Seit vielen Jahren wird der Cyberwar als neue Dimension des Kriegs beschworen. Er ist aber bei aller Hochrüstung noch ein Phantom, das noch hinter Cyberangriffen von Kriminellen, Geheimdiensten oder auch Hackern verborgen bleibt. Dafür ist seit dem Ukraine-Konflikt der traditionelle Informations- und Medienkrieg vor allem in Gestalt der Propaganda(kampagnen) wieder aufgelebt.
Am Donnerstag hat der Europäische Rat beschlossen, "Russlands laufender Desinformationskampagne über den Ukrainekonflikt entgegenzuwirken". Die EU-Außenbeauftragte Mogherini soll bis Juni einen "Aktionsplan über strategische Kommunikation" vorlegen.
Auch der nach amerikanischem Vorbild 2011 gegründete Europäische Demokratiefonds (European Endowment for Democracy), der demokratische Entwicklungen und "prodemokratische" Kräfte (Parteien, Bewegungen, Journalisten, Blogger, individuelle Aktivisten) in den Nachbarländern mit EU-Geldern und Beiträgen von Mitgliedsländern fördern soll, also solche, die im Interesse der EU sind, will auch Vorschläge machen. So sollen Strategien für russischsprachige Medien entwickelt werden, um die "russischsprachige Informationssphäre unabhängiger, offener und pluralistischer zu machen".
mehr:
- "Putins Trolle" und der freie Fluss der Information (Florian Rötzer, Telepolis, 2203-2015)
mein Kommentar:
»unabhängiger machen«? Von wem unabhängig?
Leute, ist es nicht klüger, mit Putin zusammenzuarbeiten anstatt gegen ihn zu kämpfen?
Was ist hier stärker: Vernunft oder Gier?
Über die Dauerberieselung durch den militärisch-industriellen Komplex spricht keiner:
- Ein Meisterstück der Propaganda des militärisch-industirellen Komplexes: Die Raketenlücke (Post, 15.03.2015)
Ukraine Berichterstattung ist falsch - Peter Scholl-Latour [6:10]
Veröffentlicht am 24.05.2014
Kleiner Ausschnitt aus einem Interview zum 90. Geburtstag
Alpha Forum
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jspx1o_wu4k
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jspx1o_wu4k
The Missile Gap 1960 Part One [10:40]
Hochgeladen am 15.01.2010
U.S. Air Force Film Report 103, "Development of the Soviet Ballistic Missile Threat," 1960, produced by Air Photographic and Charting Service, Secret
Air Force Index Card
Source: National Archives, Motion Pictures Unit, Record Group 342
This film, depicting a once secret Air Force briefing on the prospective Soviet missile and bomber threat in the years ahead, illuminates the difficulties of intelligence analysis.
Delivered by Director of Warning and Threat Assessment, Office of Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Col. Linscott A. Hall, and one of his assistants, Lt. Colonel Joel Parks, the briefing was representative of Air Force intelligence thinking at the height of the "missile gap" controversy over the degree of the Soviet ICBM buildup. The intended audience for the briefing may have been other intelligence agencies, senior officials in the Pentagon, and possibly civilians and officers who worked on nuclear targets, so they would have their agency's angle on the prospective threat.
Air Force Index Card
Source: National Archives, Motion Pictures Unit, Record Group 342
This film, depicting a once secret Air Force briefing on the prospective Soviet missile and bomber threat in the years ahead, illuminates the difficulties of intelligence analysis.
Delivered by Director of Warning and Threat Assessment, Office of Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Col. Linscott A. Hall, and one of his assistants, Lt. Colonel Joel Parks, the briefing was representative of Air Force intelligence thinking at the height of the "missile gap" controversy over the degree of the Soviet ICBM buildup. The intended audience for the briefing may have been other intelligence agencies, senior officials in the Pentagon, and possibly civilians and officers who worked on nuclear targets, so they would have their agency's angle on the prospective threat.
The Missile Gap 1960 Part Two [10:52]
Hochgeladen am 15.01.2010
U.S. Air Force Film Report 103, "Development of the Soviet Ballistic Missile Threat," 1960, produced by Air Photographic and Charting Service, Secret
Air Force Index Card
Source: National Archives, Motion Pictures Unit, Record Group 342
This film, depicting a once secret Air Force briefing on the prospective Soviet missile and bomber threat in the years ahead, illuminates the difficulties of intelligence analysis.
Delivered by Director of Warning and Threat Assessment, Office of Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Col. Linscott A. Hall, and one of his assistants, Lt. Colonel Joel Parks, the briefing was representative of Air Force intelligence thinking at the height of the "missile gap" controversy over the degree of the Soviet ICBM buildup. The intended audience for the briefing may have been other intelligence agencies, senior officials in the Pentagon, and possibly civilians and officers who worked on nuclear targets, so they would have their agency's angle on the prospective threat.
Air Force Index Card
Source: National Archives, Motion Pictures Unit, Record Group 342
This film, depicting a once secret Air Force briefing on the prospective Soviet missile and bomber threat in the years ahead, illuminates the difficulties of intelligence analysis.
Delivered by Director of Warning and Threat Assessment, Office of Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence, Col. Linscott A. Hall, and one of his assistants, Lt. Colonel Joel Parks, the briefing was representative of Air Force intelligence thinking at the height of the "missile gap" controversy over the degree of the Soviet ICBM buildup. The intended audience for the briefing may have been other intelligence agencies, senior officials in the Pentagon, and possibly civilians and officers who worked on nuclear targets, so they would have their agency's angle on the prospective threat.
50th Anniversary: The Missile Gap Controversy [1:33:31]
Veröffentlicht am 23.04.2014
In September 1961, President Kennedy was officially notified by the CIA that the United States had surpassed the Soviet Union in missiles, dispelling the notion of Soviet superiority in the arms race. Former senior CIA intelligence officer Gene Poteat and historians Timothy Naftali, Fred Kaplan and John Prados discuss this pivotal moment in world history. Mary Elise Sarotte, professor of International Relations at USC, moderates. This forum followed the afternoon panel sessions of the CIA Overview of the Missile Gap.
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