“The war the US establishment wages with our journalists is dedicated to all the starry-eyed idealists who still believe in freedom of speech,” RT Editor in Chief Margarita Simonyan said at the time. “Those who invented it, have buried it.”

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“Stuck in traffic?” one ad reads. “Lost an election? Blame it on us!” Another says: “The CIA calls us a ‘propaganda machine.’ Find out what we call the CIA.”

Justice Department spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle said the agency does not comment on which groups “may or not be required to register” as foreign agents, and RT doesn’t appear on the online FARA registry.

“FARA does not in any way affect the contents of the message by the press or others,” Hornbuckle wrote in an email. “It merely requires transparency about who controls the messenger.”

Anna Belkina, a spokeswoman for RT, said the ads were intended to run for a month but would be removed on the advice of its legal team. She also denied that the ads referred to Clinton’s election loss.

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“The campaign was developed and platforms secured prior to the receipt of correspondence from the DOJ demanding FARA registration, and the mounting pressure on our US operations that surrounds this,” Belkina wrote in an email. “Due to the circumstances that RT America is facing, therefore, we are forced to replace our campaign with alternative advertising, which you will see in the coming weeks.”

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She continued: “The ability for current, politically motivated, Russophobic orators to twist and manipulate the ads for nefarious purposes, has left us where we are today.”

James Kirchick, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution who wrote in a Washington Post piece last month that RT should register under FARA, said the advertisement controversy “seems like a giant PR stunt on their part.”

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