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Austin Bay Blog » A very bad idea: The Army’s new blog ban

Austin Bay Blog

5/3/2007

A very bad idea: The Army’s new blog ban

Filed under: General — site admin @ 7:51 am

I’m late in getting to this subject– end of school, the LA Times debate, etc.

At the minimum this is a media disaster for the Army public affairs office. OPSEC is a concern, no one dispute that, but The War for Modernity is an information and philosophical battle as well as a war of soldiers and bullets.

Wired has posted a long article on the ban.

Note Matt Burden’s comment:

The U.S. Army has ordered soldiers to stop posting to blogs or sending personal e-mail messages, without first clearing the content with a superior officer, Wired News has learned. The directive, issued April 19, is the sharpest restriction on troops’ online activities since the start of the Iraq war. And it could mean the end of military blogs, observers say.

Military officials have been wrestling for years with how to handle troops who publish blogs. Officers have weighed the need for wartime discretion against the opportunities for the public to personally connect with some of the most effective advocates for the operations in Afghanistan and Iraq — the troops themselves. The secret-keepers have generally won the argument, and the once-permissive atmosphere has slowly grown more tightly regulated. Soldier-bloggers have dropped offline as a result.

The new rules (.pdf) obtained by Wired News require a commander be consulted before every blog update.

“This is the final nail in the coffin for combat blogging,” said retired paratrooper Matthew Burden, editor of The Blog of War anthology. “No more military bloggers writing about their experiences in the combat zone. This is the best PR the military has — it’s most honest voice out of the war zone. And it’s being silenced.”

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