Why The West Is An Inviting Target For Jihadist Propaganda
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS - ne of the most alarming things about Islamic State terrorists is how
effective they've become at creating propaganda -- slickly produced videos
depicting violent acts against their captives, paired with various denunciations
of Western foreign policy and related demands. In some cases these videos
feature recruits from Western nations attempting to reach out to vulnerable
youth. And judging by the estimated hundreds (and counting) who have been lured
from the comfort of democratic Western states into battlefields in the Middle
East, the recruiting effort seems to be working. But why?
We should be embarrassed that a bunch of guys running around in the desert
beheading people have found an exploitable vulnerability in our "soft power"
culture. It says just as much about us as it does about them. Propaganda is most
effective when it's able to skirt the radar of logic, reason and self-awareness.
It only loses its power once people can see the manipulation.
Manipulation detection is a skill. The underdevelopment of that skill is why
some people get all misty-eyed when they see Toyota's "My Bold Dad" ad,
featuring a father sending his daughter off to military service. A healthier
reaction would be to get annoyed at the blatant manipulation, with Toyota
playing on your love of family and country in order to sell you a Camry.
And it's telling that when the same ad was recently spoofed in a "Saturday Night
Live" skit, with the dad sending his daughter off to join the Islamic State,
many viewers who connected with the Toyota ad got angry at "SNL" and defensive
of the original manipulation.
The most brilliant thing about the "SNL" skit was that it evoked a public
reaction illustrating precisely why Western nations are such fertile recruiting
grounds for the Islamic State. We have become far too emotional and far too
vulnerable -- to the exclusion of reason and logic. Critical thinking is the
antidote to propagandist subversion, but we live in a culture that rarely
rewards thought anymore.
Instead, an increasing number of us are easily excited by simplistic appeals to
base emotion, like viral videos of cats, interpersonal drama depicted on reality
television shows, or even the idea of a "Bush vs. Clinton" showdown in the next
U.S. presidential race. The notion of another Bush or Clinton presidency is
horrifying to many, but people sure do like talking about the possibility of a
Bush-Clinton race, because the two family names evoke a couple of decades of
memorable drama. So, some of us are willing to spend our time in a March Madness
presidential fantasy fugue rather than deal with the reality of a critical
election 20 months away and the urgent need to turn our attention to some less
interesting but more capable contenders.
The Islamic State has access to the same media as the rest of the world. They
see the so-called leaders in the U.S. Congress acting like petulant children
over the visit of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. They see Republican
senators firing off a letter to Iranian leaders, letting them know that
President Obama is wasting his time on a potential nuclear agreement. It doesn't
take a rocket scientist to see that this kind of insecure emoting projects a
collective weakness that's ripe for exploitation.
So where the West is showing weakness -- aside from its inability to wipe out
the Islamic State in short order despite all the high-powered defense and
intelligence resources available -- the Islamic State is using its videos to
project its illusion of strength, primarily by appealing to emotion.
One might ask how a violent organization that lops off people's heads could
successfully appeal to anyone on such an irrational level. The answer lies in
what we -- that is, Western society -- have allowed ourselves to become over the
past few decades.
As KGB propaganda expert turned Soviet defector Yuri Bezmenov explained during a
talk in Los Angeles in 1983, people become vulnerable to subversion when their
education moves away from science, math, physics and foreign languages toward
less rigorous studies like, as Bezmenov enumerated, "history of urban warfare,
natural foods, home economics and sexuality."
We have largely unburdened ourselves from the rigors of critical thinking in
favor of "feeling." We have emotional leaders, emotional entertainment and
emotional debates. We vote for the nice guys rather than the smart ones. The
good news is that it's reversible -- but we have to first recognize and admit to
having this problem.
COPYRIGHT 2015 RACHEL MARSDEN