Abstract
It is often thought that an external threat increases the internal cohesion of a nation, and thus decreases polarization. We examine this proposition by analyzing NATO discussion dynamics on Finnish social media following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. In Finland, public opinion on joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) had long been polarized along the left-right partisan axis, but the invasion led to a rapid convergence of opinion toward joining NATO. We investigate whether and how this depolarization took place among polarized actors on Finnish Twitter. By analyzing retweet patterns, we find three separate user groups before the invasion: a pro-NATO, a left-wing anti-NATO, and a conspiracy-charged anti-NATO group. After the invasion, the left-wing anti-NATO group members broke out of their retweeting bubble and connected with the pro-NATO group despite their difference in partisanship, while the conspiracy-charged anti-NATO group mostly remained a separate cluster. Our content analysis reveals that the left-wing anti-NATO group and the pro-NATO group were bridged by a shared condemnation of Russia’s actions and shared democratic norms, while the other anti-NATO group, mainly built around conspiracy theories and disinformation, consistently demonstrated a clear anti-NATO attitude. We show that an external threat can bridge partisan divides in issues linked to the threat, but bubbles upheld by conspiracy theories and disinformation may persist even under dramatic external threats.
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1 Introduction
Despite a period of momentum building, the Russian invasion of Ukraine on Feb 24, 2022 came as a shock to most observers. The shock was most acute in Ukraine but was felt also in countries bordering Russia. Finland, the militarily non-aligned European country that shares a 1344-kilometer border with Russia, witnessed a sharp shift in its public opinion on NATO membership, based on a reappraisal of the external threat posed by Russia. Traditionally, around 20 percent of the Finnish population had been in favor of joining NATO [1]. Russia’s invasion of Crimea in 2014 increased the number to 25–30 [1], but after the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, support for joining NATO soared as high as 70–80 percent [2].
Behind this major change in opinion, the rising external threat seems to have had a depolarizing effect on the Finnish NATO discussion. For long, Finnish opinions on NATO embodied a polarization that was largely partisanship-based: voters of the main right-wing party (National Coalition) were largely in favor of joining, whereas voters of left-wing parties were the most vocal opponents of NATO [3]. After the invasion, however, many left-wing supporters changed their opinion, and eventually the Finnish parliament almost unanimously voted in favor of joining NATO (188 for, 8 against).
Social media opens an unobtrusive observation window [4] into whether and how this depolarization took place among the more politically active and partisan segment of the population [5, 6], including political elites who often play an important role in steering the discussion [7, 8], as well as fringe communities that subscribe to conspiracy theories and disinformation [9–11]. The digital traces of user interactions make it possible to measure structural polarization by constructing endorsement networks of individuals and observing cohesive groups in them [12–15], and provide insight into the information spreading and user interaction dynamics that drive opinion (de)polarization [16, 17]. While network analysis can reveal the structure of user interactions and how it changes over time [18], content analysis can uncover how the discussion climate evolves and what arguments connect or distinguish opposing sides [19, 20].
Previously, researchers have used social media data during the Russian invasion of Ukraine to study people’s opinions and emotions toward the incident [21–24], how it changed people’s sentiments toward green energy [25], and the spread of Russian propaganda and misinformation online [26, 27]. Closest to our work, Nisch [28] studied social media discussions on Finland’s NATO membership. However, they were interested in the world’s reaction to Finland’s NATO application, and thus analyzed data from English Twitter after Finland announced its intention to join NATO in May 2022. By contrast, we are interested in the immediate depolarizing effect of the invasion on the NATO discussion among Finnish actors.
Using a combination of network analysis and content analysis methods, we inspect how the Russian invasion of Ukraine changed the polarization dynamics of the Finnish NATO discussion on Twitter. We mainly analyze Finnish language tweets from Feb 10, 2022 to Mar 30, 2022 that contain any NATO-related keyword. By clustering the user retweet network before the invasion and reading through a sample of tweets in each user cluster, we identify three separate user groups: one pro-NATO group, one anti-NATO group of left-wing partisans, and another anti-NATO group of conspiracy theory and disinformation consumers. We find that depolarization took place among Twitter users after the invasion, but in a selective manner. In contrast to the expectation that partisanship-based polarization is considerably resistant to external threats [29], the invasion rapidly depolarized partisan actors: the left-wing anti-NATO group started retweeting much more from the pro-NATO group right after the invasion, while they also started posting less anti-NATO content. Instead, the conspiracy-charged anti-NATO group retained strong in-group retweeting and a consistent anti-NATO attitude. As opposed to previously reported evidence of bots (i.e., automated accounts) playing an important role in spreading disinformation [30] and Russian propaganda [26] on the English Twitter, the conspiracy-charged anti-NATO group in our data did not seem to be populated by bots, but more likely consisted of spontaneous consumers of conspiracy theories and disinformation who exhibited persistent opinions and communication patterns.
Our study adds new empirical evidence to the long-held theory that external conflicts increase internal cohesion [31] by showing that this process may happen selectively. While limited partisan depolarization has been observed in the face of external threats in the United States context [29], we show that partisan actors can be depolarized overnight by a dramatic external threat in a way similar to the rally-around-the-flag reaction to terrorist and other direct attacks [32]. Meanwhile, in line with previous findings that consumers of conspiracy theories tend to form echo chambers [33, 34] and concentrate on within-community content [35], our results further underscore the resilience and danger of conspiracy-/disinformation-based polarization by showing how it can survive an external threat that even bridges partisan divides.
2 Data and methods
We collected all tweets in the Finnish language from Dec 30, 2021 to Mar 30, 2022 that contain any NATO-related keyword (see Appendix for the list of keywords) using the Twitter Application Programming Interface (API) v2 [36]. This gave us 320,407 tweet records produced by 28,887 users in total. We divided the timeline into two-week periods before Feb 24 and one-week periods after Feb 24, in consideration of the asymmetric activity level before and after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. For each period, we constructed a retweet network of users, where a directed link with weight w connects user A to user B if A retweeted B w times within the period. We used only retweet records (not including quote retweets) for constructing the user networks, as retweet is a relatively certain indicator of endorsement-based connection [37]. Following prior work on quantifying polarization in Twitter data [14, 18], we used only the largest connected component of each network for subsequent analysis.
Based on an observation of the retweet networks, we decided to focus our analysis mainly on four periods that are representative of the evolving retweeting dynamics: before (Feb 10 to Feb 23, 31,399 total tweets, 12,891 retweets), right-after (Feb 24 to Mar 2, 81,433 total tweets, 39,936 retweets), 1-week-after (Mar 3 to Mar 9, 49,585 total tweets, 23,365 retweets), and 4-weeks-after (Mar 24 to Mar 30, 20,792 total tweets, 9103 retweets). The retweet network (largest connected component) contains 3836 users and 10,774 links in the before period, 8986 users and 32,454 links in the right-after period, 6173 users and 19,309 links in the 1-week-after period, and 3383 users and 7598 links in the 4-weeks-after period.
In order to track stance changes induced by the invasion, we performed our analysis on users who were active in the before network. Using the Leiden graph partitioning algorithm [38], we find clusters of users in the before network who retweet mainly within their cluster, and inspect how these users change their behavior and stances in the subsequent periods. We ran the Leiden algorithm 50 times, each time with a different resolution parameter; for each run, the algorithm returned a partition of maximized modularity. In order to select the most appropriate resolution and number of communities, we chose the partition that gives the shortest description length of the data under the weighted stochastic block model [39], where link weights (i.e., count of retweets between a pair of users) are treated as covariates sampled from a binomial distribution. For each of the four time periods, we then calculated for each user cluster the number of external retweets, the number of internal retweets, and the external-internal (E/I) ratio (i.e., the ratio between the number of external retweets and the number of internal retweets), in order to examine the change in intra-cluster and inter-cluster communication dynamics.
To get a sense of changes in the content of the discussion, we sampled a number of tweets from the data for manual content analysis. For each cluster and each of the four time periods, we randomly sampled 42 tweets from those that got retweeted at least once in the cluster in the period, which resulted in 504 sampled tweets (see Appendix for more sampling statistics). We preferentially sampled tweets that were popular within each cluster by setting the sampling probability of each tweet proportional to its number of in-cluster retweets in the period. A group of four coders (all co-authors) then labeled the stance of each tweet to be pro-NATO, anti-NATO, unclear, or unrelated to NATO. The coders were split into two teams, with two coders on each team. From the 504 tweets in total, 24 tweets were randomly sampled for both teams to code; for the remaining 480, one team coded half and the other team coded the remaining half. Within each team, each coder first labeled the 264 tweets independently, then the two coders discussed cases of disagreement and reached a consensus as a team. The inter-team agreement for the 24 double-coded tweets, as evaluated by Krippendorff’s alpha [40], is 0.80.
3 Results
The graph partitioning algorithm reveals three clusters of users in the before network (Fig. 1A). Based on the coded stances of sampled tweets in each user group, we find one of the groups to be pro-NATO (hereinafter referred to as “the pro group”) and the other two to be anti-NATO (Fig. 1F-H). A qualitative reading of the sampled tweets suggests that one of the anti-NATO groups based their arguments on traditional leftists’ concerns, such as pacifism and feminism not being compatible with joining a military alliance, and NATO having been involved in the violation of human rights. We will hereinafter refer to this group as “the left-anti group”. The other anti-NATO group showed a clear engagement in conspiracy theories and disinformation in framing their opposition to NATO. For example, they claimed NATO equals supporting globalism, the global elite, and the World Economic Forum, all of which are supposed co-conspirators that are set out to destroy the Finnish nation, and that those who want people to inject themselves with poisonous vaccines are the ones who want to join NATO. We will hereinafter refer to this group as “the conspiracy-anti group”. It is worth noting that we did not observe a prevalence of bot-like accounts in our sample, which aligns with previous studies that found limited bot activity in political discussions on Finnish Twitter [41, 42].
Our user partisanship analysis further enriches the profile of each group. Specifically, we plot a list of Finnish politician accounts in the before network, colored by their publicly available party affiliation (Fig. 1B). In our analysis, we focus on the six main parties in Finland, each with over 10 Members in the current Finnish Parliament: the Left Alliance (Left), the Social Democratic Party (SDP), the Green League (Green), the Centre Party (Centre), the National Coalition Party (Coalition), and the Finns Party (Finns). Quite surprisingly, we find that politicians of most parties, including many that traditionally took a neutral or an anti-NATO stance, already fell on the pro-NATO side in the before network; presumably, this results from the buildup to the war since the end of 2021. However, politicians affiliated with the Left Alliance – the traditionally most anti-NATO party – still fell exclusively in the left-anti group. Meanwhile, the conspiracy-anti group seems to accommodate few politicians, which indicates its relatively fringe position in political communication.
3.1 Change in network structure
Plotting the pro group, left-anti group, and conspiracy-anti group members in the retweet networks after the invasion, we observe a substantial change in the network structure. In the right-after network, members of the left-anti group became much less connected internally and more connected to the pro group, while most members of the conspiracy-anti group largely remained in their own internally connected bubble (Fig. 1C). This observation is confirmed by the number of external retweets of the pro group, the number of internal retweets, and the E/I ratio in each anti group (Table 1): although the E/I ratio of the conspiracy-anti group also more than doubled in the first week after the invasion (some of this change might be explained by overfitting [45]), the E/I ratio of the left-anti group had an almost tenfold increase in the same period. This structural change in the retweet network also remains in the 1-week-after and 4-weeks-after periods (see Appendix for a visualization of the retweet networks in these two periods). A statistical test further confirms that the larger change of E/I ratio in the left-anti group than in the conspiracy-anti group is not explained by statistical fluctuations (see Appendix).
The change in retweet network structure reflects a breakage of the cohesive cluster formed by the left-anti group members, as they instantly developed connection and alignment with the pro group after the invasion. The partisanship plot after the invasion (Fig. 1D) confirms that the invasion bridged the communication divide between politicians of the Left Alliance and those of the other parties. By contrast, the sustained bubble structure of the conspiracy-anti group suggests that the invasion did not change its communication dynamics as much.
3.2 Change in tweet content
Our reading of the sampled tweets suggests that the left-anti group shared with the pro group a critical attitude toward Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which potentially connected them in the retweet network. After the invasion, many people in the left-anti group also moved away from explicitly voicing anti-NATO stances to asking for more discussion on NATO, in addition to arguing that NATO opponents should not be ostracized. Although this might imply that they did not shift their opinion completely toward the other end, the change in their expression opened up a possibility for their interaction with the pro group, as some NATO supporters also argued that an open discussion involving both sides should be acceptable. Thus, the left-anti group and the pro group were also connected by a shared understanding of the discussion norm that embraces diverse opinions and open debate.
Meanwhile, members of the conspiracy-anti group consistently built explicitly anti-NATO arguments upon conspiracy theories and disinformation. Many were also repeating messages of the Russian state propaganda [46], and some of them, as well-known figures in the Finnish disinformation and conspiracy theory scene, have been interviewed on Russian state television as supposed experts. Thus, this conspiracy-charged and pro-Russia group presumably did not find much common ground with the pro group, and was not changed much by the invasion.
The stance distribution of the sampled tweets confirms that the conspiracy-anti group held a consistently strong anti-NATO attitude even after the invasion (Fig. 1H). Meanwhile, the left-anti group saw a notable decrease in the expression of anti-NATO attitude after the invasion (Fig. 1G), yet it also did not turn clearly pro-NATO. While in general tweets labeled “unclear” do not necessarily reflect an attitude toward NATO (see Appendix for a discussion), many users in the left-anti group posted a specific type of “unclear” stance tweets that discussed the pros and (especially) cons of joining NATO, or asked for more discussions on that. This potentially reflects some extent of self-censorship in this group: some users who retained an anti-NATO leaning might have avoided stating anti-NATO stances explicitly after becoming a minority in the discussion.
Our user activity analysis reveals another possible form of self-censorship in the left-anti group. Before the invasion, the two anti-NATO groups had a comparable percentage of active users in each retweet network (Fig. 1E); yet after the invasion, the percentage was consistently lower in the left-anti group. The partisanship plot (Fig. 1D) also shows that only two of the eight Left Alliance politicians in the before network were still present in the right-after network. Coupled with the change in retweeting dynamics, the decreased user activity in the left-anti group hints at a spiral of silence [47] among a part of the left-anti group members, who may have chosen not to share their opinions in response to the shifted discussion climate.
4 Discussion
Our analyses provide an overview of how the Russian invasion of Ukraine selectively depolarized the Finnish NATO discussion on Twitter: the left-wing anti-NATO group members broke out of their retweeting bubble and connected with the traditionally right-wing pro-NATO group based on established common ground, but the conspiracy-charged anti-NATO group mostly remained a densely connected cluster of its own and persisted in holding an anti-NATO attitude.
Our results demonstrate how a dramatic external threat can change the discussion dynamics between partisan actors. While previous empirical research has found that terrorist and other direct attacks can lead to a rally-around-the-flag phenomenon where the political elite presents a united front [32], there is less evidence that an indirect external threat posed by an adversarial state would decrease partisan polarization [29]. Our results show that polarization in partisanship-divided issues can be weakened overnight by a dramatic external threat, as actors of opposite leanings build connections on the basis of a shared target of criticism (Russia) and a shared understanding of democratic norms (discussion about, and even opposition to joining NATO are part of democracy).
While the observed depolarization of the endorsement network and the change in expressed stances are conclusive, with observational data it is difficult to gauge the amount of actual opinion change or the level of ideological depolarization at large, especially given the possibility of a spiral of silence. Nevertheless, even when depolarization takes the form of self-censored opposition [48], it can still create opportunities for information exposure and conversation between different bubbles, which can serve as a first step toward actual ideological depolarization [49].
Our study also sheds new light on the critical role that conspiracy theories and disinformation play in shaping and sustaining polarization on social media. Prior to our work, researchers have found that consumers of conspiracy news tend to form echo chambers with homophilic ties in friendship networks [34] and diffusion networks [33]. Bessi et al. [35] showed that conspiracy news consumers are more focused on diffusing within-group content and interacting with within-group actors, which points to the potential stability of conspiracy-based polarization. Zollo et al. [50] further added that users within the conspiracy echo chamber rarely interact with debunking posts, and when they do, their interest in conspiracy content actually increases after the interaction. Echoing these findings, our results more concretely demonstrate the resilience of conspiracy-/disinformation-based polarization. We show that consumers of conspiracy theories and disinformation formed a separate retweeting bubble, and further, that they were reluctant to change their opinions or communication patterns even in the face of a dramatic external threat and otherwise bridged partisan divides. This alerts us to the fact that conspiracy theories and disinformation are consumed by polarized actors that are even more entrenched than partisan actors, and that it can be extremely difficult to pave a way toward conversation and consensus with them.
Data availability
The code, tweet IDs, and anonymized retweet networks for generating the results described in the paper are available at https://github.com/ECANET-research/finnish-nato.
Abbreviations
- NATO:
-
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- API:
-
Application Programming Interface
- E/I ratio:
-
external-internal ratio
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Acknowledgements
We want to thank Ted Hsuan Yun Chen, Risto Kunelius, and the anonymous reviewers for giving extremely insightful feedback on our study.
Funding
This work was supported by the Academy of Finland (320780, 320781, 332916, 349366, 352561), the Kone Foundation (201804137), and the Helsingin Sanomat Foundation (20210021).
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YX, AG, AM, TY, BK, and MK designed research, performed research, and analyzed data; YX, AG, AM, TY, and MK wrote the paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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Appendix
Appendix
1.1 A.1 Data collection keywords
Two of the authors who are experts on Finnish politics developed a list of keywords related to the Finnish NATO discussion. We here present the original keywords in Finnish along with their rough translations into English (many of the words are context specific): liittoutua (to ally), liittoutumaton (non-aligned), liittoutumattomana (as non-aligned), liittoutumattomuuden (non-alignment), liittoutumattomuus (non-alignment), liittoutuminen (allying), liittoutumisen (allying), nato (NATO), nato-kumppani (NATO partner), nato-kumppanien (NATO partners’), nato-kumppanit (NATO partners), nato-kumppanuus (NATO partnership), nato-yhteistyö (NATO cooperation), nato-yhteistyön (of NATO cooperation), nato-yhteistyössä (in NATO cooperation), nato-yhteistyötä (NATO cooperation), naton (of NATO), natoon (into NATO), natossa (in NATO), natosta (from NATO), puolustusliiton (defense alliance’s), puolustusliitosta (from the defense alliance), puolustusliitto (defense alliance), puolustusliittoon (into the defense alliance), sotilasliiton (military alliance’s), sotilasliitosta (from the military alliance), sotilasliitto (military alliance), sotilasliittoon (into the military alliance), suominatoon (Finland into NATO), natojäsenyyttä (NATO membership), natojäsenyyden (NATO membership’s), nato-trolli (NATO troll), nato-trollit (NATO trolls), nato-trollien (NATO trolls’), nato-trollaajat (NATO troll users), nato-trollaajien (NATO troll users’), nato-kiima (NATO heat), nato-kiiman (NATO heat’s), nato-kiimailijat (NATO enthusiasts), nato-kiimailijoiden (NATO enthusiasts’), natoteatteri (NATO theater), natoteatteria (NATO theater), and natoteatterista (from the NATO theater).
1.2 A.2 Tweet sampling statistics
For each group and each period, we sampled 42 tweets from those that got retweeted at least once in the group in the period. In total, 1800/221/416 tweets in the before period, 4188/343/1118 tweets in the right-after period, 2698/257/779 tweets in the 1-week-after period, and 1022/88/481 tweets in the 4-weeks-after period got retweeted at least once in respectively the pro, left-anti, and conspiracy-anti group.
1.3 A.3 Extra retweet network plots
Retweet networks in the 1-week-after and 4-weeks-after periods are plotted in Fig. 2.
1.4 A.4 Statistical test of network structure change
Due to the varying user group size in the retweet networks across different time periods, the observed change in E/I ratio can potentially be explained by statistical fluctuations. Here, we conduct a statistical test to see if the observed E/I ratio change after the invasion is higher in the left-anti group than in the conspiracy-anti group despite statistical fluctuations.
We suppose the retweets by each anti group are generated by a hypothetical model where each retweet is an external retweet of the pro group with probability \(p_{E}\), or an internal retweet with probability \(1-p_{E}\). We assume the uniform \(\operatorname{Beta}(1,1)\) prior on \(p_{E}\), which leads to the posterior distribution of \(p_{E}\sim \operatorname{Beta}(1+n_{E},1+n_{I})\), where \(n_{E}\) is the observed number of external retweets, and \(n_{I}\) is the observed number of internal retweets in a certain period. For respectively the before period and the right-after period, we calculate the posterior distribution of \(p_{E}\) in respectively the left-anti group and the conspiracy-anti group. For example in the left-anti group, \(p_{E}\sim \operatorname{Beta}(1+41,1+468)\) in the before period, and \(p_{E}\sim \operatorname{Beta}(1+166,1+193)\) in the right-after period; in the conspiracy-anti group, \(p_{E}\sim \operatorname{Beta}(1+96,1+1216)\) in the before period, and \(p_{E}\sim \operatorname{Beta}(1+389,1+1946)\) in the right-after period.
We run 100,000 rounds of simulations. In each round, for respectively the before period and the right-after period, we sample \(\hat{p}_{E}^{L}\) from the posterior distribution of \(p_{E}\) in the left-anti group, and \(\hat{p}_{E}^{C}\) from the posterior distribution of \(p_{E}\) in the conspiracy-anti group. We then numerically calculate the expected E/I ratio in the left-anti group \(R^{L}\) (resp. in the conspiracy-anti group \(R^{C}\)) based on the sampled \(\hat{p}_{E}^{L}\) (resp. \(\hat{p}_{E}^{C}\)). Then we obtain the E/I ratio change induced by the invasion in the left-anti group \(Q_{R}^{L}=R_{\mathrm{after}}^{L}/R_{\mathrm{before}}^{L}\) (resp. in the conspiracy-anti group \(Q_{R}^{C}=R_{\mathrm{after}}^{C}/R_{\mathrm{before}}^{C}\)). Finally, we obtain distributions of \(Q_{R}^{L}\) and \(Q_{R}^{C}\) over 100,000 simulations. We conduct a similar analysis also for the E/I ratio change in the 1-week-after period (as compared with the before period) and in the 4-weeks-after period (as compared with the before period).
As shown in Fig. 3 and Table 2, there is a certain range of variance in E/I ratio change that can be explained by statistical fluctuations, and the variance increases in later periods as the group size decreases. However, despite statistical fluctuations, the E/I ratio change induced by the invasion is still consistently higher in the left-anti group than in the conspiracy-anti group.
1.5 A.5 Tweets with unclear stance
In our tweet stance coding, a tweet is labeled “unclear” if it does not explicitly express a positive or negative attitude toward NATO. Thus, in general, the label “unclear” does not necessarily imply an ambiguous attitude toward NATO, but rather that the tweet does not clearly indicate any attitude. For example, tweets labeled “unclear” can be reactions to what was currently taking place in the Ukraine war (while NATO was also mentioned) or in the Finnish NATO policy process.
More specifically in the pro-NATO group, many tweets were labeled “pro” in the earlier periods because they were advocating for two citizen initiatives that were pro-NATO; but later on, these initiatives became irrelevant because the needed signatures were collected, and the NATO policy process moved on. Thus in later periods, many clearly pro-NATO tweets disappeared from the pro-NATO group and, for example, many tweets condemning Russia’s actions in Ukraine took their place. The latter are often labeled “unclear” as they are less clearly in favor of NATO, even though such a stance might be implicit. In general, the increase of tweets with unclear stance does not suggest that the group moved toward an ambiguous stance on NATO.
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Xia, Y., Gronow, A., Malkamäki, A. et al. The Russian invasion of Ukraine selectively depolarized the Finnish NATO discussion on Twitter. EPJ Data Sci. 13, 1 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjds/s13688-023-00441-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjds/s13688-023-00441-2