Russian internet trolls are setting up Twitter accounts that share uplifting or heartwarming messages to build a massive following, before spewing tweets that plant distrust in the White House ahead of the 2020 election.

Russia's 2020 disinformation operations have been revealed in a new bombshell Rolling Stone report by Clemson University professors Darren Linvill and Patrick Warren, who study Russian social media trolling.

The experts reveal that Russian operatives use 'Trojan horse' tweets that discuss popular topics, such as celebrities doing charity work, to lure followers

One account @IamTyraJackson started out sharing tweets about an NFL star who gave back to his community by building houses for single mothers. After picking up a following, the same account started to controversial political tweets.

Clemson University professors and Russian trolling experts Darren Linvill and Patrick Warren reveal how Russia's 2020 disinformation operations work by sharing 'Trojan horse' uplifting tweets, such as this one above, to gain a following, before sharing tweets that plant doubt and distrust in the White House

Linvill and Warren worked with Twitter to suspend Russian-operated accounts. The last pinned tweet from the Russian-operated account @PoliteMelanie said: 'I am pretty sure that undocumented immigrants commit less crimes than the election campaign staff of Donald Trump'

On August 22, 2019 the @IamTyraJackson account went viral amassing nearly 290,000 likes on Twitter - nearly double the average number of likes on a typical tweet by President Donald Trump.

The tweet was two pictures of former NFL star Warrick Dunna and a description of his charity work, praising him as #BlackExcellence.

The anonymous account that existed for just a few months surged in popularity and the tweet about Dunn was retweeted by his former coat as did rapper Chuck D. Hundreds.

Linvill and Warren reveal that these kinds of accounts are run by Russia's Internet Research Agency - the very group that was at the center of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation for interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Their goodhearted nature helped them collect a large number of followers that they can later influence with more divisive tweets that cast doubt in the U.S. government.

Their report comes after two years of research and after poring through thousands of Russian tweets and data publicly released from Twitter. Together the researchers and Twitter identified disinformation campaigns and suspended Russian-operated accounts.

'We believe @IamTyraJackson was an account operated by the successors to Russia’s Internet Research Agency (IRA),' the report said.

'Special Counsel Robert Mueller indicted the IRA for waging a massive information war during the 2016 U.S. election. Since then, the IRA seems to have been subsumed into Russia’s Federal News Agency, but its work continues. In the case of @IamTyraJackson, the IRA’s goal was two-fold: Grow an audience in part through heartwarming, inspiring messages, and use that following to spread messages promoting division, distrust, and doubt,' it added.

@PoliteMelanie is a Russian-operated account that Linvill and Warren helped shut down. It boasted 20,000 followers and shared tweets like this one that criticized Christian conservatives as homophobic and ignorant to subtly plant division among Twitter users

A similar account controlled by Russian operatives was @PoliteMelanie, which boasted 20,000 followers.

The account was identified in fall 2018 and shared a tweet that said: 'My cousin is studying sociology in university. Last week she and her classmates polled over 1,000 conservative Christians. "What would you do if you discovered that your child was a homo sapiens?" 55% said they would disown them and force them to leave their home.'

The tweet wasn't blatantly controversial, but it subtly suggested that conservative Christians are homophobic and ignorant, and was enough to drive a wedge between Twitter users.

The tweet ended up receiving more than 90,000 retweets and nearly 300,000 likes.

Most of @PoliteMelanie's followers were left-wing Americans, not outspoken #MAGA supporters.

'These accounts also harness the goodwill they’ve built by engaging in these communities for specific political ends. Consistent with past Russian activity, they attacked moderate politicians as a method of bolstering more polarizing candidates,' the two experts said.

Other tweets on PoliteMelanie's account are of a similar political nature.

The account's pinned tweet said: 'I am pretty sure that undocumented immigrants commit less crimes than the election campaign staff of Donald Trump.'

Another tweet on the account was a poll that asked: 'When the economy will finally crash who is going to be blamed for it?' with answer options being 'Obama, Democrats, Hillary, Fake News Media'.

Linvill and Warren reveal that these kinds of accounts are run by Russia's Internet Research Agency - the very group that was at the center of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation for interference in the 2016 presidential election. One of the offices of the IRA pictured above St. Petersburg, Russia

The experts say Russian social media trolls successfully got Trump elected by building support on the right for Trump and lowering voter turnout on the left for Clinton

'Professional trolls are good at their job. They have studied us. They understand how to harness our biases (and hashtags) for their own purposes. They know what pressure points to push and how best to drive us to distrust our neighbors....They don’t go to social media looking for a fight; they go looking for new best friends. And they have found them,' the researchers said.

What is the IRA? The Internet Research Agency is a Russian company that engages in online influence operations for Russian businesses and political interests The group is linked to Russian oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin based in Saint Petersburg. The United States Intelligence Community said in a January 2017 report that the IRA was a 'troll farm'. 'They previously were devoted to supporting Russian actions in Ukraine and started to advocate for President-elect Trump as early as December 2015,' as per that report. The IRA was indicted by a US grand jury on February 16, 2018 for violating criminal laws with the intent to interfere 'with U.S. elections and political processes', as per the Justice Department Source: Wikipedia Advertisement

And the Russian trolls aren't just on Twitter, they're using the same tactics on Instagram, Stitcher, Reddit, Google+, Tumblr, Medium, Vine, Meeetup and even Pokemon Go.

Linvill and Warren issue a warning in their report saying: 'We need to learn to question our own and others’ biases on social media.'

The experts say Russian social media trolls are powerful and successfully got Trump elected.

'Our research has shown how Russia strategically employed social media to build support on the right for Trump and lower voter turnout on the left for Clinton,' they said.

However, Russia's goal, according to these researchers, isn't to support Donald Trump. The larger agenda is to see the downfall of the American government and the greater democracy.

'But the IRA was not created to collude with the Trump campaign. They existed well before Trump rode down that escalator and announced his candidacy, and we assume they will exist in some form well after he is gone,' Linvill and Warren said.

'Russia’s goals are to further widen existing divisions in the American public and decrease our faith and trust in institutions that help maintain a strong democracy,' they added.