[ISN] DOD aims psy-ops at Iraqi officers

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Sat Mar 22 2003 - 00:51:42 PST

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    http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2003/0317/web-psyops-03-21-03.asp
    
    By Matthew French 
    March 24, 2003
    
    The Defense Department is continuing, and perhaps has stepped up, its 
    electronic psychological operations campaign directed at the upper 
    echelons of the Iraqi military now that hostilities have begun.
    
    In a press conference March 20, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said 
    that DOD officials are "in communication with still more people who 
    are officials of the [Iraqi] military at various levels," warning them 
    of the outcome of their actions should they take up arms against U.S. 
    or allied forces.
    
    Defense officials confirmed in January that they had been sending 
    e-mail messages to Iraqi military officials as part of a psychological 
    operations campaign. For decades, military forces have dropped 
    leaflets on enemy soldiers in an attempt to persuade them to surrender 
    before engaging in combat. The new e-mail campaign, according to 
    experts, is a technological extension of that.
    
    DOD in January began sending thousands of e-mail messages to 
    commanders, promising protection for those who comply with the order 
    to not use weapons of mass destruction against allied forces. 
    Responding to reports from CNN and Reuters that quote anonymous 
    military officials, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command told Federal 
    Computer Week that the e-mail program does exist, but he would not 
    divulge any other details.
    
    Robert Martinage, a senior defense analyst for the Center for 
    Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, said the psychological operations 
    campaigns have moved beyond just e-mail, but that remains the most 
    directed effort of which he is aware.
    
    E-mail messages can address an individual personally, rather than 
    relying on blanketing a geographic area, as was required with dropping 
    leaflets.
    
    "The ability to reach into the country and communicate is really a 
    part of an overall, comprehensive psychological operations plan that 
    has gotten more sophisticated," Martinage said. "We have also taken 
    control of the major airwaves and are sending U.S. broadcasts out."
    
    Martinage said the message DOD is trying to get across to the Iraqi 
    people in general, and military in particular, is threefold: first, do 
    not resist or take up arms against the allies; second, do not use 
    weapons of mass destruction, or they will be held accountable as war 
    criminals; and third, this is not a force of occupation, but one of 
    liberation.
    
    Getting the right messages to the right people is a key part of the 
    operation, proving that the United States has the knowledge of who is 
    in charge and how to reach them, said retired Navy Rear Adm. Stephen 
    Baker, a senior fellow at the Center for Defense Information, a 
    nonprofit, independent research organization.
    
    Baker said the effectiveness of the psychological operations will 
    probably be known in the first few days of the conflict, as allied 
    ground forces move further into Iraq.
    
    "The e-mail campaign will probably be proven to be a successful part 
    of an overall psychological warfare plan to hit them in every 
    direction using all of the conduits available to [the military]," he 
    said.
    
    The takeover of the radio airwaves will allow U.S. and allied forces 
    to reach the Iraqi citizenry and soldiers in the field, and the e-mail 
    campaign is directed at the higher-grade officers. Next, he said, 
    could come the takeover of TV airwaves, giving allied forces a virtual 
    lock on all forms of electronic media within the country.
    
    "We have the technology and the capability to do just that, and it 
    would probably prove to be very effective," Baker said.
    
    Baker has said he thinks that the 193rd Special Operations Wing, which 
    is part of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard, and the CIA were 
    "certainly" involved in the e-mail campaign, as were Iraqi defectors.
    
    The 193rd is equipped with an airborne electronic broadcasting system 
    and its mission is to support psychological operations by broadcasting 
    programs in standard AM/FM radio, television, short wave and military 
    communication bands, which they did during the Gulf War.
    
    
    
    *==============================================================*
    "Communications without intelligence is noise;  Intelligence
    without communications is irrelevant." Gen Alfred. M. Gray, USMC
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