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The Islamic State’s flag with the ‘shahada’ written on it, which is the declaration of faith of Muslims. It translates to “there is no God but one
God and Muhammad is the prophet of God.”								 Photo: INDEPENDENT
ISIS propaganda achieves
worldwide media coverage
By Demi Korban
Due to the absence of reporters in Islamic State’s territories for security reasons, many media outlets rely on
the information and graphics the group releases on the Internet as a source for their knowledge about the group
itself. Experts ask whether those outlets are being critical enough towards ISIS or involuntarily helping the
group achieve its aims.
“Without the media, terrorism would not exist,” says
Jad Melki, the chairperson of communication arts at
the Lebanese American University.
The Islamic State (ISIS), which has become one of the
most radical Islamic terrorist groups to date, spreads
most of its messages and aims through the Internet.
Major media outlets rely on the group’s circulated
content as a source of information for their news
pieces about ISIS. Are they being critical enough is
a question? Another is if media outlets blindly push
the group’s agenda further? How long might this
‘phenomenon’ last?
Understanding the attacks is central to ISIS’s media
scheme
Following the eruption of the civil war in Syria over five
years ago, the Sunni militant group ISIS has made its
way to become one of the most radical Islamic groups
to date.
Europe has been a stage for many of the organisation’s
attacks, with the latest being the Brussels attack,
which occurred earlier this March. However, experts
suggest that the main target of ISIS is France for many
overlapping reasons.
“Firstly, France has the largest Muslim population
in Europe. Secondly, France has been very active in
opposing the Islamic State and partnering with the
United States against Islamic fundamentalism,” says
William Keylor, professor of history and international
relations at Boston University.
“Thirdly, France is the most secular society in Europe
with a very powerful sense of separation of religion
and state. I think their refusal to allow Muslim women
to wear the hijab, or the veil as we call it, is an example
why Islamic militants hate France.”
Professor Keylor explains that most of
the Muslim populations residing in the
suburbs of France are dissatisfied with
their lives due to economic difficulties,
which has led them to get attracted
to go to Syria and fight on behalf of
the Islamic State. ISIS describes itself
as a financially strong organization in
their recruitment videos, which attracts the hopeless
individuals to join the terrorist group.
The attacks in Brussels were intended for France,
according to Professor Keylor. The perpetrators
decided to pursue the attack in Brussels, prematurely;
because they were worried they would not be able to
carry the attacks in France.
“Brussels is the headquarters of the European Union
as well the headquarters of Nato, so that probably
contributed to the desire to attack Brussels as well,”
Keylor adds.
Why is ISIS active in the media?
The group uses the media to achieve
many of their aims. These include
recruiting supporters, generating
fear against their enemies, and
asserting authority, in reference to
a Lowy Institute analysis, which is an
independent policy think tank based
in Australia.
“Islamic State’s propaganda effort
is central to its ability to recruit new
members, intimidate its opponents,
and promote its legitimacy as a
state,” said Australian journalist
Lauren Williams in the Lowy Institute
analysis earlier this February.
ISIS has many media arms, which
they use to spread their messages,
with the most popular of them being
their official magazine ‘Dabiq’ as well as the social
media accounts led by their supporters.
The group publishes its magazine through the hidden
web, however, other sources, such as media outlets
and anti-extremist movements, as well as the ISIS
supporters’ twitter users, spread it online so that
many viewers can reach it.
According to Melki, each attack that ISIS executes is
planned with a media strategy in mind to help them
gain supporters afterwards.
Melki gives an
example where ISIS
circulated a video to
threaten Russia with
a graphic that read,
“soon very soon, the
blood will spill like an
ocean” just two days
ahead of the attacks in Paris during November, last
year. Right after the attacks, the group also released
their 12th edition of the magazine Dabiq with news
features praising and celebrating the attacks. Melki
says that due to the flawless writing, the magazine
must have been planned way ahead.
“ISIS uses the media to play on the grievances
that many Arabs and Muslims hold, which were a
result of Western colonialism in the Arab world, the
discrimination against Arabs following 9/11, and the
occupation of Palestine,” says Melki.
He explains that the group is both reminding people of
these events, while offering a solution, which in their
case, is the caliphate, a united Muslim state.
List of the latest ISIS-led attacks
“ISIS uses the media to play on the
grievances that many Arabs and Muslims
hold, which were a result of Western
colonialism in the Arab world, the
discrimination against Arabs following
9/11, and the occupation of Palestine,”
2524
ISIS had a very strong communication strategy from
the start, says Dalia Ghanem Yazbeck, an expert on
jihadism and political violence and research analyst at
Carnegie Middle East Center, which is an independent
policy research institute based in Beirut.
“ISIS is a 2.0 jihadist group that has a real know-how:
they know how to use social media (Twitter, Facebook,
Youtube) but also local radios, pamphlets and other
magazines such as Dabiq. Each medium has a very
specific objective,” says Yazbeck.
ShegivestheexampleofDabiqasamagazinetargeting
a foreign audience since it is circulated in several
languages such as English, Arabic, Russian and Urdu.
The pamphlets, on the other hand, target a specific
audience so they are written in a single language.
Cutting-edge graphics require funding
What distinguishes ISIS from previous Islamic
fundamentalist groups is their ability to produce high
quality videos and magazines. Since ISIS appeared,
Experts have been skeptical about how the group gets
funded to create its cutting edge material.
To Yazbeck, a large proportion of the group’s financial
resources come from oil revenues since the coalition
has been able to take control over several oil fields in
Syria and Iraq, such as Deir-el-Zor, which is one of the
richest oil reserves in Syria.
An example of that is when the group took control
over Mosul, a city in Iraq, in 2014, where ISIS was able
to produce and sell oil for low prices through Turkish
borders, says Rabie Barakat, who is expert in media
studies and editor of the opinion page at As-safir
Newspaper, a leading Arabic-language daily based in
Beirut.
“The latter uses oil refineries in addition to very basic
techniques it has been able to develop (since many
oil refineries have been bombed and have become
dysfunctional) in order to extract oil and trade with it,”
Barakat adds.
The group sells the oil through a black market to
middlemen and criminal gangs. However, Yazbeck
believes they have other sources of income such as the
looting of banks and people. For example, ISIS looted
millions of dollars from Mosul’s Central Bank during
their takeover in 2014. Also, a large proportion of their
income is paid by European governments, which pay
ransom in exchange of the hostages ISIS kidnaps.
Professor Keylor, on the other hand, believes that the
funding comes from within the organisation itself.
There are other suspicions on whether they receive
contributions from a wealthy supporter from Saudi
Arabia, which is the birthplace of Islam, yet it is too
difficult to trace whether this is true.
“They hold hostages and get ransom from those
hostages and they do receive some contributions
from sympathetic people abroad. Of course, there is
this question of to what extent have citizens of Saudi
Arabia supported ISIS. I don’t think we know the
answer yet, but there is this suspicion, not that the
Saudi government is involved in financially supporting
ISIS, but rather that wealthy Saudi individuals, who
share the Wahhabi [fundamentalist branch of Sunni
Islam] brand of Islam with ISIS are providing funds for
the group,” Keylor says.
Western media vis-a-vis ISIS produced content
MainstreammediaoutletsarepickingupISISproduced
content from the group’s own media platforms
since they find it dangerous to send reporters to ISIS
territories, which are seen as high-risk zones.
“The decision to use Islamic State-produced material
is driven by the absence of ground reporters and the
easy availability of high-quality broadcast material
produced by Islamic State,” said Australian journalist
Lauren Williams in the Lowy Institute analysis.
Yazbeck, the research analyst at Carnegie, believes
the media sometimes gives ISIS too much attention,
especially when they release information, which they
haven’t double-checked. For example, everyday each
news organisation writes at least one article about
ISIS, and every time the group releases a video on the
Internet,manyofthemediachannelsrecirculateiteven
ifithasgruesomeimagery.Sheaddsthatthetrendthat
the media is searching for is “sensationalism”, which
ISIS provides through their videos of decapitation and
massacres.
On the contrary, Western media
outlets haven’t relied solely on the
ISIS produced content, according
to Barakat, opinion editor at As-
safir. He believes that the media might have given the
group attention previously, but he no longer sees it as
the case now.
Professor Keylor thinks that ISIS is very adept at
exploiting Western media because the outlets do not
have any journalists reporting from ISIS territories,
on the one hand. On the other hand, ISIS is a very
closed organisation making it impossible for people to
penetrate it and get news about it.
“I think that Western media doesn’t have a real
connectiontoISIS,theydon’thaveanypeopleworking
there or any reporters accompanying ISIS. So, all they
can do is rely on the information that comes from
ISIS, which is not particularly reliable, but it is the only
information they can get,” says Keylor.
The media must become more critical
The whole dilemma lies in whether the media should
actually publish ISIS content or not, because by
publishing their content, the media promote the
group’s initiatives, says Yazbeck.
“By publishing their content, the media are indirectly
promoting it and giving it (sometimes) more
importance. Media and social media are used by ISIS
to spread their word, attract to their cause and recruit
people.”
That is why many experts believe
that media outlets should have a
responsibility to treat ISIS content
more critically.
One way to do that, as Williams suggests, is to adopt
better standards and practices to limit the appeal of
ISIS propaganda while maintaining the public’s right
to know.
Another method is through counter-messaging, which
is a form of communication through using messages
that oppose the propaganda within the same target
audience.
For example, London-based anti-extremism
organisation Quilliam Foundation launched a social
media campaign last July including a counter-narrative
YouTube clip directed to the Muslim population that
may be vulnerable to Islamic State messaging.
The 14th issue of ISIS’s official
magazine released right after
the recent Brussels attack.	 Photo: The Clarion Project
ISIS is prominent among
many social media
platforms through
various accounts. The
picture reads the Muslim
‘shahada’, which is also
used as the Islamic
States’ logo. It translates
to “there is no God but
one God and Muhammad
is the prophet of God.
Photo: War on the Rocks
“By publishing their content, the
media are indirectly promoting
it and giving it (sometimes) more
importance.
2726
The video dubbed #NotAnotherBrother tells the story
of a British man who decides to join ISIS while his older
brother speaks about the pain of his family due to his
decision. It aims to show the cost of radicalisation in a
broader sense.
Barakat, media studies expert, explains that television
networkshavetoholdabigresponsibilityinminimizing
harm to their audiences, be it social or psychological
harm. This is sometimes a result of the gruesome
videos ISIS produces.
“Television networks should refrain from broadcasting
any material that could cause harm to their audiences.
This harm could be psychological involving vulnerable
peopleaswellassocial.ThevideosthatISISpropagates
may cause both, as, in addition to the psychological
effects they could have on families of victims and other
vulnerable spectators, these videos fan the flames of
sectarian conflict that ISIS thrives on.”
Is ISIS here to stay?
WhetherISISwilllastforlongisamatterofspeculation.
This will all depend on both ideological and military
responses. According to Professor Keylor, the French
government plays a role to improve the conditions
of the Muslim
population in
France so that
they are no longer
intrigued by the
idea of joining
ISIS, as part of a long-term solution. However, short-
term objectives are also needed and they pertain
military responses fighting against the group.
Barakat explains that the ISIS ‘phenomenon’ will
end once the major international players reach an
agreement over the war in Syria, just how long that
will take is still a mystery.
“ISIS will end as soon as an overarching agreement
is reached regarding the war and the phase to follow
in Syria. When the main international and regional
players reach this agreement, it would be a matter
of time before ISIS seizes to exist, at least as we now
know it, i.e. as a non-state actor controlling massive
territory. Yet even then, huge efforts should be made
in order to achieve this goal. This will probably take
time as well.”
Yazbeck, on the other hand, remains doubtful on
whether destroying the group would be the last the
world sees of terrorism.
“Even if we destroy ISIS military, we will not destroy
the idea. Also, many fighters will die, some will maybe
be jailed but others will “recycle” themselves, go
underground, rebuild their networks and come back
again.”
“ISIS will end as soon as an
overarching agreement is
reached regarding the war and
the phase to follow in Syria.
Islamic State spread their
messages in a straight-forward manner.
Photo: Explorer Venango
ISIS recruits individuals through social media campagins in
Middle Eastern and Western societies likewise.
Photo: Dana Summers/Tribune Content Agency

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  • 1. 23 The Islamic State’s flag with the ‘shahada’ written on it, which is the declaration of faith of Muslims. It translates to “there is no God but one God and Muhammad is the prophet of God.” Photo: INDEPENDENT ISIS propaganda achieves worldwide media coverage By Demi Korban Due to the absence of reporters in Islamic State’s territories for security reasons, many media outlets rely on the information and graphics the group releases on the Internet as a source for their knowledge about the group itself. Experts ask whether those outlets are being critical enough towards ISIS or involuntarily helping the group achieve its aims. “Without the media, terrorism would not exist,” says Jad Melki, the chairperson of communication arts at the Lebanese American University. The Islamic State (ISIS), which has become one of the most radical Islamic terrorist groups to date, spreads most of its messages and aims through the Internet. Major media outlets rely on the group’s circulated content as a source of information for their news pieces about ISIS. Are they being critical enough is a question? Another is if media outlets blindly push the group’s agenda further? How long might this ‘phenomenon’ last? Understanding the attacks is central to ISIS’s media scheme Following the eruption of the civil war in Syria over five years ago, the Sunni militant group ISIS has made its way to become one of the most radical Islamic groups to date. Europe has been a stage for many of the organisation’s attacks, with the latest being the Brussels attack, which occurred earlier this March. However, experts suggest that the main target of ISIS is France for many overlapping reasons. “Firstly, France has the largest Muslim population in Europe. Secondly, France has been very active in opposing the Islamic State and partnering with the United States against Islamic fundamentalism,” says William Keylor, professor of history and international relations at Boston University. “Thirdly, France is the most secular society in Europe with a very powerful sense of separation of religion and state. I think their refusal to allow Muslim women to wear the hijab, or the veil as we call it, is an example why Islamic militants hate France.” Professor Keylor explains that most of the Muslim populations residing in the suburbs of France are dissatisfied with their lives due to economic difficulties, which has led them to get attracted to go to Syria and fight on behalf of the Islamic State. ISIS describes itself as a financially strong organization in their recruitment videos, which attracts the hopeless individuals to join the terrorist group. The attacks in Brussels were intended for France, according to Professor Keylor. The perpetrators decided to pursue the attack in Brussels, prematurely; because they were worried they would not be able to carry the attacks in France. “Brussels is the headquarters of the European Union as well the headquarters of Nato, so that probably contributed to the desire to attack Brussels as well,” Keylor adds. Why is ISIS active in the media? The group uses the media to achieve many of their aims. These include recruiting supporters, generating fear against their enemies, and asserting authority, in reference to a Lowy Institute analysis, which is an independent policy think tank based in Australia. “Islamic State’s propaganda effort is central to its ability to recruit new members, intimidate its opponents, and promote its legitimacy as a state,” said Australian journalist Lauren Williams in the Lowy Institute analysis earlier this February. ISIS has many media arms, which they use to spread their messages, with the most popular of them being their official magazine ‘Dabiq’ as well as the social media accounts led by their supporters. The group publishes its magazine through the hidden web, however, other sources, such as media outlets and anti-extremist movements, as well as the ISIS supporters’ twitter users, spread it online so that many viewers can reach it. According to Melki, each attack that ISIS executes is planned with a media strategy in mind to help them gain supporters afterwards. Melki gives an example where ISIS circulated a video to threaten Russia with a graphic that read, “soon very soon, the blood will spill like an ocean” just two days ahead of the attacks in Paris during November, last year. Right after the attacks, the group also released their 12th edition of the magazine Dabiq with news features praising and celebrating the attacks. Melki says that due to the flawless writing, the magazine must have been planned way ahead. “ISIS uses the media to play on the grievances that many Arabs and Muslims hold, which were a result of Western colonialism in the Arab world, the discrimination against Arabs following 9/11, and the occupation of Palestine,” says Melki. He explains that the group is both reminding people of these events, while offering a solution, which in their case, is the caliphate, a united Muslim state. List of the latest ISIS-led attacks “ISIS uses the media to play on the grievances that many Arabs and Muslims hold, which were a result of Western colonialism in the Arab world, the discrimination against Arabs following 9/11, and the occupation of Palestine,”
  • 2. 2524 ISIS had a very strong communication strategy from the start, says Dalia Ghanem Yazbeck, an expert on jihadism and political violence and research analyst at Carnegie Middle East Center, which is an independent policy research institute based in Beirut. “ISIS is a 2.0 jihadist group that has a real know-how: they know how to use social media (Twitter, Facebook, Youtube) but also local radios, pamphlets and other magazines such as Dabiq. Each medium has a very specific objective,” says Yazbeck. ShegivestheexampleofDabiqasamagazinetargeting a foreign audience since it is circulated in several languages such as English, Arabic, Russian and Urdu. The pamphlets, on the other hand, target a specific audience so they are written in a single language. Cutting-edge graphics require funding What distinguishes ISIS from previous Islamic fundamentalist groups is their ability to produce high quality videos and magazines. Since ISIS appeared, Experts have been skeptical about how the group gets funded to create its cutting edge material. To Yazbeck, a large proportion of the group’s financial resources come from oil revenues since the coalition has been able to take control over several oil fields in Syria and Iraq, such as Deir-el-Zor, which is one of the richest oil reserves in Syria. An example of that is when the group took control over Mosul, a city in Iraq, in 2014, where ISIS was able to produce and sell oil for low prices through Turkish borders, says Rabie Barakat, who is expert in media studies and editor of the opinion page at As-safir Newspaper, a leading Arabic-language daily based in Beirut. “The latter uses oil refineries in addition to very basic techniques it has been able to develop (since many oil refineries have been bombed and have become dysfunctional) in order to extract oil and trade with it,” Barakat adds. The group sells the oil through a black market to middlemen and criminal gangs. However, Yazbeck believes they have other sources of income such as the looting of banks and people. For example, ISIS looted millions of dollars from Mosul’s Central Bank during their takeover in 2014. Also, a large proportion of their income is paid by European governments, which pay ransom in exchange of the hostages ISIS kidnaps. Professor Keylor, on the other hand, believes that the funding comes from within the organisation itself. There are other suspicions on whether they receive contributions from a wealthy supporter from Saudi Arabia, which is the birthplace of Islam, yet it is too difficult to trace whether this is true. “They hold hostages and get ransom from those hostages and they do receive some contributions from sympathetic people abroad. Of course, there is this question of to what extent have citizens of Saudi Arabia supported ISIS. I don’t think we know the answer yet, but there is this suspicion, not that the Saudi government is involved in financially supporting ISIS, but rather that wealthy Saudi individuals, who share the Wahhabi [fundamentalist branch of Sunni Islam] brand of Islam with ISIS are providing funds for the group,” Keylor says. Western media vis-a-vis ISIS produced content MainstreammediaoutletsarepickingupISISproduced content from the group’s own media platforms since they find it dangerous to send reporters to ISIS territories, which are seen as high-risk zones. “The decision to use Islamic State-produced material is driven by the absence of ground reporters and the easy availability of high-quality broadcast material produced by Islamic State,” said Australian journalist Lauren Williams in the Lowy Institute analysis. Yazbeck, the research analyst at Carnegie, believes the media sometimes gives ISIS too much attention, especially when they release information, which they haven’t double-checked. For example, everyday each news organisation writes at least one article about ISIS, and every time the group releases a video on the Internet,manyofthemediachannelsrecirculateiteven ifithasgruesomeimagery.Sheaddsthatthetrendthat the media is searching for is “sensationalism”, which ISIS provides through their videos of decapitation and massacres. On the contrary, Western media outlets haven’t relied solely on the ISIS produced content, according to Barakat, opinion editor at As- safir. He believes that the media might have given the group attention previously, but he no longer sees it as the case now. Professor Keylor thinks that ISIS is very adept at exploiting Western media because the outlets do not have any journalists reporting from ISIS territories, on the one hand. On the other hand, ISIS is a very closed organisation making it impossible for people to penetrate it and get news about it. “I think that Western media doesn’t have a real connectiontoISIS,theydon’thaveanypeopleworking there or any reporters accompanying ISIS. So, all they can do is rely on the information that comes from ISIS, which is not particularly reliable, but it is the only information they can get,” says Keylor. The media must become more critical The whole dilemma lies in whether the media should actually publish ISIS content or not, because by publishing their content, the media promote the group’s initiatives, says Yazbeck. “By publishing their content, the media are indirectly promoting it and giving it (sometimes) more importance. Media and social media are used by ISIS to spread their word, attract to their cause and recruit people.” That is why many experts believe that media outlets should have a responsibility to treat ISIS content more critically. One way to do that, as Williams suggests, is to adopt better standards and practices to limit the appeal of ISIS propaganda while maintaining the public’s right to know. Another method is through counter-messaging, which is a form of communication through using messages that oppose the propaganda within the same target audience. For example, London-based anti-extremism organisation Quilliam Foundation launched a social media campaign last July including a counter-narrative YouTube clip directed to the Muslim population that may be vulnerable to Islamic State messaging. The 14th issue of ISIS’s official magazine released right after the recent Brussels attack. Photo: The Clarion Project ISIS is prominent among many social media platforms through various accounts. The picture reads the Muslim ‘shahada’, which is also used as the Islamic States’ logo. It translates to “there is no God but one God and Muhammad is the prophet of God. Photo: War on the Rocks “By publishing their content, the media are indirectly promoting it and giving it (sometimes) more importance.
  • 3. 2726 The video dubbed #NotAnotherBrother tells the story of a British man who decides to join ISIS while his older brother speaks about the pain of his family due to his decision. It aims to show the cost of radicalisation in a broader sense. Barakat, media studies expert, explains that television networkshavetoholdabigresponsibilityinminimizing harm to their audiences, be it social or psychological harm. This is sometimes a result of the gruesome videos ISIS produces. “Television networks should refrain from broadcasting any material that could cause harm to their audiences. This harm could be psychological involving vulnerable peopleaswellassocial.ThevideosthatISISpropagates may cause both, as, in addition to the psychological effects they could have on families of victims and other vulnerable spectators, these videos fan the flames of sectarian conflict that ISIS thrives on.” Is ISIS here to stay? WhetherISISwilllastforlongisamatterofspeculation. This will all depend on both ideological and military responses. According to Professor Keylor, the French government plays a role to improve the conditions of the Muslim population in France so that they are no longer intrigued by the idea of joining ISIS, as part of a long-term solution. However, short- term objectives are also needed and they pertain military responses fighting against the group. Barakat explains that the ISIS ‘phenomenon’ will end once the major international players reach an agreement over the war in Syria, just how long that will take is still a mystery. “ISIS will end as soon as an overarching agreement is reached regarding the war and the phase to follow in Syria. When the main international and regional players reach this agreement, it would be a matter of time before ISIS seizes to exist, at least as we now know it, i.e. as a non-state actor controlling massive territory. Yet even then, huge efforts should be made in order to achieve this goal. This will probably take time as well.” Yazbeck, on the other hand, remains doubtful on whether destroying the group would be the last the world sees of terrorism. “Even if we destroy ISIS military, we will not destroy the idea. Also, many fighters will die, some will maybe be jailed but others will “recycle” themselves, go underground, rebuild their networks and come back again.” “ISIS will end as soon as an overarching agreement is reached regarding the war and the phase to follow in Syria. Islamic State spread their messages in a straight-forward manner. Photo: Explorer Venango ISIS recruits individuals through social media campagins in Middle Eastern and Western societies likewise. Photo: Dana Summers/Tribune Content Agency