Social media crazes in the Israeli military have seen a number of soldiers behaving in ways “unbecoming of the spirit of the IDF" – videos of soldiers dancing to Internet fads like the Harlem Shake could damage the IDF's image, officials said.
It is believed that viral videos run against the government's
attempts to use social media as an effective propaganda tool.
Although the IDF boasts its own official Facebook page and Twitter
feed, there are fears that 'unauthorized’ materials could harm the
image of the military where most young Israeli men and women aged
18 to 21 are required to serve.
“Just as the government uses social media for explaining, for
campaigning, for propaganda or for spinning, it also has to deal
with private soldiers using new media. Every soldier is a broadcast
station,” Israel’s Center for the Protection of Democracy
Executive Director Yizhar Be’er told RT.
Israeli military commanders have been recently told to prevent
soldiers from uploading material “not appropriate” to the IDF’s
“spirit.”
“It’s the problem of free speech… I don't see how you can control
it,” said Dr. Yuval Dror, head of digital media studies at the
Middle East college of management-academic studies.
The punishment for such behavior “unbecoming of the spirit of the
IDF" can be strict. Earlier this year, two soldiers were sent to
military prison for several weeks for posting a clip of their
artillery battalion performing a version of the Harlem
Shake.
“Under the military code of justice, there is an offense... I
think it is sergeant and above... which says in effect any conduct
which is unbecoming an IDF soldier would therefore potentially at
least expose you to criminal liability. Could actually find
yourself in jail if you made an offense under that,” former IDF
legal advisor David Benjamin told RT.
IDF officials were also incensed when a group of soldiers turned
their patrol in Hebron into a dance number: A video titled
'Battalion 50 Rock the Hebron Casbah' featured six armed soldiers
in bulletproof vests who start a Macarena-like dance after a Muslim
call to prayer is heard.
“You have to remember that soldiers are 18-year-old kids,” Gil
Yogev, who was once an officer with the paratroopers' unit, told
RT. Yogev said he would brief his soldiers regularly about what
they could and could not post online, but many were careless or
childishly unaware of the impact such material could have.
“It is not misuse of power, for them it is just fun,” Yogev
added.
“I don't think that the dancing is abusing power, I do think
that putting your sniper aim on an innocent person is an abuse of
power and I think that this is the distinction that the army should
make,” Yuval Dror said.
“You have to remember that soldiers are 18-year-old
kids,” Gil Yogev, who was once an officer with the
paratroopers' unit, told RT. Yogev said he would brief his soldiers
regularly about what they could and could not post online, but many
were careless or childishly unaware of the impact such material
could have.
“It is not misuse of power, for them it is just fun,” Yogev
added.
“I don't think that the dancing is abusing power, I do think
that putting your sniper aim on an innocent person is an abuse of
power and I think that this is the distinction that the army should
make,” Yuval Dror said.
Sacha Dratwa, the head of the IDF’s social media unit, sparked
controversy when he uploaded a Facebook photo with dark mud from
the Dead Sea smeared on his face, and a caption reading “Obama
style.” The picture provoked mixed reactions, with some accusing
the 26-year-old of racism. Dratwa claimed he had been
misinterpreted.