Psy-ops propaganda goes mainstream

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Psy-ops propaganda goes mainstream

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Nov 18, 2006 1:28 pm

http://www.scl.cc/home.php

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http://www.slate.com/id/2126479/

You Can't Handle the Truth
Psy-ops propaganda goes mainstream.
By Sharon Weinberger
Posted Monday, Sept. 19, 2005, at 6:31 AM ET
Download the MP3 audio version of this story here, or sign up to get all of Slate's free daily podcasts.

A live "ops center" in a country SCL won't identify
LONDON—Over the past 24 hours, seven people have checked into hospitals here with telltale symptoms. Rashes, vomiting, high temperature, and cramps: the classic signs of smallpox. Once thought wiped out, the disease is back and threatening a pandemic of epic proportions.

The government faces a dilemma: It needs people to stay home, but if the news breaks, mass panic might ensue as people flee the city, carrying the virus with them.

A shadowy media firm steps in to help orchestrate a sophisticated campaign of mass deception. Rather than alert the public to the smallpox threat, the company sets up a high-tech "ops center" to convince the public that an accident at a chemical plant threatens London. As the fictitious toxic cloud approaches the city, TV news outlets are provided graphic visuals charting the path of the invisible toxins. Londoners stay indoors, glued to the telly, convinced that even a short walk into the streets could be fatal.


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This scenario may sound like a rejected plot twist from a mediocre Bond flick, but one company is dead set on making this fantasy come to life.

Strategic Communication Laboratories, a small U.K. firm specializing in "influence operations" made a very public debut this week with a glitzy exhibit occupying prime real estate at Defense Systems & Equipment International, or DSEi, the United Kingdom's largest showcase for military technology. The main attraction was a full-scale mock-up of its ops center, running simulations ranging from natural disasters to political coups.

Just to the right of the ops center, a dark-suited man with a wireless microphone paces like a carnival barker, narrating the scenarios. Above him a screen flashes among scenes of disaster, while to his right, behind thick glass, workers sit attentively before banks of computer screens, busily scrolling through data. The play actors pause only to look up at a big board that flashes ominously between "hot spots" like North Korea and Congo.

While Londoners fret over fictitious toxins, the government works to contain the smallpox outbreak. The final result, according to SCL's calculations, is that only thousands perish, rather than the 10 million originally projected. Another success.

Of course, the idea of deluding an entire city seems, well, a bit like propaganda.

"If your definition of propaganda is framing communications to do something that's going to save lives, that's fine," says Mark Broughton, SCL's public affairs director. "That's not a word I would use for that."

Then again, it's hard to know exactly what else to call it. (Company literature describes SCL's niche specialties as "psychological warfare," "public diplomacy," and "influence operations.") The smallpox scenario plays out in excruciating detail how reporters would be tapped to receive disinformation, with TV and radio stations dedicated to around-the-clock coverage. Even the eventual disclosure is carefully scripted.

In another doomsday scenario, the company assists a newly democratic country in South Asia as it struggles with corrupt politicians and a rising insurgency that threatens to bubble over into bloody revolution. SCL steps in to assist the benevolent king of "Manpurea" to temporarily seize power.

Oh, wait, that sounds a lot like Nepal, where the monarchy earlier this year ousted a corrupt government to stave off a rising Maoist movement. The problem is, the SCL scenario also sounds a lot like using a private company to help overthrow a democratically elected government. Another problem, at least in Nepal, is that the king now shows few signs of returning to democracy.

The company, which describes itself as the first private-sector provider of psychological operations, has been around since 1993. But its previous work was limited to civil operations, and it now wants to expand to military customers.

If SCL weren't so earnest, it might actually seem to be mocking itself, or perhaps George Orwell. As the end of the smallpox scenario, dramatic music fades out to a taped message urging people to "embrace" strategic communications, which it describes as "the most powerful weapon in the world." And the company Web page offers some decidedly creepy asides. "The [ops center] can override all national radio and TV broadcasts in time of crisis," it says, alluding to work the company has done in an unspecified Asian country.

The government's use of deception in the service of national security is not new. During World War II, for example, Allied forces conducted a massive misinformation campaign, called Operation Fortitude, designed to hide plans for the Normandy invasion. More recent efforts have met with controversy, however. In 2002, the Pentagon shuttered its brand new Office of Strategic Influence after public outcry over its purported plans to spread deceptive information to the foreign press.

Government deception may even be justified in some cases, according to Michael Schrage, a senior adviser to the security-studies program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "If you tell the population that there's been a bio-warfare attack, hospital emergency rooms will be overwhelmed with people who sincerely believe they have all the symptoms and require immediate attention," Schrage says.

The problem, he adds, is that in a democracy, a large-scale ruse would work just once.

The U.S. government has generally sought to limit disinformation; some agencies—such as the CIA—are explicitly prohibited by law from misleading domestic press. And while the CIA is fond of concealment, it takes pride in the belief that truth is necessary for an open government, a sentiment chiseled into the agency's lobby.

A successful outcome means thousands, not millions, will die in a catastrophe
What makes SCL's strategy so unusual is that it proposes to propagate its campaign domestically, at least some of the time, and rather than influence just opinion, it wants people to take a particular course of action. Is SCL simply hawking a flashier version of propaganda?

The spokesman's answer: "We save lives."

Yes, Broughton acknowledges, the ops center is not exactly giving the truth, but he adds, "Is it not worth giving an untruth for 48 hours to save x million people's lives? Sometimes the means to an end has to be recognized."

Who buys this stuff? Broughton declined to mention many specific clients, noting that disclosing SCL's involvement—particularly in countries with a free and open media—could make its campaigns less effective. However, he says that post-apartheid South Africa has employed SCL. So has the United Nations, he says.

The company's Web site is even vaguer, mentioning international organizations and foreign governments. A Google search produces only a handful of hits, mostly linked to the company's Web site. The company's work is based on something that even the spokesman admits you "won't find on the Web": the Behavioral Dynamics Institute, a virtual lab led by Professor Phil Taylor of Leeds University.

But the company, which is funded by private investors, is now taking on a higher profile, and visitors flocked to the flashy setup here at the show. "Basically, we're launching ourselves this week on the defense market and homeland security market at the same time," Broughton explained.

If SCL has its way, its vision of strategic communications—which involves complex psychological and scientific data—could be used to shape public response to tsunamis, epidemics, or even the next Hurricane Katrina.

Well aware that the company may face controversy, particularly with its push into the defense market, Broughton emphasizes the company's role in saving lives.

"It sounds altruistic," he said. "There is some altruism in it, but we also want to earn money."
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Postby Telexx » Sat Nov 18, 2006 2:28 pm

"If your definition of propaganda is framing communications to do something that's going to save lives, that's fine," says Mark Broughton, SCL's public affairs director. "That's not a word I would use for that."


Framing communications!? FFS...

he U.S. government has generally sought to limit disinformation; some agencies—such as the CIA—are explicitly prohibited by law from misleading domestic press. And while the CIA is fond of concealment, it takes pride in the belief that truth is necessary for an open government, a sentiment chiseled into the agency's lobby.


Erm?! Yeah... See this v.important article here(thanks HMW)

Is it not worth giving an untruth for 48 hours to save x million people's lives?


Well why can't he just say "Is it not worth lying to the people for 48 hours to save x million people's lives"?

FFS evil scumbag £($*"$)(&$"

Thanks :evil:

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Re: Psy-ops propaganda goes mainstream

Postby MinM » Sun Aug 22, 2010 12:13 pm

seemslikeadream wrote:You Can't Handle the Truth
Psy-ops propaganda goes mainstream.

By Sharon Weinberger
Posted Monday, Sept. 19, 2005, at 6:31 AM ET

The U.S. government has generally sought to limit disinformation; some agencies—such as the CIA—are explicitly prohibited by law from misleading domestic press. And while the CIA is fond of concealment, it takes pride in the belief that truth is necessary for an open government, a sentiment chiseled into the agency's lobby...

A psy-ops propaganda piece about psy-ops propaganda. From one of the cia's favorite propagandists (Sharon Weinberger) in the cia's favorite newspaper (Kurt Nimmo™) using a famous line from one of the cia's favorite filmmakers (Rob cia Reiner HMW™). It's a perfectly promulant piece of propaganda. :offair:

Speaking of promulant propaganda :wink: here's an interesting piece that sheds new light on a couple of benevolent dictators who are no longer with us...
ImageImage
Paul "Bear" Bryant, shown in 1979, had won three national titles with Alabama when in 1969 the FBI began tracking him.

J. Edgar Hoover eyed Crimson Tide, 'Bear' Bryant
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Forty years ago, Alabama football fans watched Southern California and a black running back named Sam Cunningham trounce coach Paul “Bear” Bryant’s Crimson Tide in a game widely credited with helping start the integration of Southern football.

Fans weren’t the only ones watching Alabama football back then. The FBI, apparently with the approval of then-director J. Edgar Hoover, was secretly keeping an eye on a civil rights lawsuit filed by blacks against the legendary coach during the same period.

Documents released under the Freedom of Information Act show that for almost two years, agents tracked the suit filed by a prominent black lawyer against Bryant, the University of Alabama and others to make Bryant recruit black football players. Agents built a file, including copies of the court docket and newspapers stories, and sent the findings to the agency’s office responsible for investigating civil rights crimes.

The FBI won’t explain why it was interested in a civil lawsuit by a black student organization against a prominent white football coach. The agency kept track of possible civil rights violations and often monitored public figures and civil rights leaders under Hoover.

But one of the FBI forms in the Bryant file is marked twice with a handwritten capital “H” – a clear indication that Hoover both saw the document and approved of the snooping.

Bryant, one of America’s best-known sports figures at the time, already had won three national championships with the Crimson Tide when he was sued in 1969. The black lawyer who sued him, U.W. Clemon, had made a name for himself by taking on Alabama’s all-white establishment in numerous court fights over desegregation and police brutality. He later became the state’s first black federal judge.

A retired agent who once worked in the FBI’s Birmingham office, Larry A. Long, said the bureau likely monitored the Bryant case because it claimed violations of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The suit was dismissed in 1971 after the school gave a handful of scholarships to black athletes. The monitoring ended, too, with Bryant’s FBI file 27 pages thick.

“When you received an allegation of a civil rights violation, the civil rights unit had to be advised,” said Long, who left the FBI in 1999 after 30 years. “This sounds typical for the time.”

Clemon said in a recent interview that he never knew of the FBI monitoring until informed by AP. He had his suspicions about why it was authorized, however.

“Bear Bryant was a god in Alabama in those days; maybe it was just a matter of keeping up. And you have to recall the thinking of some of the Southern FBI agents at the time,” Clemon said. “Maybe they thought I was doing something illegal. Maybe they just wanted to pursue it because black people were suing Bear Bryant.”

Bryant and the integration of intercollegiate athletics in the South were a major topic throughout the 1960s.

The Civil Rights Act outlawed racial segregation in areas including public education, but progress was slow in overturning practices of the Jim Crow era in the Deep South. It wasn’t until 1966 that Kentucky signed the first black football players in the Southeastern Conference.

In both a sworn statement in the lawsuit and in interviews from the period, Bryant said he’d been trying to recruit black athletes to play football at Alabama for years before the Afro-American Association of the University of Alabama filed the suit in July 1969.

Bryant already had blacks on his team as non-scholarship walk-on players, but it wasn’t until five months after the federal suit was filed that Alabama signed its first black football player to a scholarship, Wilbur Jackson. The next year, 1971, another player became the first black to appear in a varsity football game for ‘Bama.

By August 1970 – just weeks before Southern Cal routed an all-white Alabama team 42-21 in Birmingham, with Cunningham running for two touchdowns and 135 yards – the file forwarded by Alabama agents to Washington included a note that Clemon had questioned Bryant under oath.

During the deposition, Bryant said his staff had been scouting black players as early as 1966. Yet he recalled telling a black high school coach that it was “a little too soon” to have a black player at Alabama and implied that the state’s racial climate was a problem.

Bryant died in 1983. Clemon said in a recent interview that black high school coaches would have testified that Alabama didn’t seem truly interested in attracting black players until after the loss to Southern California in 1970. The game was viewed by many as opening fans’ eyes to the idea that racial integration was inevitable if Alabama wanted to have a successful football program.

“Bear Bryant got religion after the USC game, and it was dismissed without trial,” said Clemon, who went on to serve in the Alabama Legislature and became the state’s first black federal judge in 1980. Now retired from the bench, he is an attorney in private practice in Birmingham.


FBI & ‘Bama

• Federal agency kept file on Alabama and legendary coach Paul “Bear” Bryant from 1969-71

• Investigation and monitoring was standard when civil rights violations were involved

• Lawyer U.W. Clemon filed lawsuit in 1969, claiming lack of scholarships given to black players was violation of 1964 Civil Right Act outlawing racial segregation

• Lawsuit was dropped in 1971 after Alabama gave a handful of scholarships to black athletes

saukvalley.com | FBI tracked Bear Bryant, Alabama
***
See -- good old J Edgar and the FBI really did look out for black people -- just like that Rob Reiner movie (Ghosts of Mississippi) claimed. :thumbsup001: Forget about what they did to Martin Luther King Jr., Fred Hampton...
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Re: Psy-ops propaganda goes mainstream

Postby StarmanSkye » Sun Aug 22, 2010 12:37 pm

"A psy-ops propaganda piece about psy-ops propaganda."

Damn straight -- a pretty blatant in-your-face puff piece; Insulting, really.

About par for MSM.
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Oliver Stone usurped yet again...

Postby MinM » Thu Jun 09, 2011 10:12 am

See -- good old J Edgar and the FBI really did look out for black people -- just like that Rob Reiner movie (Ghosts of Mississippi) claimed. :thumbsup001: Forget about what they did to Martin Luther King Jr., Fred Hampton...

I recall reading somewhere that Oliver Stone was in the process of doing a movie that would have certainly been closer to the real history than Reiner's. But the Reiner movie was rolled out effectively killing the Stone project. :offair:

It seems that another potential Oliver Stone Production is being usurped again. (albeit after the fact this time):

From 'SNL' to FDR: Murray to play Roosevelt in upcoming film
HYDE PARK — Academy Award-nominated actor Bill Murray has agreed to portray President Franklin D. Roosevelt in a new movie and was in the town Sunday researching the role.

Murray, well-known for appearing on "Saturday Night Live" from 1976 to 1980, will play the 32nd president and Hyde Park native in "Hyde Park on Hudson."

Rhinebeck resident Richard Nelson, who wrote the screenplay for "Hyde Park on Hudson," confirmed Monday that Murray has agreed to take the role.

"Hyde Park on Hudson" will focus on the late commander-in-chief's relationship with his cousin, Margaret "Daisy" Suckley. Historians have concluded that Roosevelt and Suckley, who lived at the Wilderstein estate in Rhinebeck, were intimately involved.

http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/arti ... 0607/NEW...
leveymg wrote:Oh, Christ. They shitcanned Stone's movie about the Banker's Plot but make this scandal-ridden
saga instead.

Disgusting.

From a dozen years ago:
Stone Sets Sights on Roosevelt

Updated 3:29 PM ET July 28, 2000
NEW YORK (AP) - Oliver Stone has his sights set on another conspiracy.
The "JFK" director wants to make a movie about an alleged plot by rich
Republicans to topple President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933, according to
Friday's Daily News.

"The coup d'etat planned against President Roosevelt has amazingly
disappeared from the history books," Stone writes in the introduction to the
newly published book, "Oliver Stone's USA: Film, History and Controversy."

Stone cites J.P. Morgan Jr., Douglas MacArthur, the media and others as
conspirators in their unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the president, the
Daily News reported. Stone is still working on the script. He is basing it partly on William
Corson and Joseph Trento's book, "The Last President," due out in 2002.

Now it's certainly debatable how effective a filmmaker Oliver is now, see Wall Street 2. On the other hand if it included stuff about the Dulles Bros., as he once promised, it might have been worthwhile.
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Re: Psy-ops propaganda goes mainstream

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Jun 09, 2011 2:43 pm

.

I notice that the OP cross-posts very well with the new thread on the Nokia ARG:

See ARG: Conspiracy For Good (Warning: Don't click this)
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=32316

"This ain't really a life, ain't really a life, ain't really nothing but a movie.
This ain't really a life, ain't really a life, ain't really nothing but a movie.
This ain't really a life, it's only - reel to real
This ain't really ain't really ain't really ain't really ain't really ain't really ain't really real."
- Gil Scott Heron

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
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