British army creates new unit to fight through social media

77th brigade to use platforms to ‘fight in the information age’ as part of Army 2020 plan

The British army has announced plans to create a new social media warfare unit. File photograph: Tim Ireland/PA Wire
The British army has announced plans to create a new social media warfare unit. File photograph: Tim Ireland/PA Wire

A new British army unit will use psychology and social media to help Britain “fight in the information age”.

The 77th Brigade will begin operations in April and will comprise more than 40 per cent of reserves as well as regulars from all three services to help defence forces “operate smarter”, the UK ministry of defence said.

Modelled on the Chindits, a specialist unit which fought in Burma during the second World War, the new unit's focus will be on "unconventional" non-lethal, non-military methods such as "shaping behaviours through the use of dynamic narratives", an army spokesman said.

The development is part of a major restructuring of the military under the Army 2020 plan, which will see the military scale down to around 82,000 regular troops in the next five years.

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The spokesman said that the brigade “is being created to draw together a host of existing and developing capabilities essential to meet the challenges of modern conflict and warfare”.

"It recognises that the actions of others in a modern battlefield can be affected in ways that are not necessarily violent and it draws heavily on important lessons from our commitments to operations in Afghanistan amongst others."

The brigade will be based at Hermitage, Berkshire, with detachments at other sites, and will operate across the army, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy, as well as training and working with other nations and across UK government departments.

It will build on “the spirit of innovation and offensive spirit of the men and women” who served in the Chindits between 1942 and 1945.

In 1943 the elite guerilla unit was deployed behind enemy lines to fight in Japanese-occupied Burma with a mission to disrupt communications and supply routes fuelling the Japanese war effort.

The Chindits were named after the Chinthe - a fierce lion-like creature that stood guard at every Burmese temple - and the 77th Brigade’s cap badge will feature the mythical animal, according to reports.

PA