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Posts with tag: iraq-war | Return to BloggersBlog.com Homepage
President Bush Meets With Bloggers
The Washington Post reports that President Bush met with bloggers following his recent Iraq speech.
Still, the hour-long meeting in the Roosevelt Room offered Bush another opportunity to break through what he sees as the filter of the traditional news media, while also reaching out to the providers of a new source of information for soldiers, their families and others who follow the conflict in Iraq closely.
"More and more we are engaging in the new-media world, and these are influential people who have a big following," said Kevin F. Sullivan, the White House communications chief.
Bush told the group that, to his knowledge, it was the first time a president had met with bloggers for a chat at the White House, one of the participants wrote.
The Washington Post said the bloggers talking to Bush were the "generally pro-Bush and pro-military, and the ensuing reports were highly sympathetic to the president." Some of the bloggers that met with Bush (in person or via teleconference) include Argghhh!, The Victory Caucus, Blackfive, The Long War Journal, INDCJournal and Mudville Gazette. Ward Carroll was also in attendance representing Military.com and DefenseTech.
Is there much point to speaking with bloggers that are already very supportive? Maybe it was just a way to reward bloggers that have blogged kindly about the Bush administration and the Iraq War. If President Bush ever wanted to talk to bloggers that have a very negative view of the Iraq War they certainly aren't hard to find. Ward Carroll said, "It was a conversation and an opportunity for the president to demonstrate that he was aware of what the milbloggisphere is capable of."
A couple more reports on the Bush blogger meeting can be found here, here and here.
Posted on September 19, 2007
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Military Monitoring Blogs For OPSEC Violations
Defense Tech has a post about an Army News Story that says a team of Virginia National Guard troops are monitoring blogs and websites for the slightest OPSEC violation. The Army News article says the team is equipped with several scanning tools.
The team uses several scanning tools to monitor sites for OPSEC violations. The tools search for such key words as "for official use only" or "top secret," and records the number of times they are used on a site. Analysts review the results to determine which, if any, need further investigation.
For the 10 Virginia Guardsmen, the mission often becomes personal.
"I have friends over in Iraq, Kuwait and Afghanistan," said Sgt. Yaphet Benton, a network technician in civilian life. "Once I started this mission, I saw a lot of things that can endanger a lot of Soldiers. I see a lot of bios, pictures, names and birthdates. I consider that critical. Terrorists (and persons trying to steal your identity) can use that information."
Based in Arlington, Va., AWRAC was created in 2002 to monitor official Web sites. Its mission was expanded in August 2005 by order of the Army Chief of Staff to include unofficial sites written by servicemembers.
Defense Tech also points to this DoD warning that includes a section specifically about blogs.
*BLOGS,* OR WEB LOGS, POSTED TO PUBLIC WEBSITES ARE INCREASINGLY USED BY MILITARY PERSONNEL AS PERSONAL JOURNALS. COMMANDERS SHALL ENSURE SUBORDINATES ARE AWARE THAT, IN ACCORDANCE WITH DOD DIRECTIVE 5230.9, *CLEARANCE OF DOD INFORMATION FOR PUBLIC RELEASE,* AND THE JOINT ETHICS REGULATION (DOD 5500.7-R), PERSONAL BLOGS (I.E., THOSE NOT HAVING DOD SPONSORSHIP AND PURPOSE) MAY NOT BE CREATED/MAINTAINED DURING NORMAL DUTY HOURS AND MAY NOT CONTAIN INFORMATION ON MILITARY ACTIVITIES THAT IS NOT AVAILABLE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC. SUCH INFORMATION INCLUDES COMMENTS ON DAILY MILITARY ACTIVITIES AND OPERATIONS, UNIT MORALE, RESULTS OF OPERATIONS, STATUS OF EQUIPMENT, AND OTHER INFORMATION THAT MAY BE BENEFICIAL TO ADVERSARIES.
Meanwhile, an article in Raw Story has a copy of an email from CENTCOM to bloggers that is trying to drive more traffic to the the centcom.mil website.
I would like to invite you to check out our web site, www.centcom.mil. It's one more resource for information and you're free to use any of it (video, audio, photos and articles) in conversations on your blog.
It appears that the military is trying to spin the situation in Iraq by clamping down on what soldiers can blog about and by trying to get bloggers to blog about stuff on centcom.mil. Unfortunately, there are many signs that the Iraq War is not going well such as Saudi Arabia building a giant 550 mile long wall along the Iraq border because they think Iraq is a failed state. The good news is that you can use the content on the centcom.mil website. The photograph on this post is from centcom.mil and it shows the opening of a solar well and water tower in Afghanistan, which is a very cool idea.
Posted on October 16, 2006
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The Blog of War Book is Released
The Blog of War by Matthew Currier Burden, the founder of Blackfive.net, was released today. It has already to jumped to #273 on Amazon.com's list of bestselling books. The book features the writings from dozens of military bloggers, also known as milbloggers. Here are few comments from book reviewers.
Publishers Weekly: "The best (if sometimes troublesome) selections relate personal experiences: a woman trucker is severely wounded; a tanker fights his way into Fallujah, enthusiastically describing the men he kills; a base commander fires an obstreperous Iraqi employee. More literary efforts are less successful, with several wince-inducing attempts at poetic battlefield imagery. Tributes to fallen comrades often fall into mawkishness. Burden warns that unfettered war blogging may soon disappear under the heavy hand of military censorship, but if our leaders are worried about criticism of their policies, Burden's book will reassure them."
Booklist: "Previously, war letters, diaries, and memoirs were published long after the actual experience of the writers. Burden, a blogger himself, has selected observations of ordinary men and women written and sent in real time as they endure the cauldron of war. Some of the writings are mundane, but there are also chilling descriptions of surviving a mortar attack and attempting to save the life of a severely wounded Iraqi. This collection is an excellent introduction to an emerging form of war reporting."
Vanity Fair: "Can you handle the truth? Matthew Currier "Blackfive" Burden's The Blog of War (Simon & Schuster) is loaded with firsthand reports from the Internet diaries of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. Grab it before the Pentagon orders it burned on the ever growing bonfire of lost civil liberties."
Washington Post: "Blogging the story of Schram and hundreds of other unknown soldier-heroes was a good decision, as was piecing together a collection of military blogs from all over the Iraq theater. Though Burden's politics have a decidedly conservative slant (one of his favorite bloggers, a Marine who re-enlisted as a corporal after watching others go off to Iraq and Afghanistan, calls his site 'Red State Rants'), nonpartisan patriotism is the common thread tying together these reflections, love letters and stories of combat. They make for riveting reading."
You can also check out the blogs of the milbloggers whose words were included in the book. Blackfive.net has a long list which includes A Day in Iraq, Boots in Baghdad, Dadmanly, Howdy's Blog, Military Bride, The Sniper Eye, Trying to Grok and many other milbloggers. The full list can be found here.
Some other bloggers discussing the book include ArmyWifeToddlerMom, The Indepundit, Fuzzilicious Thinking, Sepia Mutiny and Milblogging.com.
Posted on September 5, 2006
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Blogs Blamed for Iraq War?
Georgie Anne Geyer has an opinion piece on Yahoo News where she appears to blame blogs for the Iraq War.
Think for a moment of what might have happened had we had better (really, any) coverage of Afghanistan during the 1990s, when the Taliban and
Osama bin Laden were cooking up a second attack after the 1993 attack on the World Trade Center. Could we then have been so amazed by 9/11? Wasn't it criminally irresponsible to be so amazed?
Think a little further. If more Americans had had a comprehensive view of the world -- the kind that is irrevocably blurred by the 80,000 new blogging sites launched every week -- it would have been barely possible for the 30 people who in essence started the Iraq war to have acted without the accord of the American people.
A lot of people see it the other way around. The mainstream media was not providing enough coverage of international news. They were also not publishing enough information about Iraq's weapons and the possibility that an invasion could lead to a civil war during the time period the Bush Administration was pushing for the Iraq War. Blog readership was not even very high three years ago and at the time there were blogs both for and against the war. Blogs are not to blame. (Via No Silence Here -> Romenesko)
Posted on March 21, 2006
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