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Russian strike forces in Crimea amass near Ukraine border

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1437432364-5524Russia is strengthening military units in Crimea near the Ukrainian de-facto border, deploying paratroopers, the press service of Ukraine’s National Security and Defence reported on Tuesday, according to Ukraine Today.

25.11.2015 | 09:30

“Russia is quickly amassing its offensive forces in northern Crimea. On November 24, five Russian IL-76 military transport aircrafts transferred two battalion tactical groups of paratroopers, belonging to the Russian Airborne Armed Forces, from the city of Ivanovo (central Russia) to the Dzhankoy airfield in Crimea”, the press service statement reads, Ukraine Today reported.

The 97th Russian Airborne Assault Regiment stationed in the Russian city of Novorossiysk has also been deployed 3km south-west of Dzhankoy, some 30 minutes’ drive away from Ukraine’s Chongar crossing.

READ ALSORussia pulls tanks, Grads to Crimea-Kherson demarcation line in wake of blackout – MIA official“Russian troops in occupied Crimea have significantly increased their offensive capabilities with well-trained units (who are) ready to launch attacks”, the NSDC reports.

Yesterday, on November 24, a dozen Russian tanks reportedly approached the line of contact between the Crimea peninsula and the Ukrainian mainland following blasts over the weekend that knocked out electricity transmission lines, leading to a blackout across parts of the occupied Black Sea region.
Read more on UNIAN:http://www.unian.info/war/1193378-russian-strike-forces-in-crimea-amass-near-ukraine-border-nsdc.html


Filed under: #RussiaFail, Crimea, Information operations, Russia, Ukraine Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies, Crimea, Russia

Russian Pilot Safe After Jet Shot Down on Syria-Turkey Border

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Russian Pilot Safe After Jet Shot Down on Syria-Turkey Border

MOSCOW — The Russian pilot plucked from behind enemy lines after his jet was shot down by Turkey said Wednesday he was eager to get back to the battlefield.

A 12-hour rescue operation successfully brought Capt. Konstantin Murtakhtin — who had ejected from the plane — back to a Russian base in Syria’s Latakia province early Wednesday, according to a tweet from the Defense Ministry.

Murtakhtin said he was “alright in general now” following the dramatic events.

“Our military medics can work wonders,” he said in remarks carried on Russian television.

“I am very eager to be discharged from the hospital to get back to the ranks. I will be asking the command to keep me on this base — I have a little debt to pay back for the commander,” he added, referring to Lt. Col. Oleg Peshkov, who Moscow said died in the ordeal.

Murtakhtin’s warplane crashed in an area controlled by militants trying to overthrow President Bashar Assad, a key Russian ally who the West accuses of trying to prop up through airstrikes.

Russia says it is targeting ISIS with airstrikes — but many areas where the extremists don’t have a presence have been bombed and other anti-Assad groups say their positions have been hit.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that Murtakhtin had managed to evade capture in hostile territory with the help of Syrian special forces.

Murtakhtin was awarded an Order of Courage medal, while Peshkov was posthumously given the Hero of Russia award — one of the highest honorary titles bestowed by the Russian government.

Image: Russian warplane is shot down in Syria
A Russian warplane crashes in flames in northern Syria after it was shot down by Turkish fighter jets on Tuesday. Haberturk via Reuters

Russia has flatly denied Turkey’s claim that its pilots were warned at least 10 times in five minutes before the jet was shot down.

“The Russian plane was shot from behind, without warning,” Russian Ambassador to France Alexander Orlov told Europe 1 radio.

Murtakhtin also rejected Turkey’s version, saying that “there was no contact at all … . The missile hit the plane’s tail all of a sudden. We didn’t even have a visual of it.”

Russia’s military said that Alexander Pozynich, who was among those dispatched to rescue the pilots, had died in the operation. Pozynich was also awarded the Order of Courage posthumously.

The incident between Russia and Turkey has ratcheted up East-West tensions and threatened to scupper international efforts to defeat ISIS and find a diplomatic solution to the Syrian civil war.

There were signs that Turkey was attempting to prevent the situation from boiling over. Turkey’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement late Tuesday saying “we have no intentions whatsoever to escalate the situation. Our contacts with the Russian authorities are ongoing to this end.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said while Moscow will not wage war on Turkey, it would seriously reconsider relations and does not have plans to host any visits from Turkish officials.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/russian-pilot-safe-after-jet-shot-down-syria-turkey-border-n469361


Filed under: #RussiaFail, Information operations

Opposite of Rising: Falling?

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Russia and China appear to be rising.

What is the US doing?  Falling.

In the information world, in the public view, in the eyes of the world.

Why?  Because the US refuses to play in the Information world.  Big Boy propaganda, countering Big Boy propaganda, disinformation, exposing disinformation, misinformation, countering misinformation.

Ben Rhodes. Why do you still have a job?


Filed under: #RussiaFail, Information operations

Russia, do you monitor the Guard Frequency, and how?

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6976422-3x2-700x467Editor’s note: Russia’s probable response to the release of the Turkish recording of multiple warnings to the Russian pilot is predictable.

It’s embedded in their Information Warfare DNA:

  • Deny, deny, deny
  • Produce a recording of a Russian pilot, and a pitifully bad Turkish speaker playing the part of a Turkish air controller, stating ‘thank you for avoiding Turkish airspace!’  Of course the speakers will sound like they are reading from a script.
  • Putin will claim, once again, that Russia is the victim. ‘Russia will respond with the harshest of actions’.
  • Russia will respond with the mildest of reactions.

I’m only surprised Putin has not picked up on the Hillary Clinton phrase (from 1998), and has not said ‘A vast Western conspiracy!’

On the original website, the audio is available (link at the bottom).  “Guard” refers to the Guard Frequency, the aircraft emergency frequency, which is supposed to be monitored by all aircraft.  Russian civilian aircraft monitor this frequently, if this particular aircraft did not, they were just plain wrong.  I did a fairly extensive online search for Su-24 and Black Box and Flight Recorder.  Zero, zip, nada.  This intrigued me, so I pushed further.

I asked an aviation expert about Su-24 Black Boxes, if they have them.  His answer:

Never known Russian fighters to carry them. Moreover I looked for data on radios to see if they have capability to use NATO/ICAO spec VHF AM 121.5 MHz and UHF AM 243 MHz but could find no data.

It looks like Russian Su-24s might not even monitor the Guard Frequency.  Both Turkey and Russia may be telling the truth.

Again, my aviation expert, when I specifically asked about Russians and the Guard Frequency:

They might not have had capability to monitor Guard. They may not have had procedure to monitor Guard. They made have been ordered not to monitor Guard. They may not have had sufficient English language skills to monitor Guard …..

All likely irrelevant as they were baiting the Turks. Never bait the Turks, they have no sense of humour when it comes to matters of honour.

Somebody needs to ask Russia, point blank, do you monitor the Guard Frequency, and how?  This is a simple question which may have a strategic impact.


Turkish military releases recording of warning to Russian jet

Surviving crew member of downed plane is rescued in 12-hour mission and says there were no warnings

The Turkish military has released what it says is an audio recording of a warning it gave to a Russian fighter jet before the aircraft was shot down near the Syrian border, hours after the surviving Russian crew member insisted there had been no contact.

A voice on the Turkish recording can be heard saying “change your heading”. But Konstantin Murakhtin, a navigator who was rescued in a joint operation by Syrian and Russian commandos, told Russian media: “There were no warnings, either by radio or visually. There was no contact whatsoever.”

He also denied entering Turkish airspace. “I could see perfectly on the map and on the ground where the border was and where we were. There was no danger of entering Turkey,” he said.

The apparent hardening of both countries’ versions of events came as Russian warplanes carried out heavy raids in Syria’s northern Latakia province, where the plane came down. Tuesday’s incident – the first time a Nato member state has shot down a Russian warplane since the Korean war – risks provoking a clash over the ongoing conflict in Syria, where Russia has intervened to prop up the regime of Bashar al-Assad.

A Turkish official said his country stood by its version of events. The Turkish military has said it delivered multiple warnings to the plane as it neared the border and shot it down after it entered the southern province of Hatay. “We shared concrete evidence of airspace violation with relevant international bodies,” the official said. “From where we stand, there’s nothing to discuss.”

Turkey’s military said on Wednesday night that it invited Russian military attaches to its headquarters and explained that the plane was shot down because its rules of engagement went into effect after the jet did not respond to warnings.

In a written statement, the Turkish armed forces said it had made great efforts to find and rescue the pilots of the plane and that it had also called military authorities in Moscow and expressed readiness for “all kinds of cooperation”.

Russian officials said earlier that Murakhtin, one of two airmen who ejected from the downed Su-24, was “alive and well” after a 12-hour rescue operation succeeded. The second airman was killed by gunfire from the ground, apparently from Syrian Turkmen fighters.

Rescued navigator Konstantin Murakhtin.
Rescued navigator Konstantin Murakhtin. Photograph: YouTube

The Russian agency LifeNews said Murakhtin was found by an 18-man Syrian special forces team. It said he had hidden for many hours after landing, and was found by a radio signal.

A military source from the Syrian government said: “Special operations units from the Syrian Arab army conducted last night a special operation in which it penetrated areas where the terrorists are present and was able to rescue one of the pilots of the Russian plane.”

Speaking on Russian television after his rescue, Murakhtin said he knew the area where his plane came down “like the back of my hand”. He was receiving medical treatment and said he wanted to stay in Syria and continue flying missions.

The dead pilot was named by Russia as Lieutenant Colonel Oleg Peshkov. One of the rescue helicopters sent to search for the men was hit by rebel fire, forcing it to make an emergency landing. One of the marines on board, Alexander Pozynich, was killed.

Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, said Peshkov would be awarded the country’s highest military honour, the Hero of Russia award. The Order of Courage would be awarded to Murakhtin and posthumously to Pozynich.

Russia has repeatedly said its plane did not enter Turkish airspace. On Tuesday Putin said the downing of the plane was a “stab in the back by the accomplices of terrorists” and promised “serious consequences”.

Turkey said the plane entered its airspace for 17 seconds, in what it said was the latest in a string of provocative attacks on Ankara-backed Turkmen fighters close to the Turkish border. Last Friday the Turkish foreign ministry summoned Russia’s ambassador to complain about the incursions.

Screen Shot 2015-11-26 at 7.52.46 AM

The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, repeated his insistence that the Russian jet was in Turkish airspace when it was shot down and said parts of the wreckage fell into Turkey, injuring two people. Ankara had no wish to escalate the incident and was only defending “our own security and the rights of our brothers” in Syria, he said.

The Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, said he had spoken to his Turkish counterpart for around an hour on Wednesday. He said the attack looked like a “pre-planned provocation”, and even if Turkish claims that the plane had strayed into Turkish airspace proved to be correct, there were no grounds for shooting it down.

Later, in a telephone call with John Kerry, the US secretary of state, Lavrov said Turkey’s actions were a “gross violation” of an agreement between Moscow and Washington on air space safety over Syria. The state department said Kerry called for calm and more dialogue between Turkish and Russian officials.

In Moscow, a crowd of youths gathered outside the Turkish embassy and threw rocks. Some of the ground-floor windows in the building were broken. Police at the scene did not make arrests, according to witnesses.

turkish-embassy-protest3
Russian protesters pelt the Turkish embassy in Moscow with eggs and tomatoes on Wednesday.

Russian officials made it clear that despite the fury the reaction would be measured. There is no talk of a military response, and no suggestion that diplomatic relations could be cut or the Turkish ambassador expelled from Moscow. However, the tone of relations between the two countries is likely to change dramatically.

Lavrov cancelled a visit to Istanbul planned for Wednesday, and recommended Russian citizens not travel to Turkey because of the terrorist threat.

Russia’s state tourism agency said it was banning all tour operators from offering holidays in Turkey. There has been no suggestion of cutting air links, but anysuch move would hurt the Turkish economy. About four million Russians a year visit Turkey, mainly for tourism.

A Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, hit out at the US state department official Mark Toner, who said the Turkmen fighters who shot the Russian airman as he parachuted to the ground could have been acting in self defence. “Remember these words, remember them forever. I will never forget them, I promise,” Zakharova wrote on Facebook.

Also on Wednesday, Russia announced it would send its latest air-defence system, the S-400, to its base at Latakia to back up Russian air operations in Syria. The defence ministry has vowed to continue its strikes on Islamic State. Moscow says it is fighting Isis, but western capitals have said the majority of the strikes appear to be targeting other groups.

85881226_russian_airstrikes_syria_624_v8

Moscow and the west are still at odds over whether Assad is part of the problem or the solution to the Syrian crisis. The French president, François Hollande, will travel to Moscow on Thursday for meetings with Putin to discuss coordinating action to fight Isis.

Activists said there were ongoing clashes on Wednesday in the northern Latakia countryside where the plane fell, as well as airstrikes by either Russian or Syrian warplanes. Jahed Ahmad, a spokesman for a rebel brigade in the region affiliated with the Free Syrian Army, said the Russians appeared to be taking revenge for the plane’s downing by Turkey and were providing cover for advancing Syrian ground forces and their Lebanese Hezbollah allies.

The area has long been a flashpoint of battles between the Syrian government and an alliance of rebels that includes Jabhat al-Nusra, al-Qaida’s wing in Syria. The region straddles the Syrian-Turkish border that separates Latakia and Hatay in southern Turkey. The city of Latakia is one of the Assad regime’s redoubts and a key part of its sphere of control in western Syria.

The Syrian military said in a statement that Turkey’s downing of the Russian plane was a “blatant attack on Syrian sovereignty”. It said: “This confirms without a doubt that the Turkish government stands by terrorism.”

Turkey has long opposed the Assad regime and has backed rebel groups bent on overthrowing him. The country hosts two million Syrian refugees and shares a long border with its southern neighbour.

Source: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/nov/25/second-russian-pilot-shot-down-turkey-alive-ambassador


Filed under: #RussiaFail, Information operations, Russia, Syria, Turkey Tagged: Russia, Syria, Turkey

The Next War Will Be An Information War, And We’re Not Ready For It

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While I appreciate Dr. Stupples’ article and his intention to highlight our non-existent counter to adversarial Information Warfare, he made far too many errors in what appears to be a new subject for him: Information Warfare at the national level.

I wrote a response in the comment section in the original article, but it would take pages and pages and pages to properly address my thoughts.  He mentions Russia and China…  when I saw China mentioned, I knew he was thinking of cyber and electronic warfare.  Living and working in the UK, I am certain Dr. Stupples knows about Information Warfare and Psyop waged against Russia, and the UK has a much more whole-of-government approach than does the US.  Beyond Cyber, EW and Psyop, I am afraid I must regretfully judge him lacking in knowledge of the greater field of information warfare. We further complicate matters by not having a recognized name for IW, in the West, at the national level.  In the US we were forced to change the name from Information Warfare to Information Operations because some people at the US Department of State simply said “We don’t do warfare”.

This article will haunt me, I am certain, for days.  Not for what it said, but for what it did not say.

To get more of an idea, please read “Propaganda and Counter-Terrorism” by Dr. Emma Briant. Twice. Her book is the definitive book for IW (or whatever the heck you want to call it) organizations in both the UK and the US.  …and it still falls short of everything in the discipline.

One last thought. It was very nice to see the late Dan Kuehl’s name mentioned at the beginning of the article. My wonderful friend, mentor and sometimes father figure, Dr. Dan Kuehl, his efforts continue and always will.


The next war will be an information war, and we’re not ready for it

November 26, 2015 11.35am EST

https://theconversation.com/the-next-war-will-be-an-information-war-and-were-not-ready-for-it-51218#_=_

By Professor of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and Director of Electronic Warfare Research, City University London

In the 21st century the familiar form of warfare in which physical damage is meted out against the opponent’s military forces and infrastructure has become only one form of attack. Instead, states are increasingly launching non-lethal attacks against an enemy’s information systems – this is the rise of information warfare.

Dan Kuehl of the National Defence University defined information warfare as the “conflict or struggle between two or more groups in the information environment”. You might say that just sounds like a fancier way of describing hacking. In fact it’s a lot more sinister and a lot more dangerous than its somewhat tame name implies.

Western leaders are investing billions to develop capabilities matching those of China and Russia, establishing military commands for attacking, defending and exploiting the vulnerabilities of electronic communications networks. Information warfare combines electronic warfare, cyberwarfare and psy-ops (psychological operations) into a single fighting organisation, and this will be central to all warfare in the future.

The anatomy of information warfare

The free flow of information within and between nation states is essential to business, international relations and social cohesion, as much as information is essential to a military force’s ability to fight. Communications today lean heavily on the internet, or via communications using various parts of the electromagnetic spectrum (such as radio or microwaves) through terrestrial communications networks or satellite networks in space. We live in a highly connected world, but it doesn’t take much to tip over into instability or even chaos.

Electronic warfare is used to disrupt or neutralise these electromagnetic transmissions. These might be electronic counter measures and jammingused to cripple military communications or weapons guidance systems. Or it can include civil uses, for example the ADS-B air traffic control system used by aircraft to avoid in-flight collisions, or the recently adopted European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS) that replaces railway trackside signalling and provides full control of trains. Jamming or degrading either of these would cause chaos.

We have become familiar with cyber-attacks launched through the internet against digital networks, which can make it impossible for businesses to operate. Enormous damage can follow, in cost and reputation, as seen from attacks on Sony Pictures and TalkTalk. Bringing down a stock exchange could cause massive financial losses. Cyber-attacks can also be directed at industrial control systems used in manufacturing plants or in power, water and gas utilities. With the capacity to affect such a wide range of national infrastructure lives would be put at risk.

Psy-ops are aimed more at degrading the morale and well-being of a nation’s citizens. This might include spreading false information, rumour and fear through social media and news outlets. The great level of connectedness that populations have today is a strength, but being instantly connected means that misinformation and fear can also spread rapidly, resulting in panic.

Information warfare, then, is the integration of electronic warfare, cyberwarfare and psychological operations, for both attack and defence.

The joined-up approach to the many aspects of information warfare. US DoD

Information war has already broken out

It’s suspected that Russia has launched increasingly sophisticated non-lethal attacks on its neighbours, for example against Estonia, Georgia andUkraine, which experienced an integrated onslaught of electronic, cyber-attacks and psychological operations.

There is convincing circumstantial evidence that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan gas pipeline in Georgia was targeted using a sophisticated computer virus which caused an uncontrolled pressure build-up that led to an explosion. Even the so-called Islamic State has shown it has a good understanding of how to use and manipulate social media for use in psychological warfare. IS is reportedly building greater cyberwar and electronic warfare capabilities, as it recognises that winning the information war is key.

A response to unconventional warfare

In response to the threat of information war the British Army has established two new formations: the 77th Brigade for dealing with psychological operations, and the 1st Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Brigade which combines electronic warfare and intelligence. Hundreds of computer experts will be recruited as reservists, trained with the help of GCHQ’s Joint Cyber Unit.

These are moves in the right direction, but the approach is too piecemeal. A recent RAND Corporation report argued for a highly integrated approach to all aspects of information warfare in order to present an effective defence force. In the US, Admiral Michael S. Rogers released a Cyber Command vision statement, describing how it would defend Department of Defence networks, systems and information against cyber attacks and provide support to military and contingency operations. The US approach is more integrated but this is only the case within the military – from a national perspective both countries lack an overall integrated approach with a common command structure that includes threats to civilian infrastructure.

So while the concept of information war appears to be well understood the aspects of it are not being addressed together, and such siloed thinking could lead to gaps in our security. Western governments have failed to fully grasp the vulnerability of electronic communications and the enormous risks this poses to critical infrastructure, transport, and the safety of civilians.

The US director of intelligence has emphasised the enormity of the cyber-threat facing the US, while British General Sir Nicholas Houghton in a speech at Chatham House observed that most acts of physical war today incorporate an online aspect, where social networks are exploited to manipulate opinion and perception. He also acknowledged that the tactics employed by Russia combine aspects of information war and also counter-intelligence, espionage, economic warfare and the sponsoring of proxies.

We need to better understand the full scope of information warfare as it evolves, identify where we are most vulnerable, and then establish a single point of responsibility to implement defence mechanisms. Because those adversaries that are unconstrained by western policies, or by ethical or legal codes, can and will exploit our vulnerabilities.

Source: https://theconversation.com/the-next-war-will-be-an-information-war-and-were-not-ready-for-it-51218#_=_


Filed under: Information operations

The Pro-Russian Disinformation Campaign In The Czech Republic And Slovakia

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Screen Shot 2015-11-26 at 10.59.24 AM

Editor’s note: Over the course of the past 20+ months I have witnessed a huge influx of pro-Russian disinformation.  I warms my heart that this is being examined.

However…  I received feedback on this from my Czech resident expert in the Czech Republic, Dr. Veronika Valdova.

1)      It does not have methodology. PSSI has enough resources to conduct a proper study. I can do that for them/with them, but they need to pay me.

2)      Picking four relatively obscure media outlets does not do the trick. It is necessary to screen the whole media spectrum in a comprehensive and rigorous manner, i.e. snapshot over two months, and quantify the findings. Mainstream media are often picking up and republishing highly controversial content. To name and shame mainstream publications, one needs a very good research methodology, to make the findings and conclusions valid.

3)      Some directories suppress or amplify content as they deem fit. Their impact is significant because of reader behavior. Naturally, frequently used directories have higher impact. This needs to be quantified.

4)      Television should not be disregarded, it is a major influencer. The paper noted the role of pro-Russian president Milos Zeman, although very carefully – calling him “a strong supporter of Czech-Russian relations”. My take is that this is an understatement. Despite the controversies he still has very strong popular support. This orientation gives information coming from Russian and pro-Russian sources much more legitimacy and credibility than it otherwise would have, at least among certain audiences.

5)  PSSI should contact other gov’t institutions and ask them to provide a comprehensive library service.   ProQuest would help, for instance.

I was going to complain about the All-Caps title…  her expertise is much greater than mine in methodological critiques.

Bottom line, this study is a good first step but it needs a refined and disciplined methodology to achieve professional standards.


THE PRO-RUSSIAN DISINFORMATION CAMPAIGN IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC AND SLOVAKIA

TYPES OF MEDIA SPREADING PRO-RUSSIAN PROPAGANDA, THEIR CHARACTERISTICS AND FREQUENTLY USED NARRATIVES

By Ivana Smoleňová

SUMMARY

SUMMARY FINDINGS

• In the Czech Republic and Slovakia, the proRussian disinformation campaign originates from multiple sources: numerous pro-Russian websites, informal groups and communities on social media, several printed periodicals, radio broadcasts, and non-governmental organizations. Their pro-Kremlin messages are amplified through extensive social media activity, and through the organization of public events and gatherings.

• Common characteristics of the pro-Kremlin media and websites in CR and SR are as follows:

− They claim no allegiance to Kremlin;

− Send very similar messages and use similar arguments;

− Are strongly anti-Western, most frequently targeting the United States, Ukraine and the West in general;

− To lesser extent, are ProKremlin and pro-Putin; − Heavily use conspiracy theories, combining facts and half-truths;

− Have negative undertones, usually depicting moral, economic, political and social degradation and predicting a bleak future, including the collapse or clash of civilizations;

− Frequently use loaded language and emotionally charged words, stories and pictures;

− Are interconnected and supported by various public personalities that give the campaign both credibility and public visibility.

− The advent of the pro-Kremlin media and organizations in these two countries predates 2014, as many were founded in 2013 or earlier, but their rhetoric and activities hardened and intensified with the crises in Ukraine.

• Their motives, origins and organizational and financial structures remain, in most cases, unknown. To date, all efforts by investigative journalists or activists have only resulted in finding dubious links and facts, but no direct proof of Russian involvement.

• The lack of transparency is one of their strongest assets, as any accusation of ulterior motives is depicted as an attempt to suppress ‘alternative opinions‘ and any challenger is branded ‘America‘s propaganda puppet.‘

• The most important role of these new proKremlin media, and especially their social media channels, is that they facilitate vivid platforms where like-minded criticism and discontent can be shared and, to the Kremlin’s benefit, spread and amplified.

• The goal of the pro-Russian campaign is to shift public opinion against its own democratic institutions and foreshadow a world where the United States intents to overrun the globe, every West-leaning politician is corrupt, all media outlets not of their persuasion are biased and the future is bleak, hopeless and full of conflict. In such a world, Russia emerges as both the savior and moral authority, the guarantor of political stability and peace.

http://www.pssi.cz/download/docs/253_is-pro-russian-campaign.pdf


Filed under: CounterPropaganda, Czech Republic, Disinformation, Information operations, Propaganda Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies, counter-propaganda, CounterPropaganda, Czech Republic, propaganda, Russia

Why Vladimir Putin’s a pro at turning terror to Russia’s advantage

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1448515960838by Hannah Thoburn

As French President Francois Hollande visits Washington and Moscow to solicit aid in fighting Islamic State, which has claimed responsibility for the attacks in Paris that claimed 130 lives, his options seem few.

Where the European allies are seemingly incapable and unwilling to confront the issues at hand, Russia, which already has a military presence on Syrian soil, has said that it is willing to shift its bombing focus from the Syrian opposition to areas controlled by IS. Russia is also a recent victim of the group, with the downing of MetroJet Flight 9268 by a bomb planted aboard. The US, desirous only of avoiding yet another Middle Eastern war, but worried by the unravelling of regional order and growing humanitarian disaster, seems willing to go along with the idea of a US-French-Russian anti-IS coalition.

But both Hollande and President Barack Obama should be on their guard. In past situations, Putin and his Kremlin have made a habit of responding to tragic events and terror attacks only in ways that they believe will benefit them politically. There is no reason to believe that pattern will change now.

If, as it seems will happen, US and French leadership do decide to work in conjunction with the Russians in Syria, they must take that step with their eyes wide open. Vladimir Putin – the same man who insisted that Russian troops were not in Crimea, and said Russian soldiers had nothing to do with violence in eastern Ukraine – is not a good-faith actor. The Kremlin is not a trustworthy ally, nor is it now in its interest to really and truly combat IS.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, favcing camera, and Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov speak during a wreath  laying ceremony at Russia's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Russian President Vladimir Putin, favcing camera, and Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov speak during a wreath laying ceremony at Russia’s Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

Russia’s goals in involving itself militarily in Syria, remain very different from US and French aims. Though many have assumed that the deaths of 219 Russians at the hands of IS-related terrorists will change the Kremlin’s calculations, we must remember that Russia has always responded far differently to terrorism than has the West.

In 1999, just after Putin was made Prime Minister by then-President Boris Yeltsin, three apartment buildings in three different Russian cities were blown up, killing nearly 300. These attacks, the origins of which have never been confirmed, were blamed on Chechen terrorists. The day after a similar attack was foiled in the city of Ryazan, Putin launched air strikes against the Chechen capital, starting the Second Chechen War.

In 2000, a Russian nuclear submarine, the Kursk, sank in the Barents Sea with 118 on board. At the time, Russia’s media was relatively free, and it was unashamed in broadcasting the reality of the military and government incompetence that had made the accident possible. It was that honestly that spelled the beginning of the end for free Russian media, especially since most Russians receive their news through television. Very quickly, two of Russia’s most-watched TV channels, NTV and ORT, came under the Kremlin’s control.

In 2004, a year of many deadly terror attacks in Russia, a school in the North Caucasus was taken by Chechen terrorists. Nearly one-third of the 1100 hostages were killed in the siege, a number that the media struggled to keep under wraps. Putin took the opportunity to further consolidate his power, ended the local election of governors, and gave himself the power to appoint them. At the time, he said: “Under current conditions, the system of executive power in the country should not just be adapted to operating in crisis situations, but should be radically restructured in order to strengthen the unity of the country and prevent further crises.”

Vladimir Putin lands of Francois Hollandes and Barack Obama's thanksgiving
Vladimir Putin lands of Francois Hollandes and Barack Obama’s thanksgiving David Rowe gallery

The Kremlin’s reactions to these events highlight a key difference between the Western and Russian understanding of the role of the state. While Western nations largely consider the state to be in the service of the citizens that have established and nurtured it, the Russian understanding is the opposite. In Russia, the people are to serve the state, which exists to prevent the blossoming of chaos. The existence and survival of the state is of higher importance than the people who belong to that state. “While Mother Russia must be protected,” write Fiona Hill and Clifford Gaddy, “she does not necessarily protect her own citizens.”

It is this understanding that informs Russian actions in Syria. Where the West seems more concerned about the humanitarian situation in Syria and the millions of displaced persons, Russia’s key concern remains the continued existence of the Syrian state and the preservation of Bashar al-Assad as the rightful leader of Syria. Neither the crash of the MetroJet plane nor the loss of life in Paris has changed that ultimate intention. To give in wholesale to Western demands that Assad must go would be, for the Kremlin, an admission that the very foundations of Russian statehood are illegitimate. Worse, it might open the possibility of the future destruction of the Russian state.

For Russia, then, the destruction of the Islamic State is only a secondary concern. Since it declared common cause with France on November 17, Russia has made a show of increasing its bombing of IS positions in Syria. But it is exactly that, a show. In reality, its old bombing patterns – in which it claimed to be targeting IS but was largely bombing those who stand in opposition to Assad – largely remain the same. In fact, by largely bombing groups opposed to Assad, Russia has been tacitly assisting IS in its mission. Even IS itself notes that it is not being very much targeted by Russian bombing raids, and that those sorties are still largely focused on the opposition strongholds in cities like Aleppo.

As Western leaders meet in Vienna to discuss Syria’s future, and meet with each other to discuss a possible alignment with Russia in the fight against IS, they must bear these realities all in mind. There may be little appetite in the West for more wars, but outsourcing our dirty work to a Russia with vastly different goals has the potential to produce a set of outcomes that we have not even begun to imagine.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey favours "peace, dialogue and diplomacy".
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey favours “peace, dialogue and diplomacy”. AP

Hannah Thoburn is a Research Fellow at the Hudson Institute, focused on Eastern Europe.

Source: http://www.afr.com/opinion/why-vladimir-putins-a-pro-at-turning-terror-to-russias-advantage-20151125-gl89xp


Filed under: #RussiaFail, Censorship, CounterPropaganda, Information operations, Propaganda, Russia Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies, Censorship, CounterPropaganda, media, propaganda, Russia

How Syria is becoming a test bed for high-tech weapons of electronic warfare

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nrg8drg7-1444299498October 8, 2015 10.55am EDT

Author – Professor of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and Director of Electronic Warfare, City University London

The relationship between Russia and the West is becoming increasingly dangerous with potential flashpoints developing in both eastern Europe and Syria. After repeated incursions into Turkish airspace by Russian warplanes on bombing raids over Syria, NATO’s secretary general Jens Stoltenberg warned Moscow that it stands ready to “defend all allies”. Meanwhile Britain announced it would send troops to Baltic states to defend NATO’s eastern boundaries against possible Russian aggression beyond Ukraine.

Russia’s military presence in Syria has been steadily increasing over the past few months. Its warplanes are carrying out regular bombing raids against both Islamic State position and, reportedly, other rebel groups opposed to the regime of Bashar al-Assad. Its warships are launching cruise missiles against the same targets. But the latest reports are that Russia has also deployed its most modern electronic warfare system to Syria – the Krasukha-4 (or Belladonna) mobile electronic warfare (EW) unit.

The Krasukha-4 is a broad-band multifunctional jamming system designed to neutralise Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) spy satellites such as the US Lacrosse/Onyx series, airborne surveillance radars and radar-guided ordinance at ranges between 150km to 300km. The system is reported to be able to cause damage to the enemy’s EW systems and communications. The Krasukha-4 system works by creating powerful jamming at the fundamental radar frequencies and other radio-emitting sources.

Lt General Hodges, the commander of US Army Forces Europe, commented that Russia had demonstrated a high level of offensive EW proficiency against Ukrainian forces in Donbas using a first foreign deployment of the Krasukha-4 system.

Hi tech hostilities

Electronic warfare (EW) was first developed in World War II by the UK to defend against Axis bomber attacks and to defend Allied bombers from enemy surveillance systems. From that time there have been major technological breakthroughs and EW is now acknowledged to be a major fighting element of armed forces worldwide. The US, Russia and Europe invest billions of dollars each year in research and development in order to be the best at this essential military art, while Asian countries, led by China, also view EW as ta vital area for research and development.


E3 Sentry – NATO’s ‘eyes in the sky’. Author provided

EW is considered to include electronic attack/support, electronic intelligence and signals intelligence. In conflicts since World war II, EW has played an increasingly important role in major including Korea, Vietnam, Arab/Israeli, Balkans, Desert Storm/Enduring Freedom, Afghanistan, and Ukraine. EW is effectively employed before the hard fighting begins to deny an opponent intelligence and the use of weapon systems.

Since the beginning of the Arab Spring, NATO countries led by the US and directly supported by the UK have been actively gathering intelligence from countries employing EW assets including low-orbit surveillance satellites (Lacrosse/Onyx series), reconnaissance aircraft (NATO E3 Sentry (AWACS), USAF RC135-Rivet Joint, RAF’s Sentinel R1 and Reaper drones), and sharing intelligence information with the side being supported in the conflict.

Since the land grab by the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) in both Iraq and Syria, NATO’s EW assets have been targeting IS rebel fighting units, gathering intelligence to provide tactical target information and to actively engage IS by denying rebel units radio communication and surveillance information – thus electronically blinding them. Sanitised intelligence information is shared with friendly forces including the rebel forces opposed to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.

Until September 2015, Russia has been supporting Assad by supplying arms and training to Syrian forces. Bolstered by what it sees as Western indecisiveness on a Syria solution and by the West’s inaction on Russia’s military intervention in the Ukraine, Russia has decided to provide direct military air support to Syria. However, Assad’s enemies comprise all rebel groups opposing his rule – not just IS.


RAF Sentinel 1: the UK’s eyes and ears on the battlefield. Author provided

Russia is aware that NATO surveillance assets are able to monitor all Syrian-based Russian military aircraft activity including the rebel groups it is targeting, locations and weapons used. Some of these rebel groups are directly supported by the US and its allies which may result in Russia becoming in direct political conflict with NATO. To avoid being spied on, Russia needs to blind the eyes and silence the ears of NATO reconnaissance and intelligence-gathering assets so its actions are not open to close scrutiny.

Cat and mouse conflict

So how can the Krasukha-4 be used to cloak Russia’s operations in Syria? In words – partially effectively. Its surveillance systems will not only be able to monitor NATO aircraft movement over Syria but also the types, and from its intelligence it will know the frequencies used and signal characteristics present – Lacrosse satellites and AWACS operate in S-band, Sentinel (and similar) in X-band, and drones in J-band. Lacrosse/Onyx satellite positions are continually tracked by Russia. With this intelligence detail the Krasukha-4 can be programmed to engage in order to deny or disrupt NATO intelligence gathering.


The EQ9 Reaper drone: high tech target for Krasukha-4. Author provided

But it is not all one way – US and NATO intelligence gatherers will have “electronic counter counter measures” (ECCM) to combat Russian EW interference – and so the cat and mouse game of the Cold War is repeated. Intelligence gathering and radar-guided munitions will suffer some disruption and mistakes may be made but operations will continue.

ECCM may include being frequency agile and dodging the jamming signal or pointing the receive antenna away slightly from the jamming source. There are also many tricks that can be played with signal processing that will mitigate the effects of jamming. Of course, it would also be possible for NATO to jam the Russian surveillance radar, denying them of identification and positioning of NATO aircraft – but this would really ramp up the war of words with Vladimir Putin. We must also accept that the Krasukha-4 EW system is an essential part of the defence of Russian forces at the Latakia airfield in Syria and this must not be denied them.

Russian military has long appreciated that “radio-electronic combat” is integral to modern warfare and accordingly that it offers a set of relatively inexpensive weapons that can potentially cripple an opponent’s ability to sense, communicate and exercise command and control within a battlespace.

Russia will now be able to test its new EW systems in live combat but avoiding direct conflict with NATO – it will enhance overseas sales prospects of the Krasukha-4 system. NATO will be able test its ECCM against another EW system, presumably with similar ends in mind.


Filed under: Electronic Warfare, Information operations, Russia, Syria Tagged: Electronic Warfare, Krasukha-4

Creating Cognitive Warriors

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 Senior Program Analyst

http://www.secnav.navy.mil/innovation/Pages/2015/08/CreatingCognitiveWarriors.aspx

In the mid-1990s, Commandant of the Marine Corps General Charles Krulak, recognized the changing nature of modern conflict and introduced the concepts of the “Three Block War” and the “Strategic Corporal.” Both ideas stressed the dynamic challenges of the new battlefield, where leaders across the military rank structure would have to make diametrically different decisions often within moments of one another during a single operation.

Krulak’s view of the future operating environment demanded mental agility. Centrally, he recognized that poor tactical decisions would quickly turn into an adversary’s advantage, particularly in a globally connected environment. The Commandant’s prescient vision became reality only a few years later in Iraq and Afghanistan.

To prepare the Marines of that era for this challenging new environment, Krulak provided the following guidance:

“There is a critical need for all Marines to prepare themselves mentally and physically for the rigors of combat. Physical preparation has long been ingrained in our culture and Marines are well known for their physical conditioning. Mental preparation needs to receive the same emphasis.”

He stressed the need for Marines to take time to improve tactical decision-making and ordered a two-pronged approach – make wider use of tactical decision games and have regular discussions on warfighting. Krulak also challenged traditional views of training by encouraging the use of commercial video games to improve tactical decision-making when live training opportunities were limited.

Today, Marines still emphasize the need to hone decision-making skills in officer development programs. Successfully completing the leadership reaction course is part of Officer Candidate School while land navigation, where individual decision-making is as important as military orienteering, is still a significant part of The Basic School curriculum at Quantico.

The Marines are not the only service members to recognize the need to continually sharpen mental acuity to prepare for the complex battlefield. Navy SEALs are widely recognized as world-class athletes but they are also some of the most intelligent members of the US military. For years the SEALs have used Keep In Mind exercises to improve an operator’s powers of observation and recall. A decade ago, the SEALs faced the challenge of growing their numbers while not compromising their high standards. Rather than having candidates do more push-ups or flutter kicks, they enlisted the help of top neuroscientists to help improve the cognitive conditioning of future warriors. These scientists found four cognitive pillars which help ensure success: setting goals, mental visualization, positive self-talk and stress control.

The Secretary of the Navy has also recognized the need to improve the cognitive skills of naval officers. Specifically, he tasked the services to improve problem-solving skills of naval officers, to make wider use of wargames and to increase the use of virtual training and simulation systems. All of these actions are to help prepare Navy and Marine Corps leadership for a complex and uncertain future, saving time and lives on a future battlefield.

Despite top leadership’s guidance not all naval officers believe cognitive skills are valued in the fleet. During Task Force Innovation we found that many junior officers, fighter pilots being an exception, were discouraged from developing critical thinking and problem solving skills in the operational environment. Instead, the emphasis was placed on enforcing established practices and following check-lists. In the private sector, workers performing such repetitive functions have been replaced by robots.

Such devaluation demoralizes our junior leaders, and risks worsening their response time in combat. In a future foreshadowed by swarms of micro UAVs, cyber attacks, and even the proliferation of intelligent robots on the battlefield, decentralization of decision-making will be critical for success.

As an institution we must recognize this problem – the navy attracts some of the best young minds our nation has to offer. This is a success, yet their cognitive skills are not valued or developed in the operating forces. Simply sending officers periodically to graduate schools is an insufficient remedy either to encourage the best to stay or to develop needed problem-solving, and life-saving, skills.

As a Marine Officer, I designed several squadron, group/regiment and wing-level exercises. The guidance I received was usually the same – make the exercise challenging and force leaders to make decisions in a stressful, realistic environment. General Al Gray, Krulak’s Cold War predecessor, was an advocate for “free play” and risk-taking in field training, influencing the Marines of that generation.

“Hot washes” after the exercises were an essential part of the learning environment. Exercise participants were usually advised of the “Rhino-Rules”, that is, have a thick skin and let the spears thrown by others bounce off, in other words, have candid discussions about what worked and more importantly what didn’t work during the exercise; that’s what great organizations do.

In contrast, my first fleet-wide Anti-Terrorism/Force Protection exercise as a navy civilian was just the opposite of my Marine Corps experience: we were advised to follow a script and make sure there were no surprises! My observation was that large naval exercises were more of a demonstration to prove training had finished. Although history has shown these may reassure allies and capture an adversary’s attention, they are not true learning exercises.

Some may argue that the missions of the navy, focused on commanding ships, submarines and aircraft, are significantly different than those of the Marines or SEALs, which are focused on leading people and operating in a human-centric battle space. Therefore, training the former should also be different. But the future battle space for all naval officers will change significantly over the next few decades and officer development must adapt as well. Just as Commandant Krulak was able to look into the future and urge his Marines to adapt, we should be scanning the horizon today for similar changes and a recent US Army study should provide us with some interesting food for thought.

According to the report, major changes are coming with respect to our ability to see, communicate, think, and decide on the tactical battlefield of 2050. These changes draw upon a shared view that this battlefield will be characterized by the vastly increased presence and reliance on automated processes and decision making; humans with augmented sensing; and information-related and cognitive capabilities.

The study’s authors identified the following 7 interrelated future capabilities that they believe differentiate the battlefield of the future from current capabilities and engagements:
• Augmented humans
• Automated decision-making and autonomous processes
• Misinformation as a weapon
• Micro-targeting
• Large-scale self-organization and collective decision-making
• Cognitive modeling of the opponent
• Ability to understand and cope in a contested, imperfect, information environment

For the naval services to contend with these new realties, we must prepare our future leaders to thrive in this new information- cognitive-centric environment. The first step is to follow the advice of General Krulak and place cognitive fitness on a par with physical fitness.

To improve cognitive fitness we should follow the same structure as physical conditioning programs. We must create local experts to offer cognitive instruction and provide ample opportunities to allow junior officers to exercise decision-making ability; the latter can occur in a virtual environment if needed. Fitness equipment is widely available to condition physical systems; so, too, should simulation or networked gaming to develop cognitive skills. Finally, the naval services include the results of physical fitness tests on officer performance evaluations. We must develop an accurate standard of cognitive development and include those scores on performance evaluations as well.

The information age battle space will be much different from that of the industrial age. We must recognize the need to develop the next generation of warriors with the cognitive skills to dominate the data rich environment of the future. The cognitive warriors of the naval services must be able to apply mental and physical skills with equal acumen. Simply developing and promoting leaders who can follow a checklist will leave us ill-prepared for future challenges.


** = The opinions expressed here are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of the Navy, Department of Defense or the United States government.

Source: http://www.secnav.navy.mil/innovation/Pages/2015/08/CreatingCognitiveWarriors.aspx


Filed under: Information operations

Disinformation Review: Week Four

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Dear colleagues,

740077c1-10af-4501-aca2-50f50764a49f1Thank you very much for your reports. Once again this week, we see new languages represented in the Review – this time Dutch and Serbian. If we continue this trend, we will be able to identify disinformation trends in most European languages, and almost in real-time. If you know about credible partners who could help us with those languages that are still missing in our Review (you will see it in the table below), please tell them about this product.

Three European presidents were targeted by pro-Russian media in the past days. One of them is the Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko – Ukraine is again the most targeted in the Review.

Bulgarian President Rosen Plevneliev was accused of intending to flee his country to become a German ambassador. It is noteworthy that this unproven information came just four days after President Plevneliev gave an interview to the Independent, saying that “Russia plans a hybrid warfare campaign aimed at destabilising Europe”.

France’s President Hollande was quoted incorrectly by major Russian outlets like Sputnik and RIA as saying that it is not Asad but ISIL which is the true enemy of France. And pro-Russian media in the Czech Republic went so far as to accuse the French authorities of staging the Friday 13th terrorist attacks: AC24.cz sought to convince Czech readers that the French Government planned these attacks in order to strengthen its position against France’s loudest advocate of Vladimir Putin, Marine Le Pen’s Front National party.

Trend of the Week: Repeating is the Mother of all Disinformation

As the Trend of the Week, we see the re-emergence of an older piece of disinformation, which was identified at the beginning of the month – connecting Ukraine to ISIS terrorists in every plausible, often even implausible way. In the past days, this trend has intensified, ending with Dmitry Kiselyov stating in his Sunday show that Ukraine provides weapons to islamist terrorists.

According to the Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Mariya Zakharova, Russia is the only country that truly tries to bring peace to Ukraine. Russian media recycled two older and already debunked disinformation pieces, both of them related to Maidan as Ukrainians celebrated its second anniversary on Saturday. The first says that the victims of Maidan were shot by Maidan activists; the second that almost 300 women were shot by Maidan activists. Neither happened. What is more striking, the second piece of disinformation was amplified by DNR “prime minister” Zakharchenko – who had denied the same information more than a year ago.

Older pieces of disinformation were repeated in the Dutch media. NGO Promote Ukraine believes such articles could be aimed at worsening the image of their country before the Dutch referendum about the Association Agreement. And our contributor Igor Solovey reminds us of the article by StopFake.org, which says that pro-Russian media will now have to try to discredit Ukraine through European media – as so few in Ukraine believe what the pro-Russian media outlets report.

One last piece about Ukraine: Several media claimed that at the beginning of the New Year, Ukrainians will be banned from leaving the country. There are no such plans in place.

Too hard to believe

Among the stories we have spotted this week are that Syria has endured a coup staged by the CIA, Mossad, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and France; and that Austria and Slovenia have closed their borders with Serbia (sic) to stem the flow of refugees.

But most of the attention was brought to Izvestia. The fake letter from the American Embassy in Moscow they reported on, and the way USA officials dealt with it, brought a lot of amusement to the media, both traditional and social.

DOWNLOAD DISINFORMATION REVIEW WEEK FOUR (.pdf)

For contributions, please e-mail jakub.kalensky@eeas.europa.eu

When you advertise this product, please use this link for automated subscriptions.

Thank you very much once again for your reports, we are looking forward to the new ones,

East StratCom Task Force
Follow us on Twitter @EUvsDisinfo

The Disinformation Review is a compilation of reports received from members of the mythbusting network. The mythbusting network comprises of over 450 experts, journalists, officials, NGOs and Think Tanks in over 30 countries. Please note that opinions and judgements expressed here do not represent official EU positions.

Filed under: #RussiaFail, Information operations, Information Warfare, Russia Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies, CounterPropaganda, propaganda, Russia

How Do You Identify Propaganda?

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I have been having a conversation with a Russian friend, tonight, who I have known for six or seven years.

Many of you know his name and reputation, but I have never mentioned him before, he did some bad things and spent some time in prison.

Today he and I were talking about propaganda.

Here is what he wrote, tonight:

One other thing I thought about related to propaganda, back when I was very young everyone around truly believed in communism, I remember praising Mr. Lenin. When I got older and was a teen already in [the] 90s everyone believed in usa freedom stuff, my favorite music was and probably still is Guns n Roses.

But in our days the problem is – there is much quality propaganda in USA there is ton of crap propaganda here but nobody really believes it both. That’s what makes it different – it feels that people on top no longer really care what people really are thinking about them or politics, propaganda is living it’s own life so to say and real life is going somewhere else. And if you think of that – it’s the internet to blame for, news are too fast, lying is too hard. Which was supposed to be great but as of now I think it actually is even got worse

I wrote a fairly long response, explaining how I do not believe the US manufactures and broadcasts propaganda intentionally. The journalists and editors for Voice of America, Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia, and so on, do not purposefully make or broadcast propaganda.

A few points for you to consider:

  • Is propaganda only something that opposes your opinion?
  • Does propaganda push a certain government’s agenda?
  • Is propaganda part, whole or not at all truthful?
  • Can a broadcast from a government not be propaganda?
  • When you hear something that you consider propaganda, do you try to determine what the broadcaster is attempting to do?  As a result, what do you do?
  • Is propaganda intended to:
    • Reinforce your opinion favorable to that government
    • Change your mind in favor of that government
    • Tear down your belief in your own government
    • Sow disbelief in your government
    • Sow distrust of your government
    • Sow division in your government
    • Sow division in a defensive alliance (ie NATO)
    • Sow questions or doubt in your government or an alliance
  • Is propaganda intended only for a foreign audience?
  • Is propaganda intended for a domestic audience?

How Do You Identify Propaganda?

Which leads me to my next question: how do you defeat propaganda?


Filed under: CounterPropaganda, Information operations, Propaganda Tagged: counter-propaganda, propaganda

Daesh. Daesh. Daesh. Daesh. Daesh.

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Daesh member in training to be a proctologist

Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.  Daesh.

Oh, did I forget to say Daesh?


 

ISIS THREATENS TO CUT THE TONGUE OUT OF ANYONE USING THE WORD “DAESH”

Looks like we’ve found our new favorite word for ISIS! The term is Daesh and you’ve probably heard world leaders use the term in referring to the terror organization.


Filed under: Information operations

Hackers Troll Daesh By Replacing Propaganda Site With Prozac Ad

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By Steve Ambrose

While nations contemplate dropping bombs in Syria to combat Islamic State, one hacker group is using a tried and true Internet weapon to stifle terrorist propaganda: trolling.

GhostSec has taken down an active Daesh website, operating on the Dark Web, and replaced the propaganda forum with an advertisement for the antidepressant drug Prozac, The Guardian reported Nov. 25.

“Too Much Daesh. Enhance your calm. Too many people are into this Daesh-stuff. Please gaze upon this lovely ad so we can upgrade our infrastructure to give you Daesh content you all so desperately crave,” the GhostSec ad reads.

Screen shot of the blocked ISIS website.

The Dark Web consists of networks not publicly available on the Internet without special software that allows users to gain access. One of the common types of software used to access the Dark Web is Tor, an encrypted site that allows users to browse the web anonymously.

The Guardian reports GhostSec had originally taken the website down Nov. 21, but Daesh found a way to restore the site.

GhostSec states that the purpose of the group “is to eliminate the online presence of Islamic extremist groups such as Islamic State (IS), Al-Qaeda, Al-Nusra, Boko Haram and Al-Shabaab in an effort to stymie their recruitment and limit their ability to organize international terrorist efforts.”

Daesh has been driven into the hidden parts of the Internet, in part, because its content is blocked or erased from digital groups like Twitter and Facebook. In the wake of the Paris attacks, the hacktivist group Anonymous has also been feverishly shutting down ISIS social media accounts, with the group claiming responsibility for dismantling over 20,000 terrorist affiliated accounts. (RELATED: Daesh Now Spreading Ideology On Dark Web)

In addition to Twitter, the secure messaging app Telegram recently shut down 78 Daesh related accounts Nov. 18. Telegram has become a popular tool for terrorists because the app is designed to protect communication channels from third parties.

Source: http://thelibertarianrepublic.com/hackers-troll-isis-by-replacing-propaganda-site-with-prozac-ad/


Filed under: Information operations

A Primer on Refugee Law

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“Everyone is a prisoner of his own experiences. No one can eliminate prejudices — just recognize them.”

I start with a quote from Edward R. Murrow:

American traditions and the American ethic require us to be truthful, but the most important reason is that truth is the best propaganda and lies are the worst. To be persuasive we must be believable; to be believable we must be credible; to be credible we must be truthful. It is as simple as that.

Speaking as the Director of USIA, in testimony before a Congressional Committee (May 1963)

I received this blog from Lawfare, Paul Rosenzweig’s outstanding national security legal blog after being bombarded with outright lies, distortions and mistruths from other sources during the European refugee crisis.  The fear mongers among us are screaming “no” and the die-hard liberals are saying “we must!” Here is yet another perspective.

While this is a radical departure from my normal blog, I think it important to share the TRUTH with you.

I am as cynical as anyone about attorneys, but the author I have come to trust to tell the truth.

Paul Rosenzweig
Paul Rosenzweig is the founder of Red Branch Consulting PLLC, a homeland security consulting company and a Senior Advisor to The Chertoff Group. Mr. Rosenzweig formerly served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy in the Department of Homeland Security. He is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Homeland Security Studies and Analysis Institute. He also serves as a Professorial Lecturer in Law at George Washington University, a Senior Editor of the Journal of National Security Law & Policy, and as a Visiting Fellow at The Heritage Foundation.

A Primer on Refugee Law
By Paul Rosenzweig

Friday, November 27, 2015, 10:31 AM

Posted: 27 Nov 2015 07:31 AM PST

Typically, this blog does not focus on immigration law.  That seems to me appropriate.  After all, most immigration questions are, while matters of profound importance to Americans, not really questions of national security.  To be sure, the immigration function resides within DHS because Congress thought that security concerns needed to be paramount, but any fair assessment of the immigration law begins with the reality that the vast majority of immigration decisions are related to economics and politics and that by and large national security plays a background role in the discussion.

Not so, of course, today.  The Paris attacks, married to the flood of Syrians into Europe, has brought the intersection of national security and immigration law to the forefront.  Many today see the refugee program as a national security threat and want to modify or change its legal parameters.

With that in mind, I thought it might be useful to offer a primer on immigration law as it relates to refugees and is practiced today.  I offer the following with the caveat that I am not an immigration lawyer.  However, while at DHS I spent a goodly amount of time on refugee affairs and their intersection with counter-terrorism, so it is not without some basis in knowledge. I should also offer the caveat that immigration law is riddled with exceptions and exclusions, and even exceptions to the exceptions.  I am therefore outlining what the law says in broad strokes and I acknowledge at the outset that some of the complexity is deliberately elided.  Corrections from those more knowledgable are warmly welcome.

Refugees, Asylum Seekers, and Immigrants

To begin with, let’s distinguish between immigrants on the one hand and refugees or asylum seekers on the other.  The former category includes everyone entering a country, whether legally or illegally, for purposes of remaining there.  The latter group, a subset of the former, includes those migrants the cause of whose migration is a bona fide fear of persecution.  They may be the losing side in a war; gay people subject to stoning; or a religious or cultural minority.

We should also distinguish asylum seekers and refugees.  Often the two are confused – as I said, they both involve individuals fleeing their country of origin for some reason.  The principal difference between the two categories lies not in WHY they left, but rather WHERE they are.  Refugees are in camps somewhere near their country of origin – as such they are outside American jurisdiction and therefore cannot generally take advantage of American law.  Whatever process that applies to them is a creature of our own construction (and an effort to fulfill our obligations under international law) but US law can define and control the process – often in ways that limit refugee flows and limit their rights of appeal in contesting determinations that are made.

By contrast, asylum seekers are here in the US.  They have presented themselves at the border (or even entered illegally and found within our territory) and they have a cognizable claim of persecution so as not to be sent home.  Because they are here in the US, they typically get many greater procedural protections against the exercise of Executive discretion and they have greater rights to challenge whatever action the US government proposes to take with respect to their application for asylum.

This distinction goes a long way to explaining why we see so many migrants flooding out of the Middle East trying to reach Europe.  I don’t know much about the details of European immigration law, but I do know that a different set of rules applies to those who have succeeded in reaching European lands and are physically present in the EU.  They get more process and have greater rights.  Europe also has, as I understand it, a much looser definition of eligibility than we do in the US – those reaching Greece are highly likely to be able to stay when similarly situated arriving at US borders might be denied entry.  In the end migrants arriving in the EU are far more likely than those left behind in refugee camps to be able to settle in Europe which, after all, is their goal.

This explains, as well, why most (though not all) of the issue with respect to America’s response to the tragedy in Syria focuses on refugee law, rather than asylum law.  Given our distance from the Middle East and the intervening oceans on our borders the number of Syrians who will show up at the US-Canada border to claim asylum is going to be vanishingly small.  For the US, new migrants from the Middle East who want to come to the US lawfully will come, if at all, from refugee camps in the region.

Processing Refugees

So then, how are refugees processed?  A description of the system will give you some idea of how detailed, complex and difficult it is to navigate.

To start, section 101(a)(42) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), defines a refugee as a person who is unable or unwilling to return to his or her home country because of a “well-founded fear of persecution” due to race, membership in a particular social group, political opinion, religion, or national origin. This definition is based on theUnited Nations 1951 Convention and 1967 Protocols.

[As an aside, the UN High Commissioner on Refugees (UNHCR) estimates that in 2014 there were 14.4 million refugees in the world.  Top sources of refugees include: Afghanistan (2.6 million), Syria (2.5 million) Somalia (1.1 million), Sudan (650,000), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (499,600), and Myanmar (480,000).  Note that this is the 2014 number for Syria.  I have seen estimates as high as 4.2 million refugees as of 2015 from that country.  The UNHCR estimates that in 2015, roughly 1 million of the refugees will need to be resettled (the rest choosing to remain in camps and try to return home) but the actual capacity around the globe for legal refugee resettlement is between 15 and 20 percent of that total.]

The story of resettlement starts in the temporary camps to which refugees flee.  Today many of these are located near war-torn Syria and Iraq in, say, Jordan or Lebanon.  Refugees who flee to these camps generally have a preference to return home rather than move onward.  After all, wouldn’t that be what most of us would want – to return to our home town and friends and family as a first priority?

If, however, a migrant decides he wants to move onward away from the conflict, that’s the first step in a process that can last months, if not years, while their application is reviewed.  Their story of persecution will be evaluated and checked.  Their suitability for transfer as well.

The first filter is the UN High Commissioner on Refugees (UNHCR) who is generally responsible for working with the local government to provide water, food, shelter and clothing at the local camps.  Here those wanting to resettle mix with those wanting to return home and they spend most of their time … just waiting.   One function of the UNHCR is to register and identify each refugee (and their family) and assist in finding a place for them to resettle.

Each year the US tells the UNHCR how many refugees it will take in.  The President sets that number “in consultation” with Congress, and before the recent crisis the annual allotment for the US was 70,000 in this year.  For fiscal year 2016, President Obama has announced a goal of 85,000 refugee resettlements.  The law, however, gives the President ample emergency authority to change the number agreed upon – an authority that President Obama invoked when he added 10,000 refugees to this year’s total.  Given that there are 14+ million refugees in the world, the US contribution to resettlement is very small next to the whole number.  On the other hand it is something around half of the world’s total accepted from the UNHCR.

[Two notes:  First, the UNHCR does not have a monopoly on the management of displaced persons – some estimates say that as many as 60 million people are refugees today.  Many are resettled through informal mechanisms, or not resettled at all.   Second, by way of comparison, the next largest refugee program in the world is Australia’s which took in roughly 6,000 refugees last year – more than the US on a per capita basis, but a small number indeed next to the absolute need around the globe.]

As should be clear by now then, a refugee does not get to select which country he will be resettled to.  You cannot, sitting in a camp in Jordan, tell the UNHCR that you want to go to America and only America.  The UNHCR will allot refugees to new countries based on willingness of the country to accept them.  If you already have a family legally present in the US that will increase your chances that you can be reunified with them – but even that is not a sure thing.

Indeed, the US tells the UNHCR that it has certain priorities in which refugees it wants referred to our country for resettlement.  These include (in rank order):

  1. People suffering “compelling persecution” for whom no other durable solution exists (think of special cases like, say, an opposition party politician fleeing Russia);
  2. People from areas of “special concern.”  At present, we prioritize certain groups of refugees from the former Soviet Union, Cuba, Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq, Iran, Burma, and Bhutan.  President Obama’s decision regarding Syrians is, effectively, an amendment of this priority category; and
  3. Relatives of refugees (parents, spouses, and unmarried children under 21) who are already settled in the United States.

To be eligible for resettlement in the US a refugee must therefore first be referred to the US government by the UNHCR.  After referral he or she must then be adjudicated to determine whether he or she meets the various criteria (fear of persecution and fitting a priority category) before the resettlement is authorized.

The Refugee Admissions Program which does this evaluation is jointly administered by the Department of State, HHS, and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) a component of DHS. The most common means of proceeding with an evaluation is for USCIS to conduct individual refugee interviews and determine individual eligibility for refugee status.  These interviews typically take place overseas in processing offices near refugee camps.  I visited one of these offices in Jordan several years ago and to say that our USCIS officers operate in challenging conditions is to understate the reality by a fair bit.

In to being interviewed each applicant is also subject to a security clearance process.  Most of the interview process focuses on eligibility.  The law require that the individuals prove that they have a “well-founded fear.” As you may imagine, some people actually … well … lie about their fear.  USCIS conducts multiple interviews over time and any discrepancies are identified and explored.  Simply by way of example, back in the mid-2000s when several African countries were persecuting gay men we saw an upsurge in claims of persecution – many of which were well-founded but quite a number of which were, shall we say, inconsistent with demonstrable behavior of the applicant.

Applicants who pass the “well-founded fear” test may nonetheless be subject to exclusion. Grounds for exclusion here include serious health matters, moral or criminal matters, as well as security issues.   One issue that has raised its head many times is that refugees may be excluded for having provided “material support” to terrorist organizations.  One of the inevitably testing circumstances is that of refugees who provide such support under duress – if you live inside ISIL controlled territory and feed ISIL troops because refusal will mean death, is that a basis for exclusion or not?  One can see both sides of that argument.

One fair point to make in this discussion is that, by and large, USCIS staff are trained better at eligibility determinations than security assessments.  The security portion of the inquiry is mostly based on watch lists and intelligence data bases.  Back in the mid-2000s, one gap was that USCIS adjudicators did not have access to all of the classified US government databases at the Terrorist Screening Center.  I understand that this is no longer the case and our vetting against known terrorist watch lists is more robust today.

That does, however, beg the question of “clean skins” who are not on any known watch list.  That problem is, however, endemic to all screening programs, not just the refugee program.  Put another way, a clean skin is no more (or less) likely to get through the refugee application process than he is the visa application process.  We are converging all the listing systems so the resulting determination of risk should be uniform across the government.

What all this means is that, from my perspective refugee screening is fairly robust.  It is not foolproof – but no system is.  Some refugees with criminal records and even terrorist connections may slip through.  But as I said in an earlier post relating to the Paris attacks homeland security is about risk management; not risk elimination.  The only way to eliminate risk from the refugee program is to eliminate the program; just as the only way to eliminate risk in the airline industry completely is to stop flying.

Here is my bottom line on the security risk from the refugee program:  It is real but manageable.  More to the point, if I were a terrorist intent on getting into the United States there are many better ways to come here.  A refugee applicant for resettlement can’t even be sure he will be going to the US.  Were that my intention, I would fly to Mexico and pay someone to walk me across the border.  Much easier and with a much higher chance of success.


Filed under: CounterPropaganda, Information operations, Propaganda, Truth

Talent Search

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talent-searchI am compiling a list of people who want part time or full time work in a team effort.

Please pass this around, I am in search of people.

I am seeking people of all levels of experience, seniority and disciplines, interested in working quietly on counter-propaganda efforts.  For now I am collecting  names and contact information, for possible future use.

I prefer both operators and academics to do studies, develop techniques, processes and procedures.

I have reason to believe this may be possible in the near to midterm future and I would like to start collecting information soonest.

Qualifications.  Experienced –

  • Operators
  • Academics
  • Leaders
Interested in work for:
  • Government
  • Corporate
  • Academic
  • Private
  • Unofficial
  • Off the record.

Fields include:

  • Foreign marketing and advertising
  • Psychological operations/warfare
  • Foreign languages (Native preferred)
    • Russian
    • Mandarin/Chinese
    • Spanish
    • Hindi
    • Arabic
    • Farsi
    • Portuguese
    • Bengali
    • Javanese
    • Ukrainian
    • Belarusan
    • Polish
    • Czech
    • Bulgarian
    • German
    • Turkish
    • Romanian
  • Foreign
    • Culture
    • History
    • Religion
  • Mathematical game theory
  • Shannon information theory
  • Argumentation theory
  • Application and planning
    • Information Operations
    • Information Warfare
    • Psyop
    • MilDec
    • Computer Network Attack
  • Intelligence
    • General, IO, IW, Psyop, cyber
    • Social media
    • Trolls
    • Developing themes and memes

My preference is virtual work/working from home with a central core for planning purposes, we shall see how much of that is possible.

For consideration, please send your resume to: joel_harding@yahoo.com 

 


Filed under: Information operations

IOTA Global Assists NATO COE In Training Moldova Government In Strategic Communication

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Steve Tatham Ph.D.

Director of Operations IOTA-Global Ltd & UK Armed Forces Veteran

We are delighted to have been working with the NATO Centre of Excellence for Strategic Communication, Latvia, in delivering capacity building training, in Chisinau, to representatives from the Moldovan government.  Moldova is faced with a number of challenging issues – as this recent article from The Economist magazine highlights – not least corruption, a very weak economy and ongoing territorial disputes with Russia.  IOTA Global and its partner company, SCL Ltd, were contracted by the Canadian Government earlier this year to assist the NATO COE in its vital work. This included the delivery of a 9 week intensive Target Audience Analysis course, using the Behavioural Dynamics Institute (BDi) advanced TAA methodology (TAA), to train 20 students from 11 NATO nations.

The course in Moldova was a condensed version of that much longer course and provided Moldovan students with an appreciation of the science behind Target Audience Analysis as well as the fundamental principles of Strategic Communication (StratCom).  Around 25 Moldovan students attended the training from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Anti-Corruption Task Force, the Education Ministry, the Ministry of Defence and the Office of the President.  IOTA Global / SCL designed the course and co-delivered it with NATO COE Staff.

The BDi methodology uses the most advanced social science research to measure populations and determine, to a high degree of accuracy, how population groups may respond under certain conditions. The methodology  is the only one of its type and has been verified and validated by the US Defence Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA), the Sandia National Laboratories (USA) and the UK’sDefence Science and Technology Laboratories (DSTL).

IOTA Global was recently recently selected by the Norwegian Government Defence Research Agency to assist it in its research into Information Operations and SCL is currently working with a major client in the Middle East on Strategic Communication issues.

More capacity building training courses are planned.

Source: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/iota-global-assists-nato-coe-training-moldova-steve-tatham-ph-d-?trk=hb_ntf_MEGAPHONE_ARTICLE_POST


Filed under: Information operations Tagged: IOTA Global, Moldova, NATO Centre of Excellence for Strategic Communication, Steve Tatham, TAA

Russian Propaganda Outlet RT Caught Fabricating Lies – Again

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Russian Propaganda Outlet RT is caught lying again.

Big surprise, eh?

In a bit of disinformation, RT cited a video mistitled Jihadists Launch TOW at Journalists [another perspective of the featured video]. The video was posted on LiveLeak, which is co-owned by RT and has posted tons of disinformation, propaganda and complete Russian fabrications online. Here is the original posted video, as you can tell the label of the posted video is completely different: Reeve Latakia forces targeting car system in the village of Aldgmsheelh missile Jintao 11/25/2015.   

RT then throws together a number of videos which supposedly show US backed FSA soldiers “targeting journalists”.  The problem is that none of the videos make any sense when put together.

Unfortunately they also provided the URL of the original video, making my job of exposing their disinformation very easy.

In the video shot when the journalists location receives fire, the location could be anywhere. Donbass, even. I found it interesting that the Russian reporter is narrating in English and says “the shelling continues, we should go into our hideout”, then kneels while nobody around him moves, except for the camera.  That is not just bad journalism, that’s bad acting.

RT is using my “spaghetti theory”, throwing a wide variety of things against the wall, to see what sticks.


 

US anti-tank TOW missile used in attack on RT journalists in Syria

A US-made anti-tank missile system was used in an attack on an RT crew in Syria, a mounting body of evidence suggests. Journalists recognized the area, while experts confirmed that a booster found by the Syrian army matches the TOW seen in a rebel video.

A baldly titled video – ‘Jihadists Launch TOW at Journalists’ – was recently posted online and clearly shows a group of Syrian rebels firing a US-made anti-tank missile launcher. Upon reviewing the video, RT’s Roman Kosarev, who was among the group of Russian journalists which miraculously survived an attack from a similar weapon earlier this week, recognized the area and the chain of events which subsequently unfolded.

“The landscape is very very reminiscent of the one when we came under fire from militants just a few days ago, on November 23,” Kosarev said. “And actually you can see people running for cover at a distance and I’m pretty sure it must have been us. And that person running in the back must be me.”

There is no doubt that rebels in the video had been firing a US-made BGM-71 TOW, not so-covertly supplied by Washington to the so-called moderate Syrian opposition, Kosarev insisted, with security and arms experts corroborating his statements.

Immediately after the attack on the Russian crew, the Syrian army swept the area and found a launch booster from the rocket that hit the media convoy. Experts agreed that it was “highly unlikely” that the booster, featuring distinctive markings, might belong to any other kind of weapon, but the system in question.

 

The BGM-71 TOW (Tube-launched, Optically tracked, Wire-guided) is one of the most widely used anti-tank guided missiles, which has been produced in the US since the 1970s. The missile has an operational range of up to 4,200 meters and an armor penetration of between 600 and 800 millimeters depending on the model. Hundreds of the systems have fallen into the hands of various rebel factions over the years of the Syrian conflict.

“It is clearly an American weapon system. It is consistent, that lettering, with the TOW system,” security analyst and former counter-terrorism intelligence officer Charles Shoebridge told RT upon reviewing the photo and video evidence. “And indeed it has been openly supplied by the US and indeed by US allies in the region, particularly Saudi Arabia to rebel groups. So therefor it would not at all be surprising to find this weapon system in the hands of the rebel groups and being used by them.”

“Perhaps notably last year a very large consignment of these weapons in the thousands were shipped to Saudi Arabia by the US as part of the arms supply,” Shoebridge added.

“And of course Saudi Arabia has been in the forefront supplying Syrian rebel groups, including to what in the West should really be called extremist rebels groups, with these fairly sophisticated and certainly powerful weapons.”

All the separate pieces of information are consistent with the version that Syrian rebels used a US-made weapons system against RT journalists, Shoebridge said. However, he admitted that from an “evidential perspective” it is hard to tie them all together.

Moreover, the same model of TOW was used by the rebels to destroy a grounded Russian helicopter involved in the Su-24 rescue operation, according to a video leaked earlier this week, a former senior security policy analyst in the office of the US Secretary of Defense Michael Maloof told RT. The tripods that the system was mounted on in on both of the videos allow a high degree of mobility, “especially when you are hiding in an ambush environment,” Maloof pointed out.

“TOWs have gone into Syria to so-called moderate groups, Sunni fighters really, ever since Russia actually began bombing. So the amounts of TOWs going in there has actually increased. And the Saudis of course are paying for a lot of it,” Maloof added.

“In the case of Syria [TOWs] have been supplied clandestinely under CIA operation through Turkey to various fighters that they have identified as being moderate,” Maloof added. “But these moderates are generally with the Free Syrian Army, and most of them have gone to join the Islamic fighters of either Al-Nusra or Daesh [ISIS].”

After Syrian rebels, apparently from the FSA, had been caught firing an anti-tank missile at a Russian helicopter, RT’s correspondent Gayane Chichakyan asked a US State Department spokesperson whether it was kind of action Washington expects from a “moderate rebel” force.

Citing a “complex environment” and scarce information he had about the downing of Russian Su-24 by the Turkish air force and subsequent pilot rescue mission, in which the helicopter came under fire, Mark Toner dodged the question and refused to condemn rebels’ actions.

“I mean, first of all, we have supplied some of the Syrian forces that are fighting ISIL in northern Syria. We’ve talked about that before. But there’s frankly many ways you can get – I mean, we’ve also been providing equipment and weaponry to Iraqi military as well,” Toner said on Tuesday,

“So I can’t speak to the specific incident,” Toner added, instead resorting to vague accusations that Russian airstrikes “in many cases are directed at moderate Syrian opposition forces,” which according to Washington is making situation on the ground “even more complex.”

The State Department is yet to comment on the rebels’ apparent use of TOW against Russian journalists.

Overall, the attacked media convoy included 17 people, all wearing jackets clearly marking them out as press. The convoy was targeted deliberately, journalists said, as they had been receiving death threats from local terrorist groups.

RT English channel correspondent Roman Kosarev, his RT Arabic colleague, Sargon Hadaya, and TASS reporter Alexander Yelistratov who were all injured in the attack safely arrived in Moscow on Thursday.


Filed under: Disinformation, Information operations Tagged: disinformation

Turkish video released praising Ukrainian military

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Previously, Ukrainian volunteers made a video about the Turkish Air Force

UNIAN: Turkish Haci Productions company has released a video about the Ukrainian Armed Forces. The move comes as a response to the video by volunteer Ukrainian People’s Project about the Turkish Air Force.

The Turkish activists have expressed gratitude in the description to the YouTube clip to the “Ukrainian friends” who had made the video about the Turkish Air Force.

Haci Productions video – Army of Ukraine

“The emergence of the video miraculously coincided with the shooting down of a Russian Air Force bomber by the Turks after it violated Turkish airspace. There is no mention of this fact in the video. It does, however, conclude with the slogan “Glory to the Turkish Air Force! Death to the enemies,” as reported by People’s Project military and civil crowdfunding.

The video has been picked up by CNN TURK. A dozen Turkish news websites have followed suit, loading it to their homepages.

The People’s Project video – Turkish Air Force in action

“The video shows the Turkish Air Force in action: in training and combat tasks. The visuals are accompanied by music based on Hucum Marsı – a modern rendering of a well-known Ottoman military march,” the Ukrainian volunteers said.

The video has been massively reposted over the last 24 hours.

Source: http://24today.net/open/595056


Filed under: #RussiaFail, CounterPropaganda, Information operations, Propaganda, Russia Tagged: #RussiaFail, #RussiaLies, CounterPropaganda, propaganda, Russia, Turkey, Ukraine

Winning Without Fighting: The Chinese Psychological Warfare Challenge

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Editor’s note: ht to cm.

I was remiss in not passing this around before, but a wonderful friend shared this with me today.


 

Beijing hopes to win future conflicts without firing a shot. How? By using psychological warfare to manipulate both a nation’s leaders and its populace—affecting the thought processes and cognitive frameworks of allies and opponents alike. Indeed, the PRC’s psychological warfare operations are already underway despite the fact that there is no active conflict. It is therefore essential that the United States counter such psychological operations now while preparing to use its own arsenal of political warfare weapons should a conflict ever arise.

One of the elements distinguishing the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) from many of its counterparts is its continued role as a Party army. The PLA is, first and foremost, the armed wing of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). This distinction both obligates the PLA to help maintain the CCP’s grip on power and gives it an additional set of tools with which to defend the CCP and the Chinese state. At the moment, the PLA is not only planning for operations on the physical battlefield; it is also preparing to conduct “political warfare,” including what is termed the “three warfares”: public opinion warfare, legal warfare, and psychological warfare.

Psychological warfare is in some ways the most far-reaching of the “three warfares.” It involves the application of specialized information and media in accordance with a strategic goal and in support of political and military objectives.[1] Such efforts are aimed at a variety of potential audiences and usually involve operational missions against an opponent’s psychology and cognitive capacities. Specifically:

There are myriad targets and objects of psychological warfare; it is applied against the enemy, but also against friends; it targets externally, but also internally; it must deal with allied countries, but also the entire globe, and one must rely on the media acting in multiple directions jointly, with effective coverage of many areas, in order to comprehensively realize the various goals.[2]

The goal of psychological warfare is to influence, constrain, and/or alter an opponent’s thoughts, emotions, and habits while at the same time strengthening friendly psychology.[3]

Psychological Warfare and Information Warfare

Psychological warfare operations are integral to the broad concept of information warfare (xinxi zhanzheng). A product of the Information Age, information warfare is the struggle to dominate the generation and flow of information in order to enhance and support one’s own strategic goals while degrading and constraining those of an opponent. The ability to triumph in future “Local Wars Under Informationized Conditions”—the most likely form of wars in the Information Age—rests upon the ability to secure “information dominance (zhi xinxi quan).” This in turn requires the ability to collect, manage, and exploit accurate information more quickly than an opponent.

Information dominance rests on two primary factors: modern information technology, which is integral to information collection and transmission, and the ability to degrade the quality of information, whether by slowing down transmission or by introducing false or inaccurate data. But in the Chinese conception of psychological warfare, the users of information—both high-level decision-makers and lower-level policy implementers (individual soldiers, clerks, etc.)—are as important as the computers and networks and the software that runs them. Efforts to secure information dominance, therefore, will target not only the physical information infrastructure and the data that pass through it, but also the human agents that interact with those data, especially those who are making decisions.

Given the nature of modern technology and informationized societies, operations designed to influence a rival nation can no longer be aimed solely at military leaders or reserved for wartime. The interconnected nature of information, as well as information systems, makes clear-cut classifications of “military” and “civilian” almost impossible. Similarly, information collection, and even exploitation, is not necessarily restricted by “wartime” versus “peacetime” categorizations. As one Chinese volume observes, information warfare is constant and ongoing, whether in wartime or peacetime. Because of the complex, intertwined nature of modern international politics and economics:

[I]t is necessary in peacetime to undertake information warfare in the political, economic, technical, and military realms, as only then can one scientifically establish operational plans, appropriately calculate gains and losses in a conflict, appropriately control the level of attack, precisely strike predetermined targets, and seek the best strategic interest and long-term benefit.[4]

This philosophy is echoed in other PLA writings, which emphasize that modern information technology blurs the lines between peacetime and wartime, between military and civilian, and among strategy, operations, and tactics.[5] Rather than trying to draw artificial boundaries among these categories, the implication is that information should be treated as an integrated whole.

In this context, psychological operations are seen as an essential part of future conflicts, affecting the very perceptions that inform decision making, from the context to the biases. Successful psychological operations will therefore have repercussions at every level of operations, influencing the course of the conflict. To be effective, however, psychological warfare operations cannot be limited to wartime. Instead, peacetime psychological operations are necessary, both to understand an opponent better and to lay the groundwork for effective wartime operations.

Peacetime applications of psychological warfare techniques involve influencing and altering an opponent’s unconscious, implicit views in order to make that opponent more susceptible to coercion. By employing various forms of strategic communications, including diplomatic efforts, one can foster a positive national image and increase foreign sympathy and support for one’s own policies and goals. At the same time, such techniques attempt to isolate opponents, undermining their positions, portraying them as fostering ill intentions, and forcing them to react to a variety of charges so that their energy is dispersed.

In addition, employing all the tools of communications, including various forms of media, emphasizes one’s own strengths as well as a willingness to employ that strength to deter and coerce opponents more effectively. All the while, one must be working to counter opponents’ efforts to foster their own image of strength and unity. It is also likely that an opponent will attempt to demoralize one’s populace and that appropriate defensive measures will have to be taken.

In wartime, psychological operations shift emphasis towards more specifically military targets and goals. The primary objective of such efforts is to generate confusion, doubt, anxiety, fear, terror, regret, and exhaustion in an opponent, especially among senior military and civilian leaders. Ideally, such a campaign will induce neglect and maximize the chances of an opponent making mistakes. Wartime psychological warfare operations also aim to generate a sense of uncertainty and indecisiveness at all levels, thereby degrading opposition decision-making processes. The ability to interfere with an opponent’s information systems, coupled with efforts to influence decision makers, can create a strong psychological impact.

Another facet of wartime psychological operations is the sowing of discord and a sense of hopelessness in the enemy. Not only will this help generate war-weariness among enemy forces and populations and discourage resistance, but once the conflict is concluded, such operations may facilitate peace negotiations and induce more concessions. “When one defeats the enemy, it is not solely by killing the enemy, or winning a piece of ground, but is mainly in terms of cowing the enemy’s heart.”[6] In order to undermine the opponent’s morale, one must emphasize information favorable to oneself through various forms of media as well as through third parties, friendly elements in the opponent’s society, and similar outlets.

Finally, offensive psychological warfare operations must be complemented by defensive measures, since an opponent will also be trying to undermine one’s own forces, population, and leaders. One must therefore attempt to solidify popular support for the conflict, highlight one’s successes and the enemy’s failures, and instill confidence and support for the Party and the state. Such defensive measures require tight control of information flows in one’s own society and the insulation of one’s decision-makers and decision-making processes from enemy information warfare efforts. This need for control explains Beijing’s efforts to limit cyber access to the larger population, including the “Great Firewall of China.”

Chinese Concept of Psychological Warfare Tasks

For the PLA, psychological warfare is the resposibility of the General Political Department (GPD), working in coordination with the rest of the PLA. The GPD not only ensures political orthodoxy within the PLA, but also is responsible for maintaining morale, personnel administration (e.g., assessing promotions), and countering psychological warfare attacks. As one of the four “General Departments,” its purview covers the entire PLA, and its authority is second only to the war planners of the General Staff Department (GSD).

The “three warfares” of psychological warfare, legal warfare, and public opinion warfare are part of the GPD’s responsibility as laid out in the 2003 and 2010 “political work regulations” of the PLA. For the GPD, Chinese writings suggest that there are five broad tasks associated with psychological warfare.[7]

  • Presenting One’s Own Side as Just. Winning future wars will require efficient political mobilization. Failure to mobilize the populace will make them vulnerable to war-weariness and moral collapse such as occurred in the 1990s Balkan conflicts. Consequently, the foremost role of psychological warfare is to emphasize the justice of one’s cause, for only by portraying one’s own goals as just and the enemy’s as unjust can one hope to secure popular support and garner international sympathy and aid.[8] At the same time, successfully inculcating one’s own population and forces with a sense of a just cause will reduce the effectiveness of enemy propaganda and allow them to weather the inevitable setbacks associated with any conflict.
  • Emphasizing One’s Advantages. Psychological warfare is intended to support larger diplomatic, political, economic, and military ends. Consequently, it is essential to emphasize one’s own advantages in each of these respects. Such emphasis will bolster the confidence and will of one’s own side while simultaneously influencing the other side’s perceptions. In this regard, propaganda efforts—part of public opinion warfare—will extend beyond the superiority of one’s military forces and equipment to note advances in science and technology, culture, and economic capacity.
  • Undermining the Opposition’s Will to Resist. This is one of the fundamental tasks of wartime psychological warfare. Because the will of an enemy is a key determinant of ultimate victory, it is essential to degrade his morale and unravel his alliances and support from third parties. Psychological warfare efforts must therefore not only bolster one’s own side, but “cause the enemy to lose heart and disperse, so that even though they appear whole, they cannot exploit that.” Such a campaign can involve such diverse measures as implementing policies of benign treatment of prisoners (to promote a willingness to surrender) and developing base areas in the enemy’s rear (to make the enemy feel constantly insecure).
  • Encouraging Dissension in the Enemy’s Camp. This task is distinct from the previous one, insofar as such measures are more indirect than those associated with undermining the opposition’s will to resist. Instead, sparking dissension involves fostering anti-war elements and encouraging war-weariness. Such an approach is similar to the creation of “united front” tactics, wherein various local elements within the opponent’s camp are unified against the leadership without necessarily being openly supported by the PRC.
  • Implementing Psychological Defenses. Since psychological warfare can have such far-reaching impacts, in the Chinese view, it is assumed that an opponent will mount psychological attacks. Consequently, in addition to negating or neutralizing such attacks, it is necessary to expose them, both to defeat them and to demoralize an opponent by demonstrating the ineffectiveness of his efforts. Thus, not only must there be counter-propaganda activities, but one must also publicize enemy machinations and techniques, thereby exposing and highlighting their futility.

It is worth noting that none of these tasks is necessarily limited to actual wartime. Erecting psychological defenses, fostering efforts to bolster popular and military support for the Party’s leadership, and emphasizing the justness of one’s own cause are all long-term endeavors that can be undertaken in part in peacetime.

Principles Governing Psychological Warfare Operations

Chinese analyses of military affairs are informed by the idea of military science; i.e., that there is a proper scientific approach to the analysis of military affairs. This method entails identifying underlying principles that govern individual aspects of military operations, including those aimed at fulfilling the key tasks of psychological warfare operations.

  • Principle #1: Maintain direction. The principle of direction refers to the need to follow the Party’s direction and leadership, incorporating its commands regarding policies, parameters, and limitations into all psychological warfare activities—whether strategic, operational, or tactical and whether aimed at foreign or domestic audiences. It closely parallels the military axioms of unity of command and effort. The principle of direction dictates that psychological warfare activities should be planned and assessed based on (1) their support of broad national interests and goals, (2) their relation to specific political and diplomatic efforts, and (3) their support of integrated operational military activities. Direction is achieved through unified, integrated command and operational implementation—something facilitated by the existence of the GPD, which spans the entire PLA.
  • Principle #2: Adopt a systematic approach. Psychological warfare is not a single instance or even an accumulation of instances, but must instead be organized and integrated into a systematic, coherent whole. This approach requires coordination of psychological warfare operations between higher and lower levels so that the resulting unified construct will have maximum impact. Such coordination in turn requires that psychological warfare be tailored against opponents: There cannot be a “one size fits all” mentality. Rather, the character of the implementing force, as well as of the intended targets, must be taken into account with a suitable division of labor among the various components. The psychological warfare effort, moreover, should include both military and civilian entities. Given the authority and span of the GPD, Chinese psychological warfare operations are likely to be integrated into broader military operations and incorporated into the earliest stages of military planning.
  • Principle #3: Seize and retain the initiative. As Chinese writings on public opinion warfare and legal warfare have emphasized, with regard to political warfare, the side that gets its message out first has an enormous advantage. The same principle is true for psychological warfare. In order to seize the initiative, PLA writings stress that advance preparation is essential; only through early research can the most effective messaging be delivered, the most vulnerable targets be identified, and the best approach be determined. Securing the initiative significantly increases the likelihood of creating shifts and trends in one’s own favor. At the same time, being proactive in the implementation of psychological warfare activities compels an opponent to spend time and resources countering one’s own messages rather than implanting his own program. This principle again highlights the importance of undertaking some elements of psychological warfare in peacetime.
  • Principle #4: Assume an objective outlook. In the view of the PLA, psychological warfare operations are governed by certain objective laws (including these principles). Therefore, effective implementation of psychological warfare cannot be subject to hunches and hopes; rather, it requires a full consideration of all existing conditions and contemporary realities. To this end, psychological warfare efforts should not be based on outlandish or unrealistic ruses, but instead should be consistent with larger contexts. The most effective psychological warfare efforts will reinforce preconceptions.
    In this regard, Chinese analysts are making an observation comparable to that of Allied planners in World War II, whose deceptions before D-Day played to German (and especially Hitler’s) expectations that the main attack would be at the Pas de Calais. Just as it is difficult to dislodge preconceived notions, it is far easier to exploit those same notions. Effective psychological warfare activities will therefore not try to substitute a preferred narrative, but rather will exploit the prejudices and assumptions of the other side.
  • Principle #5: Recognize linkages. To be effective, psychological warfare techniques must be mutually reinforcing. This requires careful pre-planning, coordination among the various elements engaging in activities, and the creation of a single, unified plan and command authority. Psychological operations therefore also demand a dedicated, professional cadre and cannot be conducted as an afterthought by amateurs. At the same time, local authorities and resources may well have specific—even superior—understanding of potential psychological warfare targets; consequently, their knowledge and resources should be leveraged to maximize effect. Similarly, psychological warfare operations cannot be undertaken in isolation from other activities (e.g., military attacks or diplomatic and economic maneuvers); they must be coordinated with and supportive of those operations.[9] Finally, offensive and defensive psychological warfare operations must be mutually complementary.
  • Principle #6: Retain flexibility. Psychological warfare activities must always pay attention to the enemy, recognizing and accommodating changes in the enemy’s psychology, the battlefield environment, and the relative stance of oneself and the enemy. Those responsible for implementing psychological warfare must be prepared to exploit changes in the situation in order to extract maximum effect.

Typology of Psychological Warfare Operations

In examining the long history of psychological warfare operations—foreign and domestic, historical and contemporary—one group of PLA analysts has created a typology of psychological warfare operations. In assembling a selection of 100 case studies, the authors have broken them down into coercive, deceptive, alienating, and defensive psychological warfare.[10]

Coercive psychological warfare is aimed at causing an opponent to surrender or otherwise abandon a fight by leveraging his thinking, emotions, and/or will and persuading him that resistance is futile. It requires the possession of substantial, actual military capabilities, but the objective is to obviate the necessity to use those capabilities. Coercive psychological warfare involves manipulating the psychological workings of the opponent’s leadership and population through displays of martial capability and the insinuation of violence. If this manipulation is effective, one can degrade an opponent’s willingness to resist to the point where he will surrender without necessitating the full employment of actual capabilities.

Coercive psychological warfare is the preamble to actual conflict. That is, if it is not successful, then conflict will occur; successful coercion will mean that conflict is avoided because the opposition will have given way. In many ways, it harkens back to Sun Tzu’s observation that the apex of achievement is to win without fighting. Successful coercive psychological warfare is the realization of ends for which one is prepared to go to war without having to take that final step and engage in active, kinetic, destructive warfare. From the Chinese perspective, given the destructiveness of nuclear weapons and even conventional forces, there is also significant incentive to develop coercive psychological approaches in order to achieve strategic ends without having to resort to the use of force.

Coercive psychological warfare can be implemented through military exercises, weapons tests, and other displays of capabilities. A triumphant history of previous wars is also important, as such success demonstrates the capabilities at one’s disposal and, along with other displays of martial prowess, leaves one’s opponent feeling overmatched and outclassed. Interestingly, Chinese analysts suggest that this approach is used most by the United States, which sees great benefit in achieving its political aims without having to engage in actual combat. The range of annual military exercises, both national and multinational, not only allows the United States to experiment with a variety of new weapons and tactics, but also demonstrates American military effectiveness, thereby intimidating both real and potential opponents.

Chinese computer network activities should be seen as attempts to exert coercive psychological pressure. The constant reconnoitering of computer networks raises serious questions about the security of information systems and potentially affects state and non-state actors’ willingness to communicate. In a crisis, such activities may well raise questions about operational security and the extent to which the PRC may already have penetrated national information systems and databases.

Deceptive psychological warfare entails the use of various ruses and other steps including camouflage, dummies, disguises, and the like to give wrong impressions and generate mistaken assessments. It is rooted in the idea of “garbage in, garbage out”; if misleading or deceptive information is fed to decision-makers, the resulting decisions will themselves be wrong. It is another aspect of the struggle for information dominance (zhi xinxi quan), which is seen as the keystone for fighting and winning future “Local Wars Under Informationized Conditions.” While the advances in modern information technology allow for more rapid acquisition, transmission, and exploitation of information, deceptive psychological warfare degrades the quality of such information available to an opponent. Thus, it is an important complement to modern information systems.

Although deceptive psychological warfare has long been a staple of military operations (more than 2,000 years ago, for example, Sun Tzu observed that “all war is deception”), its impact is described in terms of modern psychology. The purpose of deceptive psychological warfare is to employ stratagems and other deceptive measures to implant psychological and informative barriers in the cognitive processes of opponents. Not only will this make it harder to differentiate between what is true and what is false; it will also complicate decision making. For example, perhaps opposing commanders are given incorrect information, or perhaps their thought processes are retarded as they try to reconcile accurate data with inaccurate data. Either way, the result is the same: a military advantage.

Deceptive psychological warfare depends upon creating false impressions while masking reality, much as the deceptive measures for D-Day entailed both hiding the mountains of supplies and various actual forces and creating false formations upon which the Germans would fixate. Such a strategy in turn requires that the deceptive information be both credible and consistent with the opponent’s psychological activities and patterns. In the Allied deception efforts prior to D-Day, for example, the Allied planners not only encouraged German preconceptions of an invasion at the Pas de Calais, but even “assigned” General George S. Patton to command the assault forces embodied within the fictitious “First US Army Group.”[11]

An essential element for deception operations is to exploit “confirmation bias,” or “the tendency of individuals to look for, and attach more importance to, information that validates their existing beliefs,” while dismissing or explaining away information that invalidates or contradicts those same beliefs.[12] As Chinese authors note, an opponent will be looking for deceptions and false leads. Deceptive psychological warfare efforts will therefore be much more likely to succeed—i.e., the ideas presented will be accepted—if they support or are consistent with preconceived notions and frameworks, since they will then fit more readily into the opponent’s cognitive and psychological framework and be subjected to less careful scrutiny.

Alienation psychological warfare is aimed at generating dissension and discord in the opponent’s camp, creating friction and fracturing links between the population and the leadership, among leaders or between allies, and between the military and civilian population. By generating mutual suspicion, one causes the opposition to become more suspicious of each other, which forestalls effective cooperation. As one Chinese volume observes, “castles are inevitably easier to attack from within.”[13]

Alienation psychological warfare requires a thorough understanding of an opponent at both the individual and group levels. It requires grasping group dynamics, understanding fault lines between individuals and within groups, and identifying and exploiting individual personality and character traits, as well as underlying jealousies and suspicions, in order to tailor specific operations against them as effectively as possible.

This type of psychological warfare builds on the belief that people’s activities are often constrained by their underlying nature or character, especially the passive aspects. Often manifested as weaknesses or flaws in their character, such passivity is an essential vulnerability to be exploited. By emphasizing the propensities to which those passive aspects are linked, one can misguide and mislead an enemy commander with relative ease. As important, such emphasis can generate divisions within the top leadership or between the leaders and the led.

Consequently, this type of psychological warfare demands much more extensive research into an opponent as one seeks to determine weaknesses in individual character and group solidarity, as well as methods of exacerbating those weaknesses and vulnerabilities. By creating more interest groups—many of which have divergent interests—globalization facilitates alienation psychological warfare. This in turn generates ever more fault lines, which can cause an opponent to be much more brittle and easily disrupted.

Defensive psychological warfare seeks to counteract an opponent’s attempt to employ coercive, deceptive, and alienation psychological warfare against one’s own side. It entails a variety of methods, given the complexity of psychological offense. Some of the more important methods include:

  • Strengthening indoctrination to immunize one’s leadership and population against the enemy’s messaging efforts.
  • Preempting the enemy’s psychological warfare efforts in order to create a broad consensus among one’s own population, forces, and leaders that an opponent will find it harder to undermine. This often will involve undertaking psychological operations in peacetime or at least before the formal onset of hostilities. It also includes strengthening psychological warfare training to heighten awareness of enemy efforts, thus lowering domestic susceptibility.
  • Controlling public opinion through such means as control of the media and strategic communications, as well as discouragement of rumor-mongering. This will limit the opportunities for an opponent to exploit differences (as in alienation psychological warfare) or otherwise undermine one’s own military and popular morale.
  • Forging greater internal consensus to increase national solidarity and unify the various social and political groups. This includes greater enforcement of laws and regulations in order to reduce the temptation to break the law and thereby create opportunities for enemy psychological warfare activities.

PLA analyses recognize that the faster tempo and operational rhythms of modern warfare impose greater pressures on both military and civilian populations. Consequently, they acknowledge the need to improve safeguards against and treatment for psychological pressure and damage, including post-traumatic stress syndrome. Moreover, as one volume observes, because of the one-child policy, young people are pampered and may therefore be more psychologically brittle and less capable of handling stress. Defensive psychological measures are therefore seen as an essential means of limiting the impact of wartime pressures on them.

PLA Assessment of Psychological Warfare in the Iraq War

The PLA has not engaged in a conflict since 1979. Consequently, its analysts have examined foreign military experiences to derive likely lessons and trends in modern warfare. The second Gulf War, with the American defeat of the Iraqi military, is seen as the epitome of conventional modern warfare, including in the application of psychological warfare operations.

In the view of PLA analysts, psychological operations were conducted at an unprecedented scale and intensity, from the tactical to the strategic levels, and engaged a range of both military and non-military measures. In particular, Chinese analysts believe the United States factored psychological warfare into all of its thinking, from strategic decisions to operational plans to actual tactical employment and military battles.

According to this analysis, the U.S. began psychological warfare operations long before March 2003. Indeed, at the strategic level, psychological warfare efforts began almost upon the conclusion of Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm. Two decades of international sanctions had not only limited Iraq’s ability to maintain its forces, but also created a siege mentality among the Iraqi population. This isolation was reinforced by the repeated charges that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, dating back to the George H.W. Bush Administration.[14]

This strategic isolation, both diplomatic and economic, coupled with the imposition of a strategic information blockade by denying Iraq access to international media and communications, imposed significant pressure on the Iraqi leadership and population long before the outbreak of hostilities.[15] Senior U.S. leaders also openly discussed post-war Iraqi reconstruction plans even before hostilities had begun—an attempt to demonstrate that Iraq’s defeat was a fait accompli.

The strategic psychological pressure on the Iraqis was sustained even after hostilities commenced—not only through the continued isolation of Iraq, but even through the naming of allied operations. As one Chinese assessment noted, the decision to title the war “Operation Iraqi Freedom” was a masterful psychological ploy. It implied that the United States undertook this war in order to liberate the Iraqi people, with no ulterior motives.[16]

Chinese analysts believe that as the onset of open hostilities drew closer, the United States engaged in alienation psychological warfare at the strategic level by calling senior Iraqi officers directly on their personal cell phones and sending e-mails to their personal accounts, trying to induce them to surrender or otherwise not operate at full effectiveness. Such measures sowed seeds of discord and mistrust within the senior Iraqi leadership, thereby dissipating solidarity at the very top.[17] Such chaos was further exacerbated by American engagement of a variety of exiles and dissidents in order to foment additional discord and create divisions among Iraqis.[18]

Once the war began, the United States, according to Chinese assessments, employed coercive psychological warfare methods, mostly at the tactical level. These operations included such measures as “decapitation (zhanshou xingdong)” efforts against Iraq, which sought to kill Saddam in the first hours of the conflict. Although these attacks failed to achieve that objective, coalition forces regularly claimed that Saddam had been killed; the spread of false information and rumors is a basic component of psychological warfare. Along these lines, one PLA assessment suggests that the dispatch of relatively small armored detachments into Baghdad in April was not an unnecessary military risk, but rather an attempt to erode Iraqi military will further by showing that U.S. forces could operate at will and generating additional uncertainty within the Iraqi leadership.

However, coalition forces hardly had a monopoly on psychological warfare. Chinese authors observe that within the more constrained resources available to it, the Iraqi government also sought to employ psychological warfare both to inspire greater resistance against the invaders and to garner more support from abroad—or at least condemnation of the Anglo–American leaders of the coalition. Thus, in the Chinese view, the Iraqis chose to assume an almost passive stance in the months leading up to the outbreak of hostilities, allowing U.N. inspectors into Iraq and making clear that Baghdad had no intention of commencing hostilities.[19] Once the war began, Saddam was regularly televised, undermining coalition efforts to claim that he had been killed.

What the United States Should Do

It seems clear that the Chinese take psychological warfare very seriously and believe that America’s use of such tactics is a major factor in the recent success of U.S. military operations.[20]It is ironic that the Chinese see the United States as pursuing a much more coherent, integrated approach to psychological operations when Western analyses and policy approaches seem to treat psychological operations as discrete entities.

Many Western policymakers differentiate between psychological warfare at the strategic level, involving national tools such as strategic communications and public diplomacy, and more tactical-level efforts waged by dedicated psychological warfare units. Indeed, the renaming of the latter as “military information support operations (MISO)” underscores this significant but artificial divide in the American approach. Given the radical advances in information technology and the attendant globalization and permeation of information, psychological operations need to be seen in a more holistic light.

Consequently, reducing obstacles to information flow and public outreach is the most important thing America can do to improve its psychological warfare capabilities. Whether at the strategic or tactical level, there needs to be an overarching communications plan, incorporating all of the relevant agencies and entities, to convey to the rest of the world that the United States is a reliable ally and steadfast partner, willing to cooperate with other states to advance our mutual interests but fully prepared to counter aggression against friends and allies. Whether the United States government is seeking to deter, persuade, coerce, or placate others, it can succeed only by presenting a coherent message. To this end, the U.S. government, and especially Congress, should continue to break down such barriers, as was done recently with modernization of the Smith–Mundt Act.[21]

At the strategic level, this entails improving inter-agency strategic communications, including coordination of messages and efforts among the major foreign policy departments—State, Defense, Commerce, Treasury, and even the Departments of Justice and Agriculture, both of which regularly interact with foreign governments and non-governmental organizations. Only by creating and transmitting unified messages can the United States gain the initiative in influencing foreign governments and populations, whether allied, adversary, or neutral. The Pentagon, which does not necessarily have the expertise, should not head this inter-agency effort. Furthermore, such an operation should also extend beyond the State Department and might well involve the reestablishment of the United States Information Agency, drawing upon the public diplomacy resources of the entire government.

Another aspect of strategic psychological warfare operations is the effective use of alliances and relationship building, which should emphasize current relations while moving beyond traditional allies. In the Asia–Pacific region, for example, the United States possesses a significant foundation of strong alliances with Japan, South Korea, Thailand, the Philippines, and Australia as well as special relationships with Taiwan, Singapore, and New Zealand and a revision of relations with India. The array of bilateral and increasingly multilateral relations among these states sends a strong signal to potential antagonists and adversaries that hostile actions will likely generate a concerted response from a powerful set of nations.

By exposing Chinese psychological warfare activities, America can enhance its other information flow operations. Just as the recent Mandiant report on Chinese cyber activities reveals the extent to which the Chinese military is actively engaged in both traditional national intelligence gathering and commercial espionage, the U.S. should publicize examples of Chinese efforts to influence foreign public opinion, whether through use of Chinese state-owned media, cyber espionage, or other national means. The growing Chinese assertiveness on maritime territorial disputes, including not only the Spratlys and Senkakus, elsewhere in the East and South China Sea, is as much psychological posturing as physical action and should be countered by American diplomatic and economic, as well as military, moves.

At the operational and tactical level, the U.S. military should recognize the importance of its psychological warfare capabilities. Labeling them “military information support operations” would seem to undercut the holistic nature of psychological warfare activities, which are neither solely the purview of the military nor focused only on military-related information. Indeed, successful psychological warfare operations cannot take a stovepiped approach; they must incorporate military and civilian public affairs specialists, press secretaries and public affairs officers, and individual military and civilian personnel.

This holistic approach entails not only integrating MISO activities into all aspects of military planning and activities, but also recognizing that American psychological warfare assets are likely to be a major target for the PLA in times of crisis and especially conflict. Given the limited numbers of such assets, neutralizing them, whether through cyber activities, kinetic attacks, or other means, would affect the course of the conflict. The Chinese military is therefore likely to commit significant resources to countering such units early in any conflict. American planners should recognize this threat and incorporate both active and passive security measures into their own preparations.

War in a Time of Peace

The Information Age provides unparalleled ability to influence both a nation’s leaders and its population. The core of the Chinese concept of psychological warfare is to manipulate those audiences by affecting their thought processes and cognitive frameworks. In doing so, Beijing hopes to be able to win future conflicts without firing a shot—victory realized through a combination of undermining opponents’ wills and inducing maximum confusion.

Indeed, although it is a time of peace, psychological warfare is already underway, employing a variety of both military and civilian means. It is therefore essential that the United States counter such psychological operations now while preparing to use its own arsenal of political warfare weapons should a conflict ever arise.

—Dean Cheng is Research Fellow in Chinese Political and Security Affairs in the Asian Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation.


Filed under: Information operations

The Chinese People’s Liberation Army And Information Warfare

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