ISIS Propaganda Declined After Military Pressure, West Point Report Says

A new report says the terror group's vaunted media operation is struggling.

The comprehensive report from the academic center at the United States Military Academy (USMA), Communication Breakdown: Unraveling the Islamic State’s Media Efforts, says at its peak in August 2015 the terror group posted 700 items from its official media outlets, but persistent military pressure has shrunk that number to just 200 a year later. The report also notes that ISIS is producing far fewer messages about its successful governance and the promise of a happy-life within it's so called "caliphate," instead posting more messages about it's deadly battles.

ISIS has become well known for its highly-produced and brutal execution videos, but also for its ability through digital media to recruit 40,000 foreign fighters to the region over five years.

What's most interesting about the decline in the terror group's media production, the report's author Daniel Milton told ABC News in an interview, is its shift away from any positive messages.

"This is a group that has branded itself as a state-governing institution, and they're not able to do that anymore," Milton said. "I think that says something about the long-term difficulty in the caliphate project."

But, Milton warned, just as ISIS has shown an ability to adapt on the battlefield, its propaganda arm will likely do the same. "If it's not a caliphate and its just now a terrorist network, the media expertise that they've garnered can be used for that purpose as well," Milton said.

"We know they're having trouble recruiting talent and we know that they're having trouble retaining fighters and they certainly continue to lose leaders," he added.

That strike was the second in two weeks targeting a senior ISIS leader involved in ISIS's media operation.

But even if the twisted messages all come down, the effect they'll have will be lasting, "particularly as it applies to the most vulnerable subset of this population: children," the report said. "The psychological effects of the group’s control over what people read, watched, and heard will likely outlast its physical control of the territory."