Wage online war against ISIS, says United States

Wage online war against ISIS, says United States

(AFP) / 28 October 2014

Retired US General John Allen met representatives of coalition countries, including Bahrain, Britain, Egypt, France, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.


Washington called on Monday for the battle against the ISIS group to be taken to the Internet, as coalition partners vowed to step up efforts to counter the militants’ online propaganda.

Retired US General John Allen told participants at the talks in Kuwait City that the ISIS was promoting its “horrendous brand of warfare” online, where it “recruits and perverts the innocent”.

“It is only when we contest ISIS’s presence online, deny the legitimacy of the message it sends to vulnerable young people… it is only then that ISIS will truly be defeated,” Allen said.

Allen, who is coordinating the US-led campaign against the ISIS, met representatives of coalition countries, including Bahrain, Britain, Egypt, France, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

After the talks the coalition partners promised to take steps to boost efforts to prevent the recruitment of foreign fighters for ISIS, including online. “This involves intensifying our engagement… enhancing exchanges, training and other cooperative programmes … actively opposing the recruitment of foreign fighters,” they said in a statement.

Richard Stengel, the US Undersecretary of State for Diplomacy and Public Affairs, told reporters the goal of the meeting was to create “an information coalition that is parallel to the military coalition” fighting the ISIS.

Stengel said the number of recruits joining the ISIS has dropped, but provided no evidence or figures. “We think that the attraction of ISIS is decreasing,” Stengel said.

The ISIS, which has seized large parts of Syria and Iraq, operates a sophisticated online presence, posting frequent propaganda videos and publishing its own expertly designed magazine.

Some of the videos have featured brutal atrocities, including the on-camera beheadings of two US journalists and two British aid workers.

The ISIS and its supporters also have a strong presence on social media, which has become an important recruitment tool to attract foreign fighters to their cause.

Western governments have been increasingly alarmed by the numbers of Europeans and Americans making their way to Syria to fight with ISIS.

Concern is also growing over the group’s online influence among disaffected young Muslims living in the West and its calls for them to carry out attacks on Western targets.

Allen said the talks in Kuwait were focused on “how to degrade and defeat ISIS’s messaging and how we can all confront and contest its presence in the information space and online”.

This would require a “holistic, coordinated approach at the international, regional and local levels, combining military, law enforcement, intelligence, economic and diplomatic tools”.

Washington has built up a coalition of Western and Arab nations to combat the ISIS, launching a series of air strikes against it in Iraq and Syria and backing local ground forces, including the Iraqi army, Syrian rebels and Kurdish militia forces.  

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