The Military Occupation of Our Minds 

By Tom Hayden

April 29, 2010 "Huffington Post" --  As Congress weighs Afghanistan funding, 
the military is escalating what it calls the "war of perceptions" at home and 
abroad. The question is whether the American media and Congress will 
collaborate in the Pentagon's press strategy or retain a critical edge. 

It is no accident that the Pentagon is shaping the "information battlespace" by 
welcoming friendly reporters and think tank hacks to beam back commentaries 
about the Kandahar offensive to the American people. 

Nor is it accidental that the US is soft-pedaling any public criticism of its 
crooked crony in Kabul, Hamid Karzhai, as thousands of American soldiers are 
being dispatched to face bullets in his defense. 

Nor is there any question that Afghan civilian casualties are being downplayed 
or covered-up. The agency in charge of counting the bodies, the United Nations 
Assistance Mission to Afghanistan, published a footnote last year admitting 
"there is a significant possibility that UNAMA is under-reporting civilian 
casualties." 

Paranoia? Do we live under Orwellian thought control? Of course not. But we the 
people, the media and the Congress, routinely accept taxpayer-funded Pentagon 
and White House public relations narratives. These often take disgusting forms, 
such as the false claims and cover-up that soldier Pat Tillman died under enemy 
fire, or the recent Special Forces' killing of three pregnant women which was 
followed by digging of bullets out of their bodies to cover up the crime. 

The current cycle of military media manipulation began with the Iraq war, when 
the Pentagon enticed generals, intelligence officers, and defense contractors 
to become "message force multipliers" for the Bush administration's version of 
the war, "sometimes even when they suspected the information was false or 
inflated." It took a New York Times' lawsuit to uncover 8,000 pages of 
documents showing that the chosen surrogates could be counted on to deliver 
propaganda messages "in the form of their own opinions." 

The strategy goes far deeper than the sleaze of everyday public relations. This 
is about the Pentagon's turning of computer science into a weapon in the 
emerging field of information warfare, in which the deaths of men, women and 
children are less important than the perception of those deaths, or whether 
they are perceived by anyone at all. As Gen. McChrystal, whose entire career in 
Iraq remains a classified secret, said during a February briefing: 

"This is not a physical war of how many people you kill or how much ground you 
capture, how many bridges you blow up. This is all in the minds of the 
participants." 
McChrystal also has said, in a recent London speech, that Afghanistan is not 
like a football game but more "like a political debate after which both sides 
announce they have won." 

McChrystal went on a public relations offensive to promote his request for a 
troop escalation earlier this year, giving interviews to the New York Times, Le 
Figaro, Newsweek, and to the London-based International Institute for Strategic 
Studies. 

He was featured as a modern god delivering us from the impersonal forces of 
fate, in a worshipful piece by Robert Kaplan in The Atlantic in February. (In a 
2003 Atlantic piece by Kaplan, titled "Supremacy by Stealth," he advised that 
America's wars best be fought "off camera, so to speak.")

Prior to the current media offensive someone leaked (or was it a pre-emptive 
launch?) McChrystal's August 30, 2009 confidential assessment of Afghanistan, 
which includes a length section on "Strategic Communication", where McChrystal 
declares that "the information domain is a battlespace" in the war over 
perceptions. 

The irony is that the Taliban insurgents, with little if any information 
technology, "have undermined the credibility of the ISAF, the international 
community [IC], and the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan 
[GIRoA]", according to McChrystal's own analysis. (It is noteworthy that the 
Afghan government is never referred to in the American media as an "Islamic 
Republic," because the frame is communicated to Afghans only.)

Shortening the term Strategic Communications to StratCom, McChrystal goes on 
for five single-spaced pages with directives for dominating the information 
battlespace. Of particular interest might be his plan for Offensive Information 
Operations [IO], which consists of "a robust and proactive capability to 
counter hostile information activities and propaganda", with every soldier 
"empowered to be a StratCom messenger for ISAF." A key strategic goal is to win 
over European and Canadian public opinion, or "the strategic center of gravity 
which is the maintenance of [NATO] Alliance cohesion." Afghanistan, in other 
words, is the glue which holds NATO together, as other official strategists 
have written. 

The general does acknowledge, in one sentence, that the battle of perceptions 
does require a change of behavior on the ground. But the overwhelming emphasis 
on perception requires that the negatives always be minimized or covered-up, as 
in any aggressive public relations campaign. 

Already, Special Operations forces account for half or more of the American 
military missions in Afghanistan, and all the operations in Pakistan. 
Clandestine raids against the Taliban -- not al Qaeda -- more than quadrupled 
recently, with 90 raids in November 2009. The Red Cross now reports that, as 
the Kandahar offensive begins, the number of civilian deaths attributed to NATO 
has doubled, despite McChrystal's orders to avoid such casualties. 

>From 2004-2009, the Pentagon's PR budget increased by 63 percent to at least 
>$4.7 billion in 2009. The entire video budget for Brave New Foundation's 
>"Rethink Afghanistan" campaign was approximately $350,000 in 2009. 

This brings us to the US offensive in Kandahar, which might be called the 
mother of all media battles. The deadly hubris underlying the US information 
battleplan was recently exposed in a poll showing that Kandahar residents 
support negotiations with the Taliban instead of a military offensive by a 19:1 
margin, and that five of six see the Taliban as "our Afghan brothers." [NYT, 
April 21, 2010]. As often happens, the poll was uncovered and released by the 
Wired magazine blog, not by the Congress or the mass media. 

Given Afghan public opinion, the challenge for the Pentagon in shaping the 
information battlefield in Kandahar, therefore, is overwhelming, even 
impossible. That means the war of perceptions is going to be directed largely 
at American and congressional opinion as the heralded offensive gets underway. 

A few American journalists, like Doyle McManus of the LA Times, have noted that 
the warm-up offensive in tiny Marja, back in February, has not met the 
military's expectations. That it was hardly an "offensive" at all is proven by 
the handful of US/NATO casualties, estimated in the range of thirteen by late 
February. The fatal premise of the Marja plan was that the Marines could bring 
in "a government in a box" after driving out the Taliban. That's a form of 
immaculate conception that will not happen. 

In Kandahar, as in Marja before, the local insurgents probably will fight 
defensively, and probably launch spectacular bombing operations in other parts 
of Afghanistan, before gradually disappearing as the Americans advance, 
bringing their "government in a box". It's confusing, because that same 
"government" is actually there already, in the form of Karzhai's brother who is 
widely seen as a corrupt drug-dealing warlord with existing ties to the 
Taliban. So the US may gain a public relations victory which will mean 
deepening of the quagmire. Kandahar is not going to be Iwo Jima, forever frozen 
in a photograph as the turning point of World War 2. 

Someday soon the White House and Pentagon will announce on camera that they 
have captured the Taliban's "spiritual homeland" of Kandahar. While the 
offensive goes on, few in Congress will be tough enough to take a hard look at 
the reality behind the war of perceptions. And when the "victory" is announced, 
Congress will pass another year's appropriation for the war. 

This will go on, with American troops dying in vain, unless enough members of 
the American public, the mainstream media and the Congress finally wake up to 
the reality that we are no longer citizens but targets in a deliberate war for 
our minds. 
 


 



Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
News Division, Trans TV, Lantai 3
Jl. Kapten P. Tendean Kav. 12 - 14 A, Jakarta 12790 
Phone: 7917-7000, 7918-4544 ext. 3542,  Fax: 79184558, 79184627
 
http://satrioarismunandar6.blogspot.com
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Verba volant scripta manent...
(yang terucap akan lenyap, yang tertulis akan abadi...)



      

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