CIA Makes An Ill-Advised Foray Into The Twitterverse
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- On June 6, the Central Intelligence Agency joined the social media 
platform Twitter with its first tweet: "We can neither confirm nor deny that 
this is our first tweet." Presumably this is an attempt by the agency to develop 
its "brand." Here's why this is a really bad idea:
-- The CIA doesn't need a brand. If anything, the agency is supposed to be all 
about discretion and secretiveness, meaning that it should be defined solely by 
its conspicuous absence. In fact, if the CIA ever wanted to run a TV ad, it 
should consist of 30 seconds of silence and a black screen. People would be left 
scratching their heads, unsure about who would even pay for such a thing, let 
alone what the objective was. And that would be the whole idea.
-- The CIA doesn't need to be funny. It's understandable that a government 
agency would be compelled to humanize itself. Oh, wait ... no it's not. It's a 
government agency. No doubt there are funny guys who work there -- guys who 
would do really well in front of a packed house on amateur stand-up comedy 
night. One of those guys might actually be the best bet for manning the social 
media feed and cracking jokes on a daily basis. But could he convey the 
seriousness and discretion reflected in the CIA's mission? And in light of the 
fact that the agency receives billions of taxpayer dollars every year, could a 
guy cracking jokes convey "fiscal black hole" seriousness? No. Taxpayers don't 
want a $14 billion comedy routine when they can buy one on iTunes for 10 bucks.
-- The CIA doesn't need to advertise. Thanks to Hollywood spy films, much of the 
general public is under the impression that CIA personnel spend their time 
creeping around the Kremlin in disguise, dodging bomb blasts and killing people 
with their bare hands, rather than (more realistically) warming ergonomic chairs 
in embassies, lamenting an expanding waistline from the cocktail circuit, trying 
to convince locals to manipulate their friends in exchange for cash, and filling 
out paperwork about all of this. The myths are as good as it gets. Best to stop 
there.
-- The CIA is already overexposed. I'm not just talking about the highly 
classified intelligence disseminated through the WikiLeaks-Assange-Snowden axis 
of leakage. When a local guy offering to braid my hair in Ocho Rios, Jamaica; a 
panhandler in downtown Paris; and at least 10 vendors in New York City's Times 
Square are all wearing CIA T-shirts, then it would seem that the marketing 
problem for this clandestine service agency is one of overexposure rather than 
underexposure. Ask any Canadian to name that country's intelligence agencies. 
The majority likely couldn't name more than one (if any) and would be 
hard-pressed to accurately describe what that agency does. And whatever they 
could describe would no doubt be so boring that their interlocutor wouldn't want 
to hear more than a sentence about it. That's the kind of public image you want 
for your intelligence service.
-- The CIA has injected itself into the ranks of satirical jokers and social 
media account squatters. A satirical Twitter account for Government 
Communications Headquarters (aka GCHQ, the United Kingdom's equivalent of 
America's National Security Agency) has a bio that reads: "Defending the realm 
from the plebs on the internet. Listening to you." Someone established a 
satirical Twitter account for the "KGB" (the former name of Russia's domestic 
intelligence service). The most recent tweet from that account: "From the CIA 
world fact book: The Drone is the national bird of both Pakistan & Yemen."
-- The CIA has to behave with some decorum (at least in cases when it operates 
out in the open). This isn't the case for other social media users, who not only 
don't have to follow the same rules but, in many instances, enjoy a more 
established public platform. For example, the CIA's second tweet read, in part: 
"We look forward to sharing great unclassified content with you." A response 
from the WikiLeaks account read: "We look forward to sharing great classified 
info about you" -- and included links to numerous items, including classified 
intelligence.
-- The CIA should be off social media entirely and communicating with actual 
journalists in relating its successes. Were you instrumental in stopping a 
terrorist attack? Did you assist in destabilizing a foreign country to the 
benefit of America's economic and political interests? Excellent. Tell us all 
about it!
Whatever the CIA is hoping to achieve, it's not going to do it in 140-character 
blurbs. Unless, of course, the CIA's objective is to turn itself into a punch 
line.
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN