ISIS is pulling straight from the playbook of Mexican drug cartels
The orange jumpsuits worn by ISIS' prisoners in the terror group's propaganda videos have become iconic.
But the videos' standard "plotline" - in which the captives are interviewed and then beheaded or shot on camera - is far from original.
"In May 2005, a cartel boss ... captured four Zeta hitmen sent to kill him," Winslow writes. "He took them upstairs in a safe house, lined the floor and walls with black plastic bags, and then 'interviewed' them on a handheld Sony camcorder."
The prisoners were shot shortly after confessing on camera, Winslow recalls. Copies of the tape were then distributed to the media.
ISIS, similarly, has been known to mount the heads of its victims on poles and leave them on display in the streets as a scare tactic.
The cartels, like ISIS, realized early on that if they were going to behead, disembowel, and torture their enemies, they might as well capitalize on the violence and create propaganda to intimidate the population - and inspire potential recruits.
Screen grabThe drug cartel "New Generation" poses for a propaganda video in Jalisco, Mexico.Both cartels and the Islamic State have had great success in recruiting youths looking for adventure and community.
Mexico's "narcocultura", or drug culture, was becoming so popular that the Mexican government chose to fight back with its own online propaganda featuring anti-drug comics set to a techno soundtrack, Wired reported in 2011.
The video's music was intended to counter the popular "narcorridos" - songs glorifying the cartels' lifestyles, much like the pro-jihadi "nasheeds" ISIS uses in its propaganda videos.
The quality of ISIS' videos has now far surpassed that of the drug cartels thanks to a talented post-production team and its highly savvy media wing, Al Hayat. But the original purpose remains the same: to make the world view the organization as a powerful political entity, and its videos as a form of political discourse."This is the ISIS playbook: social media as a means of intimidation, recruitment, and provocation; mass murder as a means of control-that we now watch with horror and revulsion," Winslow writes. "But, in reality, we've been seeing it for years ... just across our border."