How To Combat ISIS? Use Their Power, Social Media, To Destroy The Idea Of Islamic State
Experts at the 7th annual Halifax International Security Forum tackled a wide range of issues, from combating the use of social media as a communication, recruiting and fundraising tool in the war against the Islamic State, to the need for the world to accept its collective responsibility to welcome refugees fleeing conflict zones, and agreed that the only way to defeat ISIS is to destroy the idea of it.
“If you look at the investments Daesh [ISIS] has made in social media, videography, it would compete frankly with the best of us and we haven’t really fully grasped that, nor thought of a strategy that we need to deal with that,” said Janice Stein, a professor in the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto.
Reaffirming and defending the government’s commitment to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada by the end of the year, despite opinion polls that show a significant number of Canadians question the safety of such a move, Canadian Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said a coalition’s best strategy in fighting ISIS is identifying warning signs early through “the right indicators and the right intelligence”.
“We also need to understand the linkages across the various threat streams — how criminality, oppression and ideology can interact and feed off of each other. We need to understand their critical points of convergence and the real targets of vulnerability. Not just vulnerability of failed and failing states, but vulnerability of young alienated by a lack of opportunity,” he stated.
In an interview to The Daily Signal in June, Michael O’Hanlon, a Brookings Institution senior fellow specializing in defense and foreign policy, pointed directly to ISIS’ propaganda machine as key to its recruitment success.
“There is no doubt in my mind that social media has helped ISIS enormously. Its glossy, glitzy, romanticized version of jihad and the caliphate it is trying to create—even if seriously perverted and twisted and brutal by any fair standard—is made to seem appealing by truly expert propaganda,” he said, explaining that the group still draws about 1,000 foreign recruits a month to Iraq and Syria from nearly 100 different countries.
Using social media as well as encrypted online communications beyond the reach of law enforcement surveillance, the Islamic State is increasingly reaching new sympathizers and encouraging attacks. The terror outfit has built a sophisticated and effective online propaganda machine, exploiting many mainstream networks such as Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Telegram, WhatsApp, Diaspora and LinkedIn. Their efforts resemble a well-oiled marketing department, employing experts in PR and design to ensure a legitimate appearance and making the voices of a few sound like the voices of millions.
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This war on the internet and communications cannot be won.. Where there is a will there is a way. The various religious and ethnic groups who want to kill people along with the criminals where communicating long before the internet came along and doing as much damage as ever. The only thing that will work is education and a decent standard of living, neither of which where addressed here so until common sense rules this is just a tool to control the internet and spy on everyone.
@thelifeofbrian, you are to 90% correct. But nevertheless, we should continue to fight ISIS online, too. Since it's social media they are using to recruit most of their soldiers. Upvoted!
True we have to deal with the uneducated violent people... But I start to feel like i live in a kindergarten class ..you all have to stay in because bill put a tack on the teachers chair. lol
We are all being punished so to speak for a few nuts. So lets educate these (insert derogatory comment here ) lol
It would probably help if the CIA and deep state stopped funding them too.
True words.