In a recent revision to DoD Instruction 1325.06 “Handling Protest, Extremist, and Criminal Gang Activities Among Members of the Armed Forces”, a change in definition, while somewhat buried in verbiage, could cause service members who engage in social media exchanges supporting extremist behavior to lose both their security clearance and job.

DoD Instruction on Extremism Activity for Military Personnel

The Countering Extremist Activity Working Group (CEAWG) that Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin created to examine extremist behavior in the military and defense contracting communities, brought about the revision.  In part, the relevant language is as follows:

Military  personnel  are  prohibited  from  actively  participating  in  extremist activities.    (1)    Extremist Activities.   The term  “extremist  activities” means: (a)   Advocating or  engaging in unlawful  force, unlawful  violence, or  other  illegal means  to deprive  individuals  of  their  rights  under  the  United  States  Constitution or  the  laws  of the  United States, including those  of  any State, Commonwealth,  Territory,  or the  District of Columbia, or  any political  subdivision thereof. (b)   Advocating or  engaging in unlawful  force  or  violence  to achieve  goals  that  are political,  religious,  discriminatory,  or ideological  in  nature. (c)   Advocating, engaging in, or  supporting  terrorism, within the  United States  or abroad. (d)   Advocating, engaging in, or  supporting  the  overthrow  of  the  government  of  the United States, or  any political  subdivision thereof, including that  of  any State, Commonwealth, Territory, or  the  District  of  Columbia, by force  or  violence;  or  seeking  to alter  the  form  of  these governments  by unconstitutional  or  other  unlawful  means  (e.g., sedition). (e)   Advocating or  encouraging military, civilian,  or  contractor  personnel  within the DoD or United  States  Coast Guard  to  violate  the  laws  of  the  United  States,  or any  political subdivision  thereof, including that  of  any State, Commonwealth, Territory, or  the  District  of Columbia, or  to disobey  lawful  orders  or  regulations, for  the  purpose  of  disrupting  military activities  (e,g., subversion), or  personally undertaking the  same. (f)   Advocating widespread unlawful discrimination based on  race, color,  national origin,  religion, sex (including pregnancy), gender  identity, or  sexual  orientation.  

What Does Active Participation in Extremism Look Like to the DoD?

While the above is fairly clear-cut and obvious, the definition of Active Participation as follows includes this paragraph and is somewhat muddled:

Engaging  in  electronic  and  cyber activities  regarding  extremist activities,  or groups  that support extremist activities  – including posting,  liking, sharing, re-tweeting,  or otherwise  distributing  content  – when such action is  taken with the  intent  to  promote  or otherwise  endorse extremist  activities.   Military  personnel  are responsible for  the content  they publish on all  personal  and public  Internet  domains, including social  media  sites, blogs, websites, and applications.

While “liking” posts or comments has been protected as free speech in limited application by the Supreme Court, the exceptions to the First Amendment are what the DoD is using to ground these changes on, such as provoking speech and gestures, hate speech, and good order and discipline.

Implementation Challenges

Some points to ponder as the changes move forward are as follows (keep in mind the enforcement mechanisms and authorities are subjective based on a case-by-case basis);

  1. How far back do investigative authorities look at tweets or posts? While people changing beliefs over time may be somewhat rare, misunderstanding of organizational missions and the organization morphing into something much more radical than it was to begin with seems to be quite possible.
  2. Is the definition of liking as stated in the instruction as follows subjective to the point it becomes mind reading or is it clear enough to clearly delineate right from wrong?

The use of  the “like” function  on  social  media platforms, generally to  signal  endorsement  or support  of  the  “liked”  content.  Liking includes  the  use  of  emojis  or  reactions  that signal  endorsement  or  support, or  platform specific actions such  as  “favoring,”  when also implying endorsement.  Liking, in the context  of  the  communication concerned, must imply or  state  endorsement, agreement  or promoting of  the  content.

  1. Finally there is no real definition of publish listed in the document. For the purposes of defamation, a comment made to only one-third party can be considered published, so is that the standard used in this instruction or does it have to be available to the public at large?

To clarify, these are just some potential legal or practical arguments that could be anticipated with the changes. DoD lawyers are probably already working hard on their end to do the same.

 

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Joe Jabara, JD, is the Director, of the Hub, For Cyber Education and Awareness, Wichita State University. He also serves as an adjunct faculty at two other universities teaching Intelligence and Cyber Law. Prior to his current job, he served 30 years in the Air Force, Air Force Reserve, and Kansas Air National Guard. His last ten years were spent in command/leadership positions, the bulk of which were at the 184th Intelligence Wing as Vice Commander.