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Milblog

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Amilblogorwarblogis ablogdevoted mostly or wholly to covering news events concerning an ongoing war. Sometimes the use of the term "warblog" implies that the blog concerned has apro-warslant.[1]The term "milblog" implies that the author is a member of, or has some connection to the military; the more specific term "soldierblog" is sometimes used for the former.[citation needed]

History[edit]

The coinage 'warblog' is attributed toMatt Welch,[2][3]who started hisWar Blogwithin days of theSeptember 11 attacks.[4]In the fall of 2001, the attacks gave rise to a "war-blogging movement,"[5]which favouredpolitical punditryover the often personal and technological orientation that had dominated the blog genre up to that point, achieving much greater public and media recognition than earlier blogs.[5]Most warblogs supported the US-ledWar in Afghanistanand theIraq War[6]from a hawkish perspective.[7]

Milblogging was popularized byGlenn Reynolds,whoseInstapunditwas one of the most popularpolitical blogson the web.[8]Some prominent milblogs, such asLittle Green FootballsbyCharles Johnson[9]andDaily DishbyAndrew Sullivanexisted beforeSeptember 11,but made thewar on terrortheir primary focus afterwards.[10]Other notable milblogs includedDynamistbyVirginia Postrel,KausFilesbyMickey Kaus,Talking Points MemobyJosh Marshall,KenLayne.combyKen Layne,[10]andLileks.combyJames Lileks.[1]

The readership of milblogs dramatically increased in March 2003, following theU.S. invasion of Iraq,with readers chiefly attracted by the offer of perspectives absent from most news reports; the pseudonymousSalam Pax,an Iraqi national who was posting first-hand accounts from Baghdad, emerged as a prominent war blogger.[11]Media organisations that started their own reporters' milblog at this point included theBBC,theChristian Science Monitor,[12]and theSeattle Post-Intelligencer.[7]In the first half of 2003,CNN,The Hartford Courant,andTimewere among the media organizations that prohibited staff reporters from covering US-led wars first-hand in their personal blogs for fear both of legal repercussions and of competition from such blogs.[13]

Most blogs that gained popularity as "warblogs" expanded their focus topoliticsand general news, usually from aright-of-centerperspective, yet continued to be commonly known as warblogs.[5]While milblogs arose in response to the post-September-11 wars and mostly limited their commentary to them, some moved on to related political, social and cultural issues and continued after the end of the wars.

Milblogs[edit]

Military blogs emerged with the Iraq War in 2003.[14]Initially named "warblogs" as well,[15]they became popular under the name "milblogging" in 2004.[16]In October 2005, a U.S. soldier named Jean-Paul Borda launched the blogaggregatorMilblogging.com.[14][17]A milblog is primarily focused on the events of the military, written about by those with inside knowledge of the military, whether an active soldier, a veteran of the military, a spouse of a soldier, or a civilian with a special connection to the military.

Milblogs often criticized the media coverage of the wars in Afghanistan andIraq,seeking to correct what they saw as biased or negative reporting.[17][18]Thus, Matt Burden of Blackfive.net cites as the rationale of his blog the death in combat of a fellow soldier and good friend of his, who died saving the life of a magazine reporter, yet had his death go unreported by the magazine.[19]One milblogger chose to offer his site "as an educational service to the American People who wish to know the true story of Iraq and Afghanistan."[20]Other milblogs cite similar intentions to report the news that they did not feel the mainstream media was reporting.

C.J. Grisham was among the first active duty soldiers to become a milblogger[21]when he openedA Soldier's Perspectivein December 2004.[22]Within five years, ASP was receiving an average of 1,500 visitors per day (nearly 1 million in total) from over 120 countries and was ranked the second most popular site onMilblogging.com.[23]

In 2005, there were fewer than 200 "milblogs" in existence.[24]In July 2011, Milblogging.com listed more than 3,000 military blogs in 46 countries.[25]The top 5 locations were US, Iraq, Afghanistan, the United Kingdom, and Germany.[citation needed]During the2022 war in Ukraine,Russian milblogs became increasingly popular.[26][27]

Response by governments[edit]

United States[edit]

Military blogs became accepted within a few years. Whereas Secretary of DefenseDonald Rumsfeldwas at first believed to be skeptical of military blogs,[14]by 2007 presidentGeorge W. Bushlauded them as "an important voice for the cause of freedom."[28]

Official oversight of websites maintained by military personnel deployed to the Middle East began in 2002. The oversight mission consisted of active-duty soldiers and contractors, as well as Guard and Reserve members from Maryland, Texas and Washington state. Its remit was expanded in August 2005.[29]

In Iraq, commanding officers shut down a blog that reported on the medical response to a suicide bombing that had taken place in late 2004 in Mosul. The Army Web Risk Assessment Cell was created to monitor compliance with military regulations.[30]In April 2005, a four-page document of regulations was issued by Multi-National Corps-Iraq,[29]directing all military bloggers in Iraq to register with their units, and commanders to conduct quarterly reviews to make sure bloggers were not disclosing casualty numbers or violating operational security or privacy rules.[30]Some milbloggers took down or altered their blogs for fear of violating the regulation that many of them believed to be too ambiguous.[29]The regulations were updated in April 2007 but, according to many bloggers in war theatres, failed to resolve their ambiguities.[28]

Although theU.S. Department of Defensewas initially concerned about milblogs as a potentialOPSECviolation,[31]it eventually embraced the concept and attempted to implement official versions of milblogs.[32]Official milblogs did not receive the same reception or popularity of the unofficial milblogs as they were written in the same dull language as other official publications of the Defense Department.

Russia[edit]

In Russia, milbloggers (sometimes calledvoenkory,"war correspondents"[33]) have gained prominence during theRussian invasion of Ukraine,providing a greater level of information about the war than is available from state media. Blogs range from those affiliated with state media, which often provided information more in-line with that of government positions, to independent andWagner Group-affiliated blogs which are more critical of the Russian military establishment's performance in Ukraine. These blogs are notable for their ultranationalist and pro-war views.[26]TheInstitute for the Study of Warattributed their popularity to the Russian government's failure to establish an effective social media presence as well as its failure in preparing the Russian public for a drawn-out war. The Russian government has protected them from calls for censorship and has selectively granted positions to nationalist and pro-war milbloggers due to their importance in the ultranationalist constituency whichVladimir Putin's presidencyhas become increasingly reliant upon. Putin himself has met with prominent milbloggers aligned with state-media to discuss military matters.[34]However, since September 2023 the Russian government arrested a number of high-profile milbloggers, which some have seen as a crackdown on the community.[27]

Famous milbloggers[edit]

Russian[edit]

Ukrainian[edit]

Other[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^abCavanaugh, Tim (April 2, 2002)."Let Slip the Blogs of War".USC Annenberg Online Journalism Review.RetrievedAugust 4,2016.
  2. ^Reynolds, Glenn (February 20, 2003)."On the warpath".The Guardian.Archived fromthe originalon March 6, 2003.RetrievedJuly 30,2016.
  3. ^Welch, Matt (April 1, 2006)."Farewell to Warblogging".Reason.RetrievedAugust 10,2016.
  4. ^Welch, Matt (September 17, 2001)."Welcome to war".War Blog.Archived fromthe originalon September 20, 2001.RetrievedJuly 29,2016.
  5. ^abcGallagher, David F. (June 10, 2002)."A Rift Among Bloggers".New York Times.Archived fromthe originalon July 31, 2016.
  6. ^O'Brien, Barbara (2004).Blogging America: Political Discourse in a Digital Nation.Wilsonville: Franklin, Beedle & Associates. p. 20.ISBN978-1-59028-040-9.
  7. ^abLevy, Steven (March 28, 2003)."Bloggers' Delight".Newsweek.RetrievedAugust 13,2016.
  8. ^Welch, Matt (September 2003)."Blogworld: The New Amateur Journalists Weigh In".Columbia Journalism Review.42(3).ISSN0010-194X.Archived fromthe originalon December 6, 2003.RetrievedAugust 4,2016.
  9. ^Munksgaard, Daniel (2010)."Warblog without end: Online anti-Islamic discourses as persuadables".Iowa City: University of Iowa: 38.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)
  10. ^abSullivan, Andrew (February 24, 2002)."A Blogger Manifesto: Why Online Weblogs Are One Future for Journalism".The Sunday Times.London. Archived fromthe originalon April 6, 2002.
  11. ^Hamilton, Anita (March 30, 2003)."Best Of The War Blogs".Time.ISSN0040-781X.RetrievedAugust 12,2016.
  12. ^Reynolds, Glenn (2004). "The Blogs of War: How the Internet is Reshaping Foreign Policy".The National Interest(75): 59–64.ISSN0884-9382.JSTOR42897526.
  13. ^Bowman, Shayne; Willis, Chris (2003).We Media(PDF).Reston, VA: The Media Center at the American Press institute.RetrievedSeptember 16,2016.
  14. ^abcDao, James (May 1, 2011)."Milbloggers Hold Conference".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedOctober 27,2016.
  15. ^Thompson, Garry (2003)."Weblogs, warblogs, the public sphere, and bubbles".Transformations: Journal of Media & Culture.2003(7).RetrievedNovember 3,2016.
  16. ^Hewitt, Hugh (March 11, 2004)."Rise of the Milblogs".Weekly Standard.RetrievedOctober 27,2016.
  17. ^abSpector, Mike (July 26, 2006)."Cry Bias, and Let Slip the Blogs of War".The Wall Street Journal.Archived fromthe originalon October 5, 2006.RetrievedOctober 28,2016.
  18. ^Bennett, Daniel (May 11, 2009)."The evolution of military blogging in the mediasphere".Frontline Club.RetrievedAugust 4,2016.
  19. ^Burden, Matt (May 26, 2004)."Major Mathew Schram's Memorial Day".Blackfive.
  20. ^"About Me".War on Terror News.
  21. ^"Noise and Light Discipline".xbradtc.com.December 16, 2009.RetrievedJanuary 29,2014.
  22. ^"Julie Howe & CJ Grisham,"PatriotWatch.com.
  23. ^Anderson, Jon R. (December 8, 2009)."The rise and fall of a military blogger".Military Times.Archived fromthe originalon April 22, 2013.RetrievedJanuary 29,2014.
  24. ^Curt (September 24, 2010)."Find a successful case study and…".The Computer Whisperer.RetrievedSeptember 18,2016.
  25. ^"Search Milblogging.com's Database".Milblogging.com.July 14, 2011. Archived fromthe originalon July 14, 2011.
  26. ^ab"Ukraine war: Who are Russia's war bloggers and why are they popular?".BBC News.April 4, 2023.RetrievedJune 14,2023.
  27. ^abPeck, Michael (September 15, 2023)."Recent arrests suggest Putin is quietly trying to rein in some of his most effective promoters of the war in Ukraine".Business Insider.RetrievedNovember 7,2023.
  28. ^abSchwab, Nikki (May 5, 2007)."Military Bloggers Wary of New Policy".The Washington Post.ISSN0190-8286.RetrievedNovember 1,2016.
  29. ^abcFelberbaum, Michael (October 29, 2006)."Army Monitors Soldiers' Blogs, Web Sites".Washington Post.
  30. ^abHockenberry, John (August 2005)."The Blogs of War".Wired.Vol. 13, no. 8. Archived fromthe originalon August 13, 2005.RetrievedJuly 23,2016.
  31. ^Alvarez, Steve (March 2, 2006)."CENTCOM Team Engages 'Bloggers'".Defense.gov.Archived fromthe originalon June 8, 2010.RetrievedAugust 5,2016.
  32. ^Bennett, Daniel (July 7, 2010)."Tracing the first official U.S. military blogs".Frontline Club.RetrievedAugust 5,2016.
  33. ^Kottasová, Ivana (April 4, 2023)."Putin's digital footsoldiers: How bloggers became a key cog in Russia's war machine".CNN.RetrievedNovember 7,2023.
  34. ^"Institute for the Study of War".Institute for the Study of War.RetrievedJune 14,2023.