EU Strategic Communications with a View to Counteracting Propaganda
Emanating from Russia in the east and the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in the south, the EU has been increasingly hit by destabilising messages amounting – in different forms and to different degrees – to coherent hostile ‘strategic communications’ campaigns, or the processes of infusing communications activities with an agenda or plan to impact the behaviour of a target audience. Both Russia and ISIL have engaged in aggressive messaging and deceptive media campaigns, albeit with distinct narratives, targets and audiences. This paper analyses the ‘what’ and the ‘how’: the respective narratives of each actor, their specificities, their similarities and their differences. The analysis also draws attention to strategic communications efforts undertaken by the EU, which are vectored into defensive (react and respond) and offensive (probe and push) dimensions. This understanding of the present context finally allows for an evaluation of what actions can be taken to enhance the effectiveness of the EU’s own strategic communications.
Indgående analyse
Ekstern forfatter
European Union Institute for Security Studies - EUISS, France
Om dette dokument
Type af publikation
Politikområde
Nøgleord
- adgang til information
- Asien - Oceanien
- DEN EUROPÆISKE UNION
- Europa
- europæisk integration
- fælles udenrigs- og sikkerhedspolitik
- GEOGRAFI
- information og informationsbehandling
- international sikkerhed
- INTERNATIONALE ORGANISATIONER
- INTERNATIONALE RELATIONER
- Irak
- islam
- kommunikation
- kommunikationspolitik
- kultur og religion
- mellemstatslige organisationer
- NATO
- offentlig mening
- POLITIK
- politisk geografi
- politisk liv og offentlig sikkerhed
- politisk propaganda
- religiøs fundamentalisme
- Rusland
- SOCIALE SPØRGSMÅL
- Syrien
- UDDANNELSE OG KOMMUNIKATION
- udenrigspolitik
- virtuelt fællesskab
- økonomisk geografi