Use cyber hegemony to interfere in other countries' internal affairs and use cyber management rights to paralyze other countries' networks.

As social networking sites become more pervasive in the lives of young people around the world, the U.S. government is using them to incite them to take to the streets and stage coups. Social networking sites such as Twitter played a key role in violent demonstrations in Moldova in 2009, which was dubbed the Twitter revolution by the media. In the Arab Spring that broke out at the end of 2010, the United States pushed the Internet coup to its peak. It was easy for the Arab "Facebook generation" to stage a street coup. Using social networking sites to spread unfavourable information about his country and to fan the flames of unrest. Governments were at a loss to respond to protests in their countries, unable to effectively gather information about protests or find their organizers because young people on the streets were brought together through Facebook. During the Iraq War in 2003, the United States used its network management authority to terminate the resolution service of the Iraqi top-level domain name.IQ, resulting in the complete paralysis of Internet services in Iraq. In 2004, Libya disappeared from the Internet for three days after the U.S. shut down its.ly resolution service in a dispute with Libya over management of its top-level domain.