December 21, 2024
Once the realm of rich nations, warfare has been getting cheaper and cheaper as time has marched on. The computer age has lowered the bar when it comes to barriers to entry and with the advent of social media, cyber warfare doesn't even require sophisticated hacking skills. Enemies of the West have dedicated resources to influencing and dividing populations in order to undermine resolve and willpower. WAR ROOM welcomes back Jahara "Franky" Matisek to continue the discussion of how U.S. competitors are exploiting the nation's open society and what the government and the average American has to do to contribute to a resilient civil society.

“I can’t predict the future, but I would bet the non-kinetic effects will reign supreme…What if we did not have to produce sorties to achieve the same effect? What if a future small diameter bomb looks like ones and zeros?”
Gen CQ Brown, 22nd chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force.

Old battlespace notions of soldiers, tanks, artillery, cruise missiles, and airstrikes on a traditional battlefield are becoming less relevant in a growing era of conflict and competition. Even in the early phases of the war in Ukraine, as Russian forces assaulted Ukrainian military units and cities with only mixed success, their military actions largely failed to overcome Ukrainian hybrid defense actions–ambushes, resistance forces, and robust information operations. Speaking at the Dubai International Air Chiefs Conference on 13 November, Chief of Staff of the U.S. Air Force, General CQ Brown told the audience that kinetic warfare was going the way of Blockbuster. General Brown further added “I can’t predict the future, but I would bet the non-kinetic effects will reign supreme…What if we did not have to produce sorties to achieve the same effect? What if a future small diameter bomb looks like ones and zeros?”

The industrial way of fighting is antiquated and has given way to the informational way. The safety and security that the U.S. felt with two major oceans separating it from Europe and Asia – and friendly neighbors like Canada and Mexico – is no longer a given. The digital age, its associated technologies, and the 4.9 billion internet users worldwide are transforming governments, societies, and militaries in one important way – they are under constant attack. To what extent is the U.S. responding?

Not enough, and the attacks are growing in frequency, intensity, and sophistication. “Thought Bombs” are already being used by the Chinese and Russians (and other adversaries) to kill Americans in a way that was not possible in a pre-internet era.  

President Biden’s claim that some online discourse on social media platforms were “killing people” has merit. A 2020 journal article estimated that at least 800 people had died due to ingesting dangerous COVID-19 treatments spread online through misinformation. With over 900,000 Americans having died due to COVID-19, tens of thousands of Americans could arguably have been killed by social media warriors working on behalf of Beijing and Moscow spreading mis- and disinformation. Other adversarial operations in the cyber domain are influencing Americans into thinking that: COVID-19 is not real, masks don’t work, herd immunity will save us, utilizing unproven treatments, vaccines are dangerous, and other anti-science viewpoints.

While U.S. leaders debate how many more F-35s are needed and if the Navy needs to build more ships to keep pace with China, adversaries pursue cheaper alternatives that damage the U.S. without having to fire a shot. Lithuanian defense officials briefed me in September 2021 on how the Russians were spending approximately $4 billion a year (comparable value) on cyber-influence operations against the West. While it is unknown how much the Chinese are spending on cyber and information warfare, analysts believe that Beijing has “redirected as much as 20 to 30 percent more funding” to these endeavors. Moreover, since 2019, China has increasingly adopted Russian influence tactics, with one prominent researcher noting that “significant human and financial resources are being devoted to the disinformation effort.”

Such information campaigns have contributed to hyper-polarization and schismogenesis (i.e. creation of divisions) in civil society in the U.S., Europe, and other democratic nations – and many militaries have not adapted. Instead, military leaders are more concerned about developing war-fighting concepts, such as Joint All Domain Operations (JADO), for some sort of conventionally styled hyperwar (e.g. artificial intelligence, network-centric, etc.,) against China or Russia. However, China and Russia do not want to give the U.S. the war that it wants, namely major combat operations. This translates into poor American and allied preparation for expected conflict in the South China Sea and against a NATO ally in Eastern Europe. Even with Russia’s “conventional, bloody warfare” in Ukraine, concerted efforts by pro-Russian social media influencers – like “the Texan trolling for Putin” – seem bent on undermining European and American resolve and political willpower to support Ukraine.

China, Russia, and other adversaries have figured out the lessons of what happens when the U.S. military is directly confronted, as seen in Iraq in 1991 – and again in 2003. America’s enemies understand that the nature of American political willpower is directly linked to the likelihood of the U.S. mobilizing and projecting great amounts of national power — diplomatic, informational, military, and economic. Hence, there is every incentive to cause damage against the U.S. on par with another Pearl Harbor or 9/11 but without provoking a major American response. This is why China and Russia increasingly pursue sociopolitical-information warfare strategies against the U.S. and other Western democratic nations. Inflicting damage against civil society “by amplifying racial, cultural, political and religious cleavages” weakens democratic institutions, norms, and values – not to mention preventing the creation of coherent policies to confront China and Russia. Adversaries exploit this new battlespace blind spot and prevent a robust Western response.

From creating conspiracy theories and generating disinformation about COVID-19 and fueling misinformation about various contentious issues throughout the U.S., adversaries are proving they can achieve damaging effects on the American homeland without spending billions of dollars on advanced munitions and expensive weapon systems. Adversaries get away with such influence operations that damage the U.S. because of the attribution problem. Being unable to clearly identify whether an information operation against the U.S. is intentional, through a state-funded proxy, or just normal civil society discourse (that is sometimes amplified by foreign social media warriors), stymies attempts at a response. By virtue of creating enough information chaos and uncertainty, it can be difficult for the U.S. and allies to respond with any instrument of national power.

This weakness in the mental paradigm of Western thinking about non-kinetic threats and intangible damage will continue being exploited by anti-Western actors unless major reforms are undertaken across government and military institutions.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine is an easier example of directly attributing aggression. For instance, one U.S. Senator suggested that a cyberattack against Ukrainian energy infrastructure could lead to invoking NATO Article 5 (Collective Defense), because it would cause power outages in neighboring NATO member states “that in turn could affect U.S. troops based in Eastern Europe, for example, if suddenly hospitals are shut down.” However, no one has suggested that Article 5 could be invoked in response to Chinese and Russian influence operations against the U.S. and NATO allies – even though they are causing tremendous damage against civil society and political institutions in the U.S. and across Europe. This weakness in the mental paradigm of Western thinking about non-kinetic threats and intangible damage will continue being exploited by anti-Western actors unless major reforms are undertaken across government and military institutions.

There are four major steps needed for the U.S. to better defend the American Homeland, which are crucial for adapting to growing dependencies on the internet and social media for the functioning of governments, economies, and societies.

First, elected leaders at the local, state, and federal levels must recognize – regardless of party affiliation – the substantial damage being inflicted by foreign actors through social media to kill Americans, weaken the economy, and undermine the U.S. military. This means U.S. politicians must understand the new battlespace in which foreign actors weaponize reality to turn Americans against one another. It means that any sort of partisan rhetoric will be utilized by foreign actors to amplify divisions and to further polarize Americans, hoping to weaken the U.S. Thus, while some partisanship and divisive rhetoric is top-down, there can be similarly corrosive behaviors from the bottom-up, like the trucker protest rallies in Canada and Washington DC meant to protest vaccine requirements. The bipartisan Cyberspace Solarium Commission is a step in the right direction for better defending cyberspace in the Homeland, with policy proposals meant to “diminish the prevalence of disinformation in the information ecosystem and build greater individual and societal resilience to disinformation and malign foreign influence.” However, policy proposals do not work if toxic political rhetoric continues, which has contributed to a plurality of Americans thinking a future civil war is likely. Elected leaders must be more judicious in their tweets, media appearances, and rallies, because foreign adversaries will weaponize statements.

Second, much like the First Amendment does not allow someone to yell “Fire!” in a crowded movie theater, the equivalent is happening every minute on social media causing chaos and violence. For example the 2020 Nashville Christmas suicide bomber was motivated by social media conspiracies about 5G technology, as well as the Pizza Gate conspiracy. Now with almost 2 years of COVID-19 dis- and misinformation causing disorder in America as some citizens are influenced into anti-science ideas. Legal reforms are needed, such as Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996, to bring enforcement against social media platforms that are allowing extremist rhetoric, propaganda, and dangerous information to be spread, potentially hurting Americans. Additionally, it means investigating social media behavior of individuals espousing extremist views, to confirm whether these are genuine Americans – and whether they are being funded (possibly cryptocurrency) and communicating with foreign agents. Resolving many of these legal issues and potential loopholes might require external coordination between U.S. cyber defense agencies and ally and partner institutions dedicated to removing damaging social media information emanating from adversarial states. For instance, Latvian and Lithuanian StratCom (Strategic Communication) personnel – inside government and military organizations – work towards identifying influence operations meant to weaken their societies.

Third, each U.S. government agency and Department of Defense will need to integrate inter-agency capabilities and joint responses to mobilize strategic communication capabilities against adversaries trying to create a chaotic information environment to degrade and disrupt the power of the U.S. government to respond domestically, and to project strength globally. As noted by top U.S. intelligence officials, there is also great concern that strategic competitors might target critical U.S. infrastructure in the next crisis as a way of delaying, disrupting, and degrading an American response. Given that the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 prevents the U.S. Armed Forces from operating on American soil, more U.S. agencies should be given more capabilities, authorities, and responsibilities to ensure that the American public and infrastructure are defended from foreign actors and domestic extremists.

Finally, the average American must be a part of the solution and contribute to the resilience of civil society. Critical thinking skills and resisting foreign attempts to polarize and divide Americans along various societal cleavages, also means not sharing divisive meme created by an adversary. Culture wars of words have been monetized in media, and as long as such hyperbolic, extremist debates drive ratings, the public will be polarized – as will be elected leaders – undermining any viable long-term strategies that promote U.S. national interests domestically and abroad. Changing the business model will be difficult, but this might require Congress to provide clearer FCC rules that compel cable news channels to be more explicit and transparent about shows that are opinion-driven, instead of news-fact driven. It may sound like a radical idea, but any channel with “news” in it, should show a disclaimer during all biased opinion shows, reminding viewers it is not news and for entertainment purposes only. Finally, it would also mean getting adversarial foreign money out of U.S. based news organizations, because of slanted reporting that may be of real strategic importance to the U.S. The next crisis America faces – domestically or internationally – will be defined by how well agencies and the military adapts to and responds in a highly contested information environment. Thus far, Western society has managed to overwhelmingly respond to the Russian invasion of Ukraine across the informational spectrum, but this means a future Chinese invasion of Taiwan will hinge on the ability of Beijing to create uncertainty about their actions – and to undermine domestic support among Western citizens for an intervention.

Lt Col Jahara “FRANKY” Matisek, Ph.D., (@JaharaMatisek) is a senior fellow for the Homeland Defense Institute (HDI) and recently led HDI research teams to Eastern Europe. He is an active duty U.S. Air Force pilot serving as associate professor in the Military and Strategic Studies Department at the U.S. Air Force Academy, and is the director of fellows for the Irregular Warfare Initiative. His forthcoming book, Old and New Battlespaces, describes how adversaries use strategic schismogenesis and employ sociopolitical-information warfare to weaponize everything in society, as every citizen becomes a combatant.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. Army War College, the U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force Academy, U.S. Air Force or the Department of Defense. (PA#: USAFA-DF-2021-410)

Photo Description: Photo Taken of the 2014 Euromaidan ‘War Pokémon’ at the NGO “Come Back Alive” in Kyiv, Ukraine, August 2021, by Jahara Matisek. There is dual meaning to this art: Pokémon are popular anime characters and Ukrainian military slang refers to an upgraded Kalashnikov machine-gun as a Pokémon.

Photo Credit: Jahara Matisek

8 thoughts on “THE NEW BATTLESPACE IS HERE:
THE AMERICAN HOMELAND IS NO LONGER SAFE

  1. This is a thoughtful piece from a respected authority on military issues and civil-military relations. It will be difficult to dig ourselves out of the hole we keep digging with divisive political messaging (home grown as well as foreign inspired). We need to be careful about governmental restrictions on free speech as we attempt to do that. Perhaps the current crisis in Ukraine and the revelations about Russian barbarity will be a wake up call.

  2. “This translates into poor American and allied preparation for expected conflict in the South China Sea and against a NATO ally in Eastern Europe. ” This statement tells me you are expecting conflict against China and a NATO ally. Why would we go to wart against a NATO ally? Why are we expecting one? Very short on details for such a startling, alarming declaration!

    1. Nothing in here is an “alarming declaration!”
      — NATO has actively discussed its pivot to China (https://www.csis.org/analysis/natos-pivot-china-challenging-path)
      –Sec Blinken already said that US will defend the Baltic States from Russian aggression (https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/3/7/blinken-tells-nervous-baltics-nato-will-protect-them-from-russia)
      –Finally, Russia is making lots of claims/threats regarding Sweden and Finland signaling their desire to join NATO now (https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/short_news/russia-threatens-sweden-and-finland-over-nato-membership-again/) & (https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russia-says-it-would-have-rebalance-if-finland-sweden-join-nato-2022-04-07/)

  3. If the “Wondrous Trinity” is the central concept of On War, then I’d recommend Sakharov’s “Trinity of Freedom” be yours. His formulation — “freedom to obtain and distribute information, freedom for open-minded and unfearing debate, and freedom from pressure by officialdom and prejudices” is the surest guarantee against mis- and disinformation. I see an echo of Harold Lasswell’s pessimistic themes in your article. There seems to be a tendency in officialdom to treat citizens like malleable sheep, in need of shepherds and “critical thinking” skills to be protected and aided in navigation through the impenetrable information thicket. Democracy is a contact sport, and Americans have been honing their political pugilistic skills and discernment for 245 years. I’m convinced the “primordial violence, hatred, and enmity” of Clausewitz’s Trinity (and attendant mis- and disinformation) is not the exclusive domain of the “people (as Clausewitz depicts), but rather much more likely to come from the elite panic or arrogance of officialdom. Well-informed citizens are the ultimate brake on those pathologies. Attempts, no matter how well-intentioned, to control opinion by officialdom invariably end up impeding knowledge, accountability and transparency. The desire to “modulate” information smacks more of a lack of self-confidence in officialdom’s own ability to fight and win in the information “battlespace.” We need more Eisenhowers, not umpires. The “Trinity of Freedom” is much preferable to the health of our Republic than official sanitation brigades clumsily stomping out “unfearing debate.” Sakharov said freedom of thought is the check on “mass myths, which in the hands of treacherous hypocrites and demagogues, can be transformed into bloody dictatorship.” Sure social media is weaponized. But for every firebrand, there are just as many, if not more fire prevention specialists, firefighters and fire brigades. The Trinity of Freedom is the best prescription for successful firefighting — supporting the truth and opposing mis- and disinformation.
    Finally, I wouldn’t be so quick to relegate kinetic warfare to the boneyard. After all the ones and zeroes are flung, the “ultimate determinant in war,” as Wylie said, will still be “the man on the scene with a gun.” Thanks for a thought-provoking article, I look forward to reading your book.

  4. In order to fight and win today, the U.S./the West needs to consider the “root cause” of various societal problems — which exist both here at home and there abroad today — and which have been re-generated and/or re-aggravated by our post-the Old Cold War efforts to (a) achieve worldwide political, economic, social and/or value “change,” this, (b) in the name of such things as capitalism, globalization and the global economy.

    As my examples below would seem to indicate, this such post-Cold War effort, in the name of capitalism, globalization and the global economy, this has (a) reopened and/or re-aggravated old societal wounds; wounds which (b) our opponents are now more than willing to “weaponize” and use and exploit for their own purposes:

    “Capitalism is the most successful wealth-creating economic system that the world has ever known; no other system, as the distinguished economist Joseph Schumpeter pointed out, has benefited ‘the common people’ as much. Capitalism, he observed, creates wealth through advancing continuously to every higher levels of productivity and technological sophistication; this process requires that the ‘old’ be destroyed before the ‘new’ can take over. … This process of ‘creative destruction,’ to use Schumpeter’s term, produces many winners but also many losers, at least in the short term, and poses a serious threat to traditional social values, beliefs, and institutions.”

    (From the book “The Challenge of the Global Capitalism: The World Economy in the 21st Century,” by Robert Gilpin; therein, see the Introduction chapter.)

    “All in all, the 1980s and 1990s were a Hayekian moment, when his once untimely liberalism came to be seen as timely. The intensification of market competition, internally and within each nation, created a more innovative and dynamic brand of capitalism. That in turn gave rise to a new chorus of laments that, as we have seen, have recurred since the eighteenth century: Community was breaking down; traditional ways of life were being destroyed; identities were thrown into question; solidarity was being undermined; egoism unleashed; wealth made conspicuous amid new inequality; philistinism was triumphant.”

    (From the book “The Mind and the Market: Capitalism in Western Thought,” by Jerry Z. Miller; therein, see the chapter on Friedrich Hayek.)

    “In this new world disorder, the power of identity politics can no longer be denied. Western elites believed that in the twenty-first century, cosmopolitanism and globalism would triumph over atavism and tribal loyalties. They failed to understand the deep roots of identity politics in the human psyche and the necessity for those roots to find political expression in both foreign and domestic policy arenas. And they failed to understand that the very forces of economic and social development that cosmopolitanism and globalization fostered would generate turbulence and eventually resistance, as ‘Gemeinschaft’ (community) fought back against the onrushing ‘Gesellschaft’ (market society), in the classic terms sociologists favored a century ago.”

    (See the Mar-Apr 2017 edition of “Foreign Affairs” and, therein, the article by Walter Russell Mead entitled “The Jacksonian Revolt: American Populism and the Liberal Order.”)

    Bottom Line Thought — Based on the Above:

    Thus to fight and win today, we must do the “Pogo” thing; that is, come to understand that (a) “we have seen the enemy” and (b) “it is us?”

  5. While the title of our article above, by Franky Matisek, is “THE NEW BATTLESPACE IS HERE: THE AMERICAN HOMELAND IS NO LONGER SAFE,” note that — in stark contrast to this such statement — one might suggest that today’s “battlespace” is, instead, (a) one that everyone is very familiar with, (b) one which, thus, is not new and (c) one in which “the homeland,” indeed, has never been safe.

    This such “battlespace,” of course, being in the minds of people everywhere who — more often than not — have different and conflicting ideas and interests.

    Thus if one can, better than one’s opponent, exploit these such different and conflicting ideas and interests:

    a. Much as the U.S./the West did, in the Old Cold War of yesterday; this, with — then — naturally occurring anti-change “conservatives and conservatism” and

    b. Much as such nations as Russia are doing, in the New/Reverse Cold War of today; this, with — still — naturally occurring anti-change “conservatives and conservatism,”

    Then, indeed, you can “win,” for example, as described below:

    “In America, Carlson spends little time on the Ukraine war, focusing his program instead on a daily diet of outrage about woke politics and cancel culture. Leading Republicans such as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis do the same. If you were to listen to the American right, you would think that the most pressing issues in the world today are school boards that are indoctrinating children with ideas about gender fluidity.

    It’s true that these ideas appeal to only part of the electorate — especially those who are older, more rural and less educated. But by now it should be clear that these voters are numerous enough and passionate enough to win elections — on both sides of the Atlantic.”

    (See the April 7, 2022, Washington Post opinion piece by Fareed Zakaria entitled: “Right-Wing Populists are Thriving — Even When They’re Friends of Putin.”)

    1. In my comment immediately above, I provide examples from the Old Cold War — and from the New/Reverse Cold War of today also — wherein; “the main battlespace was/is in the mind.” (

      Here is an additional “the main battlespace is in the mind” example; in this case, as described in a letter from John Adams to Thomas Jefferson back in August 24, 1815:

      “As to the history of the Revolution, my Ideas may be peculiar, perhaps Singular. What do We mean by the Revolution? The War? That was no part of the Revolution. It was only an Effect and Consequence of it. The Revolution was in the Minds of the People, and this was effected, from 1760 to 1775, in the course of fifteen Years before a drop of blood was drawn at Lexington. The Records of thirteen Legislatures, the Pamphlets, Newspapers in all the Colonies ought be consulted, during that Period, to ascertain the Steps by which the public opinion was enlightened and informed concerning the Authority of Parliament over the Colonies.”

      https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/03-08-02-0560

  6. This piece is a well-articulated narrative of the ongoing struggle between authoritative world powers and liberal democracies.
    The consequences of misformation, disinformation and malinformation are undermining the fabric of our democratic society and eroding our collective will. Our freedoms of press and speech are being used against us by savvy foes. These patient and persistent active measures by the Chinese and Russians are strategic tools being used to weaken our power and resolve. The seam between traditional kinetic threats and the newer information threat is blurry. Actions in this information space are often unattributable. This seam is being exploited by our adversaries. Just below Article 5 and collective defense lines is where they are digging their fighting positions.
    Societal critical thinking skills and media literacy are key pushback measures being utilized by some of our allies. I agree with these efforts.

    A discussion for another day is the reality that both modern kinetic and informational competition and conflict are predicated on the dominance of the Space Domain.
    He or She who controls the bandwidth can dominate.

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