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American Influencer Jackson Hinkle Under Scrutiny for Alleged Ties to Foreign Propaganda, Pro-Hamas Platforms, and Anti-Western Campaigns
By: Jerome Brookshire
A 25-year-old American social media influencer with millions of followers is at the center of an explosive new report that links him to foreign propaganda campaigns, Islamist extremists, and pro-Russian disinformation. Jackson Hinkle, a self-styled “MAGA communist” with over three million followers on X (formerly Twitter), is accused of using his large online platform to amplify anti-Western conspiracies, spread state-sponsored disinformation, and serve as a megaphone for terror groups like Hezbollah and Hamas.
🧵The Rise and Fall of Jackson Hinkle
Hinkle started out in the environmentalist movement, particularly its subsidiary antinuclear movement, playing the role of a bleeding heart liberal. He was seen taking a knee with BLM, protesting the death of George Floyd. pic.twitter.com/I9w568eqmS
— Awesome Jew (@Awesome_Jew_) December 12, 2024
According to a detailed investigation by the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI), Hinkle’s activities “raise concerns regarding his affiliations and potential alignment with foreign interests.” The New York Post, which has extensively reviewed the NCRI study, reported that Hinkle has become a key player in what experts call the evolving landscape of narrative warfare — where misinformation, AI-driven amplification, and diaspora influence operations blur the lines between digital influence and real-world threat.
Hinkle’s rise from a failed 2019 city council bid in San Clemente, California — backed by the Democratic Socialists of America — to international infamy has been marked by sharp ideological shifts and provocative affiliations. According to the information provided in The New York Post report, Hinkle now touts himself as a “MAGA communist,” a term that fuses far-left economic rhetoric with nationalist populism, and one he uses to court both anti-capitalist and anti-globalist audiences.
BREAKING: American activist Jackson Hinkle is speaking in front of hundreds of thousands of Houthis fighters in Yemen. pic.twitter.com/KVEWDTbPAv
— TaraBull (@TaraBull808) March 28, 2025
The NCRI study details Hinkle’s participation in a pro-Houthi conference in Sana’a, Yemen, where he met with Yahya Saree, the group’s military spokesman. While there, he gave a speech condemning U.S. military action in Yemen — a stance aligning him with an Iran-backed group the U.S. government designates as a terrorist organization.
Worse still, as The New York Post report uncovered, Hinkle also attended the funeral of a Hezbollah leader in Beirut, where he gave interviews to Hezbollah-owned Al-Manar TV and Iran’s Channel 3, bolstering the credibility of groups actively hostile to U.S. and Israeli interests.
The New York Post also reported that Hinkle has given his platform to Hamas, conducting an interview with Basem Naim, a former health minister for Gaza and senior official in the terrorist organization. These appearances have drawn condemnation from analysts who say they normalize and amplify the voices of violent extremists.
But Hinkle’s involvement doesn’t stop at the Middle East. According to the NCRI report cited by The New York Post, the influencer has played a role in spreading a Pakistani intelligence narrative following a terrorist attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 people. Just a week after interviewing former Pakistani High Commissioner Abdul Basit, Hinkle publicly accused India of staging a “false flag” attack — a position pushed by Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).
The NCRI claims this disinformation was bolstered by generative AI-powered bots, which disseminated pro-Pakistan memes and slogans under fake social media accounts. Many of these accounts circulated Hinkle’s false-flag theory, dramatically multiplying its reach.
Perhaps most troubling is Hinkle’s deepening connection to Russian influence operations. As reported by The New York Post, he was recently appointed an official representative to the Russophile Congress, a Moscow-backed body established to defend Russia’s image abroad and discredit Western institutions. The organization includes notorious Russian oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev, a financier of the 2014 invasion of Crimea who was later indicted by the U.S. Department of Justice for violating sanctions.
An NCRI analyst told The New York Post that Hinkle, by joining the congress, “could be considered an asset to Russian Intelligence.” Hinkle has also praised Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian ultranationalist philosopher and close Putin confidant who once declared that Ukraine should be “vanished from the Earth.”
While Hinkle has denied taking payments from foreign governments — a claim he reiterated in an interview with The New York Times in 2024 — his participation in state-sponsored media outlets and propaganda events continues to raise serious red flags among intelligence analysts and watchdog groups.
Hinkle’s digital influence, while banned from YouTube, Instagram, and Twitch, remains potent thanks to his massive following on X. As The New York Post report highlighted, the NCRI study warns of a “dangerous evolution in narrative warfare” in which Western influencers, diaspora communities, and AI bots converge to spread disinformation on a global scale.
“The use of generative AI, diaspora targeting, and collaboration with Western influencers marks a dangerous evolution in narrative warfare,” the NCRI report stated.
“Left unchallenged, these operations risk fueling real-world violence and eroding trust in legitimate attribution on the global stage.”
When contacted by The New York Post, Hinkle responded with characteristic defiance. “If you wonder why independent journalists are amassing such large followings, it’s simple: no one reads the mainstream media anymore,” he said, dismissing criticism as attacks from “wealthy global oligarchs” bent on silencing “truth-telling journalists like me.”
Yet critics, including analysts at the NCRI, contend that Hinkle is not engaged in independent journalism but in a calculated campaign of information subversion, possibly coordinated with adversarial states.
Jackson Hinkle’s trajectory from obscure city council hopeful to global amplifier of hostile foreign narratives has placed him squarely in the crosshairs of national security experts, social media watchdogs, and investigative journalists — notably those at The New York Post, which has been at the forefront of exposing Hinkle’s activities.
With growing evidence linking him to terrorist groups, state-run disinformation, and foreign influence operations, questions are mounting not just about Hinkle’s motives, but about the broader ecosystem that enables such figures to thrive. The lines between free speech and fifth-column activism are blurring — and as The New York Post warned, ignoring these digital threats could come at a steep cost to democratic societies.

