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3Novices:ISIL twitter traffic down by nearly half

WASHINGTON // ISIL's Twitter traffic has plunged 45 per cent in the past two years, the Obama administration says, as the US and its allies have countered messages of extremist glorification with a flood of online images and statements about suffering and enslavement at the hands of the terror group.

Among the images: A teddy bear with Arabic writing and messages saying ISIL "slaughters childhood," "kills innocence," "lashes purity" or "humiliates children." A male hand covering a female's mouth, saying ISIL "deprives woman her voice." A woman in a black niqab, bloody tears coming from a bruised eye, and the caption: "Women under ISIS. Enslaved. Battered. Beaten. Humiliated. Flogged."

US officials cite the drop in Twitter traffic as a sign of progress toward eliminating propaganda they blame for inspiring attacks around the world.

When the US formed an international coalition in September 2014 to fight ISIL, the administration outlined multiple goals: military action and cutting off foreign fighters and finances, confronting the group's extremist ideology and stemming the militants' growing popularity in the Arab world and beyond.

The messaging element of the campaign struggled early on. Much of the anti-ISIL content put online was in English, limiting its effectiveness. At the time, social media networks were only getting started with new technological approaches to the challenge of disabling accounts that were recruiting and radicalising prospective ISIL members.

These shortcomings have been fixed, American officials believe. Memes and images depicting the group's treatment of women, children and others are presented almost entirely in Arabic. Whereas the US previously blasted the information out itself, it disseminates messages now through Muslim governments, religious leaders, schools, youth leaders and advocacy groups with credibility in local communities. Data show the proliferation of ISIL propaganda decreasing.

"We're denying ISIL the ability to operate uncontested online, and we're seeing their social media presence decline," said Michael Lumpkin, head of the Global Engagement Center, which coordinates the US government's approach to fighting extremist messaging. "Anti-ISIL audiences are increasingly vocal on social media. This only weakens ISIL's ability to recruit, a key aim of our messaging efforts."

Last July, the US and the UAE launched the Abu Dhabi-based Sawab Centre to counter ISIL's online propaganda.

Data shows a 6-1 ratio of anti-ISIL content online compared with pro-ISIL content - an improvement from last year. When pro-ISIL Twitter accounts are discovered today, they have about 300 followers each. In 2014, such accounts had 1,500 followers each.

Among social networks, the administration has primarily focused on Twitter. The platform has been most heavily used by ISIL to crowdsource supporters and potential attackers, though it also has used YouTube and Facebook.

As ISIL emerged from Al Qaeda's shadow and began seizing cities and large swaths of territory in Syria and Iraq in 2013, pro-ISIL accounts started firing out tens of thousands of tweets each day, rapidly and repeatedly opening new accounts as others were suspended.

The group's enhanced use of social media quickly set it apart from Al Qaeda and previous extremist groups. Counterterrorism and law enforcement officials have pointed to ISIL's online presence for inspiring deadly attacks in Europe and the United States, including some by individuals who never had physical contact with any of its leaders or fighters in the Middle East. These include the attackers who killed 14 in San Bernardino, California, last December.

The US messages attempt to undermine many of ISIL's most oft-cited claims. These include the group's supposed invincibility on the battlefield or that its caliphate is good for Muslims. American partners have flooded social media with messages highlighting the group's territorial loses and inability to effectively govern or provide basic services to areas under its control.

Although the US government has no formal arrangement with Twitter, its information campaign has dovetailed with new approaches by the company to identify and eliminate tweets supporting terrorism.

Since mid-2015, the company has suspended more than 125,000 such accounts.

*Associated Press



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