The Digital War on Women Peacemakers: Why This Moment Calls for Doubling Down on the Women, Peace and Security Agenda
from Women Around the World and Women and Foreign Policy Program
from Women Around the World and Women and Foreign Policy Program

The Digital War on Women Peacemakers: Why This Moment Calls for Doubling Down on the Women, Peace and Security Agenda

Morocco. Marrakech. Medina.
Morocco. Marrakech. Medina. Giovanni Mereghetti/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Kristina Wilfore is Director of Innovation and Global Projects at Reset Tech and cofounder of #ShePersisted. She has worked in twenty-eight countries to create more inclusive and responsive democratic movements. 

July 16, 2025 4:02 pm (EST)

Morocco. Marrakech. Medina.
Morocco. Marrakech. Medina. Giovanni Mereghetti/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
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The hamsa—or Fatima’s hand—is one of my favorite symbols. You can find it in dusty shops of local artists as well as in fancy jewelry stores across the world. It’s an image I hold close for what it represents: strength, protection, and unity across difference. With five fingers extended, the hamsa is a sign of divine femininity meant to protect against evil. More powerfully, it’s one of the few symbols with deep meaning in Judaism, Islam, and Christianity alike. It is a rare, shared emblem of peace across faiths—rooted in the feminine and revered across cultures. 

Today, we need the power of hamsa more than ever—not as superstition, but as metaphor. As a call to protect those whose hands are extended in peace: the women working on the frontlines of conflict resolution, democracy defense, and human rights. Women are under siege—not just in the streets or in parliaments, but in the information space. Divisive discourse and conspiracies are pumped out in high volume meant to deny the clear evidence of women’s impact in negotiating and sustaining peace in the world. 

Value of Women’s Participation in Peace and Security 

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Peacekeeping

Women's Political Leadership

Conflict Prevention

Defense and Security

Technology and Innovation

From Ethiopia to Moldova, Sudan to Ukraine, a disturbing pattern is emerging: women leaders, peace negotiators, and journalists are being digitally targeted in coordinated campaigns to discredit, dehumanize, silence, and harm them. This is not accidental. It is the result of strategic information warfare—now adjacent to actual war—manufactured by authoritarian actors and amplified by unregulated tech platforms that profit from division. 

This year, we are celebrating twenty-five years of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda adopted through UN Security Council Resolution 1325 under the premise that peace is more sustainable when women are included. This “celebration” is bittersweet given that it comes in the midst of 110 ongoing armed conflicts around the world. 

The evidence is clear, including women in peace and conflict resolutions gets results. Peace negotiations with significant women’s involvement are 64 percent less likely to fail and 35 percent more likely to last more than fifteen years. A statistical analysis of peace processes since 2018 indicates a robust relationship between women signatories and the durability of peace. These studies show that agreements signed by women see better execution and longevity, stronger mission legitimacy, and improved public trust.    

Women at the Frontlines of Information Warfare  

Yet, today, women’s participation in peace processes is being deliberately undermined by information warfare, synthetic sexual imagery, AI-generated abuse, surveillance, and character assassination. The ease of spreading such attacks can only be weaponized at scale with the tools provided by digital monopolies.  

Bad actors, many who profit from conflict, use online distortions to position feminism as a dangerous Western import. In countries like Russia, Turkey, and Hungary, “traditional family values” are invoked as a cover to strip away women’s rights and an excuse to withdraw from treaties like the Istanbul Convention to develop laws, policies, and support services to end violence against women and domestic violence.    

More on:

Peacekeeping

Women's Political Leadership

Conflict Prevention

Defense and Security

Technology and Innovation

What’s new is the scale—and the enabling. Social media platforms are not passive tools; they are active vectors for digital warfare in armed conflict. And women on the frontlines are on the receiving end of a repeating playbook that gender equality erodes moral values and female leaders are corrupt, promiscuous, or Western puppets. Information warfare against those in support of Ukraine has labeled female heads of government as “whores of the West.” Online efforts to depict Rohingya women in Myanmar as sexually deviant throughout the media are used to justify genocide, and ISIS operationalized social media in Syria and beyond, using encrypted apps to traffic Yazidi women and girls to finance terrorism and war. The Taliban has used similar tactics to intimidate, shame, and surveil women educators and students to restrict full participation in society. Digital warfare used against women journalists and leaders who speak out against injustice and corruption—as seen with the treatment of Maria Ressa in the Philippines—reveals how violent and pervasive these online attacks can be. 

With the rise of information warfare, conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV) in the form of rape becomes even more dire. The International Committee of the Red Cross recently developed a typology of harmful information on social media related to armed conflict, showing that digital platforms act like accelerants, rapidly circulating falsehoods that justify, deny or downplay CRSV, while undermining survivor testimonies, as seen in reaction to the atrocities committed by Hamas on October 7th, and in the widespread denial of sexual violence allegations related to the war in Gaza. Such campaigns are at high volume, often amplified by bots using “firehose” tactics meant to create confusion and erode trust in credible evidence. 

Policies to Address These Challenges 

Despite this dystopian landscape, there is reason for hope. In May, I had the honor of joining the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Polish Presidency of the Council of the European Union (EU), the European External Action Service, and UN Women in a symposium to reflect on the progress made in advancing the WPS agenda, while addressing the new challenges arising from global conflicts and growing attacks on gender equality and women’s rights. These were hard and honest conversations about the headwinds we face.  

A concrete outcome was that the 2023 EU Common Security and Defense Policy—a plan to upgrade how the EU does peace and security work in other countries—was boldly reaffirmed. It sets out goals for EU countries to send more skilled personnel to help in crisis areas, make missions faster, more flexible, and respond to new crises quickly. The plan puts women and gender equality at the center by increasing women’s participation, integrating gender perspectives into all operations, and working more closely with local communities in conflict zones. 

The EU has long championed the role of women in peace and conflict, with strategic action plans and funding commitments to match. But in this moment of authoritarian resurgence and algorithmic abuse, every government must evolve from supporter to defender. There are signs that some are. To date, at least 110 countries have adopted WPS National Action Plans worldwide. This year, the Philippines launched the first WPS Center of Excellence in the Asia-Pacific region, and the Republic of Korea is now tying bilateral aid to WPS goals to promote the WPS agenda for Asian countries and beyond. Notably, countries, from Bangladesh to Iceland to Ukraine, are making strong commitments to integrate women’s participation in peace and security efforts on the ground. Their efforts reveal the political, social, and economic benefits of including women.  

The rightful criticism within the peacekeeping community is that the drumbeat of war drowns out any efforts to realize the goals of 1325. Yet, we must persist in being more than the bad news that surrounds armed conflict and continue to demonstrate the essential role of women and the necessity to fight on the information front.   

Three actions are now essential: 

  1. Regulate the battlefield. Tech companies must not be allowed to profit from digital violence and armed conflict. EU leadership on platform accountability must continue to inspire global standards, particularly in regions where authoritarian regimes manipulate the information space with impunity. The Digital Services Act (DSA) and the Digital Markets Act (DMA) are groundbreaking regulations, not just about consumer protection or market competition—they are about security. They mandate transparency in algorithmic systems, require platforms to address systemic risks, and hold tech companies accountable for the content they amplify. 
  2. Reject the false binary of free speech vs. safety. Freedom of expression does not mean freedom to incite, to smear, or to algorithmically amplify lies as a weapon in armed conflict. Online falsehoods are not just about speech—it is sabotage. And the public knows it. From Brazil to Kenya to the EU, polling shows people demand stronger action to protect integrity online. 
  3. Protect women as peacemakers and digital defenders. The WPS agenda must now include digital self-defense. This means protecting women from AI-generated abuse, surveillance, and smear campaigns. It means funding civil society groups that monitor and counter gendered attacks online. And it means recognizing that information warfare is today’s front line. 

The hamsa reminds us of what’s at stake. In Jewish tradition, it symbolizes the hand of Miriam; in Islam, Fatima’s hand; in Christianity, Mary’s grace. It is a feminine symbol of strength and protection, revered across divides. 

So too are the women whose hands reach across fissures—in peace negotiations, in humanitarian corridors, in parliaments, in media, in exile. When they are defamed, the peace they build is defamed. Peace is not only undermined by bombs and bullets. It is being sabotaged by bots and backlash.  

To realize peace, we must defend the peacemakers by demanding justice in the digital sphere.  

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