ISIS Media and Troop Withdrawal Announcements: Visualizing Community and Resilience

Authors

  • Ayse Deniz Lokmanoglu Northwestern University
  • Carol K. Winkler Georgia State Univeristy
  • Kayla McMinimy Georgia State University
  • Monerah Almahmoud Georgia State University

Keywords:

media, military, visual, terrorism, social media

Abstract

When a president announces troop withdrawal, some factors change. Financial and human costs fall, and relations among international actors change. To expand contemporary understandings of how the influence of troop withdrawal announcements may extend beyond state-based media portrayals, and to explore additional factors that help explain changes in nonstate actor’s media campaigns, this study asks whether troop withdrawal announcements in regions of military conflict correspond to changes in the visual media output of militant groups. Focusing on issues leading up to and following President Trump’s Twitter announcement of U.S. troop withdrawals from Syria on December 19, 2018, we conducted a content analysis of 887 images in 102 issues of ISIS’s official weekly newsletter al-Naba that examined variables related to presentational, individual, and institutional components. A chi-squared analysis and post-facto qualitative analysis revealed that militant, nonstate groups emphasize community building, resilience, and nonprovocative postures in their media campaigns after troop withdrawal announcements. The findings have implications for the intersections of platforms and gatekeeping, and of military, media, nonstate actors, and the public.

Author Biographies

Ayse Deniz Lokmanoglu, Northwestern University

Postdoctoral Fellow at Center for Communication and Public Policy, Northwestern University, Evanston IL USA

Carol K. Winkler, Georgia State Univeristy

Professor of Communication, Department of Communication, 1121 25 Park Place, Atlanta GA 30303, 404-413-5616

Kayla McMinimy, Georgia State University

PhD Student, Department of Communication, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Monerah Almahmoud, Georgia State University

Research Fellow, Transcultural Conflict and Violence Initiative, 25 Park Place Floor 8, Atlanta GA 30303, 404-413-5600

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Published

2022-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles