Administration, military aiming to improve anti-ISIS effort 'narrative'
Story highlights
- President Barack Obama told top military officials and other officials he wanted to see a better job of having the so-called "narrative" of the war on ISIS communicated to the American people
- In a recent interview the President described some of his frustrations about the messaging
(CNN)During
a National Security Council meeting held at the Pentagon on Dec. 14,
President Barack Obama told top military officials and other officials
he wanted to see a better job of having the so-called "narrative" of the
war on ISIS communicated to the American people, a senior defense
official told CNN.
In a recent
interview the President described some of his frustrations about the
messaging regarding the administration's moves against ISIS.
"I
think there is legitimate criticism of what I've been doing and our
administration has been doing in the sense that we haven't you know, on a
regular basis I think described all the work that we've been doing for
more a year now to defeat ISIL," President Obama told NPR in an
interview that aired a week ago using a different acronym for ISIS. "And
so if people haven't seen the fact in that in fact 9,000 strikes have
been carried out against ISIL, if they don't know that towns like Sinjar
that were controlled by ISIL have been taken back, or a town like
Tikrit, that was controlled by ISIL, now has been repopulated by
previous residents, then the might feel as if there's not enough of a
response. And so part of our goal here is to make sure that people are
informed about all of the actions that we're taking."
Since
the Pentagon meeting with the President, senior defense officials have
been working on various options for improving communication about the
war, including more outreach to the media by uniformed military
officials, according to a senior defense official familiar with the
effort.
The official said a major issue is trying to ensure substantive information gets communicated -- and not just messaging spin.
Separately,
a senior administration official noted the narrative effort is being
conducted within the Defense Department, but added in recent weeks the
administration has been encouraging principals across the U.S.
government to get out more to talk about their aspects of the
counter-ISIS campaign and to do it before new audiences.end quote from:
No comments:
Post a Comment