HYBRID WARFARE: PUTIN JUST PLAYED A VERY INTERESTING CARD
2
March, 2015
In
one stroke Russia has named and shamed the culprits of the
Information War waged against her and dealt multiple blows in years
to come. Now, look at the top 15 and ask yourself what it tells you?
Germany
is fooling no one while it tops the list and the so-called
International Community is just a bunch of corrupt politicians in
western capitals bidding for big capital.
This
Index is here to stay as a constant reminder of which nations show
duplicitous behaviour in their coverage of Russia. An ever
improving sophisticated propaganda (Read the Russian definition) tool
developed to counter a sophisticated Mass Media campaign and render
it useless in one blow.
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According
to this methodology, there are two countries that currently engage in
an “information war” against Russia: Germany and the U.S. The
countries that follow after them but are less aggressive in their
media policies include Austria, France, the UK and Poland.
The
Russian Institute for Strategic Studies introduced its first-ever
World Mass Media Hostility Index, which measures potential
anti-Russian bias in the media publications of different countries,
and then assigns each country an overall score.
On
Feb. 18 the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies (RISS),a
think tank established by the Russian President in 1992, presented
its new “World Mass Media Hostility Index,” the main
goal of which is to rank how friendly countries are to Russia by
analyzing their mass media content. It aims to identify the states
that exercise the most aggressive media policy towards Russia and
threaten its “information security.”
This
analytical report is the result of detailed analysis of the media
policies of different countries in 2014, when crucial shifts in the
rhetoric employed by Western media about Russia occurred. The author
of the mass media hostility index is a senior fellow at RISS, Dr.
Igor Nikolaichuk. He suggests that, over the course of 2014, Western
media started to “spread anti-Russian propaganda more actively than
ever,” which he calls the beginning of “the global information
war” against Russia.
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The
RISS positions its index as the first-ever comprehensive analysis of
the world’s media content pertaining to Russia. The analysis is
based on complex statistical data (provided by Russian news agency
Rossiya Segodnya) that is examined via a new applied discipline known
as “political mediametrics.” A unit for analysis is a significant
media publication that gives a reader certain assessments of Russia
or its leadership. Ordinary news was excluded from the analysis.
The
origins of the World Mass Media Hostility Index
As
the world entered the information age, the mass media took on a big
part in our lives, and over the last decade, started to influence it
to an even greater degree. The mass media contributes to the
formation of public opinion and leads to the creation of certain
narratives in the political discourse in a country, in a region or
even in the world.
The
word ‘propaganda’ in recent years has become a new favorite word
in the media world. Google Trends show that interest in the word
‘propaganda’ has been rising over time in the ‘news search
category’.
The
conflict in Ukraine, which erupted in 2014, galvanized a struggle in
the media space and contributed to the broad usage of the word
‘propaganda,’ which mostly referred to the information reported
by state-owned media, particularly Russian state-owned media.
Propaganda,
as defined by the Oxford dictionary, is “the information,
especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a
political cause or point of view.” The Russian dictionary of
Ozhegov defines it as “spreading in society an explanation of
ideas, thoughts, knowledge or learnings.”
The
difference in the definitions is quite obvious, as is the perception
of different types of information. From a Russian linguistic point of
view, propaganda mostly serves as a tool for explanation of certain
ideas, thoughts and policies. The Anglo-Saxon definition stresses the
biased or misleading nature of the promoted information. Herein lies
the main dichotomy in understanding the information war between
Russia and the West.
However,
there is a factor that contributes to the misunderstanding between
both Russia and the West. In fact, Anglo-Saxon and Western countries
dominate the global media world. This puts the Russian media in a
sort of defensive position, forced to explain an alternative,
different view of events that may not be popular in the West.
This
inevitably led to a clash in the type of information the media
promotes, especially at a time of geopolitical controversy. In
such circumstances, information warfare became a real fact and the
world media started to be engaged in a struggle for “hearts and
minds” as never before.
The
methodology and findings of the new index
Dr.
Nikolaichuk says that the volume of analyzed data is about 70
thousand media pieces that were published between Jan. 1, 2014 and
Dec. 30, 2014. The data was monitored for 60 countries. Before the
introduction of the research results, Dr. Nikolaichuk touched on the
topic of – information security – that has turned into
a top agenda issue in the world over the past 12 months. In the light
of the Ukrainian crisis, hostile rhetoric in the world media towards
Russia, predominantly Western, increased.
The
index is calculated as the ratio of negative publications to neutral
publications. The author defines a ratio of more than one neutral to
five negative publications as an indicator that the country wages
information warfare against Russia.
According
to this methodology, there are two countries that currently engage in
an “information war” against Russia: Germany and the U.S. The
countries that follow after them but are less aggressive in their
media policies include Austria, France, the UK and Poland.
Here
are some findings of the report. Based on the analysis of the media
space around Russia in 2014, it became evident that the media front
against Russia was comprised first of all by the Anglo-Saxon
countries, EU states, Japan, Ukraine, Georgia and Jordan, reports
Nikolaichuk. During 2014, Germany had the largest amount of
significant publications about Russia – 8,929, followed by the U.S.
– 5,771, the UK – 5,209, France – 4,810, and Switzerland –
4,105.
According
to this methodology, there are two countries that currently engage in
an “information war” against Russia: Germany and the U.S. The
countries that follow after them but are less aggressive in their
media policies include Austria, France, the UK and Poland.
Among
the European countries, Italy is out of the picture with its
traditionally friendly rhetoric towards Russia. Belgium follows this
example. Sweden and Denmark are dominated by the negative media
approach; Norway and Iceland are predominantly neutral. The only
country with a dominant positive trend in its media was Syria. If one
were to compare 2014 with 2013, in 2013 the UK and Georgia had a
neutral media policy towards Russia, and the mass media of South
Africa, Canada, Japan, and Ukraine did not have strong anti-Russian
tendencies. In general, the report concludes that the media
environment for Russia worsened in 2014.
A
comprehensive report on the Media Hostility Index will be released
annually with a detailed description and analysis of trends that
changed during the year. RISS also produces short weekly reports on
changes in the Media Hostility Index to track how the media
environment reacts to different international or domestic events.
RISS
views this new index as the start of a comprehensive,
statistically-backed product that intends to underscore the biased
nature of Western media reporting on Russia, consequently raising
this issue to a higher degree of attention and discussion.
Source: Russia
Insider
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