The Philippine Star

Mystery as IS media goes offline for a day

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LONDON (AFP) — The Islamic State group’s online propaganda channels went mysterious­ly quiet for more than a full day between Wednesday and Thursday, in what analysts said was an “unpreceden­ted” silence.

IS, which uses messaging applicatio­n Telegram to broadcast daily updates on military operations and claims of attacks, published nothing between 0900 GMT on Wednesday and 1001 GMT on Thursday.

“The decelerati­on in the production of IS media has been particular­ly profound over the last couple of weeks,” said Charlie Winter, senior research fellow at the Internatio­nal Center for the Study of Radicaliza­tion and Political Violence. He called the silence “unpreceden­ted.”

IS media infrastruc­ture has taken a real battering over the last few months and because of that, something is changing.

“But there were no 24-hour periods when it was completely silent,” he said.

IS’s Telegram channels usually post more than a dozen messages each day, ranging from multilingu­al radio broadcasts on battlefiel­d achievemen­ts to pictures of civilian life in the group’s selfstyled “caliphate.”

On Wednesday, however, the group posted in a brief 30-minute window, skipping its usual “daily broadcast” entirely.

It then went dark until Thursday, breaking its silence with a four-minute radio segment on operations in eastern Syria and Iraq, only in Arabic.

In 2017, IS has lost control of Mosul and Raqa, its two main hubs in Iraq and Syria respective­ly, and in recent days was ousted from the last towns it held in each country.

A US-led coalition backing offensives against IS in both countries has specifical­ly targeted jihadists involved in media output – which could partly explain the drop-off, said Winter.

“IS media infrastruc­ture has taken a real battering over the last few months and because of that, something is changing,” he said.

IS could be physically relocating relevant offices or members, added Winter, but it may also be laying out a new media strategy to match its own shift from a territoria­lly based organizati­on to a covert insurgency.

 ?? EPA ?? A Yemeni woman walks past a graffiti depicting a US drone after alleged US drone raids killed dozens of Islamic State fighters in Sana’a last October. According to reports on Wednesday, at least four al-Qaeda militants were killed by a US drone attack...
EPA A Yemeni woman walks past a graffiti depicting a US drone after alleged US drone raids killed dozens of Islamic State fighters in Sana’a last October. According to reports on Wednesday, at least four al-Qaeda militants were killed by a US drone attack...

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