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Operational Media Analysis as Research: Frameworks From Afghanistan For Communication Scholarship
Magee, Virgil
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/129143
Description
- Title
- Operational Media Analysis as Research: Frameworks From Afghanistan For Communication Scholarship
- Author(s)
- Magee, Virgil
- Issue Date
- 2025
- Keyword(s)
- Operational Media Analysis
- Media Analysis
- Strategic communication
- Public Affairs
- NATO ISAF
- Afghanistan war
- Conflict communication
- Fragile-state legitimacy
- Narrative competition
- Propaganda
- Counter-propaganda
- Credibility and legitimacy
- Information operations
- Open-source intelligence
- OSINT
- Media monitoring
- Afghanistan
- Date of Ingest
- 2025-10-11T15:21:23-05:00
- Geographic Coverage
- Afghanistan
- Abstract
- This paper introduces the concept of Operational Media Analysis (OMA) as a hybrid practice of communication research carried out in a conflict environment. Drawing on the author’s leadership of NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) Media Analysis Office in Kabul (2008–2009), the study demonstrates how a multinational team of fourteen Afghan analysts and two U.S. Navy noncommissioned officers systematically monitored and interpreted media coverage from approximately 14,000 outlets worldwide. Using tools such as Google Alerts, BBC Monitoring, and partnerships with Afghan broadcasters (notably Tolo TV), the office produced the Daily Media Review, an unclassified analytical product for NATO leadership. OMA combined quantitative methods (frequency counts, sentiment distribution, trend analysis) with qualitative methods (cultural annotation, frame analysis, adversarial narrative tracking). This methodological combination allowed analysts to identify emerging themes, detect reputational vulnerabilities, and predict narrative tipping points. The author also situates this work in the lived experience of being embedded in the Afghan community as a civilian, building informal knowledge networks through social engagement with embassy staff, NGOs, and UNAMA. These informal insights created additional interpretive depth, complementing formal monitoring with real-time observations of diplomatic and local discourses. The findings reveal that Taliban narratives often gained first-mover advantage, while NATO’s institutional processes slowed its response. Afghan media, once donor-dependent, grew into an autonomous and unpredictable field that shaped legitimacy discourses. Yet Taliban propaganda also relied heavily on distortion and intimidation. Their rapid claims often included outright fabrications, while journalists and civilians amplified these narratives under threat of reprisals. Over time, NATO became regarded as the more credible source, its slower but fact-based releases gaining trust among Afghan and international media. The paper argues that OMA represents not only a military tool but also a form of research producing empirical datasets, methodological frameworks, and theoretical insights into fragile-state legitimacy and narrative competition. The recognition of OMA as research bridges the gap between field-based practitioner knowledge and academic communication studies, offering lessons for both future scholarship and policy practice.
- Publisher
- Zenodo
- Type of Resource
- text
- Genre of Resource
- article
- Language
- eng
- DOI
- 10.5281/zenodo.17329190
- Copyright and License Information
- © 2025 Virgil Magee, CC BY 4.0
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