The U.S. Is Fumbling the War of Ideas Against ISIS

Earlier this week, the editor of The Fiscal Times wondered why the US had not engaged in the propaganda fight against ISIS. “If we’re fighting both an army and a war of ideas,” she wrote, “we have to go after their ideas,” urging the Department of Defense into action on that front. However, we have begun to engage on that fight – but not terribly well.

Like other terrorist organizations, ISIS builds itself on an aspirational ideal – in this case, radical Islamist theology and ideology. That has been the case with other terrorist groups of the past too, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, Hezbollah, and Hamas in the Islamist realm. Before that, radical groups like the Weather Underground, Baader-Meinhof/Red Army Faction, and the Palestinian Liberation Front organized on more Marxist and secular ideologies and narratives. Fighting these groups required more than just a law-enforcement approach; it required winning hearts and minds to keep those groups on the outer fringes of political action.

Related: It’s Time to Wag the Dog Against ISIS

Similarly, the great contest of the post-World War II era hinged just as much on the competition of ideas as it did on arms races and other military measures. The Cold War was all about one ideology definitively trumping another, as the actions of the Soviet sphere and the West made clear that “peaceful coexistence” and détente were unsustainable. Even the Non-Aligned Movement, which has outlasted the Cold War itself, turned into a battleground for the ideological debate and fight between the two superpower-driven poles of economic and political thought.

Recall for a moment how exactly the West prevailed in that ideological conflict. Ground wars took place in Korea, Vietnam, and Afghanistan, for instance, and military interventions in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Granada -- almost all of which turned into headaches for all sides.

Except for a tense week in 1962 over missile installations in Cuba, though, that grand generational conflict didn’t get resolved through acute military conflict between the main belligerents. Instead, the big victories came in space, in technological achievement, and in economic development – the lack of which doomed the Soviet Union to collapse in the late 1980s.

All through that time, both sides honed their propaganda craft, although neither would admit to that definition. The US had the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe aimed at the Iron Curtain countries, and an overwhelmingly influential cultural presence. The Soviets had academics and media strategies designed to undermine American/Western arguments for freedom. The Soviet efforts worked within the closed systems of their own satellites, but failed otherwise to win the hearts and minds necessary to produce enough converts to win the ideological battle.