and a token disclosure that La Tilde is a U.S.-funded platform allows the American government to say it technically informed readers about the actual source of the information.
According to a defense official familiar with U.S. information operations, La Tilde is operated as a military messaging platform for U.S. Special Operations Command South, or SOCSOUTH, which executes special forces missions throughout South and Central America as well as the Caribbean. When asked about SOCSOUTHâs role behind La Tilde, spokesperson Trevor Wild replied with the text of the siteâs About page noting that itâs a government operation, but declined to comment further.
U.S. Southern Command, or SOUTHCOM, which is broadly responsible for coordinating military assets in the countries La Tilde targets, denied involvement. SOUTHCOM âdoes not fund, operate, or have any official association with La Tilde,â according to spokesperson Steven McLoud, who did not respond to further questions.
Unlike most news websites, La Tilde carries no bylines, masthead, or mention of actual staff of any kind. Although the site claims it employs âdozens of freelance reporters and content creators,â at least some of the site appears to have been generated by a large language model. Running articles through Pangram , an AI-text detection service, produced multiple hits for both English and Spanish writing either partially or entirely written by machines (though such tools are known to deliver false positives).
Emerson Brooking, a fellow with the Atlantic Councilâs Digital Forensic Research Lab and former Pentagon cyber-policy adviser, told The Intercept he was struck by siteâs shoddiness, describing it as âAI all the way down.â
Despite the low quality of AI-generated articles, this approach could help the Pentagon spin up propaganda efforts faster than in the past. âIf you can generate new content and even news fronts at the flip of a switch, your influence operations can shift target and focus much more quickly,â Brooking said. âThat seems to be the thinking behind recent AI-powered Russian and Chinese networks, for instance.â
An analysis of subdomains hosted on LaTilde.co reveals the site plans to launch bespoke versions for readers in Ecuador, El Salvador, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Panama, and Peru.
Some pro-U.S. content is clearly tailored to these national audiences. An article filed to the siteâs âIn Good Handsâ section highlights the benefits of U.S.âPanamanian joint jungle warfare training exercises, regaling readâŠ
Read the full article at The Intercept â