If the media is so concerned with ISIS propaganda, why do they keep disseminating it?
May 28, 2015
ISIS Claims It Could Buy Its First Nuclear Weapon From Pakistan Within a Year
—International Business Times
ISIS to Smuggle Its First Nuclear Weapon From Pakistan, Mulls Attack on US: Report
—Economic Times
ISIS Boasts It ‘Could Buy First Nuclear Weapon in Less Than 12 Months’
—Daily Mirror
John Cantlie Claims ‘Infinitely’ Greater Threat of Nuclear Attack on US
—The Telegraph
These “reports” are based entirely on a throwaway line from
hostage-cum-ISIS spokesperson John Cantlie in an “op-ed” in the ISIS magazine Dabiq a few days ago. As IBT
reported:
“Let
me throw a hypothetical operation onto the table,” [Cantile] continues.
“The Islamic State has billions of dollars in the bank, so they call on
their wilāyah in Pakistan to purchase a nuclear device through weapons
dealers with links to corrupt officials in the region.”
It admits
that such a scenario is “far-fetched” but warns: “It’s the sum of all
fears for Western intelligence agencies and it’s infinitely more
possible today than it was just one year ago.”
This “hypothetical operation” was a “far-fetched” scenario—but the meme, naturally, soon spread to popular right-wing media:
New Issue of ISIS Magazine: We Can Buy a Nuclear Weapon From Pakistan
—Breitbart
ISIS Suggests It Can Smuggle a Nuke Into US Through Mexico
—NewsMax
ISIS Wants to Buy Nuke From Pakistan
—Drudge Report
Is ISIS Now Powerful Enough for Nukes?
—Fox News
Other propaganda claims from
this issue of Dabiq would
find their way into Western media—namely viral-ready threats
to behead President Obama and
auction off his wife, First Lady Michelle Obama, to the
sex slave market.
Now,
there’s no actual evidence that any of this is anything more than
deranged ranting, yet here we are: Millions of casual news observers who
scrolled through western media this weekend came away thinking ISIS is
plotting to acquire a nuclear bomb, kill the president and prostitute
his wife.
This
isn’t the first time the media has engaged in what I call the “Nancy
Grace Factor” when it comes to ISIS. The Nancy Grace Factor, named after
the
perpetually indignant cable
news host, is when a media outlet ostensibly condemns some terrible—yet
titillating—menace while simultaneously trading in its exploits. It
permits the pundit to excoriate the subject matter while also feeding
its scary details to the rubbernecking masses to drive ratings and
traffic.
This mentality explains most of corporate media’s ISIS
coverage and—as is readily apparent by the never-ending stream of snuff
films coming from their
Al Hayat Media Center—ISIS propagandists as well. The media’s account of the rise of ISIS has uniformly been defined by hyping
its ambition,
its scope and
its sheer bad-assery,
thus carrying water for ISIS’s core argument that it, and it alone, is
the Islamic vanguard against Western colonial aggression.
Indeed, as much ink as has been spilled by corporate media pearl-clutching the “
threat of the ISIS propaganda machine” and ISIS’s
unstoppable “
Twitter army,” what’s never mentioned is that by
sheer reach, the vast majority of ISIS propaganda is, in fact, disseminated by corporate media themselves.
ISIS,
like any good troll, requires predictable outrage from the trollee in
order to justify its troll strategy. For example, the primary source
for
almost all of the ISIS propaganda videos,
Rita Katz of SITE Intelligence Group,
feverishly demands Twitter ban jihadi social media (though presumably not the ones created by
the FBI or
DoD) while
routinely tweeting
out ISIS
propaganda in its
rawest form.
Does the average giddy jihadists care how their fear goes viral? Of
course not. Just as Kim Kardashian parlayed our collective indignation
over her sex tape into a
$130 million empire, so ISIS uses our own media outrage machine against us—enhancing its brand with each condemnation.
But
ISIS propaganda is newsworthy, you say. Yes. The fact of propaganda is,
of course, newsworthy, but the actual images and videos are, in most
contexts, nothing more than pornography. Even setting aside something as
goofy as this weekend’s idle threats, actually newsworthy pieces of
propaganda like the beheading videos are covered by Western press like a
medieval public execution spectacle. Any murder is newsworthy; this
doesn’t mean media need to show images of said murder on a loop to
report the fact of this murder. That they do—with no apparent news value
beyond conveying how savage ISIS is—belies their ostensibly
journalistic motive.
Several outlets, like the
New York Times and
NPR,
have been incrementally less terrible at this, skirting the Nancy Grace
Factor and down playing the gruesome visuals. But this is likely more a
product of medium rather than editorial discretion. Visual-heavy
TV news and news tabloid outfits almost to a tee
showed no such prudence, running the horrific images of Foley’s death nonstop.
But why? The irony is that in all ISIS “beheading videos”—except
one—the
actual beheading is never shown. Whoever edits these snuff films, from
some reason, cuts away right before the actual act of violence and fades
to the brutal aftermath, followed by a long-winded speech and Islamist
chanting; in this sense, the editors atCNN and CBS showed about as much
discretion as ISIS themselves.
Indeed, given that Fox News ran the Jordanian pilot torching video
in its entirety,
it’s possible the only thing preventing corporate media from actually
showing the beheadings themselves is that no such footage is actually
provided by our bloodthirsty yet squeamish terrorists. But the logic is
the same. For the same reason that the threat of torture is
legally indistinguishable from
torture itself, the trauma of showing the images to the runup to the
killing are as effective as the showing of the killing itself. As such,
media’s constant use of pre-execution b-roll, the quivering testimony of
the the victim, and the focus on the executioner’s ideology has just as
much recruiting purchase for ISIS as simply reposting the video itself.
The actual violence, as both Western media and ISIS alike understand,
is incidental.
It’s an obvious moral hazard that’s been simmering
under the surface since this whole ISIS phenomenon began—having been
briefly touched upon by MSNBC’s Chris Hayes and Fox News’ Laura Ingraham
last February. As Heather Digby Patron would
note in Salon:
For
months [Hayes] has been making the case that this lurid coverage is not
only creating the conditions for war without any proper debate, it’s
playing into the terrorists’ hands. When Fox’s Bill O’Reilly recently
declared that we are in a “Holy War” with Islam, Hayes said on his program:
“That
sort of rhetoric is, of course, exactly what ISIS wants. For if this is
a Holy War, they aren’t some murderous cult or some fringe Sunni
militia. No, if it’s a Holy War, then they are the representatives of
Islam, which is why the president at today’s summit on countering
violent extremism was so careful not to cast the fight on those terms.”
These
terrorists produce this propaganda for recruitment purposes but produce
them with slick production values for US and other Western media in
order to try to make the US the common enemy of all Islam. Hayes is one
of the only cable news hosts to explicitly challenge not only the Holy
War meme, but the reaction of the media to every alleged threat.
But he is on the same page with one very unlikely Fox News personality. Here’s Laura Ingraham, of all people, talking about the shopping mall threat assessment:
“I
don’t think we should jump every time the freaks with the Ace bandages
around their faces put out videos.… I think we should have a mature
debate about how to secure the Homeland without changing our way of
life.”
So where does this leave us? The solution seem
readily apparent: If the media really wanted to prevent the
dissemination of ISIS propaganda, they could stop disseminating ISIS
propaganda. It’s really that simple. Report the substance—“James Foley
Has Died,” “ISIS Releases Another Propaganda Magazine”—but avoid the
smutty details, the empty threats and, above all, the titillating
visuals.
There will no doubt be three main objections to this proposal:
But media can’t conspire to not cover something.
Wrong.
They do this all the time, as a matter of course. The media, for
example, have a widespread policy against publishing rape accusers’
names. This policy is a common-sense restriction media have informally
imposed on themselves with the understanding that publicity not only
traumatizes those who have been raped, but discourages future survivors
from coming forward. It’s an admission that their industry can have
harmful externalities in their narrow pursuit of a “story.” The name of
the accuser typically has no news value and the reporting of the rape is
not enhanced by the divulging of this information. On balance,
therefore, avoiding this detail is seen as being in the greater public
interest. The same is true for the weaponization of mass media by ISIS.
But if someone wants to find ISIS propaganda they will.
Great,
then let them. If one actively pursues damn near anything on the
internet, you can find it. This doesn’t mean major media outlets need to
tee it up to the otherwise distracted and disinterested masses and
radically amplify ISIS’s core propaganda memes.
Even if the media ignores ISIS’ social media propaganda, this won’t make it go away
Of course it won’t! But it will take away one of its primary avenues of dissemination.
The
question media need to ask themselves is this: Is the average
“impressionable” Sunni Muslim in London or Brussels or New York more
likely to be introduced to the ISIS spectacle via a random jihadist on
Twitter(the average of which has
1,014 followers) or from CNN, which
reaches 387 million homes worldwide and gets over
14 million clicks
a day? The answer, mathematically speaking, is of course the latter.
Indeed, one can even trace the popularity of so-called ISIS social media
propagandist by their corollary appearances in western media.
Consider
the case of UK radical imam Anjem Choudary. During the escalation of
the US war against ISIS in fall of 2014, the greatest thing that ever
happened to his social media brand was his numerous appearances on
corporate media—from
CNN to
Fox News to the
Washington Post to the highest-rated news program on television,
CBS’s 60 Minutes. His Twitter following, according archive records, more than doubled from
August to
November thanks to this exposure.
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