Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

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Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

Postby justdrew » Sat May 19, 2012 4:37 pm

Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban
Michael Hastings | May 18, 2012 4:27pm EDT

An amendment that would legalize the use of propaganda on American audiences is being inserted into the latest defense authorization bill, BuzzFeed has learned.

The amendment would “strike the current ban on domestic dissemination” of propaganda material produced by the State Department and the Pentagon, according to the summary of the law at the House Rules Committee's official website.

The tweak to the bill would essentially neutralize two previous acts—the Smith-Mundt Act of 1948 and Foreign Relations Authorization Act in 1987—that had been passed to protect U.S. audiences from our own government’s misinformation campaigns.

The bi-partisan amendment is sponsored by Rep. Mac Thornberry from Texas and Rep. Adam Smith from Washington State.

In a little noticed press release earlier in the week — buried beneath the other high-profile issues in the $642 billion defense bill, including indefinite detention and a prohibition on gay marriage at military installations — Thornberry warned that in the Internet age, the current law “ties the hands of America’s diplomatic officials, military, and others by inhibiting our ability to effectively communicate in a credible way.”

The bill's supporters say the informational material used overseas to influence foreign audiences is too good to not use at home, and that new techniques are needed to help fight Al-Qaeda, a borderless enemy whose own propaganda reaches Americans online.

Critics of the bill say there are ways to keep America safe without turning the massive information operations apparatus within the federal government against American citizens.

“Clearly there are ways to modernize for the information age without wiping out the distinction between domestic and foreign audiences,” says Michael Shank, Vice President at the Institute for Economics and Peace in Washington D.C. "That Reps Adam Smith and Mac Thornberry want to roll back protections put in place by previously-serving Senators – who, in their wisdom, ensured limits to taxpayer–funded propaganda promulgated by the US government – is disconcerting and dangerous."

“I just don’t want to see something this significant – whatever the pros and cons – go through without anyone noticing,”
“ says one source on the Hill, who is disturbed by the law. According to this source, the law would allow "U.S. propaganda intended to influence foreign audiences to be used on the domestic population."

The new law would give sweeping powers to the State Department and Pentagon to push television, radio, newspaper, and social media onto the U.S. public. “It removes the protection for Americans,” says a Pentagon official who is concerned about the law. “It removes oversight from the people who want to put out this information. There are no checks and balances. No one knows if the information is accurate, partially accurate, or entirely false.”

According to this official, “senior public affairs” officers within the Department of Defense want to “get rid” of Smith-Mundt and other restrictions because it prevents information activities designed to prop up unpopular policies—like the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Critics of the bill point out that there was rigorous debate when Smith Mundt passed, and the fact that this is so “under the radar,” as the Pentagon official puts it, is troubling.

The Pentagon spends some $4 billion a year to sway public opinion already, and it was recently revealed by USA Today the DoD spent $202 million on information operations in Iraq and Afghanistan last year.

In an apparent retaliation to the USA Today investigation, the two reporters working on the story appear to have been targeted by Pentagon contractors, who created fake Facebook pages and Twitter accounts in an attempt to discredit them.

(In fact, a second amendment to the authorization bill — in reaction to the USA Today report — seeks for cuts to the Pentagon’s propaganda budget overseas, while this amendment will make it easier for the propaganda to spread at home.)

The evaporation of Smith-Mundt and other provisions to safeguard U.S. citizens against government propaganda campaigns is part of a larger trend within the diplomatic and military establishment.

In December, the Pentagon used software to monitor the Twitter debate over Bradley Manning’s pre-trial hearing; another program being developed by the Pentagon would design software to create “sock puppets” on social media outlets; and, last year, General William Caldwell, deployed an information operations team under his command that had been trained in psychological operations to influence visiting American politicians to Kabul.

The upshot, at times, is the Department of Defense using the same tools on U.S. citizens as on a hostile, foreign, population.

A U.S. Army whistleblower, Lieutenant Col. Daniel Davis, noted recently in his scathing 84-page unclassified report on Afghanistan that there remains a strong desire within the defense establishment “to enable Public Affairs officers to influence American public opinion when they deem it necessary to "protect a key friendly center of gravity, to wit US national will," he wrote, quoting a well-regarded general.

The defense bill passed the House Friday afternoon.
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Re: Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

Postby DrEvil » Sat May 19, 2012 7:41 pm

They're going to have to hand out obscene amounts of retroactive immunity.
Anyhow - this really is pretty pointless. They want to legalize something they've always been doing.
I mean, how many years is it since they caught the Pentagon making "news" stories with hired actors and passing them out for free to any TV station that wanted them?
And what about the Miami Herald "journalists" being paid to write nasty things about Cuba?
Or the cadre of "retired" generals, admirals and godknowswhat serving as "experts" for all the major networks, while at the same time being spoon-fed their talking points by the Pentagon, while profiteering off the wars that result from their greed, lust for power and narcissism (And if they don't follow the official narrative - no more access for you! No access - no interest from the networks).
And even if they didn't spread propaganda directly within the US itself, it doesn't matter. Just get the propaganda into any outlet that isn't based in the US and it will come sneaking back across the border through the intertubes. There's plenty of idiots who will link to it, quote it and proclaim it as truth.
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Re: Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

Postby JackRiddler » Sat May 19, 2012 8:27 pm

Torture, kidnapping and disappearances, MC, total information awareness, Echelon-type surveillance, indefinite detention, authority to exempt spook contractors from financial law, mooting of FOIA and disclosure requirements, expansion of classification authorities, new restrictions and punishments for whistleblowing, expanding the category of "terrorism," wild expansion of the secret parts of the budget - the trend every day since 9/11 has been to render every tool the USG deep state has always employed abroad and in the "war at home" admissable (in a pinch, but with greater power to keep everything secret), unambiguously legal (albeit via often unconstitutional laws), and on budget (although the budget line-items are secret). It's funny if quaintly admirable that there were once laws that pretended military propaganda abroad could be prohibited from domestic use (since the most reliable re-publishers of USG propaganda have always been the US corporate outlets on the domestic front). It's funny that any legal architects of the state feel a need to now repeal these completely ignored and long-ago forgotten laws. And the initiative seems to be coming from the Congress. There must be no limits, not even strictly theoretical and dogmatic ones. It's not enough to say what we do is in keeping with our values - never an impediment to the pragmatic national-security operators of the past. Now the values themselves must be re-written to read, "What We Do!" Unitary executive, heil!
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Re: Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

Postby Simulist » Sat May 19, 2012 11:29 pm

Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

And in other news, preachers seek to lift the ban on sermons, restauranteurs seek to lift the ban on eating out, and "journalists" seek to lift the ban on lying their fucking asses off.
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Re: Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

Postby justdrew » Sat May 19, 2012 11:38 pm

there was a lot of talk about this years ago, maybe 5-6?

really, lifting this may be a step to ENDING Broadcasting Board of Governors
checkout this history of this sausage...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith%E2%80%93Mundt_Act

anyway, you can see a lot of Alhurra on youtube now.




Entities Covered by the Act

The following are administered by the Broadcasting Board of Governors, an agency of the US government.

Voice of America, a radio and TV network broadcasting worldwide, outside of the US
Alhurra, satellite TV broadcasting to the Middle East
Radio Farda, a radio station targeted at Iran
Radio Free Asia, a radio network broadcasting in Asia
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, a radio network based in Europe and the Middle East
Radio Martí and TV Martí, a radio and TV network broadcasting in Cuba
Radio Sawa, a radio station broadcasting in the Middle East

No other department or agency of the US government is covered by the Smith–Mundt Act. The United States Agency for International Development and Millennium Challenge Corporation have said they are not sure whether they are covered.[7].
Recent Interpretations

A 1998 U.S. Court of Appeals ruling indicated that this act exempts Voice of America from releasing transcripts in response to a Freedom of Information Act request.

The act does not prohibit the entirety of the Executive Branch from distributing information at home, just the State Department. The Act never defines nor uses the word "propaganda". The result of the amendments to the Act means that the US taxpayer is not permitted to know how the VOA (and its successor agencies) operate or what their programming content was, as was noted in 1967 by the Stanton Commission report noted above. The act both insulates the American public from government-sponsored information and broadcasting directed at audiences beyond America's borders, the only industrialized democracy to do this, and creates mistrust of the same activities in these audiences who increasingly question why Americans cannot read or hear the same material.
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Re: Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

Postby thatsmystory » Sun May 20, 2012 11:21 pm

I'm sure 60 Minutes won't stoop to such a level even if the law changes.
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Re: Congressmen Seek To Lift Propaganda Ban

Postby Hugh Manatee Wins » Mon May 21, 2012 12:03 am

Of course it's all being done. Since the 1930s non-stop.

The press coverage is just a way to gently introduce the idea to those who would be shocked....in case it was really exposed.....
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