Military considered an army of covert bloggers to ‘pass the U.S. message’
Tuesday, April 01, 2008 at 11:01 am
The propaganda potential of blogs — noted by former Bush adviser Dan Bartlett, who said many conservative sites “regurgitate exactly” what the administration tells them — isn’t lost on the U.S. government: in 2006 the military’s Joint Special Operations University explored the possibility of covertly paying prominent bloggers or training and promoting new bloggers to “pass the U.S. message.”
Co-written by James Kinniburgh and Dorothy Denning, the report “Blogs and Military Information Strategy” [revealed by the website Cryptome and available as a pdf], parses the benefits and notes the many drawbacks of enlisting bloggers, both here and abroad, in information campaigns. “Hiring a block of bloggers to verbally attack a specific person or promote a specific message may be worth considering,” it states.
Continued: Click “Read more”The military says the paper was just an academic exercise, and co-author Denning e-mailed Wired magazine, “I got some positive feedback from people who read the article, but I don’t know if it led to anything.” Yet given some of the tactics described — “pass[ing] false or erroneous information through the media… in support of military deception activities,” for example — it seems unlikely the Pentagon would be open were it impementing the plan.
While the document doesn’t specifically name friendly blogs it could seek to channel its message, it does note the roles of conservative blogs like The Drudge Report, Little Green Footballs, Townhall.com and Free Republic forums, without listing any centrist or left-leaning blogs.
We shouldn’t be surprised that the Bush administration considered paying bloggers to tout its messages, writes Steve Benen at The Carpetbagger Report. After all, we’ve seen its propaganda attempts again and again and again.
2 Comments
Comment posted April 1, 2008 @ 12:16 pm
We shouldn’t forget… the overt use of bloggers to spread military propaganda:
“During almost daily conference calls, bloggers and online journalists, including prominent Minnesota bloggers Scott Johnson and John Hinderaker of Power Line and Ed Morrissey Captain’s Quarters, are connected with military personnel during the Blogger’s Roundtable.
“The list of bloggers who regularly participate in the conference calls is overwhelmingly conservative and friendly to the goals of the Bush Administration,” wrote Silverstein. “The government is picking certain people as ‘surrogates’ to the exclusion of many others and feeding them news.”
Comment posted April 1, 2008 @ 7:16 am
We shouldn't forget… the overt use of bloggers to spread military propaganda:
“During almost daily conference calls, bloggers and online journalists, including prominent Minnesota bloggers Scott Johnson and John Hinderaker of Power Line and Ed Morrissey Captain's Quarters, are connected with military personnel during the Blogger's Roundtable.
“The list of bloggers who regularly participate in the conference calls is overwhelmingly conservative and friendly to the goals of the Bush Administration,” wrote Silverstein. “The government is picking certain people as 'surrogates' to the exclusion of many others and feeding them news.”
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