Something to consider from a psychological warfare/psychological operations, propaganda perspective. Some good words from Crispin Burke.
V/R
Dave
Useful Idiots: How a Facebook Campaign Became Propaganda For Bashar Assad
Syria is a proverbial Gordian Knot; the two-year old conflict is a vexing web of proxy armies, tenuous allies, and a myriad of factions with competing goals.
But just as the real conflict has been a lightning rod for all manner of hidden agendas, so has the domestic debate been here in the United States. According to polls, the country remains deeply divided over the prospect of air and missile strikes on Syria.
Of course, war is the most serious undertaking of any state, and should only be embarked upon after great deliberation. After all, debate is healthy in a democracy.
Still, partisan rancor often trumps careful analysis. Nowhere was this more true than on the 43,000-strong Facebook page for the “Armed Forces Tea Party“, in which purported service members–in full uniform–masked their faces with signs protesting involvement in Syria.
Not only was this an egregious transgression in civil-military relations (Psst, here’s somegreat reading), but the campaign played directly into the Assad regime’s propaganda, as hackers from the Syrian Electronic Army defaced the US Marine Corps’ website with the aforementioned images, urging the United States not to interfere in Syria.
For decades, the Communist Party wooed influential Westerners into showing sympathy for their causes. Dozens of authors, actors, and celebrities have, intentionally or not, lent legitimacy to all manner of dictators. Such activity isn’t limited to the Cold War, either, as we’ve recently seen with basketball star Dennis Rodman’s overtures towards North Korean dictator, Kim Jong-un, whom he refers to as “my friend”.
During the Cold War, misguided elites were referred to as “useful idiots“; and whether through vanity or naiveté, they advanced the interests of some very unsavory characters.
(Continued at the link below)
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