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Directive Number 9
Belmont Club | 12-7-09 | Wretchard

Posted on 12/09/2009 8:54:39 AM PST by ckilmer

December 7th, 2009 3:29 pm

Directive Number 9

During the Algerian war, the terrorists promulgated an order which with variations would provide the backbone doctrine for information warfare into the 21st century. Dr. Cori Dauber, the author of the SSI monograph “The YouTube War: Fighting in a World of Cameras in Every Cell Phone and Photoshop on Every Computer” describes the ground zero of the modern information Jihad.

The Algerians’ “Directive Number Nine” argued that it was better to kill one man where the American press would hear of it than nine where no one would find out. What Khattab realized was that technology had finally put into the terrorists’ reach the ability to cut out the middleman—the Western reporter.

Information warfare, of which terrorism is a subset, consists of the operational art of subordinating actual physical effects to their propaganda impact. The actual physical damage counts for less than the memetic effect. The picture of the murder of an unimportant election worker on Haifa Street, Baghdad in 2004, for which an Associated Press photographer received a Pulitzer Prize was a textbook case. A low ranking bureaucrat was murdered but a high level narrative was established. It was for the insurgents, more than a fair trade. The murder on Haifa street also cemented its corrollary: the identity of the victim doesn’t really matter. Anyone will do. What counts is the picture. And in that brace of propositions lies 95% of terrorism. The image on Haifa street was altered in the old-fashioned way. There are two ways to “Photoshop” an image: digitally and the secondly by controlling its composition like a Hollywood director. See Directive Number 9.


Information warfare is so important that Dauber suggests that on the battlefield the priority of the combat soldier and combat cameraman have been reversed. No longer is it the job of the cameraman to support the military effort, it is the role of the military arm to set up the picture for the cameraman.

Today even the smallest terrorist or insurgent group active in the Islamist movement, certainly those in the combat theaters of Afghanistan and Iraq, will have a specific position within the organization for the person whose responsibility is “media affairs”—in this they mirror al-Qaeda itself — but this is invariably one of the highest ranking posts, obviously seen as a job of great importance and authority.

An insurgent infantryman is expendable. An auteur — ah! that is something else. And the cost of production has been declining inversely with Moore’s Law. Jim Gray of Microsoft (still missing at sea) noted that ordinary individuals now have access to vast computational power and database access over the network. It’s capability now allows them, for example, to use Google Earth to plan operations. Dauber describes what raiders found one one computer in Iraq.

The satellite photographs show in detail the buildings inside the bases and vulnerable areas such as tented accommodation, lavatory blocks, and where lightly armored land rovers are parked. Written on the back of one set of photographs taken of the Shatt al Arab Hotel, headquarters for the 1,000 men of the Staffordshire Regiment battle group, officers found the camp’s precise longitude and latitude.

This planning information would have cost literally millions only a decade before. Today it is nearly free. But even without the network, modern computing has enabled the information warrior in ways that are as revolutionary as the Gutenberg Press. Gray might have been describing video collection and editing when he wrote: “the ideal mobile task is stateless (no database or database access), has a tiny network input and output, and has huge computational demand.”

Between June and roughly November 2007 (in other words, roughly the period corresponding to the surge of additional forces to Baghdad), American forces captured and destroyed eight media labs belonging to al-Qaeda in Iraq. Two were in Baghdad, two were in Mosul, one in Diyala near Baquba, one in Samarra, and one in Garma. In the eight labs, they found a total of 23 terabytes of material that had not yet been uploaded to the web.

One of the underappreciated aspects of the information revolution is how the MSM has slowly been denegirated from a fact-finder to a mere distribution channel. The 23 terabytes of data was gold looking for a market. As Dauber notes, “American media outlets now depend on the terrorists and insurgents for content” and in one case ABC News almost used a script written by the Islamic Army of Iraq as the basis for one of its stories.

Of course, not only Islamic insurgents but every political movement has tried to use information warfare — whatever they may have chosen to call it — for their own ends. Adolpf Hitler claimed it was possible to sell a complete falsehood, provided it was repeated often enough. In fact, the bigger the lie, the more easily sold because no one would believe anyone would have the effrontery to prevaricate on so collossal a scale.Wikipedia quotes Mein Kampf.

in the big lie there is always a certain force of credibility; because the broad masses of a nation … it would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously. Even though the facts which prove this to be so may be brought clearly to their minds, they will still doubt and waver and will continue to think that there may be some other explanation. For the grossly impudent lie always leaves traces behind it, even after it has been nailed down, a fact which is known to all expert liars in this world and to all who conspire together in the art of lying.

Hitler suggests that the brotherhood of “expert liars” know certain tricks in common. It is perhaps suggestive that the global warmists should suspect the Russians of hacking the computer files at the CRU. The closed CRU building at the University of East Anglia and the blank face of a nondescript building in the formerly closed city of Tomsky may look at each with understanding. One set of information warriors would naturally suspect another. The Independent reports:

The computer hack, said a senior member of the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, was not an amateur job, but a highly sophisticated, politically motivated operation. And others went further. The guiding hand behind the leaks, the allegation went, was that of the Russian secret services.

The leaked emails, which claimed to provide evidence that the unit’s head, Professor Phil Jones, colluded with colleagues to manipulate data and hide “unhelpful” research from critics of climate change science, were originally posted on a server in the Siberian city of Tomsk, at a firm called Tomcity, an internet security business.

The truth is often a set of sparks adrift on a sea of darkness. Who knew that al-Qaida killed eight times more Muslims than non-Muslims? You wouldn’t know if al-Qaeda could help it. Perhaps one of the reasons for the growing skepticism surrounding the assertion of anthropogenic global warming is that the key elements of the theme have emerged from a single closely linked group of climatologists. Climategate, as the revelation of emails from the CRU has come to be called derives its force the topology of the information source. Information warriors have realized Khattab’s dream. They have interposed themselves into the public process of knowing. Journalism has to manage information — using metrics like lineage, collateral and validation — in ways that it is presently unaccustomed to. Maybe the best schools of future journalism will be at Caltech and MIT.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: biglie; climategate; fauxtography; googleearth; information; informationwarfare; internet; journalism; mediaaffairs; mediaconflict; medialabs; missinglink; msm; propaganda
Directive Number 9
1 posted on 12/09/2009 8:54:40 AM PST by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer

I’d like to see more articles like this on Free Republic. It contains the core criticism of conservative failure in the latter 20th and 21st century. Yes, conflict in Marshal McLuhan’s information age is MEDIA CONFLICT, perioid. You want to know why the MSM is 80% liberal, why universities are 90% liberal, why entertainment is 90% liberal, why liberals are able to put 20k people on the streets over an issue, why the 3rd world hates us...

Liberals communicate better. Simple. Why? Because they are empaths. Simple. Conservatives piss and moan about liberal touchy feely “caring” and wonder why people can’t just get down to the “life’s a bitch and then you die” struggle for survival. A clot of hippie potheads in touch with their “feelings”, basically took over modern culture because they empathize with the suffering of others. It’s that freaking simple. Until conservatives learn to do something similar in an authentic manner, they continue to wonder what the hell hit them.


2 posted on 12/09/2009 9:27:38 AM PST by Yollopoliuhqui (consciousness is a heads up display)
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To: Yollopoliuhqui
Ah, the libtards may be able to put THOUSANDS on the street but we have put MILLIONS on the Mall recently, if you recall. We are beginning to "shrug" and we will be heard.
3 posted on 12/09/2009 10:30:29 AM PST by wastoute
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To: ckilmer

A very interesting article. If I read it right, it says that the Russians were behind ClimateGate. Maybe Russia was capturing the Soros’s queen so to say.


4 posted on 12/09/2009 10:37:26 AM PST by FloridaGeezer
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To: Yollopoliuhqui

“I’d like to see more articles like this on Free Republic”

I have added above a few keywords which, when searched, may help to link this thread with other threads of similar topics.


5 posted on 12/09/2009 11:06:17 AM PST by deks
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To: FloridaGeezer

. If I read it right, it says that the Russians were behind ClimateGate.
........
It doesn’t say the Russians are behind outing climategate.


6 posted on 12/09/2009 11:12:27 AM PST by ckilmer (Phi)
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To: deks

thanks that helps


7 posted on 12/09/2009 11:13:40 AM PST by ckilmer (Phi)
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To: ckilmer

BTTT


8 posted on 12/09/2009 11:21:08 AM PST by paulycy (Demand Constitutionality.)
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To: ckilmer

I’ve found keyword searching interesting in that it can bring up relevant articles and threads on a topic from years past (and years to come as it is added to new threads).

After reading the article, I added a number of keywords (but not the “climategate” or “missinglink” ones). The media-_____ ones are apparently new keywords.

After I saw the “missinglink” keyword I wondered what effect a missing link would actually have on a posted thread. Apparently, on a list of posted threads (like on the main page here or on a keyword search page), when the source link is missing or is not clickable, one cannot click directly from that list to the source article.

However I did see that you put it in reply #1. Thanks for posting :-)


9 posted on 12/09/2009 12:04:59 PM PST by deks
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To: paulycy

Yes, this thread deserves to be seen. I just checked out your FR homepage and liked this part...

“All I can say is that the marxists are *extremely* serious about control, they’re getting it, they do not care about true “fairness” or co-existence or collateral damage, they have been serious for decades, and it looks to me like their patient spadework has unfortunately paid off. We have a lot of work to do to remove this scourge.”

And from the article above. . . “The truth is often a set of sparks adrift on a sea of darkness.” But if they land in the right place a media firestorm can erupt.


10 posted on 12/09/2009 12:30:29 PM PST by deks
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To: deks
“The truth is often a set of sparks adrift on a sea of darkness.” But if they land in the right place a media firestorm can erupt.

I hope so. I learned my lesson in the early 1990s. It's been hard getting people to believe what I saw but now the whole world is seeing it. Still I think we can overcome it if we keep fighting. The alternative just isn't acceptable.

11 posted on 12/09/2009 12:35:57 PM PST by paulycy (Demand Constitutionality.)
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