From Paltalk to Telegram… New media and recruiting extremists (1-2)
Daesh has excelled over other terrorist
organizations by propaganda and the skillful use of various social media
platforms, known as the "new media." These modern platforms have
different characteristics form traditional media, and have helped Daesh
significantly disseminate the group's thoughts and recruit thousands of young
men.
The group has achieved broad success in the
use of chat rooms, and social media applications like Facebook, Twitter,
YouTube, Instagram, Flickr, and finally Telegram. It has proved more powerful
in this area than the official bodies fighting it, to the point that Daesh
supporters launched their own applications to keep away from security and
administrative restrictions. An example was "Khilafabook," an
alternative of Facebook. They managed to establish their virtual state online
before they could have it as a reality on the ground.
Through new media, Daesh elements
penetrated many countries around the globe. They produced hi-tech videos on
Daesh operations, and posted them on their alternative websites to be viewed
and shared by hundreds of thousands of people thanks to the fake accounts
managed by supporters.
Al-Marjie (The Reference) attempts through
the following study to review some of the reasons that prompted Daesh to use
social media as well as analysing the method they followed to spread so widely,
in addition to the measures to be taken to counter them electronically.
First: the difference between
traditional and new media
Traditional
media refers to the mass media used long before the internet came into
existence, such as newspapers, the radio and the TV. They were controlled by
the creator of the content and not recipients.
But
the new media, closely connected to the information and communications
technology, saw the emergence of untraditional means that made the media scene
available and within reach for everybody, after it was confined to a limited
category of people in the past.
The
new media has become as prevalent as ever, and could reach the masses fast and
smoothly. Websites and forums emerged, together with YouTube, Facebook, Twitter
and Instagram… etc. They have enabled a recipient of the media messages a
producer and a maker of it, and this was the outcome of social changes and the
post-globalization technological revolution.
[1]
These new platforms have a positive side,
allowing broader freedom, which was not the case with traditional media. They
also broke official monopoly of information and news, and the entire media
content at large.
On
the other hand, they have an extremely hazardous side; the flow of information,
that lacked discipline. Any person can post whatever he/she likes anywhere and ay
anytime. Extremist groups, topped with Daesh, have realized the great
importance of these means and exploited them.
Second: Cyberterrorism
The
term Cyberterrorism or electronic terrorism, has emerged in the wake of the
major boom in information technology (IT) and the use of the internet and the
computer to manage almost all aspects of life. This has prompted 30 countries
to sign the anti-cybercrime treaty, in Budapest 2001. [2]
Cyberterrorism
is defined as “Aggression, intimidation or material or moral threat imposed by
states, organizations or individuals against people, through all forms of
aggression and corruption using information resources and electronic means.”
It
can also be defined procedurally as “a deliberate activity or attack, of political
motives, to impact government decisions or public opinion through cyberspace as
a medium and an auxiliary factor in implementing an act of terrorism or war
through direct attacks, with the use of an armed force, on the information
infrastructure, or through a moral or psychological effect, via inciting
religious hatred and an intellectual war. It can take place in a digital form
through the use of mechanisms of the new electronic weapons in battles that
occur in the cyberspace, whose impact could be confined to a digital dimension,
or extended to material targets of the vital infrastructure.” [3]
Security
bodies call electronic recruiting “distance recruiting.” Of course, tracing
this type of recruitment is extremely hard.
Third: Spread of Daesh cells on the
internet
Since
they emerged, extremist organizations have made use of the internet, websites
and chat rooms such as “Paltalk” and “forums” to disseminate their thoughts and
beliefs, set their plans and implement them, besides intimidating enemies and
recruiting new members smoothly and easily away from monitoring by state
institutions. Young men are the major category of people using these platforms,
and they no longer seek news or information from traditional sources. They are
also the target of terrorist groups.
One
can state that it had not been for the internet and the social media, Daesh
would not have managed to be so widely spread over such a short period, nor
could it have attracted such huge numbers of supporters of various nationalities.
These platforms are no more a mere tool of communication but one for collecting
money and mobilization and incitement for war. The websites have also become a
wide market for attracting new elements to join terrorist groups. [4]
Spanish
Interior Minister Jorge Fernández Díaz pointed out that 80 per cent of the
operations to recruit new extremists over the past years was conducted through
social media, and only 20 per cent inside jails. This obviously reflects the
significant role of social media for luring and recruiting youth to terrorist
movements. [5]
Fourth: Daesh online recruitment
Daesh
offers each new recruit an "email account", and orders him to use it
once daily. No one is allowed to send e-mails to anybody’s account. A file is
deleted as soon as it is read, so as to erase any traces of contacts with recruits.
They also open fake accounts under false names so as not to be reached [6]. New
accounts are opened after reported ones are deactivated.
A
Daesh defector has revealed that the initial phase of recruiting new elements
is conducted through social media, such as Twitter and Google Hangouts. [7]
Daesh
varies use of social media, according to the region. For example, contacting
young men in Egypt or Levant takes place via Facebook. In the Gulf, focus goes
to Twitter. [8] The terrorist group also
uses “ask.fm” to answer questions from people in Britain willing to join it,
and it offers them advice, for example, on what to bring with them if one is
willing to join the fighting in Syria, and how to bypass security checks.
--------------------------
[1]
Debashis Aika: Traditional and Modern Media, (Abu Dhabi: Encyclopedia of Life
Support Systems, vol. I):
https://www.eolss.net/sample-chapters/C04/E6-33-02-04.pdf
[2]
Noura Bendari Abdul-Hamid Fayed: Role of social media for recruiting members of
terrorist organizations, case study “Daesh” (Germany: Democratic Arab Center..
for Strategic, Political & Economic Studies, published 19 July 2016)
[3] ibid
[4]
Abdul-Bari Atwan, the Islamic State, roots, savagery, future.” (Beirut, Dar
Al-Saqi, first edition 2015)
[5]
Al-Azhar Observatory for Combating Extremism , Daesh’s use of social media,
December 4, 2015.( https://goo.gl/uTXyyj)
[6]
Basil AbdulHamid: “How Daesh recruits youth via the internet, Al-Wafd, December
15, 2016 (https://goo.gl/n6t4ez)
[7]
Alarabiya.net: “Mobilization and recruitment starts with Twitter,” published
May 25, 2015.
[8]
Richard Barrett, Foreign fighter in Syria (USA : The Soufan Group, June 2014)