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Home » Info War » Another Milblogger Bows Out (Updated Again)

Another Milblogger Bows Out (Updated Again)

“Dave” has been in and out of the mil­i­tary since 1981. Now, he’s get­ting ready to deploy to Iraq. So he decided to start a blog, as “a place… to share [his] thoughts, feel­ings, and obser­va­tions, before, dur­ing, and after the Army Reserve is done with [him].” He man­aged to put up a cou­ple of entries — and pic­tures of his cats, Stinky Pooh and Buddy Badger.“
CLASS 2.jpgBut Dave has pulled the plug on his blog, just six weeks after he started it. Why? “Today we had a brief­ing on Blogs ‘do’s and don’t’ for the Army,” he writes. “It appears to be very sub­jec­tive as to what is and isn’t allowed, so to keep from vio­lat­ing some Army reg, pol­icy, or wish of the com­man­der, I will have this as my last post.” Then Dave linked to Defense Tech’s post from last week, on the Army’s “Big Brother” unit.
Now, Dave clearly wasn’t going to be a model spokesper­son for the mil­i­tary. He laughed at the Army’s new slo­gan. And he wrote darkly about how the ser­vice “turned me from a career sol­dier lov­ing the Army to some­one that couldn’t wait to get out just that quick.“
But still. This is some­one who plunged back into mil­i­tary life, long after he was out. Someone who wrote of his desire to be “an out­stand­ing sol­dier, a men­tor, a leader, some­one who cared enough to make a dif­fer­ence.” Isn’t that exactly who the Army wants telling its story? And isn’t Dave’s online retreat exactly what friends of the mil­i­tary, like Andi and Blackfive, have been warn­ing about?
UPDATE 8:18 PM: Speaking of Blackfive, the man isn’t amused by the Army’s new atti­tude — or its blog-​​hunting squad.

As a for­mer Intel Officer, I agree that there’s a need to make sure that blogs aren’t vio­lat­ing OPSEC. For instance, if three blog­gers are in sep­a­rate units but wit­ness an event and blog about it, there might not be an OPSEC issue in one blog, BUT if you put the infor­ma­tion from all three blogs together, you might be able to piece together Battle Damage Assessment or Order of Battle infor­ma­tion. Since the blog­gers might be in dif­fer­ent chains of com­mand, this might be missed by their 06 com­man­ders who are respon­si­ble for blog review. Setting up a group to eval­u­ate this pos­si­bil­ity is needed.
However, the watch­dog should also real­ize that com­ing down on blog­gers for some (per­ceived) OPSEC vio­la­tions might be a bit ridicu­lous — espe­cially when there are pho­tos and explicit descrip­tions of weapon sys­tems and pro­ce­dures that are pub­licly avail­able on civil­ian (ie. FAS) or military/​DoD web­sites.
Warning blog­gers of pos­si­ble vio­la­tions is a good thing. But mind­lessly crack­ing down on them with­out con­sid­er­ing the con­se­quences to the pos­i­tive infor­ma­tion flow will only cre­ate a cadre of neg­a­tive mil­i­tary blog­gers fly­ing under the radar that will become the anti-​​military poster chil­dren for the New York Times and CNN.
And then one of the few alter­na­tive sources of infor­ma­tion about our mil­i­tary and the war will be gone…

UPDATE 8:23 PM: Milblogger Dadmanly “didn’t think this was going to cause prob­lems,” orig­i­nally. Now, his “opin­ion on this has shifted.”

Reminds me of the old MOS, I for­get the nomen­cla­ture, but they were com­monly called BF’ers, or buddy ******s.
I sup­pose I am too much the opti­mist not to have acknowl­edged the prob­a­bil­ity that DoD (under Rumsfeld) might go too far and weigh the Golden Goose for hol­i­day din­ner.
Bad, bad news, if this goes any fur­ther than alert­ing mil­blogs of slips, unin­tended expo­sure, ill-​​advised details. And alert­ing to com­mands if they have been seri­ous vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties.
Although, as a National Guardsman, I would love to spend my drills scan­ning MILBLOGS

UPDATE 10/​19/​06 1:03 PM: “Just as they were years too late dis­cov­er­ing blogs, the mil­i­tary also seem­ingly haven’t dis­cov­ered that blogs rep­re­sent about one tenth of one per­cent of the poten­tial threat,” mil­blog­ging guru Greyhawk writes.

MySpace pages, cha­t­rooms, YouTube, and count­less other per­sonal and pub­lic web pages are used and read on orders of mag­ni­tude above and beyond what weblogs are. I sus­pect (actu­ally I hope) that the real prob­lem here is that “blogs” is now mil­i­tary short­hand for “any­thing any­one puts any­where on the web”. (In fact, if you read the sometimes-​​mentioned-​​in-​​this-​​discussion Army train­ing on blogs****, you’ll find that most — per­haps all — of the OPSEC vio­la­tions cited didn’t occur on blogs at all, but on other open web sites.)
In a nut­shell, I want the mil­i­tary to ensure infor­ma­tion that can get me killed isn’t widely avail­able via open sources on the web or else­where, but I’ve seen absolutely noth­ing to give me con­fi­dence that the mil­i­tary is capa­ble of doing so… Damanly says (in some­what tongue-​​in-​​cheek fash­ion) that he’d “love to spend my drills scan­ning MILBLOGS”. But you see, he’s one of the military’s lead­ing experts on weblogs, so that will never hap­pen in a mil­lion years. What they’re going to do is get some guys to sit at com­put­ers and respond when­ever a bell rings because an auto­mated process has detected too many instances of the ini­tials “FOUO” in a web site.
Jeebus.

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October 18th, 2006 | Info War | 21641 Comment »http://defensetech.org/2006/10/18/another-milblogger-bows-out-updated-again/Another+Milblogger+Bows+Out+%28Updated+Again%292006-10-18+17%3A10%3A56jason You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. pacificdave says:
    October 18, 2006 at 12:40 pm

    Having recently exited the mil­i­tary I can tell you that it was put out to us to stop blog­ging about mil­i­tary any­thing a cou­ple of years ago. It all depends on your imme­di­ate supe­ri­ors on how much they want to shut you down. I was even told a few years ago to stop blog­ging period even though there wasn’t any­thing posted on my blog that was mil­i­tary related. The said they didn’t care what or why I was blog­ging but they wanted it shut down. Being a lit­tle man there’s not much you can do in the mil­i­tary but comply.

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