
By Kit Klarenberg – Dec 5, 2024
The propaganda value of women in conflicts has long-been cynically exploited by Western intelligence services. A leaked CIA memorandum from March 2010 on covert means of increasing flagging support for NATOâs Afghanistan mission noted women âcould serve as ideal messengersâ in âhumanizingâ the military occupation. This was due to their âability to speak personally and credibly about their experiences under the Taliban, their aspirations for the future, and their fears of a Taliban victoryâ:
âOutreach initiatives that create media opportunities for Afghan women to share their stories…could help to overcome pervasive skepticism among women in Western Europe toward the mission. Media events that feature testimonials by Afghan women would probably be most effective if broadcast on programs that have large and disproportionately female audiences.â

Throughout the US occupation of course, Afghanistan remained one of the worst countries in the world to be a woman, by some margin. Roughly a year after that CIA memo was authored, Gay Girl in Damascus, a blog purportedly written by Syrian-American lesbian Amina Arraf, garnered significant mainstream attention. Widely hailed for her âfearlessâ and âinspiringâ eyewitness reporting, she was lauded as a symbol of the âprogressiveâ revolution erupting in the country.
In June 2011, Aminaâs cousin announced on the blog Amina had been kidnapped by three armed men in the Syrian capital. In response, numerous Facebook pages were set up calling for Aminaâs release and âlikedâ by tens of thousands, #FreeAmina trended widely on Twitter, journalists and rights groups begged Western governments to demand her release, and the US State Department announced it was investigating Aminaâs disappearance.
Six days later, it was revealed âAminaâ was in fact Tom MacMaster, a middle-aged American man living in Scotland, who had penned extensive lesbian literotica fantasies under that alter ego. While corporate news outlets quickly forgot all about the hoax theyâd so comprehensively fallen for, their appetite for dubious human interest stories emanating from the crisis wasnât diminished.
âHuge Global Coverageâ
In July 2019, an image of two young Syrian girls trapped in rubble in opposition-occupied Idlib attempting to haul their sister to safety as she dangled off the precipice of a dilapidated building, their father looking on in horror above, spread far and wide on social media.

The photo, snapped by a photographer for Syrian news service SY24, went viral the world over. Unbeknownst to viewers though, SY24 was created and funded by Global Strategy Network, a prominent British intelligence cutout founded by Richard Barrett, former MI6 counter-terrorism director. In leaked submissions to the British Foreign Office, Global Strategy boasted of how its propaganda âcampaignsâ broadcast via SY24 generated âhuge global coverage,â having been seen by âmany hundreds of millions of people,â and âattracting comment as far as the UN Security Council.â

SY24 content was produced by a network of âstringersâ in Syria that Global Strategy trained and provided with equipment, including âcameras and video editing software.â The firm drew particular attention to a team of female journalists it had tutored, âwho provide about 40 percent of all SY content,â and were part of âa broad ânetwork of networksââ enabling the company âto drive stories into the mainstream.â
Global Strategy also established a dedicated centre for training female journalists to produce content for SY24 in Idlib, âaccessing stories that male journalists cannot,â which were then shared on social media. It boasted that almost half of SY24âs followers were women, âa remarkably high ratio for Syria-focused platforms.â
Carefully cultivating an entirely misleading image of an inclusive, credible âmoderateâ Syrian opposition was of paramount importance to British inelligence. It helped whitewash the barbarous nature of the various ârebelâ factions London was backing in the region, while simultaneously engendering support among Western citizens for regime change.
In order to engage the âinternational communityâ to this end, Global Strategy, in conjunction with ARK – a shadowy âconflict transformation and stabilization consultancyâ headed by veteran MI6 officer Alistair Harris – planned âcommunication surgesâ around âkey datesâ such as International Womenâs Day.

In a particularly elaborate example of such a âsurgeâ, the pair collaborated on âBack to Schoolâ, a campaign in which young Syrians returned to education. Idlib City Council, opposition commanders, and other elements on the ground concurrently engaged in a âunifiedâ communications blitz, using âshared slogans, hashtags and branding.â Rebel fighters were sent to âclear roadsâ and âenable children and teachers to get to schools,â all the while filmed by the pairâs voluminous local journalist network, footage of which was then âdisseminated online and on broadcast channels.â
Ensuring âfemale teachersâ received sizeable coverage in the Western media was a key objective of the campaign. Furthermore, in many leaked files, ARK boasted of the huge network of journalists it had trained and funded in Syria, who would cover such PR stunts, secretly orchestrated by the organisation. Their reports in turn fed to the firmâs âwell-established contactsâ at major news outlets including Al Jazeera, BBC, CNN, The Guardian, New York Times, and Reuters, âfurther amplifying their effect.â
âThrust by Tragedyâ
Other documents make clear ARK well-understood the immense difficulties of promoting the role of women internally and externally during the crisis. One file on â[incorporating] the role of women in the moderate oppositionâ notes Syrian women in rebel-occupied areas faced âan almost overwhelming variety of problems,â and âthe space for women to participate in public life has contracted significantly as the conflict has progressed.â

As a result, ARK was âextremely aware of the risks of promoting womenâs participation beyond currently accepted social norms…given the potential to hinder message resonance or result in a backlash against female participation.â It therefore proposed to âsubtly reframe the narrative of women…increasing the amount of coverage of their initiatives and opinions as the context allows.â
One means of âsubtle reframingâ was Moubader (which translates to âperson who takes initiativeâ), a media asset created by ARK in 2015, comprising a âhigh-quality hard copy monthly magazine with widespread distribution across opposition-held areas of Syria,â with a website and Facebook page boasting almost 200,000 likes. Moubader was established by ARK to achieve âbehavioural changeâ in readers. âGiven the importance of broadcast television as a trusted sourceâ in Syria, ARK also sought British intelligence funding to develop a Moubader TV programme, to âleverage stories and values to maximum effect and reach an even wider audience.â
Documents submitted to the Foreign Office by another intelligence cutout, Albany, similarly noted womenâs access to education, healthcare, and economic opportunity had âbeen debilitatedâ during the crisis, with issues such as early marriage, child military recruitment, and âtransactional sexâ exacerbated. The UN defines the latter as ânon-commercial sexual relationships motivated by an implicit assumption that sex will be exchanged for material support or other benefits.â
Still, Albany considered so many Syrian women having been âthrust by tragedy into head of household and breadwinner positionsâ over the course of the crisis as a golden opportunity to propagandize them and, in turn, their families, while promoting the âinclusiveâ nature of the opposition, by creating and partnering with female civil society organizations and journalists.

ARK likewise believed women to be a âcritical audienceâ, given the number of Syrian households with female heads ââup to 70 percentâ. So, the organisation sought to ensure they were well-represented in all its domestic and international âbroadcast productsâ, as well as on social media.
âFemale Participationâ
Unsurprisingly, the files do not acknowledge the increasingly hostile environment for women in Syria directly resulted from foreign efforts to destabilise and depose its government. ISIS and al-Nusra were and remain rightly notorious for their monstrous treatment of women in the areas they occupied, which included widespread rape, sexual violence and abduction.
However, many armed opposition groups backed by Britain and other foreign powers imposed stringent restrictions on women in the areas they occupied, requiring them to wear hijabs and abayas, doling out extreme punishments for failing to comply, imposing discriminatory measures prohibiting them from moving freely, working, attending school, and more.
There are indications British intelligence was in close quarters with such activities. For instance, in December 2017 BBC documentary Jihadis You Pay For alleged Foreign Office cash distributed on its behalf via contrator Adam Smith International in Syria ended up in the pockets of Free Syrian Police (FSP) officers who not only stood by while women were stoned to death, but closed surrounding roads to facilitate their murder.

FSP, an unarmed shadow civilian police force operating in opposition-controlled areas, was created, funded and trained under the auspices of the British intelligence-funded Access to Justice and Community Security (AJACS) program. In a perverse irony, leaked Adam Smith International files relating to the project indicate it too sought to exploit women for propaganda purposes, applying a gender policy âto encourage female participation in justice and policing.â The company boasted of how, of the 1,868 police officers it trained under the scheme, six â 0.32 percent ÂÂâ were female.

Quite some ârevolutionâ. As Human Rights Watch noted in 2014, prior to the outbreak of civil war, women and girls across Syria were âlargely able to participate in public life, including work and school, and exercise freedom of movement, religion, and conscience.â While the countryâs penal code and laws governing issues such as marriage, divorce, and inheritance contained some discriminatory provisions, the countryâs constitution guaranteed gender equality.

Kit Klarenberg
Kit Klarenberg is an investigative journalist exploring the role of intelligence services in shaping politics and perceptions.
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- Kit Klarenberg#molongui-disabled-linkAugust 18, 2025
Tags: British intelligence MI6 Syria Syrian women





