[ISN] Information warfare in the war on Iraq

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Mon Mar 24 2003 - 00:41:04 PST

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    Forwarded from: vstaggat_private
    
    [Some interesting information operations being carried out during the
    war. Unfortunately here in Australia the television networks seem to
    forget or ignore there is a war on at nighttime - thankfully I have
    friends with cable!]
    
    
    
    http://www.canoe.ca/WinnipegNews/ws.ws-03-21-0035.html
    
    Friday, March 21, 2003 
    'Information warfare'
    Tried and true propaganda serves multiple purposes
    By MARK FRITZ, Associated Press
    
    Want to rattle the enemy? Give him a sneak peek at a scary new weapon,
    pepper his commanders with e-mailed inducements to surrender, fill the
    airwaves with endless accounts of an awesome army warming up for
    warfare. Make something up about his wife having an affair.
    
    Need to rally the folks at home? Question the patriotism of the
    anti-war crowd, recite a grisly litany of the adversary's atrocities,
    maybe roll out the trusty comparisons to that mother of all evildoers,
    Adolf Hitler. Promise peace as the payoff for war.
    
    During the Second World War, such tactics were called morale and
    subversion operations. Today, the voguish terms are information
    warfare and "public diplomacy." But the basic principles of propaganda
    predate cable television news. They are as old as war itself.
    
    STRATEGIC PURPOSE
    
    "People painted their faces, wore bearskins to look bigger and
    intimidating, carried banners, beat drums, chanted slogans," says
    Susan Brewer, a University of Wisconsin historian and author of To Win
    The Peace: British Propaganda During World War II.
    
    Experts agree that every word, image, leak and threat being uttered by
    nearly everyone connected with a war against Iraq is serving some sort
    of strategic purpose. Some of it works, some it doesn't. Some of it is
    true, and some of it is pure deception.
    
    "None of this stuff is incidental," said Scott Gerwehr, an analyst at
    the Rand Corp.
    
    The selective missile strikes on Baghdad late Wednesday ran counter to
    a U.S.  military commander's comments earlier in the day to "shock and
    awe" the enemy at war's opening with unprecedented firepower, a
    classic example of using propaganda to deceive.
    
    Since the attacks were aimed at a place where the Iraqi leadership was
    believed to be holed up, it fit with another propaganda objective: to
    intimidate the leadership without unduly terrorizing a general
    population being told it was about to be liberated.
    
    Sometimes, a simple gaffe can be a strategic gift to an enemy. Brewer
    gives President George W. Bush a "C" for his efforts so far. Polls
    show he has won the support of most Americans, but alienated much of
    the world.
    
    His one-time reference to the war on terrorism as a "crusade" was a
    blunder, seemingly affirming the worst fears of the Muslim community:
    That the U.S.  agenda was to repeat the Christian Crusades of a
    millennium ago to supplant Islam in the Holy Lands.
    
    Though the president apologized, such slips have a tendency to stick.
    
    "These things are reproduced as truths, and as permanent truths," said
    Philip M. Taylor, a historian at Britain's Leeds University and the
    author of War and the Media: Propaganda and Persuasion in the Gulf
    War.
    
    Taylor said reports that the United States was already soliciting
    Iraqi reconstruction bids from a list of entirely American contractors
    was another inadvertent propaganda plus for Saddam.
    
    ACCOMPLISHED PERSUASION
    
    Despite Bush's alienation of some key allies, the most recent polls
    show a solid majority of Americans back a war on Iraq even without UN
    approval.
    
    His sombre, forceful, State of the Union speech in particular was an
    accomplished piece of persuasion, said Nancy Snow, a communications
    professor at California State University and author of the book
    Propaganda, Inc.
    
    Snow said she showed a tape of the speech to her American Media
    History class. "It came across as 'Wow!' They were very impressed with
    the gravity,"  she said.
    
    As for the people who stand to be on the receiving end of a western
    military operation, the Iraqis are being bombarded with radio
    broadcasts and leaflets urging them to support Saddam's ouster. U.S.
    operatives are even sending e- mails and making phone calls to Iraqi
    commanders.
    
    The Americans and their allies dropped 28 million leaflets on Iraq
    during the 1991 war. For the sequel, 80 million already have been
    dropped.
    
    
    ________________________________________
    Vernon Stagg B.Sc, B.Comp (Hons)
    Ph.D. Candidate
    School of Information Technology
    Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria
    Australia,    3217
    
    email : vstaggat_private
    web   : http://www.infowar.com.au
    ________________________________________
    
    
    
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