Tuesday, September 30, 2008

September 30


"I've called on private-sector mortgage banks and banks to be more aggressive about lending money to first-time home buyers. And the response has been really good."

--President George W. Bush (2004)



"If I had enough funds to assist the American economy, I would do all that I can.”

--Iraqi president Al-Maliki

Cartoon from The New Yorker

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

James Glassman, Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy, at the Aspen Institute – Tarek, Aspen Institute video: "Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy James Glassman joined us for a wide-ranging talk on his work at the Department of State and the challenges facing America in the 'war of ideas.' Glassman attempted to decode the byzantine connections between his office and the various services of the Broadcasting Board of Governors as well as the various communications tools of State and the Department of Defense. Aspen Institute CEO and President Walter Isaacson moderated."

Perhaps public diplomacy should be an even more urgent priority – Susan, Foreign Policy Association: Middle East -- The official Web log for Great Decisions 2007: “30% of people surveyed from 23 different countries in a BBC poll believe that the war on terror has strengthened al Qaeda. Skepticism is never unhealthy with respect to the accuracy of polling data, but this seems like a pretty compelling argument for the role of public diplomacy in foreign affairs, in addition to, uh, better policy.”

Op-Ed: Winning Hearts and Minds: Proceed With Caution – Suzanne, HarvardKennedy2009: “Might expanding the US Peace Corps -- a long established, highly regarded grassroots diplomatic program -- to more Muslim countries be an effective complementary strategy in fighting the 'War on Terror?' … But can a bunch of idealistic American college graduates living in villages in the Middle East really have an impact on winning the hearts and minds of Muslims across the world? The task is enormous compared to the capabilities of the program, but what the impact may lack in breadth, it makes up for in a depth that is genuine and lasting in a way no public diplomacy campaign could ever be. However, just as this unconventional war has required updated military tactics, the Peace Corps must adapt its structure in Muslim countries to reflect the cultural understanding it aims to foster. … Restructuring the program to help volunteers adapt to the unique constraints on life as a PCV in a Muslim country will enable a richer more lasting cultural exchange.”

What Holds Us Together - Jane Dammen McAuliffe, American Catholic National Weekly: "Institutions as diverse as the U.S. State Department’s Office of Public Diplomacy, the World Economic Forum and the United Nations have launched programs to enhance interreligious and intercultural understanding. The social and political concerns sparked by recent world events and by accelerating demographic shifts have put interfaith relations on the agendas of many groups for whom this subject had not previously been a focus of attention."

Options for InfluenceJonathan Fryer: "‘Soft power’ and ‘public diplomacy’ have become buzzwords in both international affairs and domestic politics as countries and political parties hone their image and message. So the appearance of a new short book on the theme, Options for Influence (Counterpoint, £11.95), is timely. As the joint authors, Ali Fisher and Aurélie Brockerhoff note, ‘the aim of public diplomacy is not just changing people’s perceptions, but rather influencing the way people act.’… R.S. Zaharna, Associate Professor of Public Communication at Georgetown University in Washington, has correctly noted that networking has replaced information dominance as the new model of persuasion in the global communication era. This little study takes on board such changes and wise political parties are doing so as well."

The Spectrum Of Spectrums: A Review Of The International Relations Positioning Spectrum - Ali Fisher, Public Diplomacy Blog, Center on Public Diplomacy, University of Southern California: “Difficulty, however, still exists around the Cultural Relations/Public Diplomacy overlap. Can a government/non-government divide between Public Diplomacy and Cultural Relations be pursued by a single organisation? An organisation with employees that hold Diplomatic status and access to the civil service pension scheme? In effect, if the conceptual divide were accepted, how would the divide/ compromise work in practise?”
See also Wandren PD

Principles of Strategic Communication part I, part II
- Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner: "Anchored in sixty year old legislation and functionally headquartered in the operational equivalent of the Department of Non-State, American public diplomacy was an effective tool in the war of ideas. That was before it was neutered in the switch to techno-centric solutions and a reversion to state-centric closed door diplomacy, however. ... Unlike public diplomacy, strategic communication has no history. The term comes from the Defense Community’s need to fill a theoretical and practical void left by ineffective or missing communication by the Government, notably the State Department."

Kremlin Can’t Pursue War Against Internet Without Hackers, Expert Says, But This Is No Consolation for Voice of America – Ted Lipien, FreeMediaOnline: "The Broadcasting Board of Governors’ decision to prevent the Voice of America from being a broadcaster in Russia has destroyed VOA’s ability to have any significant impact on the Kremlin and the Russian public opinion. With its radio broadcasts silenced by the BBG just 12 days before the Russian military forces attacked Georgia, the VOA Russian Service website is now just one of hundreds of thousands of news websites and blogs in Russia."

Egypt Blogs America – Rob, Arabic Media Shack: “USAID and the Kamal Adham Center for Journalism at the American University in Cairo are paying for eight Egyptians bloggers to blog about the US elections. Their impressions are interesting and worth reading. However, I am generally critical of these types of US-government sponsored programs. If the goal here is 'public-diplomacy,' ie improving America’s image in Egyptian society, the effect is going to be extremely limited. Why? Because those that get picked almost always come from unrepresentively elite social backgrounds. As for blogging, large majorities of the population have no idea what a blog is, of if they do, have never seen one.”

Reminder: Public Diplomacy and the War of Ideas: Agendas for the Next Administration Tuesday, September 30, 2008 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM Marvin Center, Elliott Room, Room 310 800 21st Street, NW Abu Aardvark: Participants: Hady Amr, Director, Brookings Doha Center; Fellow, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, The Brookings Institution; co-author of Engaging the Muslim World: A Communication Strategy to Win the War of Ideas; Michael Doran, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Support to Public Diplomacy, U.S. Department of Defense; Kristin Lord, Fellow, Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World, The Brookings Institution; author of the forthcoming Voices of America: U.S. Public Diplomacy for the 21st Century; Marc Lynch, co-director of the Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communications, George Washington University; author of Voices of the New Arab Public. Please send RSVP to: imes@gwu.edu. UPDATE: this event will be televised on C-Span live, for those who can't make it.

Nominations Open for Second Annual Benjamin Franklin Award for Public Diplomacy – Office of the Spokesman, Media Note, U.S. Department of State: The Benjamin Franklin Award for Public Diplomacy is the most prestigious honor that the U.S. Department of State can bestow on American citizens who are making outstanding international contributions to public diplomacy. Nominations for this second annual award will be accepted from October 1, 2008 through December 15, 2008.

RELATED ITEMS

Exodus - Steve, Dead Men Working: “This has been the first administration in years that, rather than treat FSOs [Foreign Service officers] as experts and expert advisers, treats them instead virtually as servants, as pawns whose sole function is to follow orders and carry out policies devised, in many cases, by people with far less Foreign Policy expertise than even a junior-level FSO would possess.” Via Consul-at-Arms

Defending Obama's Foreign Policy - Tom Hayden, Nation: No candidate will move further left than their base demands and public opinion allows.

Straight talk about talk – Editorial, San Francisco Chronicle: When five former secretaries of state talk, the nation should listen. Their collective message: The next White House administration should talk directly to its enemies, not just isolate or demonize them.

Two steps backward -- Our view: North Korea, Iran remain formidable challenges for U.S. foreign policy makers – Editorial, Baltimore Sun: The next president must develop a new approach to halting Tehran's nuclear ambitions that advances U.S. interests without compromising the security of its friends in the region.

Remember Iraq?: The drop in violence has made the war an afterthought -- and allowed McCain to claim we're "winning." Here's why we're not -- and we can't - Gary Kamiya, Salon: Remember Iraq? McCain's talk of "victory" is not just logically false, it is morally obscene. Our unprovoked invasion destroyed Iraq. Iraq remains one of the most dangerous and violence-torn countries in the world.

Bush Favors Bankers Over Soldiers - Robert Fisk, Truthdig: "By grotesque mischance, $700bn -- the cost of George Bush’s Wall Street rescue cash -- is about the same figure as the same President has squandered on his preposterous war in Iraq, the war we have now apparently 'won' thanks to the 'surge' -- for which, read 'escalation' -- in Baghdad. …. We are, in fact, now fighting a war in what I call Irakistan. It’s hopeless; it’s a mess; it’s shameful; it’s unethical and it’s unwinnable.”

The Iranian President Makes More Sense Than Bush, McCain or Obama: Why America Should Listen to Ahmadinejad - Paul Craig Roberts, Counterpunch: Which vision of the future will win out? Ahmadinejad’s policy of peaceful co-existence or neoconservative desires for American world dominance?

Pakistan needs real alliance with US
– Editorial Comment, Financial Times: Washington and Islamabad need to agree on ways to isolate and crush the jihadis before they penetrate the Pakistani mainstream. The current strategy is not working. Overeliant on U.S. air power, costly in civilian lives, and outside Pakistan’s control, it is alienating Pakistanis.

A Bad India Deal – Editorial, New York Times: The House of Representatives approved President Bush’s ill-conceived nuclear agreement with India last week, shrugging off concerns that the deal could make it even harder to rein in Iran’s (and others’) nuclear ambitions. We hope the Senate shows better judgment.

U.S. Should Recognize South Ossetia - Richard Lourie, Moscow Times: The United States should recognize the independence of South Ossetia. Short of a major war, South Ossetia will never be part of Georgia again, and half of the country -- North Ossetia -- is already part of Russia. The United States needs to create a new Russia policy based on a redefining of NATO's role -- especially in Ukraine -- and of U.S. energy interests in the Caucasus and Central Asia.

Russia plows on: Oligarchs expand their reach - Rachel Ehrenfeld, Washington Times: While the U.S. keeps busy with the election and the financial crisis, Mr. Putin gets his way. See bio of Yul Brynner, well as website by his son.

Viewing Russia from Your Window: Reach for your inner Alaska, Governor - Ken Masugi, National Review: Americans do have different perspectives about the world, based on where they live. That geopolitics exists in every state and has shaped political attitudes and awareness is beyond dispute.
Cover from The New Yorker

We Have the Money: If Only We Didn't Waste It on the Defense Budget - Chalmers Johnson, TomDispatch: Spending hundreds of billions of dollars on present and future wars that have nothing to do with our national security is simply obscene. And yet Congress has been corrupted by the military-industrial complex into believing that, by voting for more defense spending, they are supplying "jobs" for the economy.

America pays the piper, big time
- Robert Parry, Aljazeera.com, The hyping of the "Islamic threat" fit with the neocon exaggerated depiction of the Soviet menace in the 1980s -- and again the propaganda strategy worked. Many Americans let their emotions run wild, from the hunger for revenge after 9/11 to the war fever over Iraq.

Propaganda 101: How to Decode Political Ads - Stephen Ducat, Huffington Post: Theodor Adorno once said that propaganda is psychoanalysis in reverse. Propaganda functions to make us literally simple minded, to limit our thoughts and emotions, and channel them in a direction congenial to the interests of those in power. The goal of propaganda is not to wake us up but to put us to sleep -- whether that is the cozy somnambulation of shopping or the paranoid and violent sleep of the fascist rally. The aim of advertisers, commercial or political, is not just to have us dream but to put us in a dream of their own design.

What Youtube's 'Charlie Bit My Finger' Tells Us About Web 2.0: Our hunger to create, share, and talk is fueling a media revolution - Cole Camplese, Christian Science Monitor: Today the Web landscape is dominated by blogs, wikis, and social networks. It is finally fulfilling its original promise of interaction, engagement, collaboration, and conversation. We are living through a media revolution that is set to explode this political season. And who is driving this revolution? Teens. For them, this isn't "technology," it's just the way things are.

AMERICANA


Night Vision Toy Lets Kids 'Own the Night' - Noah Shachtman, Wired: Night vision gear gave U.S. forces a huge leg up in the first Gulf War. These days, not only do most militaries worth their salt have their own see-in-the-dark gear -- kids can get "own the night," too. For just $79.99. Eye Clops Night Vision is "technically a toy and aimed for children," Ars Technica writes. But "it provides real, working night vision."

Monday, September 29, 2008

September 29



"In September 1939, the U.S. Army was smaller than the Belgian army.”

--Historian Geoffrey Wheatcroft

Image from: The Belgian Army at the outbreak of WW2


VIDEO

Al Qaeda's Approval: James Glassman of the State Department says that bin Laden is losing the Arab street. (Sept. 24), Wall Street Journal

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

In Afghanistan, hit 'em where they aren't: MacArthur's tactic worked in WWII. It could work again - F. Jordan Evert, Christian Science Monitor: In Afghanistan public diplomacy must accomplish on an intellectual level what protection and good governance achieve at the elemental level. Soldiers and advisers do not need to engage in a "war of ideas." Rather, they must expose the insurgents' ideology of fear, violence, and repression -- an ideology that offers Afghans no hope for the future. Public diplomacy is the responsibility of every soldier and adviser working at the local level. They should use education and support to enable Afghans to bolster their own unique conceptions of open markets, transparent politics, and international engagement.

U.S. Korea-US Alliance Hinges on US Election: Experts - Jung Sung-ki, Korea Times: Edwin J. Feulner, president of the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based conservative think tank, said it is important both countries begin the evolution from a singularly focused mission of the Korea-U.S. alliance of deterring North Korean aggression to a more robust values-based relationship that looks beyond the Korean Peninsula. To that end, he suggested, both countries initiate a public-diplomacy effort to secure extended public and legislate support for the new alliance framework.

Donkeys, Elephants, Crocs and Delicious Yogurt! - Joshua Fouts, DIP's Dispatches from the Imagination Age: “For the past few weeks one of my daily must-reads has been a new project by Larry Pintak who runs the Adham Center for Journalism Training and Research at the American University in Cairo. It's a blog called, 'Donkeys, Elephants and Crocs: Egypt Blogs America.' The project has taken eight Egyptian bloggers and sent them to the US to blog about the presidential election. What's developed has been a fascinating level of insight and understanding about what it means to be us. When we first launched the USC Center on Public Diplomacy in 2003, my notion as director, was that US public diplomacy could best be improved by doing more to let the world know we were listening to them, rather than telling them about us.”

Layalina Review on Public Diplomacy and Arab Media: Vol. IV No.20: 9/12-9/25, 2008

Dubai’s Dubious Debut
– jimjams, Headline Hollywood: The oil rich government of Abu Dhabi has committed a $1-billion-plus fund to make movies and digital content via Abu Dhabi Media Co., a government controlled entity. Using a newly formed subsidiary called Imagenation, Abu Dhabi made its first deal with Participant Media, a U.S. company well known in the Middle East for producing the Islamic terrorist friendly flick, “Syriana.” According to the Khaleej Times, Dubai seeks to establish “a strong regional and global media presence through successful implementation of public diplomacy.”

Nuke deal not bound by internal laws of any country: Expressindia.com: External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Friday said the Indo-US nuclear deal will be guided only by the 123 Agreement and not by the “internal laws” of any country, in line with the guiding international principles. Mukherji was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a seminar on "India and Nepal: Partners for Democracy and Development," organised by the Public Diplomacy Division of the Ministry of External Affairs.

軟權力:世界政治的成功之道作者/楊名豪 - wonderverge: Mentions public diplomacy.

PSYOP Regimental Blog - Lawrence Dietz, psyopregiment: Today’s environment has made it clear that while the USG may have strict lines separating public diplomacy, strategic communications and PSYOP -- the world does not. It is more than very likely that tomorrow’s PSYOPers will have to be part entertainer, part news journalist and media savvy across the spectrum of new media from international or regional TV to highly micro-focused web/pod costs and the ubiquitous mobile phone.

A great weekend! - DiplomatDoc: “I play [tennis] with a group that includes the Deputy Chief of Mission (DCM) at the Embassy, an attorney from Wisconsin who now works at the Embassy in the area of public diplomacy, an executive from Chevron who oversees natural gas production facilities in Bangladesh, and three business people from the U.S. who are engaged as project leaders for various NGO’s here in Bangladesh. Dr. Mike Morris is now joining the U.S. State Department Foreign Service and will provide care to members of U.S. Embassy staffs abroad.

RELATED ITEMS

Obama's three challenges - James Carroll, Boston Globe: Gangster themes define American manhood, from HBO to hip-hop to "hard power" foreign policy. The gentle Obama is out of step with all of this.

Connecting geopolitical dots - Arnaud de Borchgrave, Washington Times: In their campaign pronouncements, both John McCain and Barack Obama are in favor of taking troops out of Iraq to put them into the Afghan war against Taliban. Some call it doubling down, throwing good money after bad.

Is This a 'Victory'? - Peter W. Galbraith, New York Review of Books: We hear again and again from Washington that we have turned a corner in Iraq and are on the path to victory. If so, it is a strange victory. George W. Bush has put the United States on the side of undemocratic Iraqis who are Iran's allies. John McCain would continue the same approach.

Bombings in Baghdad Kill 34, Wound 100; Arab-Kurdish Violence in Diyala - Juan Cole, Informed Comment: Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion: The situation in Iraq is dire, and the discourse about Iraq in the presidential campaign is often disconnected from reality.

Iraqis stand up – Editorial, Boston Globe: A new Iraq is coming into being, and it will not need or want a foreign army of occupation on its soil.

An Arms Race We’re Sure to Lose - Gary Milhollin, New York Times: Sanctions have not kept Iran from developing its nuclear program. The next U.S. president must do better to convince the mullahs that they are better off without it.

Talk Isn't Cheap With Iran - Michael B. Oren and Seth Robinson, Wall Street Journal: The U.S. can communicate with Iran, but as a power and not a supplicant, and with leverage as well as words.

The Troubled North Korea Deal - Editorial, New York Times: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice must persuade her boss, President Bush, to quickly take North Korea off the terrorism list. If the North fails to meet its commitments, it can be put back on the list.

A little taste of North Korea - Donald Kirk, Asia Times: In North Korea you get a sense of a regime that’s on edge, uncertain and seething with newly kindled rage at the US and South Korea after an all-too-brief era of optimism about prospects for reconciliation -- and denuclearization.

Pakistan, the Media and the Politics of Nuclear Weapons: The Unspoken War - Anthony Dimaggio, Counterpunch: If American political elites refuse to challenge America's dangerous initiatives in Pakistan, there is little reason to expect that the media will do so on its own.

When Geopolitics Meets Principle: The U.S.-India Nuclear Proliferation Deal - David Krieger, Counterpunch: By providing nuclear materials and technology to India, the U.S. will be assisting India to develop a larger nuclear arsenal than it already has developed. Thus, the U.S. will be in violation of its non-proliferation treaty obligations.

Medvedev Pressed on ReportersMoscow Times: The Committee to Protect Journalists on Friday urged President Dmitry Medvedev to allow several foreign reporters barred from the country to return to work in Russia.

Brzezinski Talks Bases: Interview: The former national security adviser on the Bush Pentagon's spending binge: "Do we really need that for our security?" - Michael Mechanic, Mother Jones: Brzezinski: “I have been struck by the pervasive frequency of highly patriotic, pompously patriotic-sounding ads for defense industries, usually accompanied by deferential salutations to our men and women who are heroically sacrificing their lives in our defense, but sponsored by the defense industry."

Newspaper-insert DVDs on 'radical Islam' stir up swing states: Distribution of the controversial Clarion Fund documentary is pegged to 9/11, not the presidential election, the group says. Some see a 1st Amendment issue - DeeDee Correll, Los Angeles Times: Millions of copies of "Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West" were delivered over the last few weeks to homes in states whose votes will be critical in the presidential election, and more will be distributed through early October.

The Motion Picture is still the Most Powerful Propaganda - The New Digital Cinema: A fear-mongering motion picture called Obsession: Radical Islam’s War Against The West, is being distributed free on DVD in newspapers throughout election battleground states in an effort to scare voters into voting for McCain.

Vietnam’s propaganda posters on show in Spain - VietNamNet Bridge: A total of 42 propaganda posters, drawn by Vietnamese painters during the 60s-90s period of last century, are showcased in Spain’s capital of Madrid from September 26, 2008 to January 11, 2009.

Propaganda Art Has Eaten Itself - R J Evans, Socyberty: Time was you had to be a properly trained artist to produce propaganda art. Sometimes known as agitprop, this form, honed to perfection in the twentieth century has been hijacked by the Photoshop brigade among others. Fortunately, the results are often hysterical but nevertheless can still be thought-provoking.

Condi Gets Nails Done, Creates Hysteria - Princess Sparkle Pony's Photo Blog: I keep track of Condoleezza's hairdo so you don't have to: From As the World Burns: "Just this morning, Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice was talking to the Associated Press in New York about the frustrating ongoing negotiations with Iraq regarding the governance of U.S. soldiers deployed there. How to top that off? From a reader: 'Condi Rice is getting her nails done RIGHT NOW at Lovely Tender nails on w 72nd street between columbus and amsterdam.' Do not approach! Secret Service will frag your ass! Update! Commenter Clarence Rosario sends photographic evidence (after the jump), and notes, 'We boo'd her pretty soundly.'"

AMERICANA


From: Art For Obama: Authenticity and Purity of Race and Patriotism - BagnewsNotes

Sunday, September 28, 2008

September 28


"What will you be doing?”
“I’m joining the Fire Department.”
“The Fire Department? In what capacity?”
“I’ll be a firefighter. The pension plan is awesome.”


--One member of the New York Stock Exchange; image from boing boing


PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Debate Scorecard on Public Diplomacy: Obama 0.5, McCain 0 - Steven R. Corman, COMOPS Journal: Of a debate on foreign policy comprising 16,156 words, public diplomacy commanded 155 (0.96%) of them and no actual debate. The U.S. image is a much bigger issue in foreign policy than that.
Image from New York Times


Proposed new agency "would manage U.S. international broadcasts directly” - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: Re Senator Brownback's S.3456 titled "The Strategic Communications Act of 2008": “If Brownback's new entity 'would manage U.S. international broadcasts directly,' then it would probably call for news that accentuates the positive, underplays the negative, and adds lots of pro-U.S. commentary. The audience for U.S. international broadcasting, which, collectively, is much, much smarter than, collectively, the decision makers and experts of Washington, would immediately recognize such a broadcasting effort for what it is: propaganda. And they would tune elsewhere. Public diplomacy, on the other hand, is not supposed to be independent. It is the explanation and advocacy of U.S. policies to foreign publics. It is the job of the State department to project U.S. policies abroad. State is the logical location for public diplomacy. … Many people think the global unpopularity of the United States can be solved by 'strategic communications.' But, as many other people have pointed out, the popularity of the United States is actually determined by the policies and actions of the United States. The best public diplomacy and international broadcasting can do is to keep the United States from being even more unpopular by countering disinformation about the United States.

Latest Brownback Effort To Hamstring Public Diplomacy – Jerry, Avuncular American: Re Brownback's S. S.3456: “I would hope that all those who are truly interested in public diplomacy treat this bill like the plague that it is. Senator Sam Brownback, like his late hero, Jesse Helms, has a long history of wanting to emasculate those charged with managing America's engagement with the world through its public diplomacy programs . … [N]ot content with abolishing USIA a decade ago and moving it into State, he'd rather gut State's PD structures and create a new 'National Center for Strategic Communications,' an agency similar to the now defunct U.S. Information Agency."
See also comments by Juliana Geran Pilon at MountainRunner

Four VOA radio services prepare to sign off
- Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: The VOA Serbian, Bosnian, Macedonian, and Hindi services will transmit their last radio broadcasts on 30 September. The services will continue via internet and/or television. VOA Hindi has a weekly report on India's Aaj Tak TV. VOA Russian radio already ended on 26 July, continuing as an internet-only service. VOA Georgian was slated to close down completely, via all media, on 30 September, but the Georgian-Russian conflict has given that service an indefinite stay.
FE/RL radio broadcasts continue in Russian, Georgian Serbian, Bosnian, and Macedonian.

Public diplomacy urged in S. Korea relations - Erik Slavin, Stars and Stripes: South Korean President Lee Myung-bak’s administration and U.S. leaders must emphasize public diplomacy efforts to curtail anti-alliance sentiments and maintain regional stability, a host of diplomats and academics said Saturday. The comments came during two sessions on U.S.-South Korean relations during the second day of the three-day Korea Forum, sponsored by the International Institute for Strategic Studies and the ASAN Institute for Policy Studies. A feeble attempt at public diplomacy "could lead to an erosion of public support and renewed call for a reduction, or even a withdrawal of all U.S. forces in Korea," said Edwin Feulner, president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.
see also

Back to Basics in Saudi for Ramadan - Leo Americanus: "In my opinion, the best thing for places like Saudi are educated and modern young lay-preachers who encourage young people to practice their religion in an intelligent and involved way, rather than an unthinking and archaic way. By using Islam to stress civic and personal responsibility, such preachers can make far more change in a society like Saudi than any other means of public diplomacy or education.”

US, China tackle food safety issues - Chen Weihua, China Daily, via Fa guo yu suan: The US-China Diplomatic Expansion Act of 2007, authored by Mark Kirk, a representative from Illinois, authorizes the construction of a new consulate in Wuhan and 10 smaller diplomatic posts in cities with more than one million people. The bill also triples funding for public diplomacy, boosts funding for a range of language, student and teacher exchange programs and more than triples the US contribution to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation.

Where viewers fear to flick ...From serial killers to lifestyle shows about the sex industry and Lindsay Lohan's mum, it's one man's journey into extra-terrestrial TV. Ed Power reports - Independent.ie: “For true escapism, though, we switch to Russia Today, the Russian rolling news service, where pasty-faced presenters whose accents veer between the Queen's English and Bond villain gravely assure us that Vladimir Putin is the most munificent global figure since Mother Teresa -- before cutting to footage of recently razed Georgian villages. We're not quite sure if we are missing out on the satirical overtones.”
via
see
also

Morocco Foreign Relations with U.S. - Morocco Travel Information: In August 2007, Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Karen Hughes visited Morocco to meet with Moroccan officials, Moroccan non-governmental organizations, and students.

'False' Memories - Red Pony: “[T]there are historical facts and events that are [un]deniable, like the atrocities of war, however, our ideas about these atrocities usually involve a degree of public diplomacy on both sides of the fight making it hard to pin down an actual truth.”

What My Copy Editor Taught Me - Dorothy Gallagher, New York Times: “Then came [Helene Pleasants’s] great adventure. In 1945, hired by the United States Information Agency as a writer and editor on the Voice of America, she was sent to India and then to China … . In 1951, the United States Civil Service Commission notified Helene that ‘information’ had been received, accusing her of sympathy with Soviet Russia and Communism … . After a two-year battle to save her job, she was fired from the Voice of America. It was 1953, at the height of McCarthy’s power, the year the Rosenbergs were executed.”

The awful week that was - Paul Rockower, Levatine: “My Pub D group presented our project for our global pub d class. This is the class where we do group projects based on scenarios. Our scenario this week was that we received $150k to come up with a project that bolsters moderate Muslim forces (including law enforcement) and also does outreach for youth who are at risk of extremist indoctrination. … The other project was a program to do cultural outreach through hip-hop. … We debated making Snoop Dogg an American Ambassador for culture, but figured that might be a step too far. … Thursday I had Prof. Gilboa's Comparative Public Diplomacy class, and our case study for the week was Israel's public diplomacy. … Friday … I did some work at home then went to school to pick up a book from Prof. Cull about Willis Conover, who is possibly one of the most important figures to do cultural battle during the Cold War. What, you sa[y], you have never heard of him. There are reasons for this (Smith-Mundt Act), but basically he was the voice of VOA's jazz program, which the Warsaw Pact countries and Soviet Union listened to religiously.”

RELATED ITEMS

Two Foreign Perspectives on US Election - Melinda Brouwer, Foreign Policy Association: Public Diplomacy and the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election: “Use Obama as a rock star to rekindle the transatlantic relationship? Well-intentioned, but a little too gimmicky, as I see it. I might be biased, but I don’t think the Senator needs to be featured in a rock concert in order to look cool. McCain might, in which case the government should make sure he doesn’t take dance lessons from Karl Rove.”

Impulsive, Impetuous, Impatient - Nicholas D. Kristof, New York Times: Judging from Mr. McCain’s own positions, on foreign policy he could well end up more Bush than Bush.

When Judges Make Foreign Policy - Noah Feldman, New York Times: The Supreme Court, like the State Department and the Pentagon, now makes decisions in cases that directly change and shape our relationship with the world. And as the justices decide these cases, they are doing as much as anyone to shape America’s fortunes in an age of global terror and economic turmoil.

What a Surge Can't Solve in Afghanistan - David Ignatius, Washington Post: The idea that we can saturate that vast country with enough American soldiers to provide security for the population seems unrealistic, to put it mildly.

Bush the arrogant: President Bush's latest permutation of crisis management is the last straw. But who best to roll back the excesses? – Editorial, Los Angeles Times: We have held prisoners in detention without trial, without charge, without end. In so doing, we have antagonized the world and debased America's moral authority to lead.

A Shattering Moment in America's Fall From Power: The global financial crisis will see the US falter in the same way the Soviet Union did when the Berlin Wall came down. The era of American dominance is over - John Gray, Guardian/UK, Common Dreams

AMERICANA

AMAZING!: Sarah Palin carved into corn maze by farmer outside Whitehouse, Ohio - Associated Press, Baltimore Sun: An Ohio farmer would like to invite you to get lost inside the head of Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin. A 16-acre corn maze near the town of Whitehouse has been carved in Palin's likeness, complete with her familiar updo hairstyle and eyeglasses. Farmer Duke Wheeler says that Palin created a lot of excitement in the campaign and that he was hoping to generate some for this year's maze. Wheeler says it took an artist from Idaho at least eight hours to mow down stalks for the maze.

Tina Fey As Sarah Palin: Katie Couric SNL Skit (VIDEO) Huffington Post







TESTIMONIES BEFORE CONGRESS ABOUT PUBLIC DIPLOMACY (courtesy Len Baldyga)

(I)

Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Subcommittee On Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia Hearing on “A Reliance on Smart Power--Reforming the Public Diplomacy Bureaucracy.”

September 23, 2008

Testimony of Stephen M. Chaplin, Retired Senior Foreign Service Officerand Senior Advisor to the Stimson Center and American Academy of Diplomacy, Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United State Senate

"A Reliance on Smart Power: Reforming the Public Diplomacy Bureaucracy"

Chairman Akaka, Ranking Member Voinovich and Members of the Subcommittee, thank you for the opportunity to appear here today to testify on what can be done to improve Public Diplomacy's performance in achieving U.S. foreign policy objectives.

I am a retired Senior Foreign Service Officer who served 32 years with the United States Information Agency. My final assignment was as a member of the USIA Steering Committee that worked on the consolidation of USIA with the State Department in 1999.

Today I represent the Advisory Group and the Working Group that prepared a report commissioned by the American Academy of Diplomacy and researched and written by the Stimson Center entitled, " A Foreign Affairs Budget for the Future: Fixing the Crisis in Diplomatic Readiness."

In the introduction to the report, which should be issued next month, Ambassadors Ronald Neumann, Thomas Pickering and Thomas Boyatt of the Academy and Ellen Laipson, president of Stimson describe the study in the following terms:

"This study is intended to provide solutions for and stimulate a needed conversation about the urgent need to provide the necessary funding for our nation's foreign policies. We need more diplomats, foreign assistance professionals and public diplomacy experts to achieve our national objectives and fulfill our international obligations. This study offers a path forward, identifying responsible and achievable ways to meet the nation's needs. It is our hope that the U.S. Congress and the next Administration will use this study to build the right foreign affairs budget for the future."

Many fine studies published in recent years have recommended institutional reorganization or offered guidance on how U.S. foreign policy could be better conducted. This report is different. Its purpose is straightforward: determine what the Secretary of State requires in terms of personnel and program funding to successfully achieve American foreign policy objectives. Based on informed budgetary and manpower analyses, the Academy and Stimson report provides specific staffing and cost recommendations.

The Working Group on which I served conducted interviews with active duty and retired State Department officials and others, including budget, administrative and personnel specialists. The interviewees included Civil Servants, Foreign Service Officers and political appointees. The report is the result of months of internal discussions on how best to address the critical issues of staff and funding shortfalls.

My colleague Stanley Silverman, a long-time USIA comptroller, and I focused on Public Diplomacy (PD). This is what we found: despite recent increases, Public Diplomacy in the State Department is under-staffed and under-funded. The FY-2008 Public Diplomacy budget is $ 859 million. PD's current staff of 1,332 Americans, is 24 percent less than the comparable figure of 1,742 in 1986. According to State Department data, Public Diplomacy in FY-2008 had a 13 percent Foreign Service vacancy rate.

To have a reasonable chance of achieving its goals, PD needs to cover an employment shortfall; establish additional positions; obtain greater program funding and significantly expand training. I should add that, since this study dealt only with those resources controlled by the Secretary of State, we did not examine U.S. government civilian broadcasting as conducted by the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG). Broadcasting remains an important element of public diplomacy and I personally hope that it will continue to enjoy strong congressional support.

There are several interesting definitions of Public Diplomacy, but in examining the State Department's Public Diplomacy mission we prefer the following: "To understand, inform, engage and influence global audiences, reaching beyond foreign governments to promote greater appreciation and understanding of U.S. society, culture, institutions, values and policies."

PD practitioners in the State Department devise comprehensive strategies, develop content and select the most effective communications vehicles for reaching diverse global audiences. Here I wish to stress two points. First, there are limits to what Public Diplomacy professionals can accomplish in influencing the attitudes of foreign audiences. This is especially true during a period of lengthy, sharp policy disagreements between the U.S. and other nations. Secondly, Public Diplomacy is not like a water spigot that can be turned on or off at will to produce instantaneous results. Rather, it involves a cumulative process. The PD officer must first establish credibility over time, in many ways, on the road to trust. It involves a long-term investment of time, consistent engagement and respectful dialogue.

Two decades ago some observers believed that a strong U.S. Public Diplomacy effort was no longer needed after the fall of communism in Europe. Outside of international relations circles, insufficient credit was given at the time to the vital role played by Public Diplomacy in winning the ideological battle with the Soviet Union. By the 1990s there was a decline in budgetary and other support to USIA and in 1999 USIA was consolidated into the State Department.

Today, according to international public opinion surveys, there is extensive dissatisfaction with many U.S. global policies. Some question the U.S.'s leadership capability on major global issues and others, including many allies, simply disagree with certain U.S. decisions.

However, these negative foreign public opinion survey results don't fully convey foreign attitudes towards the United States. The fact remains that more than any other nation the U.S. is looked to for ideas, innovation and opportunity. In most of the world, the U.S. is viewed as a society that recognizes individual initiative and rewards talent. Foreign student enrollment in U.S. universities is rising and the number of foreign-born technology specialists interested in working for U.S. companies exceeds available visas. Given these factors, PD can make a difference.

In a post 9/11 world the U.S. must remain vigilant about possible international terrorist attacks, keep a watchful eye on a resurgent Russia and a China seeking to assert its influence beyond Asia. Today, unlike 20 years ago, U.S. officials and most international affairs experts concur that a robust, credible, creative and timely global Public Diplomacy capability is essential to U.S. national security.
The nature of Public Diplomacy work is such that PD personnel and the activities they design, implement and evaluate are inseparable. PD personnel stationed at embassies and consulates continue to successfully conduct traditional, successful programs such as exchanges, cultural and informational programs and media placement explaining U.S. policies and American society. These activities put PD personnel in touch with identifiable, established or rising opinion makers, people we deem important to reach with factual information and our views.

But in 2008 and beyond PD personnel--in the field and Washington--must reach out to broader audiences, the 20,30 and 40 year olds that are part of the "Internet Generation." Information on websites originating from Washington will certainly reach individuals unknown to individual country PD staffs. But this effort to reach the "Internet Generation" is vital since many of them are likely to be important to the U.S. because of their work, the people they know and their participation in national public policy debates and elections. In addition, our embassies utilize information provided by Washington on their own websites, information that is available to in-country Embassy contacts as well as self-selected audiences.

Consistently attracting and maintaining the attention of this 20-40 year old audience requires the development of credible, informative and, in many instances, entertaining Internet media. PD's multiple advocacy websites are engaging distinctive audiences. An example is the Digital Outreach Team, which involves PD staff in the Bureau of International Information Programs. Arabic-speaking personnel, who identify themselves as U.S. Government employees, participate inchat room discussions, particularly in the Islamic world, on U.S. policies and society.

The following Academy recommendations cover the breadth of PD's operations: educational and professional exchanges; advocacy of American foreign policies; and cultural and informational program explanations about American society, culture, institutions and values. Our recommendations span five fiscal years, beginning in FY-2010 and ending in FY-2014. These recommendations, which do not constitute an all-inclusive list of worthy activities, include:

• Increase permanent American staffing by 487 and Locally Employed staff
(i.e. Foreign Service National employees) by 369.
• Increase current academic exchanges by 100%; International Visitor grants involving future foreign leaders by 50% and youth exchanges by 25%.
• Expand capacity of PD English and foreign language advocacy websites aimed at experts, young professionals and youth and hire additional specialists in website design and program content.
• Establish 40 American Cultural Centers (or a mixture of ACCs and smaller Information Resource Centers) in order to broaden the U.S. daily cultural presence worldwide. The centers would only be established where suitable security conditions permit and programming interest warrants.
• Re-engage the autonomous pro-U.S. Binational Center network (of over 100 centers) in Latin America whose membership is desirous of closer U.S. ties
• Expand other programs, particularly overseas staff and operations to increase the effectiveness of Public Diplomacy.

Staffing increases will cost $ 155.2 million annually by 2014 and program activities, $ 455.2 million. Over-all funding increases will total $610.4 million in 2014.

In addition, elsewhere in the report, there is a call for substantially increased training opportunities for PD personnel. PD Foreign Service Officers need more extensive training in: foreign languages and area studies; technology applications; public speaking and management of personnel and resources.

The quality of an organization depends on the skills and preparedness of its staff. Personal contact with host country nationals remains the most effective PD tool. To accomplish Mission objectives, embassy and consulate Public Affairs Officers must have appropriate staffing support and a limited administrative burden. They must be allowed to do what they came into the Foreign Service for, namely meet, cultivate, listen and learn from host country citizens while explaining the U.S. to them. Only through this process can thoughtful dialogue result in successful communication and mutual understanding.

The American Academy of Diplomacy and the Stimson Center firmly believe that approval of the report's recommendations for personnel and funding increases will be significant factors in Public Diplomacy officers' efforts to attain greater success in achieving U.S. foreign policy objectives.

Stephen M. Chaplin
chaplincs@msn.comBottom of Form

(II)

Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Subcommittee On Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia Hearing on “A Reliance on Smart Power--Reforming the Public Diplomacy Bureaucracy.”
September 23, 2008
342 Dirksen SOB

Testimony by (Hon.) Jill A. Schuker, President JAS International and Former Special Assistant to the President (William Jefferson Clinton) for National Security Affairs and Senior Director for Public Affairs, National Security Council

Mr. Chairman, Senator Voinovich and Members of the Subcommittee:

Thank you for this opportunity to address the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia on the important organizational challenges facing public diplomacy in this new century.

Through your hearings on Smart Power, under Chairman Daniel Akaka’s leadership, this Subcommittee has been in the forefront of forward thinking on this issue, and capturing the urgency and attention it deserves.

If I may, I would like to set the stage for my recommendations and reflections.

Twenty-First Century U.S. Public diplomacy is at a cross-roads of both challenge and opportunity and it will be a centerpiece issue for the next President and his Administration taking office in January 2009.

Globalization has created a more complex atmosphere for the conduct of traditional public diplomacy, while as this Subcommittee is acutely aware, new security concerns, unforeseen in earlier times, have erected both structural and virtual impediments to effective, traditional operations.

Balancing the necessary and the possible, the likely and the unthinkable, to create a more effective “smart power” posture for the United States, requires thinking anew.

Mistakes made in the wake of hasty pronouncements by some respected but ill-considered thought-leaders that history ended with the Cold War along with political compromises, enabled a rushed, “jerry-built” architecture for public diplomacy ten years ago that “threw the baby out with the bathwater” leaving gaps in our public diplomacy readiness and effectiveness. This, accompanied by subsequent rhetorical and substantive foreign policy missteps, assured public diplomacy to fall on hard times over these last years. Instead of creating a lifeline for information and dialogue, the conduct of public diplomacy became part of the problem.

Furthermore, the rapid growth and complexity in communications avenues and outlets, widely accessed by non-state actors, and no longer “organized” in news cycles, created a “24/7” intensity that demands immediacy, often eliminating thoughtful or quiet deliberation before public comment or action is expected. This creates a new challenge for formulating and explaining the national interest to a range of audiences.

All this has led to the need for a more nimble and cutting-edge public diplomacy shaped through a more sophisticated and flexible prism. It means identifying and insuring the right human resources, structure and serious financial support, heretofore missing or needing strengthening.

As this Subcommittee is aware, one need only to look at respected, credible polling and qualitative survey research to know that the U.S. has been living through an agonizing and challenging period both to its moral authority and to its long-recognized leadership as the international superpower and touchstone for national credibility.

Neither the realities of U.S. “hard power” nor the power of our rhetoric, our history, our values and our attraction are the issue. Our “soft power” continues to bring millions to our shores seeking those governing principles we take for granted.

But, we are expected to lead by example.

We are being challenged abroad to demonstrate by word and deed that we are on the right track as we look toward the end of this first decade of the new century.

Indeed, for our nation, to which “much has been given”, much is indeed expected. This becomes a measurement for effective U.S. public diplomacy. The issues we tackle and the solutions we seek must have a global dimension and redound to the benefit of the many—development, pandemics, natural disasters, climate change, proliferation and terrorism and other multilateral and multi-national challenges. These all are concerns of modern Twenty First century public diplomacy.

Indeed public diplomacy is a companion for effective U.S. foreign policy. It is an opportunity if effectively shaped and executed, to create new levers of influence that will ultimately make better use of hard power when needed, and provide diplomatic alternatives to mutual threats and challenges. Simply put, public diplomacy must be intimately involved in effectively identifying and promoting our national interests and informing policy.

This recognition of both public diplomacy’s importance and its structural limitations as a tool in the diplomatic arsenal in engaging foreign publics has led to a multitude of serious reports over the last seven years researched and written by Think Tanks, policy organizations, the private sector, the Departments of State and Defense, the U.S. Advisory Group on Public Diplomacy, the American Academy of Diplomacy and Capitol Hill. The main message is a fairly consistent one: (1) change is needed both financially and structurally and (2) the recognition and role of public diplomacy in the policy process is deficient.

One new and important report, funded by Congress and under the leadership of The Brookings Institution, will be birthed on October 1, prepared for the Department of State and commissioned by Congress. It focuses on concrete steps—in and out of government-- to strengthen U.S. public diplomacy interaction across the globe.

In my view, its analysis, conclusions and recommendations are thoughtful and provocative and provide essential food for consideration and action by Congress and the next Administration—as well as other public diplomacy protagonists in and outside of government.

It underscores as all these serious reports have done, that effective public diplomacy is essential to America’s standing in the world and to be effective we cannot conduct a monologue if we are to have credibility and a resonant and responsive audience in “winning” the “war of ideas”.

Simply put, Public Diplomacy is a matter of national interest and national priority and for our next Administration.

Architecture, Organization and Coordination

There are others testifying here today as inside government practitioners who can speak more expertly and directly about the viability of specific office structures, personnel and portfolios as they operate today.

My best insights come from my own expertise inside and outside of government—at State, the NSC, US/UN, DOC, on Capitol Hill, in state government, in the private sector, and in academia as well as my participation in various public diplomacy reports and studies. .

First, while U.S. public diplomacy clearly is directed to a global audience, effective public diplomacy begins at home. It must.

This demands a more aware and better educated U.S. public, insuring that at every level of our society and government, we are structurally geared to preparing ourselves for the Twenty-First century challenges.
Along with the sciences, Americans need stronger history, civics, language and cultural education-- beginning with our own “story”, as well as providing an understanding of the global dimension and the interdependence of our planet.

This needs to start early, it needs to be comprehensive, and it needs to reflect and be open to new realities—shifting demographics, for example. This includes targeted public diplomacy training of our professional civil service in all departments so that it has an integral place in all sectors—health, housing, the arts, sciences, as well as diplomacy.

The recent Washington Post article (by Joby Warrick and Walter Pincus, September 10, 2008) highlighting a new intelligence forecast reportedly being prepared for the next President predicts that our increasingly competitive world will enable the U.S. to remain “pre-eminent” but its “dominance” will be relatively diminished because of “the rise of everyone else”.

This is the world we need to prepare for and navigate successfully through school curricula and training at every level, providing incentives for future teachers to have the skills needed, and preparing for a much more diverse, and as Tom Friedman has called it, “flat” world.

Further:

The dismantlement of USIA and its transfer into the Department of State continues to have repercussions. This transfer, which caused serious disruption with the departure of many professionals, and the resistance to and by a new “culture” suggests that there are lessons to be learned from this experience about how to “reinvent” government more successfully. It may even be legitimate to question whether public diplomacy would have operated better in these last years, if the architecture and staffing had been less disrupted.

I am not suggesting a reiteration of USIA. What does need recognition, however, is the legitimacy of the function, the independence of the work , the quality professional corps that is essential, and the recognition that effective public diplomacy means long-term planning, outreach and engagement.

The role of public diplomat is intrinsically separate from that of a spokesman or press officer and this has gotten lost in translation. Public diplomacy is definitionally a two-way street, an openness to dialogue with “the Street,” reaching out beyond traditional networks of officialdom, the basic diplomatic focus of the Department of State. (This indeed is one of the oddities of public diplomacy’s being based at State.)

While at one level, bringing public diplomacy more into the policy halls of the State Department was viewed as giving it an added gravitas and engagement, it lost some of its essential ability to reach non-traditional audiences and became only an arm of policy instead of informing the policy.

This in my view has created some of the dissonance that has called into serious question the effective operation of public diplomacy in the last years.

An additional concern, of course, is the “siege mentality” that has overtaken much of our diplomatic, in-country outreach since 9/11. So many of our embassies have become armed camps, cut off from the countries in which they reside and their publics.

This is, of course, understandable from many security aspects. But it also is a serious hindrance to effective public diplomacy. How to find a better balance between security and contact is a major challenge, but it suggests that we need to pay attention to the recommendations being made by new reports about how to better use not only governmental outreach tools but the private sector, civil society and citizen contact to create more and stronger networks for the important “last three feet” of communication-- as Edward R. Murrow called the key distance for the real impact that public diplomacy requires.

This also means better training and mastery of the new media that provide a different way to “social network” and inform citizens of other countries about United States’ interests and values. The internet, blogging—these are among modern public diplomacy vehicles and we need both traditional skills and new information technology-savvy public diplomats.

The U.S. Government is and will remain the essential actor in public diplomacy. This is where the national interest “resides” resides. This ultimate responsibility cannot be shifted elsewhere..

But this requires a priority being attached to nomination and confirmation as well as tenure. The revolving door of the Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy has swung often since the reorganization of the late 90s and added to its woes. The reasons need to be assessed by this Subcommittee. However professional, experienced, dedicated and talented the incumbent may be, the shifting focus, confirmation delays and short tenures of the incumbents have left public diplomacy and its troops without the full integration and direction it needs and requires.

Further, if public diplomacy (and the public diplomacy chief) is to be recognized as an “honest broker” on policy, to listen as much as to explain and influence, then it is difficult to have any architect of a particular foreign policy that is dominating the global discourse, to hold that office as credibly as possible. It sends a very mixed signal abroad as well as at home. Closeness to the President and the White House needs to enhance the public diplomacy mission, not overshadow it.

This relates as well to the problems faced by Alhurra, and even Radio Sawa and programs being run through the Broadcasting Board of Governors. They are too often viewed as propagandistic rather than as “news” or providing an “honest broker” perspective. If we are going to put money and muscle into broadcasting then we should look at what has worked for us –Voice of America, for example—and not diminish or undercut or dilute these structures.

Also are we looking ahead to the challenges we face today—as well as tomorrow? Does cutting out VOA to India or cutting it back in former Soviet republics, for example, really make sense for our long-term smart power interests? Are we letting specific short-term policy and short-sighted funding run public diplomacy before public diplomacy can do its job and begin to inform and enable good, sound policy? This is unproductive and an issue for congressional consideration.

What are we willing to spend and for what? Congress has the ability and responsibility to reverse unwise cuts….and to ask the right questions up front about priorities and directions. If we are really to support smart power and to provide “the powers to lead” as Harvard Professor Joseph Nye has stated, then these are legitimate and necessary points to explore.

Public diplomacy also is more than a one person job. The President sets the tone; State runs the function. But day in and day out it IS the cadre of professionals who need and deserve resource support--funding, training, respect internally in and by the Foreign Service , and an appreciation that theirs is an expertise too often taken for granted. At one time economic officers in the Foreign Service were viewed as second class citizens to the political officers. This is a message that now must be addressed for those who practice public diplomacy. There must be a reinvestment in public diplomacy professionals with recruitment and reward, as well as a refocus on fundamentals and a commitment to a long-term effort.

We also need to bring into government public diplomacy, some of the talent we are ignoring or discouraging, from outside of government. One of our country’s strengths is our diversity—and it is one of the most identifiable ways to demonstrate tangibly abroad what we mean when we say public diplomacy begins at home.

It means bringing into government more of our skilled immigrant Americans who have language skills and background (Arabic, Farsi or Chinese, for example), as well as useful geographical and cultural knowledge, rather than further marginalizing their talent and desire to make a substantive and serious contribution.

This should be informed by the new intelligence forecast mentioned earlier, identifying civil society and emerging global leaders we should be reaching through public diplomacy and providing the leadership to prepare for new global realties—in development, by non-state actors, energy demands, and transnational and non-state threats—and for rethinking and expanding our global opportunities, alliances and partners. We should be thinking now about how public diplomacy should impact the new realities of the global economic meltdown.

As to funding and architecture—how can the State Department be expected to be the coordinator of our country’s public diplomacy when their funding is miniscule? Relative to funding for similar activities at the Department of Defense, State public diplomacy funds barely register on the radar screen. [See Chart]

Senator Joseph Biden, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, recently opened up a hearing stating that “there has been a migration of functions and authorities from U.S. civilian agencies to the Department of Defense.” This hurts both State's effective stewardship of public diplomacy as well as how public diplomacy is interpreted abroad.

Defense Secretary Bob Gates has been eloquent in his recognition and support for public diplomacy but he too has stated that both the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development have been “chronically undermanned and underfunded for too long”.

There is much to be learned from the military in terms of training and outreach useful for public diplomacy, but this is NOT structurally where public diplomacy should reside, nor is it where the funding for this function should be flowing. It is neither the right messenger, nor does it have the mission. The skewed funding, however, is in danger of tilting our diplomatic arsenal in the wrong direction. This is not how to shape smart power.

Further, this impairs State’s public diplomacy leadership ability to act as the interagency interlocutor and coordinator for public diplomacy, much less its legitimacy on behalf of the U.S. for global outreach. It sends the wrong signal. The President sets the tone and the agenda; but State runs the function. The underfunding of State has got to be reversed if the United States is to demonstrate that it takes public diplomacy seriously.

Three final points about the structure of U.S. public diplomacy:

Public-Private Partnerships are essential to optimize effective public diplomacy engagement. They need to be more aggressively and successfully pursued to embrace the reach and resources outside of government –the private sector, citizens of all ages, cultural institutions and civil society influentials —and impact public diplomacy in ways that cannot be as successfully accomplished by government alone. Business for Diplomatic Action, Americans for Informed Democracy, The Asia Society, and the U.S. Center for Citizen Diplomacy are but a few examples of important interlocutors in public diplomacy operating effective programs outside of the public sector but partnering with government and civil society.

There is an important role for active citizen (and cultural) diplomacy outside of the policy dimension, including “reverse public diplomacy” bringing a range of delegations and visitors to our shores—business executives, artists/musicians, doctors, scientists, educators as well as tourists and foreign students.(Programs to send students abroad as well as to bring them to the U.S. is an essential element in the public diplomacy dialogue.) This also means revamping our visa programs in many instances so that security concerns are not unnecessarily diluting effective public diplomacy.

The dollars available in the private sector and foundations even with the serious current stresses in the economy is impressive. For example, Citigroup’s budget in 2007 in over 100 countries was $81.7 billion—9 times the size of the State Department’s budget that year of $9.5 billion for public diplomacy operations in nearly 180 countries.

Both our presidential candidates have discussed the importance of public service—nationally and internationally-- a crucial component relating to effective public diplomacy. This has ranged from the expansion of AmeriCorps to such innovative ideas as Senator Barack Obama’s call for the “America’s Voice Initiative” to send Americans fluent in local languages and dialects abroad to expand our public diplomacy. These programs need to be encouraged, expanded, and energized for Americans of all ages with a range of skills. This is exactly the kind of participation that will enhance our public diplomacy objectives.

Finally, I would recommend serious consideration by the next President, of having a Senior Advisor in the White House responsible to the President (Assistant to the President perhaps) with responsibility for public diplomacy. This would not be a position with operational responsibility for public diplomacy which would continue to reside at the Department of State. But it would send an immediate signal regarding the importance placed on credible international outreach by the new President and his administration. And it would do more than this.

This Advisor's portfolio would provide an appropriate level of linkage between the White House and the Department of State; insure support for the work and organization of public diplomacy centered at the State Department; add the imprimatur of the White House to State's interagency coordination of the public diplomacy function; participate in highest level Principal or Deputy deliberations to insure the public diplomacy dimension is being incorporated and considered relating to our national interests; advise and keep the President informed regarding public diplomacy dimensions of foreign policy; and provide a liaison with the private sector, foundations and others as a conduit for ideas on specific public diplomacy needs, actions and reforms.

This Advisor also would serve as a coordinating point for consideration and recommendations about new architecture needed and a formal and informal point of contact for such outside advisory input.

Wayne Gretzky, the great hockey player, when asked what gave him his special edge, said that “he skates to where the puck will be.”

This is the message for the United States as we consider how to insure effective public diplomacy and effective change going forward.

We have the raw talent and resources. We embody and embrace the principles and the values. We need to have the will, the vision, the leadership and the discipline to seize the moment.

The window is small but with these months of transition in which we find ourselves, we are at the right moment in our history and in the history of our globe to make a needed difference for our own future and for a better global future. This Subcommittee must help define this direction in concert with a new Administration.

Thank you.

11 pages/Jill A. Schuker
jasintlgp@aol.com
September 24

(III)

Statement of Ronna A. Freiberg Former Director of Congressional and Intergovernmental Affairs, USIA Before the Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce and the District of Columbia Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs “A Reliance on Smart Power – Reforming the Public Diplomacy Bureaucracy”

September 23, 2008

Chairman Akaka, Ranking Member Voinovich, and Members of the Subcommittee:

Thank you for inviting me to participate in today’s hearing on public diplomacy. As a veteran of USIA, I have a continuing interest in the effectiveness of the nation’s public diplomacy organizational structure and its ability to adapt to the demands of the 21st century. My remarks today are based on personal experience, observation, and regular discussions with practitioners inside and outside of government. I do not represent the views of any organization.

Our need for a robust public diplomacy strategy and support structure has been influenced by a number of developments, beginning with the end of the bipolar world of the Cold War. The subsequent rise of new technologies, the growing involvement in international affairs by NGOS, businesses and other private sector actors, the ever-present challenge of terrorism and the evidence of widespread negative attitudes toward the United States have created a “perfect storm” in international relations.

It is no secret that our public diplomacy apparatus has not responded effectively to this perfect storm. To a large degree, the current failures of public diplomacy are more attributable to resentment of our policy decisions than to flaws in message or communications. Even the most effective public diplomacy cannot compensate for policy mistakes. That aside, recent experience teaches us that designing a structure to enable creative, consistent, and coherent outreach to foreign publics must be a high priority for the next administration.

In the past few years, numerous task forces have been created, reports issued, seminars organized, and hallway conversations held to address what should be done to reinvigorate and strengthen public diplomacy. Some of these proposals focus on reforming the existing bureaucratic structure. Alternatively, a number of respected organizations have suggested creating new independent organizations outside of government. Although many of these ideas have merit, it is still unclear how a new entity would interface with State and in particular, how it would operate in the field. For that reason, I have focused my testimony on ideas for improving the State Department’s current public diplomacy structure and operations.

First, a word about definitions. Public diplomacy has come to mean different things to different persons. Other witnesses may articulate their own definitions. I have adapted the definition that appears in discourse and discussion most frequently: Public diplomacy is the effort to understand, inform, engage and influence the attitudes and behavior of foreign publics in ways that support U.S. national security interests. Public diplomacy’s fundamental tools are the dissemination of information through a range of media, both new and old; direct interaction with individuals and organizations through public and press outreach activities; and a broad range of academic, professional and citizen exchange programs. Public diplomacy includes aspects of international relations that go beyond official interactions between national governments. Or, as Joe Nye put it in his book Soft Power, public diplomacy entails not only “conveying information and selling a positive image,” but also “building long-term relationships that create an enabling environment for government policies.” The short-term and long-term aspects of public diplomacy can sometimes be at odds, and this affects how we approach reforms in the system.

Much has been said and written about why the Clinton administration and Congress approved a merger of USIA into the State Department in 1998, over USIA’s objections. I will not rehash those arguments. Certainly the move gave the Department access to all the “instruments” of diplomacy, which was one of its goals. And my colleagues on the State Department panel can tell us whether the expected cost savings occurred and whether duplication of services and functions was reduced. USIA had already undergone reorganization, downsizing and streamlining before the integration occurred.

The merger may have been good for State but it has been less than successful for public diplomacy. The culture of the State Department, though improving, still treats public diplomacy as a stepchild in the policymaking process. Public diplomacy initiatives are under-funded. Many programs are dispersed through numerous government agencies and still lack coordination. The State Department bureaucracy limits our ability to act creatively and nimbly in a world of peer-to-peer communication, despite the efforts of seasoned public diplomacy officers in Washington and in the field.

Still, this is the situation the next President will inherit and I do not advocate recreating the old USIA. The question is, how do we make public diplomacy better?

I have seven recommendations for reform:

l. Clarify and strengthen the role of the Undersecretary. At the time of the reorganization, there was a great deal of debate about the authority of the new Undersecretary, specifically with regard to personnel and budget. In the end, the USIA area offices and field personnel went into State’s regional bureaus. As a result, individuals in the field and the regional bureaus now report to regional assistant secretaries and up to the Undersecretary for Political Affairs, while they obtain resources, and theoretically, policy direction, from the Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy. It would be more efficient, and serve the unique needs of public diplomacy, to have the regional public diplomacy offices report directly to the Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy. One way to accomplish this would be to create a bureau that would house public diplomacy regional offices and connect to the corresponding field staff.

2. Significantly increase public diplomacy resources. If we are serious about our commitment to public diplomacy, we must find the resources to expand exchanges, augment the size and access to technology of the Bureau of International Information Programs (IIP), restore some public diplomacy positions that were lost in the 1990s, increase the public diplomacy training provided to all cones of the foreign service, expand English teaching, increase funding for public opinion research, and restore some in-country facilities such as American Centers.

Priority attention should go to funding for the IIP bureau, personnel increases across-the-board, and exchanges.

Because of its critical responsibilities for production and transmittal of large amounts of material in a range of formats, including print and digital technologies, development of more sophisticated internet capability and demands for even more new media, IIP should receive more funding for technology and new positions. The leadership of the bureau should be raised to the Assistant Secretary level.

Technology, however, is not enough. Like the CIA, State was wrong in thinking technology could replace human contact as a means of furthering its objectives. In public diplomacy, personnel, programs and activities are inseparable. The Department needs to restore some of the positions that were cut during the streamlining of the last decade.

Finally, although funding for educational and cultural exchange has doubled in the last five years, more needs to be done. Most of the growth in resources has occurred in the Middle East, in response to crises there. We clearly need more funding for regions of highest priority, especially in language competencies and scholarships, but we must strengthen our exchange capability in a broader way to foster relationships in other regions and lay the groundwork to prevent crises, rather than responding after the fact. The International Visitor Program and Fulbright are examples of effective activities that should be expanded. Participants and alumni in exchange programs have become enormous public diplomacy assets, acting as third party interpreters of our value system and our political philosophy.

3. Reinstate the use of the country plan. Prior to 1999 when USIA was absorbed by State, the public diplomacy area offices developed detailed country plans, which defined communications strategies and set objectives for the country’s exchange and information programs. Currently there is only a mission performance plan, which lacks specificity about communications or public diplomacy. The country plan, with approval by the Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy and the regional Assistant Secretary, will bring additional coherence to the policymaking process and encourage greater coordination between regional bureaus and public diplomacy field operations.

4. Develop a plan for private sector engagement. State has established an Office of Private Sector Outreach in the Undersecretary’s office. This office should produce a detailed strategy for leveraging private sector resources and expertise to the next administration. Several outside organizations have proposed alternatives to locating this function within the State Department, preferring instead to create an independent quasi-governmental or non-profit organization which would serve as a nexus for involvement in public diplomacy by the academic, research, business and non-profit communities. To create another new entity is a serious and costly undertaking and requires thorough discussion and debate. There can be no disagreement, however, that private sector input must be better utilized to support and enhance our ability to communicate with the world. Currently there is no central entity in the State Department, or elsewhere in government, to which private sector interest can be directed.

5. Bring coherence to the management of interagency coordination. Too many departments and agencies engage in public diplomacy or strategic communications activities and programs. The Department of Defense, for example, has resources and personnel devoted to this function, with little if any coordination with State. This results in inconsistent, uncoordinated messages and lack of accountability. Conflicting jurisdictions among Congressional committees can complicate the effort to coordinate.

The next administration should inventory these public diplomacy activities government-wide and consider consolidating some of them. At a minimum we should determine at what level and how they should be coordinated. The NSC Policy Coordinating Committee on Strategic Communication and Public Diplomacy, headed by the Undersecretary of State, may need elevation in the policymaking hierarchy. One proposal is to institutionalize the role of the PCC by creating another council parallel in status to the NSC, the HSC, and the NEC in the White House, reporting directly to the President, responsible for interagency coordination of international communications. A decision on this obviously rests with the next President.

6. Strike the right balance between security needs and public access to programs abroad. If the role of the public diplomacy officer on the ground, at post, is to interact with and engage both media and citizen groups in his or her community, and if we are going to evaluate officers on the number of these interactions, then certainly our security requirements, though necessary, may hinder the effort. In some locations, the loss of publicly accessible facilities has resulted in moving some programs into the embassy, which often appears fortress-like and unapproachable. We need to redouble our efforts to maintain access to embassies, and assure the security of embassy staff as they move about in the community.

7. Launch a major government-wide international education effort. Both our national security and our international competitiveness demand that we devise a strategy to raise the importance of international education. Again, this will require interagency cooperation and the support of several committees of Congress. But, in my view, nothing is more important, because the value of long-term relationship building, in all its forms, far exceeds that of short-term message creation in the panoply of public diplomacy activities.

An international education strategy should have three components:

We must attract and welcome more international students. The university environment fosters interaction with America’s values, its culture, its political institutions, and most importantly, its unique citizenry. To accomplish this task, further streamlining of the visa process and a greater degree of coordination between government, academic institutions and the non-profit sector may be required. Many other countries have developed comprehensive national strategies to attract students. We are competing with those countries. Our lack of a strategy works to our disadvantage.

We must find ways to make our own students more aware of the world beyond our borders. We know that for individuals to participate actively in a global economy, and for the country to increase its competitiveness, Americans must acquire not only math, science and technology skills, but also international knowledge, language competency, and cross-cultural skills. We also know that the U.S. cannot conduct effective diplomacy – public or otherwise – if our citizenry does not have an understanding of the people we are trying to influence.

Many of the reports on public diplomacy have recommended an increase in the number and diversity of U.S. undergraduates studying abroad and the diversity of the locations they choose. One option under consideration by Congress is the Paul Simon Study Abroad Foundation Act. The Simon Act creates a national study abroad program to send one million American undergraduates to diverse locations over a ten-year period through direct scholarships and improvements in on-campus capability to encourage such participation.

The third component of a campaign to build long-term relationships through education will require summoning up the will to find more resources for the educational and cultural exchange programs of the State Department, as discussed earlier.

Conclusion

Our success in foreign policy depends on our ability to engage and influence foreign publics through the power of our values, our institutions, and our national character. It depends also on our commitment to understanding our audiences and building the kinds of long-term relationships that outlive the policies of any one administration or political party and sustain us during times of crisis.

Yes, it’s about message. But it’s also about people-to-people programs. Yes, it’s about mastering communications techniques, message development and state of the art technologies. But it’s also about translating our nation’s positive attributes into realities others can experience. Too often people associate public diplomacy with public relations, which is only a piece of the puzzle. The art of salesmanship is transient; the art of fostering understanding and goodwill becomes the work of generations.

Ronna A. Freiberg

Saturday, September 27, 2008

September 27


“But back to the war of ideas and to the importance of not being too U.S.-centric. Think of it this way: we're Coke; they're Pepsi. Our job is not to get people to drink Coke in this instance, but to get people not to drink Pepsi.”

--Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs of State James Glassman

“once upon a time in Russia there really was a carefree, youthful generation that smiled in joy at the summer, the sea and the sun, and chose Pepsi."

--Russian author Victor Pelevin regarding Generation P, for Pepsi

NEW BOOK

Career Diplomacy: Life and Work in the U.S. Foreign Service
Harry W. Kopp, Charles A. Gillespie

SITES OF INTEREST

The site "Life After Jerusalem: The Adventures and Musings of an American Indian, Public Diplomacy-Coned Foreign Service Officer" lists some 80 Foreign Service-related sites, including by Foreign Service officers, ranging from "A For Adventure" to "World Chump."

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Reliance on Soft Power: Reforming Public - Diplopundit – “If the [State] Department is to attract and retain first-rate PD officers, then it needs to demonstrate that career Foreign Service Public Diplomacy officers, not political appointees or Fifth Avenue marketing hacks, will be regarded as capable of holding senior Department positions. And State could start the broom in its Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Bureau ('R') as a brilliant example.”

Twenty Questions for the Debate Tonight - Charles J. Brown, Undiplomatic: Among them: What would you do, as President, to make the State Department more effective, and to give it the resources it needs to succeed? Do you support reestablishing the US Information Agency or a similar construct to coordinate and strengthen our public diplomacy?

James K. Glassman to Speak at Luncheon Oct. 3
- National Press Club: James K. Glassman, Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, will speak at a luncheon on Friday, Oct. 3, on “The New Age of Public Diplomacy.” Since taking up his position in June, following confirmation by the U.S. Senate, Glassman has been leading the government’s efforts to win a war of ideas to combat violent extremism, and his speech will outline his views on how best to achieve this goal. Cost of the luncheon is $16 for National Press Club members, $28 for guests of members, and $35 general admission.

Meg Whitman for Governor of California? - PurpleSlog: The Future Will Be Kludged: “As for Gov. Schwarzenegger, his next role, should he choose to remain in government I would suggest one of these [including] ... Deputy Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Influence Activity (to reinvigorate the US Effort).”

Mind Control in the 21st Century – Skydrifter, Burning Babylon: "The elements of government Public Diplomacy, military Public Affairs and Psychological Operations play a key role in the endeavor of 'information operations,' ideally reinforcing each other. In theory, they are separate functions, with unique missions. 'Public Diplomacy' is intended to be an interagency effort, theoretically only directed at the influence of foreign audiences. That arena employs the use of over-the-border’ information dissemination, whether radio, TV or the Internet. The world of government-sponsored 'Psychological Operations' uses specific techniques - designed (in theory) to uniquely influence non-U.S. audiences."

NATO and Public Diplomacy: The Need for the Alliance to Tell its Own Story - Alexis Crow, RUSI, UK - “One thing … is certain: the re-emergence of Russia as a country which challenges the existing status quo has placed NATO in the hot seat. Once again, this is a battle of ideas, and NATO is back to its original business. Now, more than ever, NATO members need to engage in a sustained public relations campaign, and explain the continuing story of the Alliance to its voting publics.”

RELATED ITEMS

The Debate on Foreign Policy: Barack Obama and John McCain don't differ as much as they may lead voters to believe – Editorial, Washington Post

Debate Floor, from BagnewsNotes

In debate, Obama and McCain differ sharply on foreign policy: Each says the other has been wrong about Iraq and Afghanistan. The economic crisis shadows the debate
- Mark Z. Barabak and Peter Nicholas, Los Angeles Times

Obama Wins on Foreign Policy: He Stood up to McCain, and He Had a More Realistic Vision of the World - Fred Kaplan, Slate

The time has come for a final report on the 43rd president of the US: The man who set out to reinforce unbridled American power has weakened it in all three essential dimensions - Timothy Garton Ash, Guardian - As for the decline in American soft power, that is something for which George Bush was directly to blame. His arrogance, his unilateralism, his insensitivity, his long-time denial of the need for urgent action on climate change: all fed directly into the plummeting credit of the US around the world. It would have been a different story with a different president.

Behind the Lines: Ahmadinejad's media blitz, and polls apart - Calev Ben-David, Jerusalem Post: There's no question that Ahmadinejad views the Western media as a useful vehicle to challenge US policy toward Iran in the field of international public opinion, to justify his nation's nuclear ambitions and further his campaign to delegitimize the existence of the state of Israel.

MILF questions Marines' propaganda movie in Sulu - GMA news.tv, Philippines: The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) questioned Saturday what it called a "cheap propaganda" ploy by the Philippine Marines to win children's support through Sunday movie showings. An article on the MILF website said parents of the children branded the effort as "cheap propoganda out to win the hearts of tender minds in the ongoing war in Mindanao."

Bush's third war: U.S. attacks inside Pakistan mark an escalation that may bedevil the next president - Andrew J. Bacevich, Los Angeles Times: As U.S. operations inevitably produce a stream of noncombatant casualties, they will exacerbate anti-Americanism in Pakistan.

U.S. Raids on Pakistan: Violations of Sovereignty - Brian Cloughley, Counterpunch

Support to Pakistan distorts Asia's balance of power - Selig S. Harrison, Boston Globe: The time has come to make US military aid to Pakistan compatible with US strategic goals in India, which is eight times larger and a rising global power important to the United States militarily and economically.

AMERICANA

Sarah Palin's Beauty Pageant Swimsuit Competition Footage (VIDEO)Huffington Post
















Superstars Dolls. Photo from MSN Entertainment

Friday, September 26, 2008

September 26



"Just wing it!”

--William J. Hybl, Chairman, Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, on what, in effect, the State Department tells Public Diplomacy officers when they go serve overseas



“If money isn’t loosened up, this sucker could go down.”

--President George W. Bush, regarding the US economy

SATIRE

Advice to a Young Diplomat Assigned to the USA

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Answers to FAQs about "Getting the People Part Right: A Report on the Human Resources Dimension of U.S. Public Diplomacy" - William J. Hybl, Chairman, Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, September 2008 Testimony, U.S. Department of State

Restoring Effectiveness of U.S. Public Diplomacy and International Broadcasting
– Federalist No 1, via Free Media Online Blog: The legislation introduced by Senator Sam Brownback is an acknowledgement that US international broadcasting is broken and needs to be fixed and in a dramatic fashion. The senator’s legislation would dramatically reshape how the US Government goes about the business of public diplomacy. Not only does the legislation eliminate the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG); it also eliminates the position of undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. The former has been a hotbed of sometimes vicious partisan bickering and the latter a steady succession of appointees who have searched in vain for an answer, almost any answer, to the woeful state of American prestige abroad.

Public Diplomacy and the 2008 Election - William C. Vocke Jr., Carnegie Council Resources: “Today's candidates say we need mutual understanding and respect. Still, how will America renew a lost love affair with the rest of the world? How will administrations and Americans learn to listen? How can the moral authority of a ‘beacon on a hill’ be rekindled? The rhetoric is easy, but there is no easy answer, especially given the current application of public diplomacy as sales, as spin doctoring. … Several core American ideas are central to a new public diplomacy … these ideas would be the basis for extensive public diplomacy activities, for rekindling America's moral authority.”

President George W. Bush, Personnel Announcement Wednesday, September 24, 2008 - AmericasNewsToday.Org: The President intends to nominate Michael S. Doran, of New Jersey, to be Assistant Secretary of State (International Information Programs). Dr. Doran currently serves as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Support to Public Diplomacy.

Blogging on Public Diplomacy: the UK in the USAMountainRunner: “Andy Pryce, First Secretary Public Affairs Washington (gasp, Public Affairs is Public Diplomacy??), drew my attention to a plethora of FCO blogs in the U.S. and worldwide. … I think Nick Cull’s seven steps are missing a tremendously important step ... . Yes, you must listen, pay attention to the implications of a “say-do” gap, realize you’re operating in a global information environment, etc. But unless you understand what you’re hearing when you listen and ... what the target and non-target audiences are hearing when you speak and act, everything else crumbles. This is perhaps the greatest vector that public diplomacy is 'not about you' but about them. Especially today, it is not 'us versus them' but 'them versus them.'”

US group for ‘rethink’ in approach to Islamabad - Qudssia Akhlaque, The News: A key Washington-based ‘Pakistan Policy Working Group’ comprising independent and prominent American experts on Pakistan-US relations, while predicting that Pakistan may be the single greatest challenge facing the next American President, has called for a “rethink” in the administration’s approach to Islamabad. The Group counsels more patience with Pakistan’s new democratically elected leaders and greater public diplomacy through expansion of US missions in Pakistan.

Ritual Ramadan Dinner Becomes an Opportunity for Muslims to Reach Out - Nathan Guttman, Forward: An increasing number of official Iftar dinners held by government agencies, local communities, universities and interfaith groups. “It’s a growing trend, but it hasn’t gotten out of hand,” said David Pollock, a former State Department official who dealt with public diplomacy in the Arab world. Pollock was among those advocating more engagement with the Muslim world and participated in planning Iftar events at the State Department.

My Endors[e]ment for 2008: Barack Obama - Fear and Loathing in the Blogosphere: In Pursuit of Theoretical Wisdom: “While I do endorse Barack Obama for President I continue to endorse Republicans in every other race. Like Clinton, President Obama would perform best with a divided government, which would allow the U.S. to gain all the public diplomacy benefits of an Obama presidency while constraining the lesser of angels of the Democratic Party.”

In Iraq, a Monastery Rediscovered: Near Mosul, War Has Helped and Hindered Efforts to Excavate the 1,400-Year-Old Dair Mar Elia Monastery - James Foley, Smithsonian.com: The archaeology students from the University of Mosul were invited inside the secure U.S. base to work on the monastery excavation, says Diane Crow, a public diplomacy officer in Mosul.

RELATED ITEMS

Guns and Buttering Them Up, in Iraq - Spin of the Day, Center for Media and Democracy: The U.S. Defense Department has awarded its up to three-year, $300 million contract for "information operations" in Iraq and possibly Afghanistan.

RP-US military uses movie propaganda vs Abu Sayyaf - Bong Garcia, Sun.Star, Philippines: “The Philippine and US military have initiated a program that instills patriotism thereby dissuading children from joining terror groups like the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group in the island province of Sulu. The program dubbed as Movie Night highlights the learning of right values while having fun.”

A reason to bring US troops home - Doug Bandow, Asia Times: Downplaying America's military role would improve overall US relations with other countries. The continuing presence of bases and troops creates endless local grievances. Part of that reflects nationalist frustrations with the foreign control that inevitably accompanies foreign garrisons. There are also the inevitable problems that come from putting a large number of young American males in the middle of a foreign country and culture.

Security First in dealing with Russia - Amitai Etzioni, TMP café: As today's headlines show yet again, the Bush Administration is falling victim to its own propaganda. It is endangering vital U.S. interests in order to continue pretending that it is promoting democratization.

To Compete Locally, Global Brands Must Adapt - Andrew McMains, Adweek: The success of a global brand in a local market hinges largely on the brand's ability to adapt to local needs and tastes, according to Millward Brown Group CEO Eileen Campbell, who spoke today during an Advertising Week panel discussion on global branding. "Cultural relevance is important," said Campbell. "You need to respect local culture and become part of it."

Cultural Differences, East & West - Paul Boshears, Okinawa City

Pakistan and Afghanistan Unite Against Terrorism - Husain Haqqani and Said T. Jawad, Wall Street Journal: Prosperity is one of the most important predictors of political stability, which in turn is the single most critical element in the containment of fanaticism and terrorism. One innovative idea now before the U.S. Congress does exactly that -- the creation of Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (ROZ) in Afghanistan and Pakistan's border region with Afghanistan, including the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). Mr. Haqqani is Pakistan's ambassador to the U.S. Mr. Jawad is Afghanistan's ambassador to the U.S.

A trade-first Pakistan policy: Instead of more aid increases, U.S. should drop high tariffs on clothing, leather and textile industries - Robert M. Hathaway and Edward Gresser, Baltimore Sun

Victory over jihadists: Rooting out the real strategic threat around the globe - Bernard I. Finel, Washington Times: We need better tools to pressure the Pakistani government to live up to its obligations to control its territory, and ultimately there will need to be a political process in Afghanistan that somehow blunts the momentum of the Taliban.

Iraq Political Progress - Review and Outlook, Wall Street Journal: Whoever wins the White House next year would imperil the recent gains by drawing down American forces before Iraq holds provincial and national elections. They're needed to ensure security and guard against sectarian backsliding.

Poisonous Patriotism - David Satter, Forbes: The official Russian media today is saturated with anti-Western propaganda. Targets include plans for NATO membership for Georgia and Ukraine and the placement of anti-ballistic missiles in Eastern Europe. Photo from Juan Cole’s Informed Comment
Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion


Burma's unfinished revolution – Editorial, Boston Globe: President Bush, encouraged by Laura Bush, who met recently with refugees on the Thailand side of the Burmese border, has said all the right things about Burma. The next president will have to persuade China, India, and Thailand to join in pressuring the junta permit a genuine transition to democracy.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

September 25


"President Bush made a farewell speech in front of the United Nations General Assembly. You know, the President is not an eloquent speaker, but I thought he spoke quite powerfully today, especially at the end of his speech when he looked out at all the delegates representing all the nations of the world and . . . said, 'Can we borrow some money?'"

--Talk show host Jimmy Kimmel

"It is very much being able to look off the tip of Alaska … Metaphorically, I'm talking about."

--A Sarah Palin aide, regarding the Republican Vice Presidential candidate’s foreign-policy experience

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Senator Brownback Introduced Legislation That Would Abolish the Broadcasting Board of Governors – Ted Lipien, Free Media Online: U.S. Senator Sam Brownback (R-KA) introduced legislation that would establish the National Center for Strategic Communications, an agency similar to the now defunct U.S. Information Agency. Brownback’s proposal would abolish the existing Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy at the State Department and the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG). Their functions would be transferred to the new National Center for Strategic Communications where they would be managed by single director.

A Reliance on Soft Power - Reforming the Public Diplomacy Bureaucracy - Testimony of the Honorable Douglas Bereuter, Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia, U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
SEE ALSO

New: Assistant Secretary of State for International Information Programs (IIP) - MountainRunner: “A new post has been established at the State Department: Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of International Information Programs (IIP). The President nominated Mike Doran, currently Deputy Assistant Secretary for Support to Public Diplomacy at Defense, for this new position. The elevation of the leadership of IIP will undoubtedly strengthen the bureau, even if Mike doesn’t get confirmed. … Interestingly, it comes the day after the Brownback bill was introduced in the Senate. This bill, which is intended to provoke discussion (it has) rips out all of Public Diplomacy, eliminates the Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy job (the language of the bill, number forthcoming, doesn’t indicate the if an Under Secretary is reconstituted for Public Affairs or a lesser position is to be created), repeals the Smith-Mundt provision preventing domestic dissemination, defines Strategic Communication and its goals, creates a National Center for Strategic Communication (NCSC) based largely on the National Center for Counter Terrorism (NCTC), among other things.”

Bipartisan Group of U.S. Leaders Calls for 'Changed Course' in Relations With the Muslim WorldMarketWatch: The bipartisan Leadership Group of the U.S.-Muslim Engagement Project released its report entitled Changing Course: A New Direction for U.S. Relations with the Muslim World. The report argues that the Global War on Terror has been an inadequate framework for improving our security and preventing future 9/11s. It proposes a comprehensive strategy with concrete actions to reverse extremism, increase U.S. and international security and improve U.S. relations with Muslim countries and communities. It proposes, inter alia, to transform public diplomacy by dramatically expanding government-civil society partnerships, people-to-people exchange and cultural engagement and education.

Buried Draft Post from April 2007: “Entrepreneurial Public Diplomacy” as 5GWPurpleSlog: “Phil writes a comment at Mountain Runner on public diplomacy that is very interesting: We are all aware of how non-state actors like al-Qaeda and Hezbollah can run more effective PD operations than the most advanced states. There is a lesson in this. The solution to our PD problem will not come from government, rather it will come from citizens who have an interest in public diplomacy who will take the initiative and use the technology we all have access to and just do it. We need to start thinking in terms of an “entrepreneurial public diplomacy.”

Signing Ceremony of MOU Treaty - Press Release, U.S. Department of State: “Deputy Secretary Graffy: My name is Colleen Graffy and I am the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy in the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs. The Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte and the Foreign Minister of Ireland Micheál Martin are signing today the memorandum of understanding between the governments of the United States of America and the Government of Ireland on a 12-month Intern Work and Travel Pilot Program.”

U.S. Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation Awards Support Major Projects at Cultural Sites in Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Guatemala - Media Note, Office of the Spokesman, U.S. Department of State: Washington, DC: “The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) is pleased to announce awards of more than $2.2 million for major cultural preservation projects in Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Guatemala through the U.S. Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation. These awards for large-scale preservation projects at cultural sites are the first of their kind in the history of the Ambassadors Fund program.”

Jazz Diplomacy for Troubled Times - jazz.com: The Rhythm Road represents one of the ways in which Jazz at Lincoln Center (JALC), and for that matter, U.S. diplomacy, are quietly changing at the grassroots. "It's important for people to understand the United States through our culture, which really allows for diversity and freedom of expression," said the State Department's Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Professional and Cultural Exchanges, Alina Romanowski.

Visa Waiver Program Hearing Should Consider DHS Progress toward Increased Security
- Jena Baker McNeill, Heritage Foundation Web Memo #2076: The Visa Waiver Program (VWP), which allows citizens from pre-approved countries to travel to the U.S. for up to 90 days without a visa, is a fabulous way to accomplish several important goals: building a community of free nationals; fueling economic, cultural, and social ties; and increasing American public diplomacy.

Nepal to Participate in Democracy Video Challenge
- THT Online: On September 15, 2008, the United Nations’ first International Day of Democracy, the US Department of State and private sector partners launched a worldwide video competition aimed at enhancing the global dialogue on democracy. The US Embassy in Kathmandu in a release said that Nepal was among the first countries enrolled in the challenge and all Nepalis were invited to participate in the contest.

Primorsky Society of Russian-Chinese Friendship celebrates a 50th anniversary - Vladivostok News: On the 25th of September the Primorsky Society of Russian-Chinese Friendship celebrates its 50th anniversary. The event that took place in FENU attracted students, activists and scientists. According to Mikhail Titarenko, the chairman of the central society of Russian-Chinese friendship, the members of this society have successfully pulled off the assigned tasks. He expressed his thanks to the members who have transformed the neighborly Russian-Chinese relations into the strategic by means of public diplomacy.

America's role in South-east Asia - Tommy Koh, Strait Times: “Here is what I would tell either a President John McCain or a President Barack Obama: … America's interests would be better served if it were to exercise its public diplomacy effectively. We urge you to launch programmes to build cultural, artistic and intellectual bridges between the US and South-east Asia. Americans should and can compete with the Alliance Francaise, British Council, Goethe Institute and the Confucius Institute.” The writer, Singapore's Ambassador-At-Large, is chairman of the Institute of Policy Studies.

Malaysia Needs To Strengthen Its Public Diplomacy Programmes - Salmy Hashim, bernama.com: “Malaysia needs to strengthen its information and public diplomacy programmes overseas to reposition the country as a robust and forward-looking nation, Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim said … Malaysia is currently in the spotlight over the power struggle between the ruling Barisan Nasional and the Pakatan Rakyat. The West, including the United States, had sometimes issued caustic remarks over recent political developments in Malaysia.”

Israeli Opinion Leaders visit NATO HQ – News, North Atlantic Treaty Organization: On 15 September 2008, NATO’s Public Diplomacy Division organized, in the context of the public diplomacy activities for the Mediterranean Dialogue, a visit to NATO Headquarters of high level opinion leaders from Israel.

American University Hosts Region's Largest International Affairs Graduate School Fair - Media Newswire: American University's School of International Service will host the Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs (APSIA) graduate admissions fair for prospective students from 4 to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 14, in the Katzen Arts Center. APSIA students receive substantive research and policy-oriented training and education, including in public diplomacy.

Institute for European Defence and Strategic Studies - Pinkindustry’s Weblog: “The Institute for European Defence and Strategic Studies (IEDSS) was set up in London in 1979 ostensibly to study political change in Europe and to assess its impact on strategic and defence issues. It was particularly concerned with those developments which affected the Western Alliance. In the case of the IEDSS the Heritage Foundation provided start-up capital and the overwhelming bulk of continued financial support … [was] regarded as being part of US public diplomacy.”

Grassroot Institute Selects New Analyst: Georgetown Grad to tackle Public Policy Issues - Tom McAuliffe, Hawaii Reporter: The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii announced yesterday that Pearl Hahn has joined the organization as a Policy Analyst. Hahn is a graduate of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and Government. She has also held positions at The Department of Homeland Security and the Public Diplomacy Council.

RELATED ITEMS

Flight of the Diplomats: Midlevel foreign-service officers are fleeing the US State Department in droves. Guess who's taking their place? - Joshua Kurlantzick, Mother Jones: Across the world, the brain drain has left US embassies understaffed -- nearly 1 in 6 positions is vacant -- and in the hands of inexperienced people.

No Bailout for Ailing Peace Corps - William Fisher, Global Geopolitics Net Sites/IPS: As the U.S. government continues its planning for a 700-billion-dollar bailout of the financial sector, the Peace Corps -- one of the United States’ most successful foreign policy programs -- is being cut back due to a budget shortfall of 18 million dollars. Foreign policy experts have expressed dismay at the programme’s current dilemma.

GfK Roper Public Affairs & Media and Simon Anholt Release Global Reputation Study Ranking 50 CountriesPRNewswire: Germany is viewed as the best overall "brand," receiving the highest ranking of the 50 nations measured. The United States ranks seventh overall behind Germany, France, U.K., Canada, Japan and Italy, respectively.

Wall Street's Blow to U.S. Prestige?: The surprising answer is no. Most business people still view the U.S. as a beacon of free enterprise and praise its swift response to the crisis - Jack Ewing, Business Week: As the world grapples with the fallout from Wall Street's shenanigans, there's no shortage of consternation, and even anger. But so far the international image of the U.S. economic model has shown amazing resilience.

Park Avenue diplomacy - Maureen Dowd, International Herald Tribune: After losing its moral superiority abroad with phony evidence for attacking Iraq, the U.S. has now lost its moral superiority in the financial arena.

International doubts – Editorial, Washington Times: The Bush bailout is perceived as a band-aid to complex economic problems that cannot be solved by simply shifting the financial responsibility onto taxpayers. The very foundations of American capitalism are being tested in this crisis. By changing the rules rather than letting bad investors reap the consequences for their actions, the Bush administration is telling the world that America no longer has a fair and free economy: We make up the rules as we go.

Palin’s American Exception - Roger Cohen, New York Times: “American exceptionalism, taken to extremes, leaves you without the allies you need (Iraq), without the influence you want (Iran) and without any notion of risk (Wall Street). The only exceptionalism that resonates, as Obama put it to me last year, is one ‘based on our Constitution, our principles, our values and our ideals.’”

Neocons, Ex-Israeli Diplomats Push Islamophobic Video - Ali Gharib, antiwar.com: Critics allege that the movie "Obsession" is "hate propaganda" which paints Muslims as violent extremists and, among other things, explicitly compares the threat posed by radical Islam to that of Nazi Germany in the 1930s.

New Censors’ Obsession: The truth is out there. It may be suppressed - Seth Leibsohn, National Review: Obsession was put together in the aftermath of 9/11/01 to help educate Americans and other English speakers about the roots and methods of terrorism, the uses of propaganda in the Middle East, and the tactics of recruitment — including the recruitment of children and suicide bombers (too often, the same thing). It was one of many civilian-distributed educational efforts that sprung up after 9/11 to help educate on a topic of obvious concern and too little knowledge.

Wise advice from the old pros – Editorial, Boston Globe: If the presidential candidates and their advisers took seriously their rhetoric about the value of experience, they would heed what five former secretaries of state said last week about United States policy toward Iran. During a forum at George Washington University, Henry Kissinger, James Baker, Warren Christopher, Madeleine Albright, and Colin Powell all agreed that the United States should open high-level talks with the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Obama goes over the top in bashing Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: Once again, U.S. politicians, including both Sarah Palin and Barack Obama, pile on the Iranian president. Why does Larry King (!) sound like the adult in the room? - Juan Cole, Salon: It is clear that for the U.S. to go to war over an imaginary threat of genocide (Iran does not have the ability to kill large numbers of Israelis and consistently denies that it wants to) at a time when its military is overstretched by two protracted guerrilla wars, when its financial system is near collapse, and when the resulting run-up in oil prices would cripple the U.S. and world economies would be a folly so great that only a lunatic would contemplate it.

Appease Iran? - Daniel Pipes, Jerusalem Post: Post-1917 and after the Bolshevik Revolution concessions failed to mollify the new kind of ideologically-driven enemy -- Hitler in the 1930s, Brezhnev in the 1970s, Arafat and Kim Jong-Il in the 1990s, and now, Khamene'i and Ahmadinejad.

Dining with the Enemy: What do you serve an Iranian Islamist who is hungry for power? - Clifford D. May, National Review: In recent days, Iran’s military has been testing those missiles, launching them from ships in the Caspian Sea. Could they be developing the skills needed to target an American city? Despite all this, a group of left-leaning American religious leaders this week invited Ahmadinejad to dinner. The Mennonite Central Committee, the World Council of Churches, and the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker group, billed the event as a “dialogue.”

Decency, Toughness ... and No Shortcuts
- Bing West, Atlantic: The basic cause of the turnaround in Iraq was the decency and strength of the American troops whom the Sunnis came to know on the streets.

What the Russians Left In Their Wake in Georgia - Melik Kaylan, Wall Street Journal: Alongside the various human atrocities, such as the bombing and purging of civilian areas, the invaders looted and destroyed numerous historical sites, some of which were profoundly revered by the Georgians as sacred building blocks in their national identity.

Rice admits Bush officials held White House talks on CIA interrogations: Her written statement to Senate investigators is the first official high-level acknowledgment of meetings that led to harsh methods such as waterboarding - Greg Miller, Los Angeles Times


Condi Veep Rumors Never Really Die; They Get Reborn with Down Syndrome - Princess Sparkle Pony's Photo Blog: I keep track of Condoleezza's hairdo so you don't have to

Does the Cold War Have Lessons for Today? [review of For the Soul of Mankind - Melvyn P. Leffler] - Carolyn Eisenberg, Truthdig: Mikhail Gorbachev had a dream, and it was of a safer world in which military alliances would disappear and the habit of using force was replaced by a habit of diplomacy. Yet the Americans never bought into Gorbachev’s vision. Instead, they took the occasion of Soviet collapse to engage in new interventions and to build up NATO close to its borders. The Russian attack on Georgia is the unhappy consequence of American provocation.

ONE MORE QUOTATION

"Those who are most susceptible to propaganda (and advertising) are the intellectuals...In fact, those who are fascinated by technique are the intellectuals, the technicians, the scientists, the upper classes, the journalists, the various shapers of public opinion, the artists, the priests and pastors (when they want the church to change and to adjust to modern tastes), the responsible economists (bankers, etc.), the professors (who have suffered enough from being told that their teaching is worthless!), and the high-level administrators. These are the ones who are fascinated and who show no critical spirit, or who, when they believe (like many artists) that they are engaging in violent criticism of our society, fail to see that they are simply reproducing in a kind of parody the technical world itself with all its perversity, thus strengthening the perverse effects and in so doing reinforcing the myth."

--Philosopher Jacques Ellul

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Advice to a Young Diplomat Assigned to Serve in the USA



Advice to a Young Diplomat
Assigned to Serve in the USA

From


A Former Chief of Mission of Country “X” in Washington


1. Immerse yourself, as soon as you arrive, in day-time American TV. If you’re pressed for time, and cannot watch soap operas, focus on Tyra; Jerry Springer TV; Judge Judy on FOX; and Oprah for mental stimulation. These programs, media wonders that they are (and they are so professionally produced!), are the America-is-all-that-exists miracle-drug that spares so-called ordinary Americans from imagining that they are not the only people on earth. The basic premise of these shows is “Let’s talk about something interesting -- let’s talk about me, me, me, my personal and weight problems.” (True, Oprah is popular outside the United States, including in traditional societies like Saudi Arabia; this does suggest the me-and-my-problems syndrome is not unique to American soil, although in the United States it has become a national infatuation).

2. Forget major dailies; remember the person Americans elected twice for president, George W. Bush, proclaimed he didn’t read newspapers. Don’t waste your time establishing contact with universities or think-tanks. These establishments, no matter what their political leanings, are essentially American intellectual GULAGs separated from the Tee-Vee constructed hyper-reality of American life. With websites far less popular than those devoted to pornography or entertainment, these egghead refuges (similar to those for nearly-extinct wildlife, if you think the GULAG metaphor is in bad taste) exist mostly to keep critical thought and the American biosphere separate, so as not to threaten the status quo created by the mass media in the service of the lobbies that sponsor these establishments’ existence. (You can, however, get one of the best lunch sandwiches in Washington at the American Enterprise Institute, so do go there to spare our Embassy cafeteria expenses).

3. Study the DVD, “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan,” so you’ll be prepared on how Americans will view you as a foreigner. In the USA, always remember, no matter how friendly and welcoming eternally smiling Americans may appear to be on the surface (only TSA personnel at airports make no pretence of civility), you are considered essentially someone from another planet, an alien (the designation says it all), a "Borat,” even if where you come from is somewhat familiar (or you think it is) to Americans. By the way, if a country -- let us hope it is not ours, unless we get massive amounts of aid after we are "shocked and awed" -- is at war with the U.S., by all means don’t expect US citizens to know its location on a map, despite the famous words of the 19th century writer Ambrose Bierce, “War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.” Worthy of note here is the observation of an Austrian diplomat known to our Embassy, who once said that he was grateful for the election of Arnold Schwarzenegger as Governor of California because at last Americans were no longer confusing Austria with Australia.

4. Don't speak standard English. As for the language spoken in America, the tongue formerly known as English, you should know that in the U.S. among the young it has been transformed into a series of meaningless, unrelated utterances such as “like,” “you know,” “whatever,” prevalent among cell phones users with nasal screeches that can crack windows. When you address Americans of any age, be sure not, repeat not, to speak "grammatically," as this may sound "elitist," i.e. foreign and suspicious. As for the verbal constructions employed by adult native US speakers in your meetings with them, their words (it is unlikely that they will use complete sentences) will be parrot-like repetitions of "talking points," “strategic communication,” advertising slogans, Bill O’Reilly talk shows, and George W. Bush press conferences.

5. Never, never speak a foreign language. The United States is a land of immigrants -- indeed, that is the key to America's global success -- with varying linguistic backgrounds. But in part because so many Americans are abandoning speech as a form of public discourse (much preferring media-produced images and sound bites, just as they chose junk food over real food; see below no. 6), they -- including those Americans who are the children of immigrants -- feel extremely uncomfortable with foreigners who actually engage in any kind of conversation that is not in their version of "English." Only one percent of US college undergraduates go overseas to study; while these students, no doubt, believe that their experiences abroad have expanded their horizons, don’t be surprised if many of them, despite their academic veneer, basically agree with the well-known statement to the effect that, “English: if it was good enough for Jesus, it’s good enough for me.” So be ready, during your stay in the U.S., to assume that your native language is a figment of your imagination, even if your colleagues at our Embassy may entice you speak it.

6. Drive, drive, drive: In America, never use public transportation, so contrary to the car cult in the United States. Get on the pot-holed, litter-filled superhighways as often as you can, drive for miles and miles to nowhere, using gasoline to the maximum, and, from your car window, observe as you speed along how Americans and their families live their lives inside their vehicles, drinking sugar-soaked sodas (with ice so that they don't have to taste them), munching junk snacks made out of God-knows-what, listening to ear-busting pop-"music" or looking at mindless videos, ignoring one another while "communicating" with non-present others via cell phones, all the while sitting, immobile, with safety-belts around them, like straight-jacketed patients in an insane asylum. Often stop at filthy, third-world rest-stops and gas stations, taking careful note of how Americans react to rising gasoline prices; this is valuable information for our Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the state of public opinion in the United States -- and how on oil may determine the presidential election (see below, no. 10).

7. Join a Fitness Club. Some Americans, especially from the middle and upper-middle classes, hoping to jumpstart their professional advancement by their outward appearance, on occasion do get out of their car(s) to exercise at fitness clubs. Be sure to become a member of such an institution; you will gain valuable insights on the relationship between the sexes in the U.S. Somewhat-naked men and women, as a rule young, sweatily work out together on machines -- contrived by what appears to be a close cousin of the Marquis de Sade -- in proximity; but physical contact is taboo, and overt flirting equally verboten. Americans retain a puritanical fear of any touching between men and women, especially at a time when women are becoming increasingly involved in the work place and political life. The selection of Sarah Palin as Republican vice presidential candidate is an interesting test case on this matter.

8. Cheer, cheer, cheer USA No. 1. Watch, over and over, Mr. Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” descent on the USS Lincoln on "YouTube” for insights into American patriotism. Get into the mood of it; cheer along with the White House aides and US military on the aircraft carrier so you can understand how “USA no. 1” Americans love “to kick ass” overseas, to use President Bush’s words, if only to see what they consider yet an another quarter in a televised football game. Become a devoted football fan; religiously watch the game every Sunday afternoon and Monday night, reveling in the boring, monotonous sight of overgeared gladiators grunting it out in the name of sport that leaves many of its players maimed for life (indeed, the National Football League [NFL] is a modern-day southern plantation, with people sold and bought; no wonder Dr. Rice, a confidante of Mr. Bush handling his "foreign policy" -- when they are not talking football, their shared passion -- is interested in becoming the NFL's Commissioner). Watch the TV shots of the teams' sidelines, with their countless, over-paid coaches and pumped-up staff, to understand the American way of doing things, marked by senseless overplanning, overkill, confusion, and the use of as much useless technology as possible (as is the case in Iraq and Afghanistan). Make sure you know all the results, statistics, etc. of the latest games so that you can have something to talk about with your American contacts before focusing on what brings you and them together, which is probably about favorable contracts for US firms overseas (football talk is the only superfluous talk Americans allow before getting down to business).

9. Forget about the State Department. US “foreign policy” is determined by White House political operatives, the Defense Department, and lobbyists, mostly for reasons that have nothing to do with the outside world. They’re really all about influence-peddling inside the Beltway and money-making deals. Don’t bother calling the low-ranking State Department “desk officer” in charge of relations with our country except if there’s a problem with the Embassy’s parking spaces. To understand how the decision-making at the Seventh Floor Foggy Bottom really works, and the modus operandi of the current Secretary of State, who some have compared to a robot or Star-Trek character, screen a video of Peter Sellers’ “Being There,” based on a novel by Jerzy Kosinski, a film about a mentally feeble man, addicted to watching television, who earns the reputation of being brilliant because he utters meaningless phrases about gardening that are considered profound.

10. Foreign-policy issues in the presidential elections? Don't bother with them, since most Americans don’t: After all, one of the longest running shows on prime-time television, the War in Iraq, now has low ratings and may be suspended for lack of advertisers and viewers. Use The National Inquirer and other tabloids as a source on crucial issues: whether the candidates wear flag pins; whether they talk about lipstick on pigs; whether they get along with their dysfunctional families/relatives; and, most important, whether they are church-going and fear the Christian God. You might also want to visit blogs for other details about the candidates’ personal lives, a subject that fascinates Americans only slightly less than their own problems with weight and personal relationships (not to speak of their collapsing economy).

P.S. Join a online social network. In this way you can have contact with Americans without having to put up with them in person.













September 24


“'What is his name?,' Palin asked.
'Mirwais,' Karzai responded. 'Mirwais, which means, ‘The Light of the House.’'
'Oh nice,' Palin responded.
'He is the only one we have,' remarked Karzai.

--Liz Cox Barrett, Palin’s “Photo Spray”

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

A Reliance on Smart Power: Reforming the Public Diplomacy Bureaucracy - Elizabeth Bagley (Ambassador) , Vice Chairman, U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy: Testimony before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs’ Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia, U.S. Department of State: “Just over a year ago, the Commission reviewed the extensive recent literature on U.S. public diplomacy and determined that few if any observers had ever sought to 'look under the hood' and study the impact of internal human resources practices and structures on our Nation’s efforts to communicate with foreign publics. … In sum, Mr. Chairman, we found that the State Department:

• recruits smart people, but not necessarily the right people, for the PD career track,
• tests candidates on the wrong knowledge sets,
• trains its officers in the wrong skills, and
• evaluates those officers mostly on the wrong tasks.

In terms of personnel structures:

• State has a PD bureaucracy in Washington that hasn’t been critically examined since the 1999 merger and that may or may not be functioning optimally,
• its overseas public affairs officers are spending the majority of their time administering rather than communicating with foreign publics, and
• meaningful integration of public diplomacy into State Department decision-making and staffing remains elusive.

In short, Mr. Chairman, we’re not 'getting the people part right.' Let me now take up each of these points in a little more detail.”

SEE ALSO: John Brown, review of Getting the People Part Right: A Report on the Human Resources Dimension of U.S. Public Diplomacy by The United States Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy (2008), American Diplomacy

Senior diplomats in short supply - Kellie Lunney, Governmentexectuvie.com: The Foreign Service needs more senior public diplomacy officers, a top State Department official told a congressional panel on Tuesday. "On the public diplomacy side, there is some positive news, but it's a grim picture overall," Amb. Scott DeLisi, director of career development and assignments in State's Bureau of Human Resources, said before a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs subcommittee.
SEE ALSO Mountain Runner

Brownback introduces public diplomacy legislation - Fort Scott Tribune, KS: Senator Sam Brownback today introduced legislation that would establish the National Center for Strategic Communications, an agency similar to the now defunct U.S. Information Agency. In addition to establishing a new public diplomacy agency, Brownback's proposal would abolish the existing Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy at the State Department and the Broadcasting Board of Governors. Their functions would be transferred to the new National Center for Strategic Communications where they would be managed by single director.

Zimbabwe: charges against VOA stringer dropped - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy

Rep. Joe Rice Appointed To Board for Sister Cities International - Colorado House Democrats: State Representative Joe Rice (D-Littleton) was recently appointed to the Board of Directors for Sister Cities International, a non-profit citizen diplomacy network that creates and strengthens partnerships between U.S. and international communities. His responsibilities include setting policy for the organization and assisting members from over 700 communities in conducting educational, professional, and cultural exchange public diplomacy programs.

Alcoa President Klaus Kleinfeld and HRH Princess Ghida Talal of Jordan Honored at Institute of International Education Gala Dinner - AScribe Newswire: Dr. Henry Jarecki, IIE Board members and co-founders of IIE's Scholar Rescue Fund: "With her husband, HRH Prince Talal, the Princess has played a seminal role in launching the Iraq Scholar Rescue Project, which rescues persecuted scholars from Iraq and finds them safe haven at host universities within the Middle East region until they can safely return to rebuild their country." IIE's President and CEO Allan Goodman introduced special guest Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James K. Glassman.

A ´Community Organizer´ Frame of Mind - Yossef Ben-Meir, American Chronicle, CA: Community organizers know that public trust is generated in reaction to the empowerment people feel when their ideas for projects are implemented and the benefits are tangible; this may inform, at least in part, the approaches of community organizers to public diplomacy, the "war of ideas," and addressing root causes of of terrorism.

Philosophy and Real Politics by Raymond Geuss – Book Description, Princeton University Press: “Introduction: A strong ‘Kantian’ strand is visible in much contemporary political theory, and even perhaps in some real political practice. This strand expresses itself in the highly moralised tone in which some public diplomacy is conducted, at any rate in the English-speaking world, and also in the popularity among political philosophers of the slogan ‘Politics is applied ethics.’”

'Iran's request to join UNSC is absurd'Jerusalem Post: The morning after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's anti-Israel speech at the UN General Assembly, Foreign Minister and new Kadima leader Tzipi Livni said it was absurd that Iran was asking to join the UN Security Council. The consul-general in New York, Assi Shariv, said that "the most striking thing was that Ahmadinejad got a round of applause after his awful speech." Speaking to Army Radio, Shariv said that Israel was exerting great efforts in public diplomacy.

Catherine Fieschi announced as Director of The British Council's Think Tank Counterpoint - M/D/M Redaction alpha-2.info: The British Council is delighted to announce the appointment of Catherine Fieschi as Director of Counterpoint, the British Council's cultural relations think tank.

RELATED ITEMS

US Election Watchers, Home and Afar - Melinda Brouwer, Foreign Policy Association: Public Diplomacy and the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election: The folks at PBS’ “Frontline/World,” a national public TV series that focusing on global issues, have been producing material that is highly relevant to this blog’s scope. Their “The World is Watching” series investigates global views of the US presidential election.

Global Electoral College: What if the World Could VoteEconomist: Who do you want as the next president of the United States? Now's your chance to let America know. Cast your vote.

Travel Promotion Act Clears House Committee, Moves Significantly Closer to Final PassageTravel Industry Association: The "Travel Promotion Act," H.R. 3232, introduced by Representatives William Delahunt (D-MA) and Roy Blunt (R-MO) and co-sponsored by 243 additional members of the House of Representatives, establishes a public-private partnership to promote the United States as a premier international travel destination and communicate U.S. security and entry policies. The bill specifies that travel promotion would be paid for -- at no cost to U.S. taxpayers -- by private sector contributions and a modest fee on foreign travelers that do not pay $131 for a visa to enter the United States. Nearly every developed nation in the world spends millions of dollars to attract visitors.

Army Alters Photographs, Issues Them To AP - Megan McGinley, Columbia Journalism Review: Bob Owen, chief photographer of the San Antonio Express-News, notified the AP that the photos of two deceased soldiers, who died in Iraq on Sept. 14, were nearly identical. After inspecting the photographs, the AP confirmed that the images were, indeed, Photoshopped, and issued eliminations on the two photos.

Islamophobia Run Amok – Abukar Arman, American Chronicle, CA: Like Anti-Semitism and racism, Islamophobia is a real phenomenon that cultivates hate among communities, stereotypes a whole group for the acts of a few, and justifies transgression against the innocent. Hate speech and propaganda are often craftily camouflaged as talk radio punditry, political lampooning, speeches, or political infomercial.

Who Is Behind the ‘Radical Islam’ DVD? - Will Evans, Truthdig: Critics are calling the DVD, “Obsession: Radical Islam’s War Against the West,” anti-Muslim hate, or politicking, or both. The DVD is distributed by the Clarion Fund, a nonprofit set up by the film’s producer, Rabbi Raphael Shore. But not much is known about the group. It’s a 501(c)(3) charity, which means it can’t engage in partisan politics.

Hypocrisy 2.0: Islamic groups condemn a macabre anti-Muslim video game - Jonathan Schanzer, Weekly Standard: Kids in the Muslim world are encouraged to be anti-American, anti-Semitic, anti-Israel, and simply hateful to others in the spirit of Islamism.

The Smart Money in Afghanistan - Anne Applebaum, Washington Post: A little bit of money goes a long way in Afghanistan. Too bad so many in the aid community still haven't learned this, after all these years.

Our Generals Almost Cost Us Iraq - Mackubin Thomas Owens, Wall Street Journal: In late 2006, President Bush, like President Lincoln in 1862, adopted a new approach to the war. In Gen. David Petraeus, Mr. Bush found his Ulysses Grant, to execute an operational approach based on sound counterinsurgency doctrine. This new approach has brought the U.S. to the brink of victory.

After Kim Jong Il - B. R. Myers, Atlantic Monthly: We should be thinking less about the transition of North Korean power, and more about the worldview that Kim and all his potential successors have in common.

Pyongyang as Usual - Review & Outlook, Wall Street Journal: The real issues are North Korea's refusal to turn over all of its plutonium, disclose how many nuclear weapons it has and where they are, and come clean on its suspected uranium program.

General Assembly required – Editorial, Boston Globe: Under the influence of Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Bush has become somewhat more willing to advance American interests through multilateral channels. But he remains unaware that international cooperation must be a two-way street - and that his illusions to the contrary have led him to fritter away much of America's influence.

The Buck Stopped Then - James Grant, New York Times: Today’s dollar is faith-based. Since 1971, nothing has stood behind it except the world’s good opinion of the United States. And now, watching the largest American financial institutions quake, and the administration fly from one emergency stopgap to the next, the world is changing its mind. Cartoon from Truthdig.

A Bad Example: How the bailout helps petty tyrants -
Alvaro Vargas Llosa, New Republic: From now on, any petty tyrant anywhere in the world who takes over an industry will shut his critics up by saying that an American administration led by the party of free enterprise has done a de facto nationalization of a good chunk of U.S. capitalism.

Don't sell America's economy short: Despite the current financial crisis, there are many reasons to trust that the U.S. will, as always, rebound - Max Boot, Los Angeles Times

Dear Iraqi Friends - Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times: After a decade of the world being afraid of too much American power, it is now going to be treated to a world of too little American power, as we turn inward to get our house back in order.

A Dialogue and a Discourse on America’s Global Role [review of The End of American Exceptionalism by Andrew J. Bacevich; America And The World: Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy by Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft, moderated by David Ignatius] - Michiko Kakutani, New York Times: Unlike neoconservative ideologues in the current administration, the two former national security advisers say that talks with hostile parties can be a useful tool, and they argue that in the wake of 9/11, the Manichean language employed by President Bush has alienated allies and aggravated resentments in many parts of the world. Mr. Bacevich makes the sweeping assertion that “Bush and those around him have reaffirmed the pre-existing fundamentals of U.S. policy, above all affirming the ideology of national security to which past administrations have long subscribed” -- a dubious assertion he later appears to contest himself in writing about the current White House’s embrace of the radical idea of preventive war.

Watching Oprah from behind the veil - Jeff Jacoby, Boston Globe: They are the multitude of Saudi Arabian women whose devotion to her has made "The Oprah Winfrey Show" -- broadcast twice daily on a Dubai-based satellite channel -- the highest-rated English-language program in the kingdom. Is it any wonder that women trapped in a culture that treats them so wretchedly idolize someone like Oprah, who epitomizes so much that is absent from their lives?


Vintage propaganda posters and ads -
Vintage Ads












AMERICANA (VIDEO)

‘Daily Show’: Baron Von Moneypants – Truthdig: Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s proposed bailout plan carries a price tag of $700 billion, a staggering figure that CNN has helpfully translated into terms that every American can understand by consulting the McDonald’s (apple) pie chart.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

September 23


"I know -- look, I'm sure there are some of my friends out there saying, I thought this guy was a market guy; what happened to him?"

--President George W. Bush

"See, you know the way a bailout works? Here's the way a bailout works. A failed president and a failed Congress invest $700 billion of your money in failed businesses. Believe me, this can't fail."

--Jay Leno

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

G.O.P. Press Release: "How The Democrats Created The Financial Crisis" - M.S. Bellows, Jr., Huffington Post: “Kevin Hassett, … economist with the American Enterprise Institute, … is best known as the coauthor of a bestselling 1999 book titled Dow 36,000: The New Strategy for Profiting From the Coming Rise in the Stock Market, which argued that the stock market was undervalued, advised people to invest heavily in stocks, and predicted that the Dow Jones Industrial Average would rise to 36,000 sometime between 2002 and 2004. … Hassett's coauthor, James K. Glassman, currently serves the Bush Administration as Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs -- a strange little office formerly held by longtime Bush advisor Karen Hughes, whose association with Mr. Bush dates back to his Texas days.”

Bloggers Roundtable with Under Secretary James Glassman - Patricia H. Kushlis, Whirled View: “[I]n my view, if Glassman does one thing in the few remaining months in his tenure, I hope it relates to revitalizing the information infrastructure both at home and in our Embassies abroad. They need to go hand in hand. This desperately needs to happen - particularly in the challenging new media climate - and fast.”

State Department's Fearsome Secret Weapon: State's Trolls 'Push Back' Against Anti-U.S. Bloggers - Nolocontendere, Piglipstick: Looks Better Now: State employs eight professional Internet "trolls" whose job it is to log onto blogs in unfriendly countries and "push back" against what Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James Glassman says is misinformation about the U.S.


State Dept pokes Ahmadineijad - Globo Diplo: “From Wired’s Danger Room (with a killer graphic mock-up, suitable for dorm room framing ...), insights into what looks like the State Department’s ... new tactic in public diplomacy–blogger to blogger. But don’t miss the original source, DipNote’s announcement of the conference call Undersecretary of State Glassman for PD held to discuss 'blogging diplomacy.' … We have heard about PD in Second Life, but this is even more tangible."

Broadcasting Board of Governors Staff Still Works Hard to Make Voice of America Radio Unavailable in Russia and Ukraine but VOA is Fighting Back - Ted Lipien, Free Media Online Blog: “As of now, the BBG executive director is still the most incredible winner by any Washington standards of bureaucratic maneuvering. He managed to eliminate VOA radio broadcasts from Washington to one of the most important world powers despite the overwhelming opposition to this move among the members of Congress of both parties. … The victims of this incredible bureaucratic cabal are the Russian people, U.S. public diplomacy, the U.S. taxpayers, the U.S. Congress, VOA Russian broadcasters, and — ironically — the BBG members themselves who have been embarrassed by their decisions to terminate VOA radio broadcasts to Russia, Georgia, and Ukraine.”

Collaboration and Innovation in Government - Schmilsson Nilsson, DIP's Dispatches from the Imagination Age: “In January 1991 I had my first epiphany about the potential of the Internet to change the world … And it was with this in mind that I set a course to work at the U.S. Information Agency, the State Department's cultural outreach entity. … To my good fortune … I had arrived at a hybrid organization: VOA was part of the USIA but was also an independent news agency with a separate mission that was not easily supported by the technology teams at USIA and the State Department. … The VOA experience was an important one: It illustrated how people with innovative ideas and a drive to change could exact change and creativity to problem-solving.”

A Unified Security Budget for the United States, FY 2009 - Robert Gard, Chris Hellman, Travis Sharp, and Leonor Tomero, Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation: It is recommended that the House and Senate Budget committees create a joint national security subcommittee whose purpose would be "to set spending targets across all major components of the U.S. national security establishment's budget: defense, intelligence, homeland security, and foreign affairs/development/public diplomacy."

Islamabad Bombing I: Brute Force Tactics – Newly Syndicated Author, The Political Conundrum!: The attack on the Embassy in Sanaa, Yemen was a sophisticated, multi-pronged strike that included two carbombs and gunmen. Although the attack took ten lives, it did not penetrate the Embassy itself. There may be lessons learned from this semi-successful attack that can be incorporated into future strikes -- but Embassy security will also adapt. However, the fortress-like status of American Embassies around the world exacts a high price on U.S. efforts to conduct effective public diplomacy.

marijuana leaf belt buckle – Stephanie Evelyn, todaybutbuy: "[T]he daily [State Department] briefing -- where journalistic representatives from both U.S. Media and all the foreign media based in Washington can ask questions on any aspect of U.S. Foreign policy -- has been permamently moved from mid-day (12:30pm or so) to 10:30 a.m. The reason is all about U.S. Public diplomacy for foreign audiences. Having a U.S. Spokesman out there in front of the cameras at 10:30 in the morning Washington time allows the department to get America's message to the Middle East, Europe and even Africa before the end of the business day there.”

How About a Different Kind of Rescue Plan? - William Fisher, The World According To Bill Fisher: “But there is a third, and arguably the most compelling, argument for fully funding the Peace Corps: It is one of our pitifully few foreign policy success stories. There could be no more powerful message about America than volunteers flying off to work in often hostile and dangerous places with no agenda other than helping the less fortunate. When John F. Kennedy launched the Peace Corps in 1961, I was a very junior member of his administration. I was perhaps too inexperienced to fully appreciate the enormous potency of low-profile person-to-person public diplomacy.”

Iftar with the Ambassador - Schmilsson Nilsson, DIP's Dispatches from the Imagination Age: “Cynthia Schneider told us before we left that we had to meet with Tilly de Groot at the U.S. Embassy in The Hague. … So it was not without some irony and much happiness on our part that it was Tilly de Groot who would invite us to the Iftar dinner. Of the embassies I've either worked in or visited, there has always been one local employee at the embassy (a "foreign service national" as they are affectionately called in state department lingo) who really seems to run the place. They know everyone in the city (and country).“

Fran Drescher Skit for Episode 2, KindaLateShow Writer's Room: “Here is Madhuri's skit that will be airing live this Sunday as the opener. … in other news, actress FranDrescher has been named the new U.S. Public Diplomacy Envoy. At the moment Ms. Drescher is touring Iraq, with the aim of promoting America’s public image abroad. We join her now live from Baghdad.”

Georgia Tech Opens New EU Academic Center - Mike Rast Jr., GlobalAtlanta, GA: The Georgia Institute of Technology hosted members of Atlanta’s diplomatic, business and educational communities at a reception opening its European Union Center of Excellence Sept. 19. Anthony Smallwood, head of press and public diplomacy for the EU delegation in Washington, attended the opening. He said Americans talk a lot about dealing with different European countries, but not much about dealing with the EU as a body.

Liberals Offer Income-Averaging for Artists, Total Reinvestment in the Arts – anndouglas, One Woman. One Blog: What one woman and one blog can do: “[Among] the highlights of the arts and cultural reinvestment program that Stéphane Dion unveiled over the weekend: … reinstate funding to the Public Diplomacy Program (PDP), which allows our diplomats overseas to use Canadian artists and cultural personalities to promote Canada and gain access to and influence decision makers.”

Address by Eddie Mbalo (NFVF) at the Intergovernmental Indaba on Film – TPA, The Producers’ Alliance: “Address by CEO of the National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF), Eddie Mbalo at the Intergovernmental Indaba on Film held on Tuesday, 2 September 2008 at the CSIR International Convention Centre. The Director General of the Department of Arts & Culture Mr Themba Wakashe would have given some contextual matter to whet our appetite about the role of the state in film development. As a matter of highlights these are some the points he would have made [include] … Film as means of Public Diplomacy.”

Senate To Hold Confirmation Hearings For New Us Ambassador To Turkey – Mizgîn, Rastî: “It looks like there will be Senate confirmation hearings next Wednesday (24 September) for the next US ambassador to Turkey, James F. Jeffrey … Who is James F. Jeffrey? You can get the official rundown of his career from the State Department … ‘Ambassador Jeffrey, in collaboration with the Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern Affairs, will lead the Bureau's Iran Policy Team and coordinate Bureau public diplomacy and internal management, serving as Acting Assistant Secretary.’”

A Trip to the Embassy, Family Drama, and a Broken Laptop – roamingnome, If you catch me at the border, I got visas in my name -- brian’s travel log: “Last week turned out to be a pretty ‘busy’ week in relative Fiji terms. After luckily checking my email Tuesday afternoon after work I found out I had to be at the embassy at 9:45 in the morning for the security check-in. Our interview was scheduled for 2pm, but I guess plans were changed. I met with the Public Diplomacy Officer who was a really nice guy. After our interview, filmed by my cameraman Samuela, who was a really cool guy I even got to go upstairs to the offices."

RELATED ITEMS

Fossilized Foreign Policy: On the international scene, Barack Obama is five years out of date - Victor Davis Hanson, National Review: If elected, a President Obama would probably not do much differently abroad than what we are doing right now.

Shell oil opens office in Baghdad after 36-year absence - Sam Dagher, International Herald Tribune

Downhill in Afghanistan: The most remote place on earth is now the most dangerous - Jonathan Power, Arab News: Both history and present day activity suggest Afghanistan can never be subdued by outside powers.

Ashes of Empire - Philip Giraldi, antiwar.com: Staying in Afghanistan to stop international terrorism is a fiction, as the presence of U.S. forces has, if anything, served as a magnet and recruiting tool for the insurgents.

Iran Slips Away: Even as its nuclear program accelerates, the impetus to stop it loses steam – Editorial, Washington Post: Amid the financial crisis and the worsening violence in Afghanistan and Pakistan, Iran's nuclear program and Western efforts to stop it have slipped down Washington's list of priorities. That's just what Tehran's ruling mullahs were hoping for.

Remember Iran? - Editorial, New York Times: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice Rice could still make history if she got on a plane to Tehran to deliver an offer of a grand bargain.

Bush's stealthy use of the U.N.: Although publicly he trash-talks the body, he has repeatedly used it to help gain legitimacy for his foreign policy moves - Stephen Schlesinger, Los Angeles Times

Russia's perception of reality - David Stromberg, Jerusalem Post: Putin calls the free press "the propaganda machine of the so-called West" -- this after he systematically took state control of television and newspapers in a country notorious for the murders of journalists during so-called peacetime -- but more telling is the fact that Russia had closed off access to Western media from the devastation of Georgian villages in South Ossetia for which its army provided cover.

Russia engages in 'gangland' diplomacy as it sends warship to the CaribbeanTimes (London): Pavel Felgengauer, a leading Russian defence expert, told The Times: “It’s to show the flag and the finger to the United States. They are offering a sort of gangland deal -- if you get into our territory, then we will get into yours. You leave Georgia and Ukraine to us and we won’t go into the Caribbean, OK?” He described the visit as “first and foremost a propaganda deployment,” pointing out that one of the support vessels was a tug in case either of the warships broke down.

Rear View - Princess Sparkle Pony's Photo Blog: I keep track of Condoleezza's hairdo so you don't have to: “Yes, well... Condi. Condi's still coasting. It's funny that some of you have expressed concern about what I'll do when she's gone, but it should be obvious that she already checked out a long time ago.”

AMERICANA

Political Fashion Face Off: Condi Rice, Michelle Obama - Danielle Bolton, The Black Snob: Politics, Pop Culture and Pretentiousness

MORE QUOTATIONS

"Think of America as a town with one casino, in which the only economic activity is gambling. Most people lose, but the casino keeps lending them more money to play. Eventually, of course, the casino must go bankrupt. At this point, the townspeople people vote to tax themselves in order to bail out the casino. Collectively, the gamblers cannot help but lose; individually they nonetheless hope to win their way out of the hole."

--Spengler, Asia Times

"Dear American:

I need to ask you to support an urgent secret business relationship with a transfer of funds of great magnitude.

I am Ministry of the Treasury of the Republic of America. My country has had crisis that has caused the need for large transfer of funds of 800 billion dollars US. If you would assist me in this transfer, it would be most profitable to you.

I am working with Mr. Phil Gram, lobbyist for UBS, who will be my replacement as Ministry of the Treasury in January. As a Senator, you may know him as the leader of the American banking deregulation movement in the 1990s. This transactin is 100% safe.

This is a matter of great urgency. We need a blank check. We need the funds as quickly as possible. We cannot directly transfer these funds in the names of our close friends because we are constantly under surveillance. My family lawyer advised me that I should look for a reliable and trustworthy person who will act as a next of kin so the funds can be transferred.

Please reply with all of your bank account, IRA and college fund account numbers and those of your children and grandchildren to wallstreetbailout@treasury.gov so that we may transfer your commission for this transaction. After I receive that information, I will respond with detailed information about safeguards that will be used to protect the funds.

Yours Faithfully Minister of Treasury Paulson"

--Hal, Bailout Satire

Monday, September 22, 2008

September 22


"(Reporter Teodor Marjanovic): Can you imagine a street or a square in Baghdad being named after George W. Bush one day?

(Baghdad Mayor Al-Isawi): No."

***
"Charlie Gibson: Now I'd like to get back to the Bush Doctrine. Do you agree with it? And, would you like me to remind you of what it is?

John Kenney: I know that a bush is a shrub. A shrub is a plant. A plant is green. Sometimes it's other colors, I believe, though frankly I'm not sure. Do you see where I'm heading with this?"

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Blogging Diplomacy? - Gary William Murning Online: “I was … especially sceptical when I read today on the US Department of State’s official blog that the US is engaging in 'blogging diplomacy'. … The problem, for me, lies in the fact that these people -- the US Digital Outreach Team -- identify themselves when posting on other people’s blogs as working for the United States Government, something I suppose they naturally have to do. ... From where I’m sitting, it more closely resembles blogging propaganda. And if it looks like that to me, well, I’m sure those with a rather more radical outlook won’t be as easily swayed as James K. Glassman, Under-Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, might hope.”

Storing War Stories - Liz Los, virtualpolitik: “Speaking of the military, I recently learned about the Army's fascinating Flickr site, from where I navigated to the YouTube channel and Twitter hub also run by the Soldiers Media Center. All three social media venues are interesting as efforts at public diplomacy and institutional branding.”

The Spectacle of War: Insurgent video propaganda and Western response - MountainRunner: "The State Department’s world view has largely, with again the notable exception of the dynamic 'new' ideas from Under Secretary Glassman, remained fixed on states when it should have been on states and non-states."

Jihad and the Growing Surrender of American
Counterterrorism - Jeffrey Imm, Family Security Matters, NJ: On July 31st, the Washington Times published an article (ironically titled "War of Ideas") where it interviewed James K. Glassman, the new undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. Mr. Glassman was proud of his efforts within the government to promote Jihad-supporting Al-Sharif as an example of programs to "push back against violent extremist ideology."

Partnership or enduring relationships, what’s the most that can be expected?Wandren PD: “Many current programmes are developed to be heavily centralised, focusing authority on the P[ublic]D[iplomacy] organisation, causing the programme to be reliant on it for coordination and financial support. Inevitably, when funding or official support ceases the initiatives grind to a halt. This in many instances means the impact is limited to the time frame of the funding. Engaging with decentralised or dispersed networks would have the potential to extending the impact, by passing responsibility for the initiative on to others. This has the potential to increase longevity but reduces control, a trade off that would have to be addressed on a case by case basis.”

This Week's Senate Committee Schedule - BobGeiger.com: September 23, 2008 at 02:30 pm: Hearings to examine the elements of the federal government responsible for coordinating our public diplomacy, including their respective missions, organizational structures, workforce, and management. (Oversight of Government Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia Subcommittee.)

The VOA cafeteria is no longer the "Zhivkov” - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: “For decades, we occupants of the VOA headquarters building endured a basement cafeteria that featured indifferent service and even more indifferent food. I dubbed it the 'Zhivkov,' because it was my idea of what the cafeteria at Radio Sofia must have been like during the depths of the Cold War years. For relief, many of us would walk a block to the Skenteris's cafeteria in the Ford Building, one block away. Now we have the Skenteris food service, while the House staffers have been Zhivkov'ed.”

España arenga a sus embajadores - Felipe Santos, diplomacia pública: "El presidente del Gobierno español, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, recibió el pasado lunes 8 de septiembre a los 130 diplomáticos españoles con misión en el extranjero que participaron en la V Conferencia de Embajadores … El eslogan que ha presidido el encuentro de este año era 'Diplomacia Pública y Política Exterior': un tema novedoso en su formulación, pero ni mucho menos en su contenido, que se encontraba entre las prioridades de la política exterior que estableció Zapatero en su discurso del pasado 16 de junio en el Museo del Prado."

公共外交的新时代 -跨越千年的见证人, blog.sina.com.cn: Mentions Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James K. Glassman.

PHIPUBA Topics - caycastanos's journal: 3rd Topic: Assessing the efficacy of public diplomacy through the practice of sister-city diplomacy.

Reggae concerts united states – Williams, saye: “Joe higgs- a look at this great forgotten reggae star, he toured with the wailers for their first united states and band leader, and opening musical act for the concerts. Navy band for europe, will give concerts in three bucharest flagship plays pop, classic rock, hip-hop, reggae, and maintained by the public diplomacy office of the united states.”

Largely outdated thoughts on Doublethink in media – dave, shifting spanner: "Evidence of strategic doublethink in the past has included the widespread support generated by Ronald Reagan for his ‘friendly dictators’ in the 1980s thanks to concerted framing activities by the NSC’s Public Diplomacy arm."

3 classes, 2 presentations, and the sniffles - Paul Rockower, Levantine: “Last weekend, began with a 'glocal' party of my fellow pub-d students at the house of Rima. … Sunday was spent preparing for a presentation for my class on Historical Pub D on the Allied re-education of Japan and Germany (I made a cookbook- recipes for reeducation), then on a group project for my Global Issues Pub D class. … Wednesday was our first group presentation for Global Issues pub d. It is kind of a reality show of Pub D. We get a scenario, and have a week to come up with a project and budget to present in front of the class and 'murder board' … . I stayed in the Comparative Pub D class with Prof. Gilboa, and was really glad I did. Especially for the readings we had. This week, we had China as a case study, and we went into their public diplomacy outreach.”

RELATED ITEMS

Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia on the rise in Europe, decline in US - Jim Lobe, Inter Press Service

Fighting Terrorism With Education -- TAP talks to Sam Carpenter, founder of Kashmir Family Aid, which fights poverty and extremism by building schools in Kashmir - Daniel Strauss, The American Prospect

Bush Crafts a Handoff - Jim Hoagland, Washington Post: For Barack Obama, the winnable war is Afghanistan. John McCain makes the same claim for Iraq.

Events in Iraq muddle candidates' differences - Matthew B. Stannard, San Francisco Chronicle: Obama and McCain are no longer polar opposites on the war in Iraq.

All change in the US's Afghan mission - Syed Saleem Shahzad, Asia Times: With the situation in Afghanistan further than ever from being settled, the U.S. response, much like the financial crisis, is to throw more money and resources at the problem.

Time for a New Pakistan Policy – Alan Bock, antiwar.com: Simply sending money and weapons with no accountability, meddling clumsily with little or no understanding of internal Pakistani politics, and hoping for the best do not a real policy make. It's time to rethink it from the ground up.

Pakistan's contradictory faces: In a country rife with extremism I saw civilized culture and a triumphant human spirit - Teri Rizvi, Christian Science Monitor: “In numerous conversations with Pakistanis during our 10-day trip to Lahore … most didn't talk about the rising tide of violence. … Some see the war on terror as someone else's war, a war America has waged on Islam. Some believe the Taliban should be placated in case the country needs these warriors for its on-again, off-again conflict with India.”

Propaganda Is a Two-Way Street: Iran, Israel, and the looming threat of war - Sadegh Kabeer, antiwar.com: Israeli hawks have no legitimate casus belli for going to war against Iran, and any future act of aggression by either side must be staunchly opposed by antiwar activists.

Iran plays the mediator - Kaveh L. Afrasiabi, Asia Times: Contradicting the United States' negative image of Iran as a rogue state threatening its neighbors, its foreign policy machinery is churning out proactive initiatives aimed at de-escalating tensions in the region, with particular focus on the Caucasus and Central Asia.

Everyone Needs to Worry About Iran - Richard Holbrooke, R. James Woolsey, Dennis B. Ross and Mark D. Wallace, Wall Street Journal: Everyone must understand the danger of a nuclear-armed Iran and mobilize the power of a united American public in opposition.

Don't kowtow to Iran: U.S., Israel face key decisions - Thomas G. McInerney, Washington Times: Where is Winston Churchill? He is nowhere to be found in the Western leadership. However, this may change in the coming elections in Israel and the United States.

A Peace From the Bottom Up - Jackson Diehl, Washington Post: The former Soviet refusenik and Israeli political gadfly Natan Sharansky argues that the United States should focus on building Palestinian civil society rather than backing Abbas.

A better way with Russia – Editorial, Boston Globe: Secretary Of State Condoleezza Rice gave a tough speech Thursday lamenting the "dark turn" in Russia's conduct. Defense Secretary Robert Gates offered a more dispassionate view the same day, noting that there is no real military threat from Russia. American policy would be better shaped by Gates's unflustered view of Russia.

How to Protect Russia From U.S. Contagion - Vladimir Frolov, Moscow Times: Russian leaders are taking sweeping measures to insulate the economy from the financial contagion that is now sucking the United States into an economic black hole.

Castro Looks for a U.S. Lifeline - Mary Anastasia O'Grady, Wall Street Journal: Americans have shown that they are ready to help hurricane victims, but loans that will prolong the power of a despotic and incompetent regime is no way to relieve Cuban misery.

Liberty For Not-All: Rethinking "The Global War on Terror" - James Pinkerton, Huffington Post: We can begin by remembering that terrorism is not an ideology, it is a tactic -- a way for people to kill other people. So the cure for terroristic deeds is not freedom, it is control.

Bill Clinton's Interventionist Legacy: President Clinton may be out of office, but his policies carry on - Steve Chapman, Reason: Most of the complaints made about Bush's foreign policy were also made about Clinton's foreign policy. In many ways, Bush represents a dismal continuation of what went before.

The fleecing of America - Roger Cohen, International Herald Tribune: There's been a steady transfer of wealth away from the United States in a shift most Americans have not yet grasped. But there has been no accompanying transfer of responsibility. New powers are free-riding as if it were still the American century.

US Empire: An Orgy of Debt - Eric Margolis, Toronto Sun/Common Dreams: When great empires run onto the financial rocks, their power quickly ebbs.

Free World Colossus: In the new Cold War, the U.S. is the revolutionary force - Lee Congdon, American Conservative: The United States’ determination to foment democratic revolution in every region of the world can only mean interventions without end and, inevitably, conflict with states unimpressed by democratic dogma.

The American Empire: Too Big to Fail? Who gets bailed out -- and who doesn't – Justin Raimondo, antiwar.com: The very bigness of the American Imperium, the sheer scope of its rulers' ambition, is precisely what is fated to bring about its downfall, and a very messy and painful descent it will surely be.

A New and Revealing Study of the Influence of the Neocons: The Making of Recent U.S. Middle East Policies [review of Stephen J. Sniegoski, The Transparent Cabal: The Neoconservative Agenda, War in the Middle East, and the National Interest of Israel, Enigma Editions, Norfolk, Virginia, 2008] - Bill And Kathleen Christison, Counterpunch: The neocons are also very skilled propagandists and are more than willing to spin “facts” in many situations in ways that often do not leave readers with an honest, unvarnished version of “truth.”

Court Historian: Andrew Roberts, the Anglosphere’s greatest modern mythologist, may be perfectly suited to sanitize the Bush presidency - R.J. Stove, American Conservative: Roberts’s newfound vogue rests almost entirely upon A History of the English-Speaking Peoples Since 1900. Words cannot convey exactly how frightening a man becomes when he turns from historian to propagandist. The Roberts-style revolutionist advocates democratism, sexual liberation, endless war against “Islamofascism,” a Ponzi-scheme economy, and the dictatorship of the Anglo.

AMERICANA

Presidential debate fingerpuppet papercraftboinboing: Here's a free downloadable set of papercraft candidate finger-puppets so that you can stage your own presidential debates.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

September 21


“Chimerica -- and the global asset boom it has created -- will remain a reality and no mere chimera.”

--Niall Ferguson and Moritz Schularick (2007), regarding the symbiotic economic relationship that has developed between the People’s Republic of China and the United States of America

“We are living through the end of a phenomenon that Moritz Schularick of Berlin's Free University and I christened Chimerica’"

--Niall Ferguson (2008)

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

US diplomacy via blogosphere could respond faster – Angelo, hoi polloi: “[Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs] Glassman’s conference call talks of how the US is finding its footing in the untested middle ground of diplomacy. (Do we begin to call this social media diplomacy?) He speaks of a digital outreach team that engaged, via blog posts, the media adviser to Iranian President Ahmadinejad. But what about the rest of the world through the lens of Dipnote? Coverage of India, and China are very slim. What’s its view of civil rights in Myanmar or Sri Lanka, for instance? Not one entry there."

Conference of the public diplomacy bloggers - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: "James Glassman ... convened a teleconference of bloggers to discuss U.S. public diplomacy and especially the State Department competition inviting people around the world to create three-minute videos completing the phrase 'Democracy is... .'" Mr. Elliott’s own comments on the teleconference: "All the important bloggers covering public diplomacy were there. I, of course, was not invited. Didn't even know about it until it popped up in a Google search. Probably just as well, as I don't really think of myself as a ‘blogger.’ And I'm planning to remove ‘public diplomacy’ from the title of this website. Other bloggers … do a better and more thorough job of covering the subject. Furthermore, it is my position that if a nation's international broadcasting is to be successful, it must be credible. And to be credible it must be separate from a nation's public diplomacy. And maybe that's why I am not invited to public diplomacy events.”

9/11 PIPA Poll Watching - Patricia H. Kushlis, Whirled View: “Seems to me that as long as the US is perceived as arrogant, anti-Muslim and militaristic, the more likely foreigners will believe the Al Qaeda line. The first actions the US should take, therefore, to change these perceptions are to declare death to the global war on terror and to shutter Guantanamo. Beyond this, I think the US made a huge mistake in 1999 when it abolished the US Information Agency, the only US governmental institution that coordinated and implemented the media, cultural and educational programs that tended and enhanced America’s public face abroad. … [F]rom what I can see, the fragments of USIA that remain (either under the Broadcasting Board of Governors or the State Department) are ill-equipped, ill-funded, ill-coordinated and ill-staffed to embrace the rapidly changing international media environment effectively.”

Is anti-Americanism a failure of US diplomacy? – cwleonard, Globo Diplo: "We thought a lot about anti-Americanism after 9-11, but the discussion has seemed to wane, perhaps out of frustration. What can be done, anyway? The modern-day Tocqueville, Bernard-Henry Lévy writes an open letter to the next President, touching on higher ed, the case of Russia and IR, and public diplomacy … And don’t miss Nick Cull (11 Apr 2007)–one of the best minds working on public diplomacy–who gives a useful overview of how anti-Americanism fits within this framework….as well as Kenneth Osgood (3 Oct 2007) for a historical view of America’s campaign for ‘hearts and minds’ in the Cold War."

Us Public Diplomacy - Winning Arab Hearts And Minds By Promising To Sell Out Israel - Omri Ceren, Mere Rhetoric: "It's true. Palestinians really hate Bush. I mean, they really, really hate Bush. No matter how much money and military equipment he throws at them, they can't get over his stubborn refusal not to honor dead terrorists. If nothing short of selling out Israel will satisfying the Arab and Muslim world, then how exactly is Obama going to make the Arab and Muslim world like us?"

Ahmadinejad should separate Judaism from Zionism by showing ... - Editor: Myself (English):"The U.S. who has directly or indirectly murdered millions of Iranians (through support for Saddam and also shooting the civilian aeroplane in the 1980s among other things) and intends to starve millions of Iranians to death though its sanctions can never fool Iranians by its silly practices of 'public diplomacy'."

Angry Arab
– Mike, My Humble Ravings: "The New York Times reported that Washington 'insists that the Baghdad government give the United States broad authority to conduct combat operations,' a demand that 'faces a potential buzz saw of opposition from Iraq, with its…deep sensitivities about being seen as a dependent state.' These 'deep sensitivities' are regarded as a form of third world irrationality and emotionalism, which have to be overcome by a well-crafted combination of propaganda (called 'public diplomacy') and coercion."

Conservatives claim to boost arts funding contradicts substantial cuts - Press Release, Liberal.ca, Canada - Following John Baird and Jim Flaherty’s so-called expenditure review in 2006, [Canadian PM] Harper scrapped the $11 million from the public diplomacy budget and cut $4.6 million from the Museum Assistance Program.

Diplonuts and other creatures – Pachoris, Sunday Leader: “[For] the first time in the history of our [Sri Lankan] diplomatic service … one of our diplomats has gone to the extent of promoting another country [Nepal] … very publicly. I have not been in the media vocation long enough to remember most of the post-independence history of our foreign service and what it has done over the years to promote and safeguard the interests of the country it has been called upon to serve. The more senior members of Paradise Club however who have spent decades in the foreign and civil services were hard put to find a single example of this kind of ‘public diplomacy.’"

NATO operation in Afghanistan most complex in Alliance history - Lyubomir Tasev, FOCUS News Agency: "The NATO operation in Afghanistan is the most complex one in the Alliance’s almost 60-year history, official of the Public Diplomacy department told journalists, quoted by Focus News Agency’s correspondent. … The official has noted the key message NATO has to sent to the public is that Afghanistan will not be won or lost by military means, and that it all boils down to politics."

Danish diplomat missing after bombing - Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia: A Danish diplomat is missing after the devastating suicide bomb attack on the Marriott hotel in Pakistan's capital Islamabad, the Danish foreign ministry said today. "We are concentrating right now on finding the Dane who has been missing since yesterday,'' Klavs Holm, ambassador for public diplomacy at the Danish foreign ministry, said.

RELATED ITEMS

The Spectacle of War: Insurgent video propaganda and Western response - MountainRunner

Public Diplomacy and the 2008 Presidential Elections - Melinda Brouwer, Foreign Policy Association: The Guardian reports from Brazil: “Welcome to Obama-mania, Brazil-style. Few countries have embraced the idea of the US’s first black president as enthusiastically as Brazil, a country with one of the largest Afro-descendant populations on Earth yet where black faces remain a minority in politics.”

A lively Baghdad, back from the dead
- Dexter Filkins, International Herald Tribune: The "surge of American troops is over. The Iraqis are moving to take their country back, yet they wonder what might happen when the Americans' restraining presence is gone.

Truthiness Stages a Comeback - Frank Rich, New York Times: In Bush’s case, the lies lobbed over the heads of the press were to sell the war in Iraq. That propaganda blitz, devised by a secret White House Iraq Group that included Rove, was a triumph. The twin-pronged strategy of truculence and propaganda that sold Bush and his war could yet work for McCain.

The fleecing of America - Roger Cohen, International Herald Tribune: What have we heard from the new centers of wealth and power -- China, India, Brazil, Russia, the Gulf states - about America's financial agony over the past week? Zilch. Well, not quite. When asked about the crisis, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the Brazilian president, said: "What crisis? Go ask Bush."

Rough Week, But America's Era Goes On - Niall Ferguson, Washington Post: Certainly, if the talk of a "unipolar moment" after the collapse of the Soviet empire was hubris, then the credit crunch has been a very American nemesis. But it is much too early to conclude that the American century is over.

Express Man Who Duped Hitler - Paul Callan, Sunday Express: A new book, Churchill’s Wizards, by broadcaster Nicholas Rankin, tells how writers, journalists and artists created elaborate camouflages and fiendish propaganda to deceive the Germans in two world wars. In the Second World War the British became masters of these dark arts.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

September 20


“Is that a mobile in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?”

--Headline in highwayAfrica

“I have my coffee, and sit, and I watch Oprah. It's my favorite time of day."

Wafa Mohamed, 38, a mother of five from Riyadh

VIDEOS

Tony Blair takes the jokes as TV host Jon Stewart mocks his stance on Bush and the war in Iraq - Times (London)

Blair Shows His Charmingly Imperialist Side - Truthdig

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

State's Trolls 'Push Back' Against Anti-U.S. Bloggers - David Axe, Wired: State employs eight professional Internet "trolls" whose job it is to log onto blogs in unfriendly countries and "push back" against what Glassman says is misinformation about the U.S. … One target of Glassman's trolls is Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's personal blog. "We ... think that our guy made some very telling points," Glassman said.

State Department Digital Debaters = Trolls? - Steven R. Corman, COMOPS Journal: “Writing today in Danger Room, David Axe called members of the State Department’s Digital Outreach Team (DOT) 'trolls' … . Is it reasonable to label the DOT members as 'trolls'? Methinks not. My personal experience with trolls is that they try to completely disrupt an online discussion group, to prevent it from carrying on as usual. They mainly do this by being e-jerks, baiting people into emotional, off topic reactions and flaming. Sometimes they hack boards to delete or change posts, or impersonate other members. Above all, they do all they can to prevent anyone from finding out who they are or where they come from, so there is no chance of retaliation by aggrieved parties.”

Public Diplomacy: Danger Of Protesting Too Much - Avuncular American: An expatriate view of America and the world from Europe by former diplomat Gerald Loftus: “In a very laudable initiative, the US State Department's Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy James Glassman engaged with bloggers the other day (I was invited, but the conference call machinery didn't succeed in reaching me in Brussels). Glassman … gets points for attempting a mighty hard task: convincing the world, despite much evidence to the contrary, that America wants to listen.”

Bloggers’ Tele-Conference with Glassman: Blogging Diplomacy with Iran – Alex Belida, VOA News Blog: The VOA News Blog was invited to take part as were several prominent bloggers who routinely write about public diplomacy and strategic communications issues. Much of the session focused on Iran and included a discussion of a recent online exchange between a member of the State Department’s Digital Outreach Team and a senior Iranian official.

Open-Thread is still open, and what about USIA 2.0, USAID, and moreMountainRunner: “I find it interesting that while there’s a fair amount of talk about a USIA 2.0, or as I call it, the Department of Non-State (details forthcoming), nobody’s suggested a person to lead it. Perhaps they’re assuming the entire PD apparatus will be ripped from State, leaving DOS absolutely no effective means of international engagement? Will the same disruption happen at DOD or will they continue to own direct engagement? And if separating PD and PD-like functions from State is intended to create a more independent, arms-length from policy apparatus, then what about the tactical requirements that the arms-length Dept of Non-State can’t and won’t fulfill?”

Guinea: United States, Country Enjoy Robust Relationship On Central Issues - AllAfrica.com, Washington: Phillip Carter III, the former U.S. ambassador to Guinea, said the United States is working to use public diplomacy resources and help from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the international donor community to support the effort that everything is done to ensure the upcoming parliamentary elections in Guinea are "the most transparent, the most democratic" elections possible.

Fire as a Tool of Terror - Theterrorwonk: Fire Diplomacy: The potential vulnerability in the less developed countries to arson should be addressed, first because it is a humanitarian issue, but also because it is an important opportunity for public diplomacy. Firemen worldwide quickly find common ground based on the essentials of their profession. Consequently, fire safety, prevention, and mitigation are potentially fruitful realms for positive, non-political, international engagement.

U.S. Declining Interest in Sri Lanka an Opportunity to Charter an Independent Path under Rajapaksa Presidency - Daya Gamage, Asian Tribune: "Sri Lanka is in the process of painfully and slowly comprehending that the United States does not consider Tamil Tigers in any way connected to the ‘Global War on Terrorism’ despite the Sri Lankan separatist/terrorists operate internationally to procure arms, lethal weapons and technological know how, heavily lobby policymakers of western nations using very effective public diplomacy tool and the use of front organizations manned by LTTE professional acolytes in Western Capitals."

Jamie Ferrell '08 Awarded Surprise Fulbright Teaching Assistantship to Chile - Rockbridge Weekly, VA: Washington and Lee '08 graduate Jamie Ferrell feels that Fulbright assistantship "allows me to serve as sort of a U.S. cultural ambassador to Chile while also being able to immerse myself in Chilean life and culture. This opportunity will serve me well in my future career - I just found out that I passed my foreign service exam, so I plan to enter the Foreign Service as a public diplomacy officer with the U.S. State Department after I get back from Chile."

Bryan Frost, 23, remembered as free spirit: Friends said they'll remember Idaho native for his happiness, bravery and enthusiasm - Alexander Comisar and Catherine Lyons, Daily Trojan: Bryan Richard Frost, a student in the USC School of Cinematic Arts, died early Thursday morning from stab wounds after a fight several blocks north of campus. He was 23. "He always knew he was the type of guy that was going to do something important," said Peter Winter, a first-year graduate student studying public diplomacy.

Last Train to Texas: The Bushies are back in town - Anthony Zurcher, Texas Observer: Last month, Karen Hughes was named global vice chairwoman of Burson-Marsteller, a public relations firm run by Democratic campaign strategist Mark Penn. Her new clients will presumably expect a greater level of success than Hughes achieved in her previous job, “commuting” to Washington and abroad from her home in Austin as the State Department’s undersecretary of public diplomacy in charge of improving America’s image in the Middle East.

The Zionists Who Dictate White House Policy - Greg Bacon, Goon Squad: In January 2008, Paul Wolfowitz replaced Fred Thompson as chair of the U.S. State Department’s International Security Advisory Board (ISAB), which is tasked with providing State “with independent insight and advice on all aspects of arms control, disarmament, international security, and related aspects of public diplomacy.”

RELATED ITEMS

U.S. criticizes Asian governments' record on religion - AP, USA TODAY: Both China and Myanmar have been classified among "Countries of Particular Concern" since the first State Department religious freedom report came out in 1999. North Korea was added to that category in 2001. The Asian states were among 198 countries and territories included in the 10th annual report.

Indian propaganda against Pakistan & Iran - Jawayria Malik, Pakistan Observer, Pakistan: India is feeding a range of "tailored intelligence" into U.S. system which shapes US political and intelligence perceptions of the situation, encouraging the belief that Pakistan is the problem in resolving the conflict in Afghanistan and now Iran is becoming party to it.

A Modernized Taliban Thrives in Afghanistan: Militia Operates a Parallel Government - Pamela Constable, Washington Post: The new Taliban movement operates Web sites and a 24-hour propaganda apparatus that spins every military incident faster than Afghan and Western officials can manage. The Taliban's revival has been fueled by fast-growing popular dissatisfaction with Karzai's government, which has failed to bring services and security to much of the country. Deepening public resentment against civilian deaths caused by U.S. and NATO alliance airstrikes is another factor.

All Counterinsurgency Is Local
- Thomas H. Johnson and M. Chris Mason, Atlantic: The U.S. engagement in Afghanistan is foundering because of the endemic failure to engage and protect rural villages, and to immunize them against insurgency. Local teams with on-site development personnel -- “District Development Teams,” if you will -- could serve to support nonmilitary development projects. State Department and USAID personnel, along with medics, veterinarians, engineers, agricultural experts, hydrologists, and so on, could live on the local compounds and work in their districts daily, building trust and confidence.

Worry About bin Laden, Not the Taliban – Ivan Leland, Antiwar.com: To deflate the Taliban ascendancy in Afghanistan and Pakistan, most of the US effort should be reoriented to the same policy that has reduced violence in Iraq: paying off your enemies not to fight you.

Afghanistan Isn't Like Iraq” Why A "Surge" Won't Work There - Fred Kaplan, Slate: The U.S. and other countries could pour lots and lots of money into Afghanistan, so the government can equip, train, and pay a much larger national army.

Deadly U.S. airstrike sparks protests in Iraq - Stephen Farrell, International Herald Tribune

Why the Surge Worked
- Matthew Kaminski, Wall Street Journal: Gen. Jack Keane helped conceive the new Iraq war strategy and then sell it to the White House.

Sunni Baghdad Dark on Satellite; Kagan Proved Wrong Again - Juan Cole: Informed Comment: Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion: Satellite imaging that shows Sunni Arab neighborhoods in Baghdad dark gives evidence that the ethnic cleansing of the Sunnis by Shiite militias accounts for the fall in violence in Baghdad, not the extra troops Bush sent, called the “surge.”

Bush's Shifting Ideology: 2nd Term Markedly Different From 1st - Michael Abramowitz and Dan Eggen, Washington Post: Bush has moved away from long-standing positions on a range of foreign and domestic issues. In the final year of his second term, he has reached out diplomatically to North Korea and Iran, and engineered a dramatic midcourse correction on the Iraq war.

The View From Bush's Dead End - Dan Froomkin, washingtonpost.com: A central point of the repeatedly validated Bush critique is that the president (either knowingly or cluelessly, we're still not quite sure) led a massive misinformation and exaggeration campaign that led the nation into supporting the war on false pretenses. That his propaganda campaign worked does not somehow allow Bush to evade his personal responsibility. Quite the contrary.

The Wars of John McCain - Jeffrey Goldberg, Atlantic: In one area Mc Cain has been more or less constant: his belief in the power of war to solve otherwise insoluble problems. Nothing in his experience, recent or not-so-recent, has moved him away from his essential belief that the president has a duty to confront perceived threats well before they reach American shores.

Gunmaker to the world – Editorial, Boston Globe:The United States now provides 52 percent of the world's arms, more than twice the share of second-place Russia. The arms race makes the world a more dangerous place. The next administration needs to cut them to a size that fits the actual dangers of the world.

Spielberg Signs Movie Deal with India's Reliance: The director leaves Viacom's Paramount studio for a $1.2 billion deal to launch his own filmmaking company with the India entertainment group - Ronald Grover, Business Week

Saudi women beat a path to the TV for Oprah - Katherine Zoepf, International Herald Tribune: Today, "The Oprah Winfrey Show," with Arabic subtitles, is broadcast twice each weekday on MBC4, a three-year-old channel developed by the MBC Group with the Arab woman in mind. The show's guests, self-improvement tips, and advice on family relationships -- as well as Winfrey's clothes and changing hairstyles -- are eagerly analyzed by Saudi women from a wide range of social backgrounds and income levels.

IMAGES

Photo Gallery: Group Sex Relief, Spiegel

Friday, September 19, 2008

September 19


“Japanese-designed spectacles? That's foreign policy experience!!!!

--A reader of Princess Sparkle Pony's Photo Blog: I keep track of Condoleezza's hairdo so you don't have to, commenting on presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s eyeware

"Trabi-safari"

--Involves a Berlin sightseeing tour in the notoriously rickety Trabant, ubiquitous passenger car of the GDR.

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Bloggers’ Conference: James K. Glassman, Under Secretary For Public Diplomacy And Public Affairs, Glen Roberts, Moderator, Via Teleconference, Washington, DC September 17, 2008U.S. Department of State: Under Secretary Glassman: “Actually, there are two things that I wanted to talk about today. One is in keeping with our overall strategy and approach, where we believe that in the modern era public diplomacy doesn't work very well if it’s simply preaching at people. And so we want to be a facilitator, a convener; we want to bring people together. … The second thing that I wanted to mention, which I think is a really amazing story, we have … the Digital Outreach Team, which many of you may know about, that started under Karen Hughes’s regime. And the Digital Outreach team … it’s either eight or nine people who are on it who blog. And I say 'blog' advisedly. They don’t have their own blogs, but they enter into digital conversations online either on other people’s blogs or other websites. And they identify themselves as working for the United States Government and they are participating in the conversation.”

Listen to This: Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy Hosts Bloggers’ Call - DipNote Bloggers, Dipnote, U.S Department of State

Blogger Roundtable with Under Secretary Glassman (Updated with links and transcript) - MountainRunner

The Russian bear in America's backyard - Bernd Debusmann, Reuters: "As insults to national pride go, it was a classic -- the American response to Russian plans to send a nuclear battle cruiser and other ships to the Caribbean for exercises with the navy of U.S. enemy Hugo Chavez. 'We'll see if they actually make it there,' State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told a news conference questioner. ... Public diplomacy at its finest? It was in line with the Bush administration's generally dismissive attitude towards Russia and conjured up images of ageing rust buckets, not the flagship of Russia's Northern Fleet, the Pyotr Velikiy (Peter the Great), which entered service 10 years ago."

Secretary Rice Addresses U.S.-Russia Relations At The German Marshall Fund Hotel, Washington, DC - Secretary Condoleezza Rice, Renaissance Mayflower - U.S. Department of State: “[W]e will continue to sponsor Russian students and teachers and judges and journalists, labor leaders and democratic reformers who want to visit America.”

Lamenting the loss of VOA Hindi radio - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy - India has always been a difficult target country for VOA. Television seems to be the route to success for international broadcasting to India.

Jeffrey Gedmin: "Our Iranian Colleagues Believe in Radio Farda's Mission" - Middle East Quarterly: Jeffrey Gedmin,president of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL): "We're doing 'surrogate broadcasting,' providing the Iranian people with news and information their government denies them, information not available through other media. We're using new technologies, too, such as SMS [text messaging]. The regime works hard to jam and block everything we provide. That's one kind of market test.” SEE ALSO: Radio Farda promotes democracy and reports half the news - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy

Transparency is the Antidote to Marketplace Chaos, Says UB Law Scholar - UB News Center, NY: University at Buffalo Law School: Professor David A. Westbrook: “…as a matter of public diplomacy and in its negotiations, the United States has done quite a lot to encourage transparency and to encourage what we see as a favorable business climate, in a range of countries. Of course the U.S. government wants the business climate to be favorable for U.S. investors. But we also believe that a healthy business culture is in everybody's interest -- surely beats numerous familiar alternatives.”

Bad luck, Spain - David Steven, Global Dashboard: "One way or another, it’s bad news for Spain if John McCain makes it to President. Either he doesn’t know where the country is, or he’s going to refuse to meet Spanish leader, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, until he shows a greater dedication to ‘human rights, democracy and freedom.’ This bizarre story, which is going viral in the Spanish language press, springs from an interview where McCain appeared to lump Zapatero with Castro and Chavez - leaders he would be cold shouldering until they mended their wicked ways."

Signal of Shame? – Editorial, New York Sun: Senator Clinton would be wise to reconsider her decision to pull out of a protest rally against President Ahmadinejad. The rally has been called by the National Coalition to Stop Iran Now, the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, and other Jewish groups, who are planning to gather on September 22 outside the United Nations. The Jewish groups are acting because they recognize that the nature of the Iranian's public diplomacy is at its core anti-Semitic in a way more pointed than any such campaign since Hitler.

Business for Diplomatic Action & Thunderbird Team to Offer Program on Global Corporate Diplomacy - Business Wire, MarketWatch: In an age of hyper-globalism and a waning economy, U.S. business must be surefooted in knowing how to engage with the rest of the world to maintain a competitive edge. In response, the nation's top business-led public diplomacy advocate and the No. 1 school of global management education are joining forces to help multinational corporations better understand foreign cultures in order to operate more successfully and diplomatically across borders. Keith Reinhard, president of Business for Diplomatic Action, and Dr. Angel Cabrera, president of Thunderbird School of Global Management, today announced the global launch of CultureSpan: A Workshop in Global Corporate Diplomacy.

USTDA: Director Larry Walther signs grant promoting Romania's energy security - ISRIA, DC: Director Walther awarded a grant today that will assist in diversifying and augmenting Romania's energy supply. The grant was conferred during a signing ceremony held at Public Diplomacy Hall at the U.S. Embassy in Bucharest, Romania.

Dubai's Movie DiplomacyCD News, Institute for Cultural Diplomacy: Last week, Imagenation Abu Dhabi, a government backed subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi Media Company joined Participant Media, a U.S. media company focused on producing movies with a message, among them “Fast Food Nation” and “DarfurNow.” This is one of many steps Dubai has taken in establishing a strong regional and global media presence through successful implementation of public diplomacy, reports Dubai based Khaleej Times.

Main Points of Netherlands' Foreign Affairs Budget - NIS News Bulletin, Netherlands: To improve relations between the West and the Islamic world, more work will be done with public diplomacy and intercultural dialogue.

RELATED ITEMS

The Irrationality of Anti-Americanism : A world gone mad - Joe Loconte, Weekly Standard: Images of America as international gangster gush forth daily from the print and broadcast media of Europe and the Arab world. They help shape the narrative of these societies.

US Hands Over Seized Antiquities to Iraq - Michael Bowman, VOA: Home to what was once ancient Mesopotamia, Iraq has long been a target of looters and thieves intent on stealing the country's treasure trove of antiquities. But a large cache of priceless artifacts has been returned to Iraq's government, thanks to a multi-year initiative by U.S. customs authorities to intercept items being smuggled into the United States.

Bolivia: The Spies Who Spun MeSpin of the Day, Center for Media and Democracy: USAID "is looking to hire a PR firm to tout its work in Bolivia as diplomatic relations have strained with the left-leaning South American country," reports O'Dwyer's. USAID will pay $500,000 for the first year of an up to three year contract, "to highlight its emergency supply efforts, opportunities for the poor, and other economic and social welfare programs it has funded in Bolivia."

Keep Military Aid Separate From Aid Organizations: Even the perception of bias undercuts humanitarian help
- Ken Hackett, Christian Science Monitor: Putting a military veneer on aid violates that basic principle of aid work, the one about alleviating the suffering of all -- not just those on one side of a conflict but anyone affected by it. Ken Hackett is president of Catholic Relief Services.

Why Foreign Language Education Matters - Rep. Rush Holt, Huffington Post: It is no exaggeration to say that bolstering foreign language education for ensuing generations is vital to the U.S.' economic and national security. We could create an Assistant Secretary for International and Foreign Language Education in the Department of Education, who would provide leadership in directing efforts aimed at international and foreign language education.

Obama's Foreign Policy Advantage - Matthew Yglesias, American Prospect: Even though economic issues have elbowed foreign policy out of the headlines, Obama shouldn't forget it.

Has the 'Surge' Brought Us Any Closer to 'Victory'? – Dan Froomkin, Huffington Post: If people continue to think the surge is a success, the result could well be Bush leaving office with a widespread public perception that we're winning in Iraq. But then what happens? What happens is that when things start to get ugly again, when there's a civil war, or a partitioning, or an anti-American strongman comes to power -- i.e. when we inevitably start to "lose" -- Bush could avoid the blame.

Ten National Security Myths – The Editors, Nation: The central lesson of the Bush era: the world does not need strong U.S. leadership so much as it needs constructive U.S. participation as a great power.

Name That Doctrine
- Michael Gerson, Washington Post: The idea that America benefits in the long run from the spread of a liberal, democratic, free-trading world order is not a Bush innovation, it is a post-World War II consensus. Not every tyrant in recent history has been an enemy of America. But every major enemy of America in recent history has been a tyrant. Bush's true innovation was to apply this consensus -- at least occasionally -- to the Arab Middle East.

Reality Catches Up to the Free Market - William Pfaff, Truthdig: Unregulated free-market capitalism may be said to have killed itself by greed, vanity and excess, all amply evident before and at the death scene, but the ultimate guilt must be attributed to the vacuity and perversity of market ideology, which contradicts human nature. In this, it exactly resembles the American national foreign affairs ideology, that democracy will always eventually triumph over all else. Regrettably, this is an illusion, clung to in American governmental, political and, to a considerable degree, academic circles.

Bolivian Crisis in the New South America: The Machine Gun and the Meeting Table - Benjamin Dangl, Counterpunch: Though working to overthrow leftist governments is unfortunately nothing new in South America, region-wide cooperation between left-leaning governments, without the presence of the U.S., is new.

Joined at the Hip: America and China - Dave Lindorff, Counterpunch: America is looking increasingly like China, a country where the state has been gradually getting out of the business of directly owning companies. Chinese citizens may actually be better informed than Americans, having lived for decades under a propaganda model, since they know that they are being lied to by their newsmedia, whereas few Americans realize the extent to which their own media are controlled and acting as government mouthpieces.

The Generals Go Cyber? - Aung Zaw, Wall Street Journal: Burma's military junta has so successfully suppressed the media that Internet sites based outside the country are one of the few remaining sources of reliable news for Burmese people. Now it appears not even those sites are safe.

Russia's Ekho Moskvy Under Mounting Pressure - Daisy Sindelar, RFE/RL: Despite being partially owned by the state gas giant Gazprom, the Ekho Moskvy radio station -- like the "Novaya gazeta" newspaper, as well as the vast, as-yet uncontrolled Internet arena -- forms the last bastion of independent information in Russia.

Russian lawmakers target Halloween, Valentine's Day - Jeffrey Stinson and Yulia Ochetova, USA TODAY: The State Duma, Russia's lower house of parliament, will consider a measure this month to guard students from what the government considers destructive Western influences, such as the two festive celebrations that are growing more popular in Russia.

Letter From Russia: What's in a street name? Moscow is finding out - Sophia Kishkovsky, International Herald Tribune: The office of Mayor Yuri Luzhkov announced that Bolshaya Kommunisticheskaya Ulitsa, or Big Communist Street, actually one of the prettiest, quietest and most well-preserved streets in Moscow, full of elegant pre-revolutionary mansions, is now Ulitsa Solzhenitsyna, or Solzhenitsyn Street.

Caricature and Propaganda: Works by the KuKryNikSy Group of Artists from the Mamontov Collection
artdaily.org: In the USSR, the artists comprising KuKryNikSy were universally popular and received numerous official decorations and awards. Their artistic aims, their choice of subjects and their compositions surely transcend the limits of the official doctrine of Socialist Realism, and their relationship with the pictorial traditions of eighteenth and nineteenth century European art are increasingly being appreciated.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

September 18


“[T]he hotbed of Muslim cultural activity that is the U.S. Embassy in Helsinki!”

--Blogger Toby

"The wise elephant is the epitype of enlightened despotism. Every minister of culture should read the book and learn from it."

--The Times Literary Supplement, regarding Le Musée de Babar

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

With friends like these, the US hardly needs enemies - Roula Khalaf, Financial Times: Determined to claim some success, the Bush team, in its last months in office, says the purpose of public diplomacy is not so much to improve the U.S.’s image as to undermine that of al-Qaeda. But the next U.S. administration will have to keep in mind the fact that carrying out its political objectives effectively in the Arab and Muslim world requires projecting a better image.

Glassman: America Branding Alive and Well - Steven R. Corman, COMOPS journal: “Earlier today I pa[r]ticipated in a bloggers’ roundtable with Assistant Undersecretary of State James Glassman. My question for him was whether the U.S. National Strategy for Public Diplomacy and Strategic Communication (NSPDSC) is still in force. … I took it from his recent public statements that we would not be focusing on selling Brand America, but on suppressing sales of the competing brands. Now there appears to be renewed emphasis on the former goal. For me that raises serious questions of how we’re going to build a brand when we don’t have the credibility with target audiences to deliver an effective value proposition.”

How Can Public Diplomacy Fix This? – Melinda Brouwer, Foreign Policy Association: Public Diplomacy and the 2008 Presidential Elections: “At a blogger roundtable today, I asked Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy James K. Glassman the question at hand: how do we use public diplomacy tools to address the problem of 9/11 denial? His answer was less than satisfying. He reacted by saying that […] what he and his team are ‘up against,’ but didn’t offer any constructive measures on how to deal with the problem. … Clearly there is much work to be done in the credibility-building department.”

Blogger Roundtable with Under Secretary Glassman - MountainRunner: “The Blogger Roundtable with Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James Glassman concluded a short time ago. ... I'm in complete support of the Democracy Videos project and see Smith-Mundt as an unintended barrier for domestic distribution. … Mr. Under Secretary, do you agree public diplomacy has been militarized? If not, why not, and if so, what are your recommendations to change this?”

Soft power and a very, very interesting woman - MMB Agency, 24NewsMedia.com: “Public Diplomacy loves the Presidential election campaign,” Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James Glassman said. “It’s got people excited about the United States. ... It shows the kind of change that’s possible when there’s an African-American man in the race and a very very interesting woman.” A simple, powerful message. And where does Glassman need it to resonate most strongly? Right here in Europe, which, along with the Middle East, he said, ranks among the areas of greatest animosity towards the United States.

Self-Fulfilling Prophecy? - Daniel Johnson, New York Sun: “I am tired of the prejudice and ignorance of Europeans about America. And I am sad, though not surprised, that the U.S. government's public diplomacy has been so feeble, not to say non-existent. Instead, it has been left to a few lone voices to defend America against the calumnies of its enemies. Notable among these is a new Web site, AmericaInTheWorld.com, which is already up but will be officially launched next month in London.”

Obama, McCain on National Security and Nuclear Proliferation - Eliza Margarita Bates and Cara Zwerling, Huffington Post: Although he never mentions it on his website, John McCain admitted in March of this year that "prevailing in this struggle [against Islamic terrorism] will require far more than military force. It will require the use of all elements of our national power: public diplomacy; development assistance; law enforcement training; expansion of economic opportunity; and robust intelligence capabilities."

US image abroad - The World from Eagle Hill: Public diplomacy is something you just don’t hear much about these days. It’s not entirely missing from the presidential race though, because our two major candidates both claim that they will repair the frayed relationships between the US and its most important allies.

[S]ave the date: sept 30
– Marc Lynch, Abu Aardvark – “[F]or those interested just a heads up now to save the rapidly approaching date: Public Diplomacy and the War of Ideas: Agendas for the Next Administration George Washington University, September 30, 2008, from 2:00-3:30, Location TBA.”

Prof discusses how ads can aid U.S. diplomacy - Jacob Longan, NewsPress - Dr. Jami Fullerton, an expert on advertising and marketing: “So our hypothesis, and that’s exactly what it is, is can we use the marketing and media savvy of America and leverage that to win hearts and minds overseas? The idea of advertising and public diplomacy, if you will.” The book she co-authored is Advertising’s War on Terrorism: The Story of the U.S. State Department’s Shared Values Initiative.

Wait, This Makes Sense – Falze, Albany Media Bias: "So it’s due to the inadequacies of U.S. public diplomacy that the fabled Arab Street thinks Americans incinerated fellow Americans as part of a 'crusade' against them? Do you see it? We (well, most of us) look at these conspiracy theories (the US killed [its] own people to a) start a war with muslims; and/or b) steal middle eastern oil) and go, "That's crazy talk!" Muslims, particularly those in the middle east, do NOT think that's crazy talk."

Iftar with the Ambassador
- Toby, Northern Light – Chilled Thoughts From The Top Of Europe: “I got invited to my first Iftar dinner last night. Iftar is the meal that breaks the daily fast during Ramadan. Amusingly this very nice occasion took place at the hotbed of Muslim cultural activity that is the U.S. Embassy in Helsinki! The embassy's chef out did himself with a selection of dishes from across the Muslim world. The U.S. State Department has a rather clever public diplomacy programme of bringing four U.S. Muslims to other countries to meet civil society groups, local Muslims, students and who ever else they can rustle up (such as people like me) - so the meal was partly in their honour and partly a way of bringing Finnish Muslims and others who have tangential relations with the Finnish Muslim communities together with the U.S. diplomats.”

Somali youth for peace workshop in Beled Hawa City - Terror Free Somalia Foundation - The week of August 25th through the 29th marked the first of major student workshop held in Beled Hawa for school boys and school girls in the gedo region jubbaland state of somalia. The workshop was almost entirely organized by seven staff members at the local U.S. embassy and the initiative was led by the Public Diplomacy Officer for Somalia, Mr. Mark Zimmer.

PRSA Tries to Throw Down the Ethical Gauntlet…And Fails - The Ethical Optimist: Public Relations With A Conscience: “Oh boy. Much as I like to think our profession is starting to raise the ethical bar, I was a bit concerned when I saw the media advisory PRSA put out under the heading 'Communications Pros Issue Formal Ethics Challenge to Campaigns.' In case you missed it, here’s a lift from the alert … . 'PRSA leadership … spearheaded a private sector summit on public diplomacy at the U.S. State Department, among other activities.'”

The Committee’s Olympic Newsmakers - Committee of 100 Newsletter: Michelle Kwan was one of seven dignitaries in the U.S. presidential delegation attending the Beijing Olympics Closing Ceremony. Kwan, the decorated figure skater who has won silver and bronze Olympic medals, was invited to join the delegation because of her role as Public Diplomacy Envoy for the U.S. State Department. Her boss, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, was to have headed the delegation, but the crisis in Georgia intervened and Labor Secretary Elaine Chao took her place.

McCaineocons - GrEaT sAtAn"S gIrLfRiEnD: Combatting Anti American Propaganda,Tyrannies, Intolerant Regimes, Militias and Foes of Enlightenment: Robert Kagan -- After serving as an adviser to Congressman Jack Kemp in 1983, and then working as a speechwriter for Secretary of State George Schultz, in 1985 Kagan was chosen by Elliot Abrams to head the Office of Public Diplomacy, whose mission was to create support for the Nicaraguan Contra rebels.

British Arab Exchange – Aiban, A Little Something: “These young Iraqis shared their experiences in London under the joint programme of the Kubba Foundation and British-Arab Exchanges (BAX) which has more than 30 years’ experience of arranging exchange visits … . To be honest, I expected a story that would give an Iraqi viewpoint on the war, what was wrong and what is right, what should be done and what can be done. After, attending the 'public diplomacy' talk a day earlier, I was expecting certain output/outcome indicators of this diplomacy. But, it was good that they managed to get their visas (they rece[i]ved their visas a week late) to come to the UK and share their stories."

Ilmu HI dan Konstruksi Masa Depan Bangsa - Ahmad Rizky Mardhatillah Umar, Blognya Pengamat Politik: Mentions public diplomacy.

RELATED ITEMS

"Soccer diplomacy" to help dispel Armenia-Turkey grudges
– Yang Jun, People’s Daily: Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan invited his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul Serzh to the Armenian capital of Yerevan to watch a soccer match, or the historic World Cup qualifier match held between the Turkish and Armenian teams. A "soccer diplomacy" game alone cannot dissolve or dispel nearly a century-old grudges between the two nations as a matter of course.

Bob Dylan In Baghdad
- Melik Kaylan, Forbes.com: Arab tradition has a tremendous respect for serious culture, for classicism and philosophy, a tradition that antedates the Koran by millennia. Imagine if we were to distribute boxes full of Mark Twain in translation and show Tom Stoppard on television. The mullahs would get a diet of William James' religious experiences, and the young women Virginia Woolf. In the fight against barbarism, why not awe them with ideas?

Using bad PR is Taliban’s defense against airpower - Charles J. Dunlap Jr., Atlanta Journal Constitution: “Tanks and armor are not a big deal -- the planes are the killers. I can handle everything but the jet fighters.” This recent conversation between Taliban commanders, intercepted by U.S. intelligence officers, does much to explain the frenzied efforts of their propaganda machine to ban the use of the weapon they fear most: airpower.

Al-Qaida's Propaganda Sites, Smacked Down - Noah Shachtman, Wired: For years, the al-Ekhlaas network of sites has been a primary distributor of videos from al-Sahab, Qaida's propaganda arm. Then, on September 11, al-Ekhlaas.net was suddenly re-registered. Its domain name now belongs to the joker.com hosting service. All of its content vanished.

Victory Is an Orphan in Iraq - Thane Rosenbaum, Wall Street Journal: Yes, there are many truths about the war in Iraq. But to say America fought an ill-advised war that was both a lost cause and a total loss is surely not one of them.

"Our Work Here is Far From Done”: Petraeus Leaves Iraq - Patrick Cockburn, Counterpunch: General Petraeus’s oft declared uncertainty about the future stability of Iraq is genuine. It is the Iraqi Shia and their Iranian backers, not the Americans, who are the true victors in the Iraqi war.

A Run on Russia – Review & Outlook, Wall Street Journal: Perhaps the Russian people, who give their leaders high marks in opinion polls, will begin to see the economic toll from Putinism and question whether their country is well-served by this leadership.

What Russia Wants: Moscow is not bent on world domination, just regional influence - Ted Galen Carpenter, American Conservative: Washington remains tone deaf in its policy toward Russia.

Russia: Back to the Future - Jeffrey Tayler, Atlantic: Recognizing a Russian sphere of influence of sorts would reflect the real balance of power that obtains today across formerly Soviet Eurasia, and would allow the United States to manage its decline with some degree of dignity.

Russia And Nato's Identity Question: Russia's invasion of Georgia raises new questions about the purpose of the West's alliance – Monitor’s View, Christian Science Monitor: NATO can start addressing its identity question by reaching a consensus on the nature of the Russia threat.

Bloom Off the Rose: Georgian “democracy” owes more to Josef Stalin than Thomas Jefferson - John Laughland, American Conservative

The Duty to Rescue - Michael Ignatieff, New Republic: Humanitarian intervention is no longer in the frame for any Western state. Fixing broken states once looked possible. In Afghanistan and Iraq, everyone has learned how difficult it is to stay this course, especially for impatient societies such as our own.

Why Obama Is Wrong - William S. Lind, Antiwar.com: McCain and Obama are Establishment Party candidates. Neither man conceives any real limits, political, financial, military or moral, on American power.

IMAGES

WTF? Ann Coulter Just Had A Baby!
- Wonkette

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

September 17


"Dubai could become the gateway to global knowledge about public diplomacy."

--Dr. Ernest J. Wilson III, Dean and Walter H. Annenberg Chair in Communication, the University of Southern California

NEW BOOK

Global Intentions Local Results: How Colleges Can Create International Communities (Paperback) by William P. Kiehl

IMAGE

Palin, McCain, Bush Soviet Propaganda Style

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Call to Build Strong Regional Base in Dubai for Global Media - Staff reporter, Khaleej Times, United Arab Emirates: Dubai should continue to build a strong regional base for the global media and tell the world about its success story for others to follow suit through public diplomacy, a senior American professor said on Tuesday at the Mohammed Bin Rashid School of Communication at the American University in Dubai (AUD). Speaking to students on "Public Diplomacy, a New Tool for Dubai," Dr. Ernest J. Wilson III, Dean and Walter H. Annenberg Chair in Communication at the University of Southern California, said that the emirate should continue to build a strong regional base so global media can tell their stories.

The MBR School of Communication at AUD kicks off its Academic Events – Press Release, Zawya: “The Mohammed Bin Rashid School of Communication at The American University in Dubai launched the start of its academic events for the current Fall semester with a lecture ... by Ernest J. Wilson III … . Dr. Wilson … spoke of ‘public diplomacy’ as as a response to globalization, information revolution, economic uncertainty and the strategic shifts in world power. Moreover, he explained how public diplomacy may be a tactic for governments, yet warned against its inevitable outcome of causing the setback of nations, if misused.”

MSU Hosts MEPIACEBook: 2008 marks the fourth consecutive year that Montana State University has hosted the MEPI program. The MEPI Study of the United States Institutes are part of the U.S. Department of State’s public diplomacy initiative in the Middle East and North Africa. Funded and administered by the State Department’s Middle East Partnership Initiative (MEPI), the MEPI Study of the United States Institute at Montana State University is one of five programs that take place in the summer on campuses across the United States.

Sending American Students to Study Abroad - StudyAbroad.com’s The Globe: “The Association of International Educators, NAFSA, has some advice for the next President of the United States, whomever that may be, when it comes to the important national goal of sending more American students to study abroad each year. Since the presidency is directly involved with public diplomacy, NAFSA has put some of the responsibility of increasing study abroad in the hands of the commander in chief.”

Tuesday, September 16, 2008 - Yes We Can Hope: “The new Obama book, Change We Can Believe In: Barack Obama's Plan to Renew America's Promise has an astonishing amount of ideas everyone will agree with. … Below are the sub-chapters of the book in bold followed by the individual ideas, goals, plans, etc. All items on this first list are in the same order as they appear in the text. … The '[A]' appearing next to some ideas stands for ‘All Can Agree,’ meaning most sane Americans. … [A] ‘Launch a Public Diplomacy Effort.’”

Women Leaders For Obama - Pray For Barack Obama: Yesterday, the Obama campaign announced that hundreds of national women leaders in business, women’s rights, sport, and other fields endorsed Sen. Barack Obama. These women will be involved with various aspects of the campaign. The national women leaders supporting Barack Obama include Ambassador Elizabeth Frawley Bagley, Former US Ambassador and Vice-Chair of the United States Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, Washington, DC.

Metrosexual Healing: Can Barack Obama save the trans-Atlantic alliance? - Blake Hounshell, Foreign Policy: “Republicans have relentlessly mocked the Democratic Illinois senator for his July 24 speech in Berlin’s Tiergarten park, in which he appeared before an enthusiastic, 200,000-strong crowd in front of the Victory Column. His campaign rarely mentions the event, understandably wary of the 'global celebrity' label that rival John McCain’s campaign has hung around his neck. But if he overcomes his recent stretch of bad news cycles, Obama might have a shot at restoring the United States’ broken trans-Atlantic ties -- not because he will become the crypto-Frenchman that middle America so fears --but because … style is essential to successful public diplomacy.”

Being Young And Arab In Post-Sept. 11 America -
Neda Ulaby, Book Tour, NPR: It seems barely an exaggeration to say that Arab and Muslim Americans are constantly talked about but almost never heard from. The problem is not that they lack representations but that they have too many. And these are all abstractions. Arabs and Muslims have become a foreign-policy issue, an argument on the domestic agenda, a law-enforcement priority, and a point of well-meaning concern. They appear as shadowy characters on terror television shows, have become objects of sociological inquiry, and get paraded around as puppets for public diplomacy.

Out Of Uniform - A colossal misjudgment in the ministry of external affairs Diplomacy - K.P. Nayar, Telegraph, India: “[T]he urge to create a public diplomacy division could very well be understood in the context of the United Progressive Alliance government’s fascination with everything American, be it good or bad.”

IPRA - GuiaSenior: “IPRA: La Asociación Internacional de Relaciones Públicas (IPRA) invita a participar del Congreso Mundial de Relaciones Públicas IPRA 2008 que se realizará del 13 al 15 de noviembre en Beijing, China. … Se presentará el nuevo IPRA Gold Paper on Public Relations and Public Diplomacy (Informe Dorado en Relaciones Públicas y Diplomacia Pública). Sus contenidos también serán discutidos por un panel de distinguidos profesionales.”

To the Private Sector - Al Kamen, In the Loop, Washington Post: Richard Grenell, who's been director of communications and public diplomacy at the United Nations since 2001, working for four ambassadors to that organization, is heading back to California to be senior vice president of corporate communications for Kent Thiry, CEO of DaVita, a health-care company that specializes in kidney care.

Welcome Back, Dr. Brown - Schmilsson Nilsson, DIP's Dispatches from the Imagination Age: Re “The new and improved John Brown's Public Diplomacy Press & Blog Review 2.0.”

Public Diplomacy 2.0 - Sheldon Rampton, Spin of the Day, Center for Media and Democracy

RELATED ITEMS

Owning the Past [abstract] - Steven C. Munson, Commentary: Museum officials apparently out of financial concerns and worries about their institutions’ reputations, have adopted more restrictive guidelines on the acquisition of so-called “unprovenanced” antiquities -- that is, those lacking adequate proof of having been legally acquired. Although the guidelines leave final decisions on such purchases to the individual museum, they would seem to reinforce the notion that such antiquities should be returned to their “source” countries.

Propaganda film plays to Muslim stereotypes - Jeff VanDenBerg, News-Leader.com, MO: Despite its opening line that "most Muslims are peaceful and do not support terror," the film "Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West" makes use of all the standard tools of propaganda to create an image of Muslims as terrorists.

Anti-Islam Propaganda Reveals Vidal Sassoon's Secret Agenda - Jossip, NY: Hope everyone is following the story on the "Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West" promotional DVD that arrived in several major newspapers throughout the swing states, because it is the most blatant form of fear-mongering propaganda since Disney made those anti-Hitler cartoons during WWII.

Al-Qaeda 'able to reinvent itself' - Patrick Walters, Australian: Al-Qaeda remains firmly committed to mass terrorist attacks and has been able to adapt, rebuild and reinvent itself, according to ASIO's latest assessment. "Al-Qa'ida also continues doggedly to pursue its propaganda campaign - including increasing numbers of messages in the languages of target audiences," it says.

'To Contain Jihadism, You Need Pluralism'RFE/RL: Walid Phares, a visiting fellow at the European Foundation for Democracy in Brussels and senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington: “In order to contain and reverse the agenda of the jihadists you have to have pluralism, you have to have the ability for young minds to get another message and let them make their choice.”

Al Qaeda 9/11 message hacked? - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: In recent history, and still to some extent, groups such as Al Qaeda would have used clandestine shortwave stations to disseminate their messages. Such broadcasts could be jammed, but with more difficulty than the hacking of websites today.

US pushes Pakistan towards the brink - Tariq Ali, Asia Times: Although, in the world of the Western media, the Taliban have been entirely conflated with al-Qaeda, most of their supporters are, in fact, driven by quite local concerns. If NATO and the U.S. were to leave Afghanistan, their political evolution would most likely parallel that of Pakistan's domesticated Islamists.

20 Months in Baghdad - David Ignatius, Washington Post: General Petraeus, this media-savvy commander, was precisely what the Iraq war needed in the age of 24/7 coverage. With President Bush largely discredited, Petraeus became the public face of the war.

Odierno Warns Iraq still Unstable – Juan Cole, Informed Comment: Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion: The success of Republican Party propaganda that Iraq is "calm" now has the disadvantage for U.S. commanders facing daily violence that it may mislead Congress and the public into cutting the support the commanders feel is still very much necessary.

The Petraeus Doctrine - Andrew J. Bacevich, Atlantic: According to the emerging Petraeus Doctrine, the Army (like it or not) is entering an era in which armed conflict will be protracted, ambiguous, and continuous -- with the application of force becoming a lesser part of the soldier’s repertoire.

An Open Letter to Christian Troops in Iraq and Afghanistan: America is Now Rome - Stan Goff, Counterpunch: God's Creation does not stop at the border of the United States; and God's love is not extended exclusively to Americans.

Mission Creep Dispatch – Robert Kaplan, Mother Jones: Small missions worldwide provide the incentive for our troops to learn foreign languages and study local cultures.

The Post-American World [review of Fareed Zakaria, The Post-American World] - John W. Coffey, American Diplomacy: Zakaria emphasizes the importance of “soft power,” of the need for international support and cooperation and the example of “who we are” as a nation. The new “National Defense Strategy” issued by Secretary Gates recognizes the role of “soft power,” but realistically couples it with military assets as well, particularly a mastery of irregular warfare, in the long struggle against violent extremism. The same old world we’re fated to live in will not dispense with the need for TR’s maxim, “speak softly and carry a big stick.”

U.S.-Iranian relations: The diplomatic cost of not talking - Edward P. Djerejian, Washington Times: The United States can afford to take the first step in putting the Iranian regime to the test by offering a broad strategic dialogue on all the key issues between us.

Separating U.S. Rhetoric From Reality - Jonathan Russin, Leonid Sevastianov, Tom Thomson, Moscow Times: The U.S. policy debate on whether to engage or isolate Russia will intensify. It is, however, clear that relations must be pragmatic and recognize interdependencies in economic development, energy security, fighting terrorism and controlling nuclear proliferation. The challenge for the next U.S. president in working with Medvedev and Putin will be to address such issues with sound judgment and an acute awareness of the consequences for failing to meet this responsibility.

Four Wars in One
- Richard Lourie, Moscow Times: What the United States and the West have to do is rethink the policy of NATO expansion. George Kennan, creator of the "containment doctrine," was against it from the start, knowing it would lead to exactly the sort of situation we now have on our hands.

Unlike Its Soviet Predecessor, Russian Propaganda Deceives Only Those Who Want to Be, Analyst Says - Paul Goble, Window On Eurasia, posted on Georgian Daily: Russia's intervention in Georgia has highlighted the fundamental difference between Moscow's propaganda now and Soviet propaganda in the past. In Soviet times, the regime sought to convince everyone of the truth of its lies, whereas now, the Kremlin propaganda effort is so transparent that it deceives only those who want to be deceived.

Easing Mugabe out
– Editorial, Boston Globe: Zimbabwe's democratic movement benefited from foreign backing that was untainted by military threats.

Lehman, Merrill, AIG: World Media React: Pundits from Berlin to Beijing assess the fallout from Wall Street's rash of bankruptcies, buyouts, and ratings downgrades - David Rocks, Business Week: There's no shortage of schadenfreude. Many blame the meltdown on a culture of greed and an outsize appetite for risk on Wall Street. Some call for greater regulation of the U.S. financial sector, others say the events will give the Democrats a boost in November's elections, and still others worry about the effect on their own economies.

ONE MORE QUOTATION

“Sarah Palin knows a little something about God’s will, knowing God quite well, from their work together on that natural-gas pipeline, and what God wills is: Country First. And not just any country! There was a slight error on our signage. Other countries, such as that one they have in France, reading our slogan, if they can even read real words, might be all, like, ‘Hey, bonjour, they are saying we can put our country, France, first!’ Non, non, non, France! What we are saying is, you’d better put our country first, you merde-heads, or soon there will be so much lipstick on your pit bulls it will make your berets spin!”

--George Saunders, writing in The New Yorker

MORE IMAGES

Abkhazia’s Abandoned Railway Lies Forgotten


Tuesday, September 16, 2008

September 16


“James Glassman, if you were born to Sarah Palin, your name would be: Claw Washout Palin: Who knows, Claw Washout Palin, you just might be president one day!”

--Result obtained by typing in the name of the Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs at the Sarah Palin Baby Name Generator website

VIDEO

The visiting United States Under-Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs has been speaking on the continuing need for discussion, dialogue and education in the fight against extremism around the world - recent posts - blip.tv (beta)

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

James K Glassman: America knows that bullets alone will not win this war - Independent.co.uk: "Public diplomacy is, very simply, diplomacy aimed at publics, as opposed to officials. While some people associate it with marketing -- with building a national brand -- the truth is that public diplomacy, like official diplomacy and like military action, has as its mission the achievement of the national interest. Public diplomacy performs this mission by understanding, informing, engaging, and persuading foreign publics. … There is now a broad consensus in Washington that public diplomacy is essential to defeating the violent extremist threat, to promoting freedom and social justice. In fact, I would argue -- and many in the Pentagon would agree -- that, in this struggle, ideas are more important than bullets."

With friends like these, the US hardly needs enemies - Roula Khalaf, Financial Times: The Bush team, in its last months in office, says the purpose of public diplomacy is not so much to improve the US’s image as to undermine that of al-Qaeda. “Much of the public diplomacy effort in the past has focused on our image, on how we are seen by others,” said James Glassman in a speech at the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London to mark the seventh anniversary of the September 11 attacks.

War of Ideas UpdateAbu Aardvark: A blog by Marc Lynch: “This morning I went to hear Under Secretary of State Jim Glassman and Ambassador Dell Dailey speak at GWU's Homeland Security Policy Institute on the topic of ‘Toward a Comprehensive Approach to Countering Terrorism.’ … . His [Glassman’s] innovation has been in all but name to reorient public diplomacy efforts from ‘public diplomacy’ towards ‘strategic communications’ (though he doesn't use precisely that language). What I mean is that instead of focusing on the long-term project of building understanding of America among foreign publics (exchange programs, speaker series, and so forth) or of improving America's image in the world (trying to 'move the needle' on the favorable ratings in the Pew Global Attitudes surveys), Glassman prefers to narrow the focus to 'creating a hostile environment for violent extremism.'”

Upcoming Event: A Foreign Policy and U.S. Relations with the Islamic World -- Reforming U.S. Public Diplomacy and Strategic Communication: Views from Congress – Brookings Events: On September 23, the Brookings Institution will host Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) and Representative Adam Smith (D-Wash.) for a discussion on the future of U.S. public diplomacy and strategic communication. With increasing force and frequency, members of the United States Congress are calling for reforms to U.S. public diplomacy, strategy, organization and practice. These proposed reforms seek to improve U.S. relations with foreign societies, advance American interests abroad and counter extremist ideologies. Seven years after 9/11, the question remains: is the United States communicating effectively with foreign publics? Is it undermining support for extremist ideologies around the world?

Sarah Palin, the American scarecrow - Jean-Paul Marthoz, Atlantic Progressives: The U.S. public diplomacy service is already spending millions of dollars to repair the damage of the Bush administration on the image of the United States in the rest of the world. It will go bankrupt if it has to try to offset the world’s reaction to Palin’s moving into the vice-presidential mansion. Courtesy Gerald Loftus.

Reason 11 to Vote Obama: Engage the Country
Alaskan Librarian: Obama will set up an America’s Voice Initiative to send Americans who are fluent speakers of local languages to expand our public diplomacy. He also will extend opportunities for older individuals such as teachers, engineers, and doctors to serve overseas.

Public Diplomacy and Propaganda: Their Differences – John Brown, American Diplomacy: When public diplomacy and propaganda are used as state instruments, they serve a country’s interests. But at their best and at their worst, they do so in significantly different ways.

International Education: The Neglected Dimension Of Public Diplomacy: Recommendations for the Next President
By NAFSA: Association of International Educators
- John Brown, Internet Article Reviews, American Diplomacy

The United States Meets Germany: A Forum for Young Leaders, Berlin, November 10th-14th, 2008 – Announcements of Interest, American Diplomacy: The United States Meets Germany: A Forum for Young Leaders is designed with the intention of bringing together young, influential people from both sides of the Atlantic in order for them to gain insight into cultural diplomacy, exchange ideas and experiences and learn from influential players already working in the field.

US university dean to speak at AUD - Trade Arabia, Bahrain: The Mohammed Bin Rashid School of Communication at the American University in Dubai (AUD) will start its academic events for the current Fall semester with a lecture entitled, “Public Diplomacy, a New Tool for Dubai." The lecture will be delivered today by Dr. Ernest J. Wilson III, Dean and Walther H. Annenberg Chair in Communication, at the University of Southern California, the institution with which AUD is collaborating.

State Department to World: “Tell me a story”America.gov: In a new kind of public-private partnership, Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James Glassman launched the State Department’s Democracy Video Challenge on September 15 at U.N. headquarters. The launch was timed to coincide with United Nations’ first International Day of Democracy. Partners for the online video contest include the State Department, democracy and youth organizations, academia, and the news, film and entertainment industries.

State Dept. seeks democracy videos: Government teams with media orgs on contest - Sam Thielman, Variety: The U.S. State Dept. has revealed its latest diplomatic tool: user-generated content. At the U.N. on Monday, representatives revealed the Democracy Video Challenge, a government initiative co-sponsored with half a dozen high-profile media orgs including NBC Universal, the DGA and the MPAA.

U.S. State Department takes to YouTube for Public Diplomacy - Steve, Citizen Tube: Today the U.S. State Department launched a YouTube contest asking global citizens to complete the sentence, "Democracy is..." Regional winners from around the world will be selected, and finalists will get to travel to D.C., NYC, and Hollywood to meet with film professionals.

State Dept. seeks democracy videos: Government teams with media orgs on contest - The Martini Shot: Writer/Director/Raconteur Rich Martini's Blog - “The U.S. State Dept. has revealed its latest diplomatic tool: user-generated content. At the U.N. on Monday, representatives revealed the Democracy Video Challenge, a government initiative co-sponsored with half a dozen high-profile media orgs including NBC Universal, the DGA and the MPAA . … So, to all you would be filmmakers out there - good luck defining Democracy as the State Dept defines it!!! You're in for some real prizes. Either way, this disclaimer at the bottom solves it all: This site is produced and maintained by the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of International Information Programs. Links to other internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views contained therein.”

I didn’t Like it, So I Responded: A Man’s True Character in Times of Desperationrepublicrites: "I think it is safe to say that our relationship with the international community is fragile in some cases, and completely broken in others. As Margaret D. Tutwiler, in her first public appearance as the State Department official in charge of public diplomacy, acknowledged in 2004 - America’s standing abroad had deteriorated to such an extent that 'it will take us many years of hard, focused work' to restore it."

Russian ‘brand’ takes a hit after losing the media wars - Jay Bookman, Atlanta Journal Constitution: In the Georgia-Russia war, public-relations and public-diplomacy experts marvel at the preparation and effectiveness of Georgia’s media “blitzkrieg.”

A ‘community organizer’ frame of mind - Yossef Ben-Meir, Zimbabwe Guardian, UK: "Community organizers know that public trust is generated in reaction to the empowerment people feel when their ideas for projects are implemented and the benefits are tangible; this may inform, at least in part, the approaches of community organizers to public diplomacy, the 'war of ideas', and addressing root causes of terrorism."

Harper Cuts [Canada] – hysperia, mirabile dictum: "Foreign Affairs and Public Diplomacy Program ELIMINATED."

Ehud Olmert is a fool
– genesis, in delicto: “Israel entered the realm of pathetic, post-pioneer prime ministers a long time ago, with the election of Netanyahu (who incidentally I happen to prefer as Israel's next PM). So we don't expect a great deal anymore. But seriously - Olmert has got to go. … [H]e doesn't know the first thing about public diplomacy. He's not only corrupt, but incompetent too!”

A documentary introduces viewers to the Shillong Chamber Choir and the man behind it, writes: A choir from the abode of clouds - Utpal Borpujari, News on North East: “[I]t was quite a change for Urmi Juvekar when she got down to make a film on a choir from Northeastern India, looking not only at its specialised music but also bring out to the outside world a story unknown. … Now, Neil and his group's story is set to reach across to more parts of the world through Juvekar's film, that is one of the several the Ministry's Public Diplomacy Division has commissioned on the Northeast to bring the politically- charged region closer to the outside world.”

RELATED ITEMS

World opinion counts too in America’s poll - Gideon Rachman, Financial Times: The fact that the rest of the world overwhelmingly favors Mr Obama deserves to be a factor -- no more than that -- in the choice that Americans will make in November. Either candidate is going to have a chance to introduce himself to the world in the first few months of the presidency. Both would find it useful to be as charming as possible.

Obama's Foreign Policy Mentor: Where John McCain goes, Barack eventually follows - Matthew Continetti, Weekly Standard: Obama’s overall course is steadily toward the center. Toward an internationalist foreign policy well within the tradition of recent presidents. Toward a substantial American engagement with the world and the maintenance of American primacy. Toward McCain.

Willing To Win in Afghanistan? - Anne Applebaum, Washington Post: The enemy in Afghanistan cannot dislodge a Dutch or American base, cannot rule the country, and cannot win mass popular support. But with a handful of weapons and some homemade bombs, the enemy can make the coalition forces in Afghanistan pay a high price for their good intentions -- and erode support for the Afghan mission in foreign capitals.

Iraq's Nouri Maliki breaking free of U.S.: As the prime minister asserts his independence, Iran gains influence and America loses some - Ned Parker, Los Angeles Times

Georgia offers fresh evidence on war's start - C.J. Chivers, Dan Bilefsky and Thom Shanker, International Herald Tribune

Rethinking U.S. role
- Bruce Fein, Washington Times: Not a syllable in the Constitution or Declaration of Independence suggests the president has either the duty or authority to carry freedom to the four corners of the Earth. And Mr. Bush's concoction of a moral obligation is unconvincing.

AMERICANA

Florida Awash In Various Provocative Campaign Signs - Wonkette

Monday, September 15, 2008

September 15


"You are responsible for everything that goes on at the radio station. I don't know who they are, but I know who you are."

--Russian President Vladimir Putin, to the editor in chief of Echo Moskvy, the only national radio station that routinely broadcasts opposition voices

“Henceforth, I will be your censor.”

--Tsar Nicholas I to Pushkin

“We would even listen to Vatican radio, which would give you a good report on what was happening in the Soviet Union, and you didn’t care that the announcer would then add ‘God bless you.’”

--The historian Sergei Ivanov

Is America Equipped to Win a World-Wide Propaganda War? – Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner: "’Is America now equipped to win a world-wide propaganda war’" was the framing question for the interview debate on BBC's HARDtalk last week between Stephen Sackur and Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Jim Glassman. … Briefly, the opening question -- 'do you see yourself as America's Chief of Propaganda' -- gave the Under Secretary the chance to redefine his role and the mission of public diplomacy as distinct from past Under Secretary's. …The Under Secretary agreed that bad marketing doesn't work but disagreed that 'this' is a failed policy, which went to the essence of the responses in the debate. This represented a common underlying theme of the discussion as the interviewer frequently asked about the past and the present impact of past policies while the Under Secretary often responded with how America's policies have evolved.”

Wars of Ideas: the importance of Public Diplomacy – cwleonard, Globo Diplo: “What is public diplomacy? You may have never heard of the term, but its an important capital asset for a country, and, by definition, is different from simple public relations or propaganda. A new ambassador, James K. Glassman, may find the job to do U.S. public diplomacy as daunting as the last several have.”

Did Obama Try To Sabotage US Negotiations With Iraq For A SOFA Agreement? - Bart De Palma, Citizen Pamphleteer: "One must always take public statements of Iraq politicians with a grain of salt as they may be spreading disinformation to conduct public diplomacy with the US. However, I am unsure what Iraq would gain by making false and embarrassing claims about a US presidential candidate with a fair chance of ending up in the Oval Office."

Attempt to market America - fail92fail, Failures -- exposed, reflected upon, considered: Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Charlotte Beers' assignment was not to improve relations with other countries but rather to perform an overhaul of the American image abroad. The appointment of an inexperienced (in diplomacy and state politics) person to this post understandably raised some criticism, but the then Secretary of State Colin Powell shrugged it off. “There is nothing wrong with getting somebody who knows how to sell something. We are selling a product. We need someone who can rebrand American foreign policy, rebrand diplomacy.” “The whole idea of building a brand is to create a relationship between the product and its user,” she explained. “We’re going to have to communicate the intangible assets of the United States -- things like our belief system and our values.”

A Propaganda Model - Manufacturing Consent: A Propaganda Model excerpted from the book Manufacturing Consent by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky Pantheon Books, 1988Third World Traveler : Herman and Chomsky: “It should also be noted that in the case of the largesse of the Pentagon and the State Department's Office of Public Diplomacy, the subsidy is at the taxpayers' expense, so that, in effect, the citizenry pays to be propagandized in the interest of powerful groups such as military contractors and other sponsors of state terrorism."

Pourquoi les Latinos sortent de leurs gonds... - Paul Moreira, Premières Lignes – "Là où ça sent carrément le poisson c’est que, toujours selon le gars du Guardian, Carmona était en contact avec Otto Reich et Elliot Abrams. Inconnus du grand public, ces deux hommes sont des spécialistes des coups tordus. Ils commencent leur carrière dans les années 80 lors de la guerre contre un autre gouvernement démocratiquement élu. Celui du Nicaragua. Où l’on retrouve l’actuel président: Daniel Ortega (mais j’y reviens). Otto Reich s’occupait de la propagande. ' Office for Public Diplomacy.'"

RELATED ITEMS

Found and Lost [review of Who Owns Antiquity?: Museums and the Battle over Our Ancient Heritage by James Cuno] - Ingrid D. Rowland, The New Republic: Cuno demonstrates that antiquities laws as currently drawn impoverish rather than enrich the global level of culture. Cuno has scant patience for the single worldwide body that addresses cultural concerns, which is UNESCO.

An Open Letter To The Next President Of The United States - Bernard-Henri Lévy, Huffington Post: “Anti-Americanism, Mr. Future President, has become a new planetary religion. And unfortunately it will take more than four or even eight years to get rid of this kind of religion.”

A letter to America: You Cannot be Serious - Ian Bell, Sunday Herald/UK/Common Dreams: The American Century may well be at an end, with only the debts -- unfeasibly big debts -- to be settled.

Return to Sanity - Katrina vanden Heuvel, Nation: A purposeful opposition must form to rethink America's role in the world. There are large and fateful questions to confront: What kind of country does the US want to be in the 21st century? Republic or Empire? Global leader or global cop?

Religious comfort for bin Laden - James Carroll, Boston Globe: Beginning on Sept. 14, 2001, U.S. foreign policy was yoked to a certain brand of messianic fundamentalism. Although discussed openly in eschatologically-minded religious institutions, the link between state power and radical Christian fervor remained blurred both in Bush's mind and in political discussion, yet it was defining.

The World Isn’t So Dark: Ever since WWII, America has tended to make its strategic missteps by exaggerating dangers - Fareed Zakaria, Newsweek: We live in remarkably peaceful times. Rhetoric about transcendent threats and mortal dangers grips the imagination of the American people. But it also twists U.S. foreign policy in ways that can prove to be extremely costly to the country and the world.

A costly diversion: Our view: Pakistan is the wild card in the U.S. war on terror – Editorial, Baltimore Sun: Unless Pakistan is willing to devote a contingent of its military and intelligence forces to the fight, the next administration should slash the hundreds of millions in military aid going its way.

An existential crisis - Arnaud de Borchgrave, Washington Times: In Afghanistan, the future of the Atlantic alliance is at stake. In Pakistan, the state itself is at stake.

US forces the terror issue with Pakistan - Syed Saleem Shahzad, Asia Times: Clearly, Washington is frustrated with the situation in Afghanistan, and it no doubt rankles that the American "empire" is being thwarted by a bunch of "cave-dwellers.”

A Mideast Crisis to Avert - Dennis Ross, Washington Post: Lagging behind events has unfortunately been a hallmark of the Bush administration. If the administration is serious about trying to pass on to its successor an ongoing peace process in the Middle East, it had better focus not only on preserving the negotiating process but also making sure a Palestinian leadership crisis does not arrive just as our next president assumes office.

The Battle For Hope In Iraq - Fred Hiatt, Washington Post: A new conventional wisdom seems to be settling on Washington -- that the U.S. job in Iraq is nearing completion, and the time has come to move on to Afghanistan and other challenges. If, as seems likely, the celebration is premature and U.S. troops will be needed in Iraq for some time to come, we can hope that the next national security adviser again has the strength to resist the crowd and the deftness to steer the country in the right direction.

Bush's Lonely Decision - Review & Outlook, Wall Street Journal: The success of the surge in pacifying Iraq has been so swift and decisive that it's easy to forget how difficult it was to find the right general, choose the right strategy, and muster the political will to implement it.

Latin American saber-rattling: The U.S. should see bellicose talk from Venezuela and Bolivia for what it is -- regional politics – Editorial, Los Angeles Times: Neither Obama nor McCain has articulated a detailed policy on Latin America. It would be in the interest of both to craft one that dispenses with Cold War attitudes and focuses on relieving poverty through trade and assistance.

Russia Takes A Bite Out Of State Sovereignty: The real clash with Georgia is sovereignty vs. self-determination - Mackubin Thomas Owens, Christian Science Monitor: The tension between sovereignty and self-determination can also be seen as a clash between stability and justice. This polarity has always posed a dilemma for the United States. On the one hand, Americans have often provided support for oppressed peoples throughout the globe. On the other hand, American statesmen have recognized that the logic of secession leads to unending conflict.

The Russians want to explain - Adar Primor, Haaretz: Do the Russians not care a hoot about the world? They don't, according to some of the experts. Do they try to sway it? Yes, according to the other version.

Letter from Moscow: Echo in the Dark; A radio station strives to keep the airwaves free - David Remnick, New Yorker: In the authoritarian ecosystem of Vladimir Putin, the radio station Echo of Moscow is one of the last of an endangered species, a dodo that still roams the earth. “The problem is that official propaganda on television is extremely distracting -- it insures that people talk about the nonsense they are showing,” says Yulia Latynina, a well-known newspaper columnist and commentator on Echo of Moscow.

Did Saakashvili Lie? The West Begins to Doubt Georgian LeaderSpiegel: Five weeks after the war in the Caucasus the mood is shifting against Georgian President Saakashvili. Some Western intelligence reports have undermined Tbilisi's version of events, and there are now calls on both sides of the Atlantic for an independent investigation.

Georgian Artists Battle Moscow With Music - Jimsher Rekhviashvili - RFE/RL: The war in August between Tbilisi and Moscow over Georgia's breakaway region of South Ossetia was fought on more than the military front. In Georgia, artists and singers joined forces, producing songs and programs they said were meant to encourage the nation and demoralize the enemy.

Soviet propaganda shows gentle push into modernism - Ray Henry, Boston Globe: An exhibit of Soviet propaganda at Brown University challenges viewers who reflexively relegate Soviet propaganda to the artistic dustbin. For sure, there are predictable stock figures: rosy cheeked Soviet women, blond and robust Russian farmers and wiry, sinister-looking capitalist enemies. Yet interspersed are caricatures and posters that show wit, humor and play with modernist touches like cubism and utilize melted, warped figures like those from the noted surrealist Salvador Dali.

AMERICANA

Government Intelligence Is Way Behind - L. Gordon Crovitz, Wall Street Journal: Less than one-third of the FBI's national security branch agents and analysts have Internet access at their desks.

ANCIENT POMPEII

The love lives of the ancient Romans: From one-night stands to steamy encounters in the bathhouse, Pompeii was a society obsessed with sex - Mary Beard, The Times, London: “There are phalluses greeting you in doorways, phalluses above bread ovens, phalluses carved into the surface of the street and plenty more phalluses with bells on and wings. One of the most imaginative creations, which once jingled in the Pompeian breeze, is the lusty phallus-bird, a combination (I guess) of a joke and an unashamed celebration of the essential ingredient of manhood.”

GERMANY

After Beheading: Wax Hitler Returns to Berlin Looking More DishevelledSpiegel: Madame Tussauds has repaired its wax figure of Adolf Hitler and put him back on display in Berlin nine weeks after a visitor tore the dictator's head off. The new Hitler is protected by a thick wall and glass to prevent a new assassination attempt, and he looks more dishevelled than the original figure.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

September 14


“We must not, Charlie, blink, Charlie, because, Charlie, as I’ve said, Charlie, before, John McCain has said, Charlie, that -- and remember here, Charlie, we’re talking about John McCain, Charlie, who, Charlie, is John McCain and I won’t be blinking, Charlie.”

--New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, regarding Sarah Palin’s interview with ABC’s Charlie Gibson

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Diplomat justifies US intervention in Muslim societies - InTheNews.co.uk: The United States cannot be a spectator in the struggle for power going on in Muslim societies around the world, a senior diplomat has said. James Glassman, the Bush administration's under-secretary of state for public diplomacy, told a Chatham House audience in London he has refocused his remit away from improving the US' "image" abroad and towards combating "violent extremism."

There are many issues waiting for an inspired and noble US leadership - Richard C. Holbrooke, Tagesspiegel, Germany: If history is a guide, issues that are neglected too long often emerge at the top of the policy agenda -- Somalia, Bosnia, Cambodia, Darfur, Myanmar, Tibet and Zimbabwe are only a few recent examples. US relations with the Muslim world will require special attention. Efforts so far to encourage moderate Muslims to deal with extremists have not worked. A new, creative approach to public diplomacy must be developed.

Other Matters: Chipping Away at the Voa - All About Jazz, PA: With esteem for the United States at a low ebb around the world, the government continues to dismantle the Voice Of America, for more than half a century one of the nation's most effective creators of good will abroad. The administration's relentless disassembling of one of the most effective and cost-efficient US tools of cultural diplomacy seems to have gone unnoticed by either presidential campaign.

Rethinking a New Epoch – Gary Smith, Tagesspiegel, Germany: “After ten years, the American Academy in Berlin is different than any of us had imagined. Admittedly, our very first printed program of lectures, seminars, and screenings announced that the fellowship program would become more than an academic monastery. As we would later extend invitations for shorter residencies to many distinguished writers, artists, and policy experts, their stays in Berlin might include up to twenty to thirty meetings, presentations, and roundtables. The Academy had become an experiment in privatizing public diplomacy. That it has, is only fitting.” The author is Executive Director of the American Academy in Berlin.

Why do we accept Foreigners tell us how to vote? - The Crazy World of the Z-Man… Just another Crazy Conservative: “I was browsing around the internet today and I came across of a speech delivered by Dr. Shashi Tharoor. He appears to be a brilliant person having several degrees and unbelievable resume, born and raised in England, but of India[n] descen[t]. In this 1 hr long speech, he discussed Restoring America’s Image in the World: the Public Diplomacy Challenge. … Matter of fact, he said if Obama does not win, the world will look us with resentment! Why? He was here… In US soil… Only in America, we allow these type of things to take place. “

Mediat dhe Politika: Kush "ndërton" lajmin ndërkombëtar për shqiptarët? - Gëzim Mekuli - Agjencioni FLOART-PRESS: Mention of public diplomacy.

Reflections on a reflection – Mike Hart, Like A Specter: “Of course, the trip wouldn’t have been possible without Theo Katic and Rima Tatevossian, who were the reasons I trekked to Serbia and Armenia. … Rima returned to the U.S. to enroll in a graduate program at the University of Southern California a couple of months after I visited her in Armenia. She now holds a Master’s in Public Diplomacy and recently worked as an intern at a public relations firm in New York.”

RELATED ITEMS

Budget-crunched Peace Corps cuts volunteer positions: Volunteers who thought their assignment was a sure thing learn otherwise - Cynthia Dizikes, Los Angeles Times: At a time when both presidential candidates have pledged to promote and expand national service, the popular humanitarian assistance program that sends thousands of Americans abroad annually is now planning to cut 400 volunteer positions in the face of an unexpected multimillion-dollar budget shortfall.

The War in Pakistan: U.S. attacks on Taliban and al-Qaeda targets are risky -- and necessary – Editorial, Washington Post: There's a risk that the missile strikes will prompt a breach between the U.S. and Pakistani armies, or destabilize Pakistan president Zardari's democratically elected administration, which is the friendliest Washington could hope for in a country with strong anti-American sentiment. But US missile and commando attacks must continue.

The mixed lessons, and legacies, of Munich 1938: European democracies must decide: remain dependent on U.S. protection or develop the capacity to defend Europe themselves
- Ian Buruma, Los Angeles Times: Like permanent adolescents, Europeans and Japanese crave the security of the great American father, and deeply resent him at the same time.

Dealing with Russia
- Toby T. Gati, Washington Times: To clarify what the U.S. can realistically achieve in its relations with Moscow and what it can't, it would be useful for the next administration to undertake a major strategic assessment of Russian power and the U.S. ability to shape it.

Dealing with Russia - Ariel Cohen, Washington Times: The next U.S. administration and its allies need to design a comprehensive policy countering Moscow's bid to shift the global balance of power away from liberal democracies and in favor of the oil-rich Authoritarian International. China and India will be the most important swing states in this struggle.

A Baltic Response to the Bear - Jim Hoagland, New York Times: The Kremlin's larger intent -- to create "a new world order" on the back of gathering U.S. weakness -- has emerged with stunning clarity and velocity in the past three months. Russia is thinking strategically about world affairs while an expiring U.S. administration is not.

Making America Stupid - Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times: Unless we make America the country most able to innovate, compete and win in the age of globalization, our leverage in the world will continue to slowly erode.

Reign of Counterterror - Michael Crowley, New York Times: As the U.S.'s moral standing suffers, so does its ability to shame other nations into cracking down on their nuclear black markets. And so does its battle for the hearts and minds.

We Got Trouble [review of The Limits Of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism by Andrew J. Bacevich]
- Jonathan Tepperman, New York Times: Many of Bacevich’s points are well taken, including his critique of the hypocrisy inherent in Americans’ talk of their supposedly universal values. But surely what we require today, more than broad condemnations of American consumerism, are very specific solutions to very specific problems.

Weekend Video: Animated Soviet Propaganda: Russiatrek.net

AMERICANA

America's silly kid names: Once, no one dreamed of giving their children names like Brooklyn or Rhiannon or Darcy - Joe Queenan, Los Angeles Times: American children are no longer named after prophets, warriors, healers or cultural titans; they are named after Welsh fairies, characters in science-fiction movies, the outer boroughs of New York and trees.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

September 13


“Ya know, Charlie, there's one thing that really gets my goat, Charlie. When I'm having a conversation with another person, and there's nobody else in the conversation, Charlie, and that person keeps repeating my name.”

--Ya know something that really bugs me, Charlie?, Matty Boy, Lotsa 'Splainin' 2 Do, regarding Charlie Gibson's ABC interview with Sarah Palin

“Added to arrogance, callousness and brutality was downright ineptitude.”

--Historian Niall Ferguson, on Hitler’s Empire

IMAGES

The Bush Years poster features a dapper Jack Abramoff, boingboing

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

9/11 and the War of Ideas - Jean Fievet, ABC News London: After laying a wreath in London to commemorate the British victims of 9/11, U.S. Ambassador James K. Glassman gave a speech to a small group of invited guests about America's image overseas. Glassman was speaking seven years, almost to the hour, after the first hijacked plane hit the World Trade Center. As the new undersecretary of state for public diplomacy, he’s now the man in charge of America’s strategy to defeat terrorism by winning the war of ideas. The 9/11 attacks meant that an aggressive ideological counteroffensive was needed: what the State Department calls, for want of a better expression, a ”War of Ideas.”

Overseas US Citizen Electoral Diplomacy - Avuncular American: An expatriate view of America and the world from Europe by former diplomat Gerald Loftus: “I came home from Radio Judaica just in time to catch the BBC World 'HARDtalk' interview with US State Department public diplomacy chief James Glassman. Glassman gave it his best, and he came across as frank, willing to admit mistakes and the next-to-impossible task of putting lipstick (no, I won't use that phrase, McCain and Obama beat me to it)... the next-to-impossible task of rendering Bush foreign policy palatable to the outside world. Glassman spoke about putting a structure in place to wage the 'war of ideas,' though beyond the loaded (for conservatives) idea of 'freedom,' there wasn't a whole lot in evidence in this half hour program.”

A Global Narrative for Public Diplomacy
- Craig Hayden, Intermap: “ [P]olicy rhetoric is a resource that constructs as much as reflects the policy milieu. The question remains, how do we make our rhetoric perform the kind of end-goals we want for a public diplomacy policies in such a way as to unite allies behind a common purpose, rather than to highlight the parochial imperatives of rhetoric for a national audience?”

Sticking pins in the BBG voodoo doll - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: "VOA and RFE/RL, though funded by the same government, are archrivals. They would never admit it, but each is wholeheartedly and enthusiastically devoted to the compete and utter elimination of the other. The rationalization of U.S. international broadcasting cannot be brought through the back door by reducing VOA services to websites. The BBG [Broadcasting Board of Governor] must stand up and speak out for a real consolidation into a single organization, capable of producing the correct mix of content and media to suit each target country, and of adjusting that mix as conditions in the target country change. The BBG should promote this to the next administration, to Congress, and to all interested publics… . Back during the decades that VOA was under USIA, USIA pulled VOA in the direction of policy advocacy, while VOA's audience and its own newsroom wanted an objective, balanced news service. This left VOA as the platypus duckbill of international broadcasting, its mammal part doing the news, its bird part doing propaganda."

Model Interactive Website Touted As Replacement for Voice of America Radio to Russia Attracts No Comments from Users – Ted Lipien, Free Media Online Blog: FreeMediaOnline.org has obtained a copy of the “VOA Russian Options Paper,” which claims that VOA Russian Service can have a successful Internet-only presence in Russia. This claim is astounding since no other major government broadcaster has dropped its radio programs and opted for Internet-only strategy in targeting an audience of another world power ruled by an authoritarian government.

Sen. Lieberman’s Not-So-Straight Talk on Public Diplomacy - Angela Trethewey and Joe Fai, COMOPS Journal: ”[H]ere is our offering: The good/evil morality play isn’t doing anything for our image, as 7 years of experience has shown. It’s time to drop it and try something else. Our 'don’t hate me because I’m beautiful' message isn’t working either. Like [sic] Jim Glassman says, it’s not about us, it’s about them. The sooner we recognize that, the better. Happy talk and spin about how it’s really not all that bad might be good for a political campaign, but it’s a recipe for disaster in a public diplomacy campaign. You can’t solve your problems until you recognize them. It’s a problem when we let our own perceptions of safety and potency go unscrutinized.”

'Special Report' Panel On How the Candidates Would Approach Terrorism and Whether Clinton Would Have Been a Better Vp ChoiceFOXNews: Mort Kondracke, Executive Editor, Roll Call: “If you look at the rhetoric of both sides, both McCain and Obama are in favor of using a combination of hard power and soft power. You kill the bad guys, or kill the alligators and drain the swamp at the same time. And you extend aid and do public diplomacy and police work and you do intelligence and you do financial stuff and you do military…”

McCain, Obama largely agree on anti-terror issues: Rhetorical attacks by the presidential candidates mask a consensus. But analysts say both are lacking in details on the subjectHillary Clinton Club: Both McCain and Obama vow to engage in more public diplomacy and "soft power" tactics that emphasize winning the hearts and minds of those leaning toward extremism and anti-American beliefs.

Newsletter: Public Diplomacy in Europe, June 2008 - U.S. State Department Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, Washington, DC

The Layalina Review on Public Diplomacy and Arab media, VOL. IV NO. 19, August 29-September 11, 2008

Federation honoured with classical concert
- Sun St.Kitts/Nevis, St. Kitts and Nevis: Internationally renowned pianist, Roman Rudnytsky, of the United States entertained an appreciative crowd at a piano recital held under the distinguished patronage of St. Kitts/Nevis Governor-General Sir Cuthbert Sebastian. Rudnytsky, who has performed in more than 80 countries worldwide, told the gathering that he has been to St. Kitts several times before and always enjoys return visits. His stay here is facilitated through a public diplomacy program offered by the US Embassy in a bid to expose individuals from different countries and region to positive facets of American culture.

This Week in Germany: This newsletter is brought to you by the German Information Center, dedicated to fulfilling the public diplomacy mission of the German Embassy by offering Americans a window on modern Germany. The opinions and material contained herein, however, do not necessarily represent the views or policies of the German government.

Survey reveals Turkey a loner, summit disagreesTurkish Daily News: A global security conference was held in Istanbul yesterday. Stefanie Babast, the acting deputy secretary of NATO Public Diplomacy, said, “Multilateralism and international cooperation are key and individual countries cannot tackle global problems on their own. Turkey cannot act alone in international matter.”

RELATED ITEMS

Does killing Afghan civilians keep us safe? Western airstrikes target terrorists, but innocents are caught in the crossfire - Peter Bergen and Katherine Tiedemann, Los Angeles Times: Civilians in Afghanistan have been caught in the crossfire for too long. Over-reliance on airstrikes is counterproductive in the battle for Afghan hearts and minds. President Bush's announcement this week that he will send nearly 5,000 additional troops to Afghanistan is a good way to start ameliorating this situation, but it is not enough.

A Grim Anniversary: Seven years later, Al Qaeda still lives -- and its new host is a nuclear-weapons state - Michael Hirsh, Newsweek: The Pakistanis, including many in the military and ISI (its intel service) are becoming more anti-American as the Bush administration embraces their mortal enemy, India, with a technology-rich new strategic partnership.

Quagmire, Phase 2: The Invasion of Pakistan – William Pfaff, Truthdig: Pakistan public opinion seems largely against “America’s war” being fought inside Pakistan.

What Americans Must Ask Themselves: U.S. Designs on Pakistan - Ayesha Ijaz Khan, Counterpunch: Anti-Americanism in Pakistan has reached record highs and even those Pakistanis who are left-leaning and actively lobbying for an end to the brutality of terrorism are concluding that America’s primary interest lies in destabilizing Pakistan and not in putting an end to terrorism.

Europe’s Problem – Editorial, New York Times: Russia cannot be allowed to redraw Georgia’s (or anyone else’s) borders by force. Until the Europeans stand together -- and with the United States -- against Moscow’s bullying, Russia’s leaders will feel little pressure to change their behavior.

On China: A New Approach to All of Asia
- Thomas M. Donnelly and Rachel Kleinfeld, New York Times: Pushing the candidates on the issue of China’s rise ought to be a focus of future presidential debates. China’s status as a great power is perhaps the central question of 21st-century international affairs, arguably more important than Islamic extremism, Russian revanchism or nuclear proliferation. And China’s role is inseparable from those other issues.

What Is the Bush Doctrine, Anyway?
- Dan Froomkin,
washingtonpost.com: Jacob Weisberg, in his book "The Bush Tragedy," actually identified six Bush Doctrines: Bush Doctrine 1.0 was Unipolar Realism (3/7/99--9/10/01); Bush Doctrine 2.0 was With Us or Against Us (9/11/01--5/31/02); Bush Doctrine 3.0 was Preemption (6/1/02--11/5/03); Bush Doctrine 4.0 was Democracy in the Middle East (11/6/03--1/19/05); Bush Doctrine 5.0 was Freedom Everywhere (1/20/05-- 11/7/06); and Bush Doctrine 6.0 (11/8/06 to date) is the "absence of any functioning doctrine at all."

What Bush Doctrine? Sarah Palin Was Right To Be Confused. There Isn't One - Timothy Noah, Slate

The Sorrow and the Pity: When It Comes To Foreign Policy, Sarah Palin Doesn't Know What She's Talking About - Fred Kaplan, Slate

Is George W. Bush the Worst President in US History? – Ivan Eland, antiwar.com: Bush's War on Terror has also undermined the cherished American system of government by unconstitutionally suspending habeas corpus; enhancing government surveillance of the American public, including unconstitutional spying without court-reviewed warrants; practicing torture; and distorting the constitutional checks and balances by expanding the authority of the already imperial presidency. Yet it could be argued that several other presidents have done worse things.

YouTube bans terrorism training videos
- AP, USA TODAY

Friday, September 12, 2008

September 12


"Just look at the number of Indians who went to America during the Cold War versus those who went and settled in Russia. That is how effective [American] propaganda was."

--N. Bhaskara Rao, chairman of the Center for Media Studies in New Delhi, speaking about the Voice of America

“You see, many textbooks are written by those who are paid in foreign grants. And naturally they are dancing the polka ordered by those who pay them. Do you understand?”

--Russian President Vladimir Putin

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

James Glassman: In a HARDtalk interview broadcast on 11 September, Stephen Sackur talks to James Glassman, the US Under Secretary of State for Public DiplomacyBBC News: The architects of America's global war on terror acknowledge that the conflict cannot be won by bombs and bullets alone. They say it is also a defining war of ideas in which a key weapon against Islamist extremism is 'public diplomacy' and the power of persuasion.

Afghanistan: Taliban accused of using civilians to provoke US attacksMedia Center adnkronos: The Taliban are trying to induce American forces to kill civilians, including women and children, in Afghanistan, a senior US government official said on Thursday. James Glassman was speaking in response to the controversial air strike carried out by American forces that allegedly killed at least 90 civilians in western Afghanistan in August.

The New Age of Public Diplomacy – Aiban, A Little Something: “The title of the talk was catchy and I decided to attend this lunch hour (1-2 pm) Chatham House event … The speaker, James K Glassman is the US Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs. It's the first time I heard of 'public diplomacy' and sure enough, as Mr. Glassman completed a few introductory sentences, he explained what this meant.”

Talk by James K. Glassman Under Secretary, Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, London Sept 11th 2008 - Shanedillon’s Weblog: “The talk was interesting and poignant give[n] th[at] it was on the anniversary of September 11th. .... Why is that a substantial number of people in Europe and other parts of the world believe that the U.S. government complicit despite overwhelming evidence. Glassman's take on this was to acknowledge but realised that some of the conspiracy theories are beyond the power of public diplomacy to shift ideas.”

Broadcasting Board of Governors Refuses to Vote on Restoring Voice of America Radio to Russia – Ted Lipien, Free Media Online Blog

India Set to Lose Voice of America: After 53 Years, Radio Service Will End - Rama Lakshmi, Washington Post: The U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors has decided that VOA's seven-hour Hindi-language radio service will end this month, after 53 years. VOA will also eliminate radio broadcasts in three Eastern European languages. Radio broadcasts in Russian went off the air in July.

Internet Freedom Facing New ThreatsVOA News Blog: A workshop organized by the Broadcasting Board of Governors focused on “New Media vs. New Censorship: The Authoritarian Assault on Information.”

9/11 and Future Jihad - Walid Phares, American Thinker: The 2004 9/11 Congressional report "was a revolutionary text. It named names. While most world governments are still stuck with public diplomacy and 'diplomatic' language, never crossing from the concept of 'terrorism' to the 'j' word, the commission told us there is another 'world' out there, a space ruled by ideologies and terrorist strategies aiming at our cities, towns, countries, laws, peoples, and cultures."

9/11 anniversary: Afghanistan still holds the key to war on terror - telegraph.co.uk: The unilateral decision, reportedly taken by George W. Bush in July, to pursue terrorists into Pakistan is bound further to inflame anti-American feeling. The charge of breach of sovereignty levelled by General Ashfaq Kayani, the moderate, part-American-trained Chief of Army Staff, is a severe indictment of Washington's public diplomacy.

Poverty of Policy-Making on Terrorism - Nasim Zehra, Media Monitors Network, CA : “It was striking that the Afghan president felt confident enough to stand by strong allegations made by him in the recent past against Pakistan's institutions, yet Pakistan's President underscored that a chunk of the problem also flowed from the political and security disarray that currently prevails within Afghanistan. Whatever the private conversation public diplomacy, conducted for example through the joint press conference, required the President, like his Afghan counterpart, to put across the Pakistan-Afghan problem in the broader context.”

Transcendent warfare: Human consciousness the key? - Steve Hammons, American Chronicle: “The term ‘transcendent warfare’ was used by a U.S. Navy SEAL officer several years ago to describe the use of leading-edge knowledge and methods that could be helpful in achieving many important objectives. … [they] may assist ‘public diplomacy’ and constructive psychological operations.”

RELATED ITEMS

Launch of the Democracy Video Challenge - Media Note, Office of the Spokesman, US State Department, Washington, DC - The U.S. Department of State will announce the launch of a worldwide competition aimed at enhancing the global dialogue on democracy. The launch will take place on the United Nations’ first International Day of Democracy, September 15, 2008. The Democracy Video Challenge asks budding filmmakers, democracy advocates, and the general public to create video shorts that complete the phrase, “Democracy is…” The winners will be selected by the online voting public.

National service, not lip service – Editorial, Boston Globe: Today, Washington's favorite bipartisan couple, Ted Kennedy and Republican Orrin Hatch of Utah, will file legislation to dramatically increase opportunities for Americans to volunteer, making it as integral a part of citizenship as voting. Using the model of AmeriCorps, the bill establishes five new "corps" for volunteers, including areas such as international service, disaster relief, and a green energy corps, as well as the traditional focus on education and poverty.

BBC Poll: In 22 Nations, Obama preferred over McCain: World Views of the Elections: So What? – Melinda Brouwer, Foreign Policy Association: Public Diplomacy and the 20008 Presidential Elections: That people abroad think an Obama presidency would improve US relations with the world will have no effect on American voting patterns in the least, but it will serve as an important indicator of how we can expect the world to sit with the U.S. decision, or what foot Obama or McCain will start off with -- whichever candidate Americans choose.

Blame America First: Around the world - Michelle Malkin, National Review: Seven years after Mohamed Atta, Hani Hanjour, and their Allahu Akbar-screaming team succeeded in slaughtering nearly 3,000 innocent men, women, and children, large numbers of our putative allies in the civilized world still blame America and Israel.

Palin on World Affairs: Just not Ready for Prime Time
– Juan Cole, Informed Comment: Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Palin and the Bush Doctrine - Richard Kim, The Nation: In her first public test, Sarah Palin exhibits a stunning ignorance about national security and the Bush doctrine. Will it matter?

The day America was born again: Nothing Sarah Palin and her followers can do will prevent America's steady movement away from social conservatism - Justin Webb, The Times (London): No, America is changing and a new era is beginning: a post-Reagan era in which social conservatism (galvanising Republicans and terrifying Democrats) is replaced as the driving force in US politics by... Well, we don't know.

A new president and a wake-up call - Philip Stephens, Financial Times: If the new US president will discover that the most powerful leader in the world is not quite as powerful as he was, Europe will find the new world disorder equally discomfiting. America’s mistake has been to disdain multilateralism and to overreach itself. Europe’s misjudgment has been to assume the inexorable advance of the rules-based system that it presents as a model to the world.

Afghanistan After Seven Years of War: You Call This a Good War? - Sharon Smith, Counterpunch: The Afghan people have endured seven long years of misery thanks to U.S. occupation, and it is high time to take a principled stand against U.S. imperial aims in Central Asia. The war on Afghanistan is no more justified than the war on Iraq.

Putin Stunned by Power of Western PropagandaKommersant: Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said he was surprised by the power manifested by western propaganda after Georgia’s assault on South Ossetia, RIA Novosti reported from Sochi.

Asia's Georgian Cold : The repercussions of Russian aggression - Michael Auslin, Weekly Standard: When autocracy sneezes, Asia catches cold. Russia's naked power grab in the Caucasus will have global repercussions, nowhere more so than in Asia.

Ossetia-Georgia-Russia-U.S.A.: Towards a Second Cold War? - Noam Chomsky, Counterpunch: A new cold war seems unlikely. To evaluate the prospect, we should begin with clarity about the old cold war. Fevered rhetoric aside, in practice the cold war was a tacit compact in which each of the contestants was largely free to resort to violence and subversion to control its own domains: for Russia, its Eastern neighbors; for the global superpower, most of the world. Human society need not endure -- and might not survive -- a resurrection of anything like that.

Saudis arrest 5 accused of Internet propaganda – The Associated Press, International Herald Tribune: The arrests announced Wednesday are part of a campaign against militants that began five years ago. In June, authorities said they had arrested more than 700 suspected al-Qaida-linked militants since the beginning of the year.

Yes, even college English teachers fall for Facebook: I knew I was in deep when I spelled 'you' as 'u.' - Jan Worth-Nelson, Christian Science Monitor

Quotes on Propaganda - Quotations Book

AMERICANA

The De-Elitification of the USA - Cartoon by Mark Fiore, Mother Jones

Death Of A Nation: ‘The American People Take The Choice Of A New President Very Seriously’… - Wonkette

Thursday, September 11, 2008

September 11

"We can't kill our way to victory."

--Adm. Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, regarding the war in Afghanistan

“We're killin' 'em. We're killin' 'em all.”

--President George W. Bush, regarding his war in Iraq

Glassman in the UK – Wandren, Wandren PD: A testing ground for new possibilities: While advocating a particular national policy is a role for Public Diplomacy, Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James Glassman, and practitioners more broadly, should keep a keen eye on the end goal. If the end goal is communities empowered to face a common challenge, using rhetoric which damages that goal should be avoided, however tempting it is to promote the "national."

Conspiracy Theorists: The Middle East is still confused about 9/11; so are the elite media - Clifford D. May, National Review: “I’m attending the World Summit on Counter-Terrorism in this Tel Aviv suburb and I’m having a coffee and reading the International Herald Tribune. And there on page two is a feature, dateline Cairo, reporting that seven years after the attacks of September 11, 2001, the 'conventional wisdom' in the Middle East is that 'the United States and Israel had to have been involved' in the planning, if not the execution of the mass murder. … So it’s due to the inadequacies of U.S. public diplomacy that the fabled Arab Street thinks Americans incinerated fellow Americans as part of a ‘crusade’ against them?”

BBG to Vote Thursday on Restoration of VOA Radio Broadcasts to Russia and Other Countries – Ted Lipien, FreeMediaOnline.org

Global Service Fellowships: Building Bridges through American Volunteers - Brookings Policy Brief Series # 160: The role of international volunteer service in building bridges across growing global divides has never been more critical to the future of our nation, and global peace and stability. In addition to bringing tangible benefits to the people they serve, members of this new cadre of international volunteers also tend to develop enduring habits of civic engagement and lasting appreciation of foreign partners and perspectives. This strengthens America's civil society, advances public diplomacy objectives abroad, and deepens American understanding of forces beyond our borders.

Communications Professionals Challenge McCain and Obama on Ethics: Public Relations Society of America Requests Formal Commitment to Accurate, Truthful and Respectful Discourse, Offers Context and Commentary by Communications Ethics ExpertMarketWatch: The Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) leadership spearheaded a private sector summit on public diplomacy at the U.S. State Department, among other activities.

US ashamed over killing of Sikhs in hate crime in America: US EmbassyNational News of India: "Public Diplomacy Officer from US Embassy Lisa Swenarski said on Wednesday that US is ashamed over the killing of the Sikhs in America post September 11 due to hate crime."

Links: Cairo by night, O3b, Google imagery update - geo2web.com: Review of GIS GPS GEO and MAPs technology: “I’m in Washington DC for the rest of the week for one of my day jobs, as project manager of the Second House of Sweden: The librarians at the Library of Congress are curious about Sweden’s experience using virtual worlds for public diplomacy, and Sweden is happy to share it, so I’ll be speaking at a forum on federal information policies here for the Federal Library and Information Center Committee.”

When home is a foreign term - Nadeswaran and Terence Fernandez, Sun2Surf, Malaysia: Foreign Affairs Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim: “I’ve had three ambassadorial conventions so far -- in Egypt, UK and here. We will have one more in Washington to have these progressive developments among our mission heads ... to be up to date, not to be reactive all the time, that’s why we created these booklets and the Public Diplomacy Division in the ministry especially for this. You should see some changes now and if you see any foot-draggers, you let me know. With our progressiveness and CDs and booklets, you should see some changes.”

Courses For International Service At American University Washington DC: SIS-528 INTERNATIONAL SERVICE: Course Level: Undergraduate/Graduate -- Special Studies in International Communication (3): Topics vary by section, may be repeated for credit with different topic. Rotating topics including international communication and information technology; international communication multilateral negotiation; international communication and public diplomacy; international communication and development; communicating in the Arab world and in Islamic societies; communication, culture, and change; the global knowledge economy; and strategic communications in intelligence and national security. Usually offered every term.

Field Trips! – Carolyn, Nonnie Goes To Belgium!: “hello from brussels! we have had two interesting field trips this week. yesterday morning we got up early and went to NATO. we didn't have a tour or anything, but we had 2 information sessions. the first was from a guy from the NATO public diplomacy division who was an information officer for denmark, norway, and the US. he talked about what NATO is and what they do, how it is different from the EU, and sort of what role NATO plays in current events like what is going on in georgia.”

RELATED ITEMS

If the World Could Vote: Or How Others See Us - Patricia H. Kushlis, Whirled View: It’s too early to tell how McCain’s Palin bombshell or Obama’s fabulous speech and Clinton’s unifying message at the Democratic national convention will be received outside the borders of these United States.

The world's verdict will be harsh if the US rejects the man it yearns for: An America that disdains Obama for his global support risks turning current anti-Bush feeling into something far worse - Jonathan Freedland, The Guardian

On the Seventh Anniversary of September 11: Time to Declare the original al-Qaeda Defeated – Juan Cole, Informed Comment
Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion


A Man, A Plan, Afghanistan: If Obama really wants to smite Al Qaeda, this is what he should do - Peter Bergen, The New Republic: As the new president assumes office in January, some will no doubt advise him that increased American engagement in Afghanistan and Pakistan will be costly and dangerous. His best response is that, on September 11, we learned that neglect of Afghanistan and Pakistan costs even more.

Seven years later – Editorial, Boston Globe: Obama and McCain both need to revise their plans for Afghanistan and Pakistan. Above all, the next president must enlarge the circle of allies among the populace as well as the leadership of both countries.

Let Them Eat Cake - Karen Kwiatkowski, Lew Rockwell.com: In a sheer quantitative sense, the United States has long since avenged 9-11, racking up hundreds of thousands of dead, wounded, and scarred innocents. It has long since avenged 9-11 in sheer destruction, laying waste to cities, villages, homes and hearths, industry, government and religious observance.

The Other 9/11 Story: What has and hasn't happened in the seven years since September 11, 2001 - Victor Davis Hanson, National Review: In years to come it may well be said that the president kept us safe for years when none thought he could, and removed the two most odious regimes in the Middle East and replaced them with the two best -- and confronted a confident and ascendant radical Islam and left it demoralized and discredited among its own host Arab and Muslim constituents.

In the Seventh Year - Roger Cohen, New York Times: And around the whole earth, which had stood with America, there arose a great trouble, for it seemed to peoples abroad that a great nation, rich in flocks and herds and land and water, had been cast among thorns and Philistines; its promise betrayed, its light dimmed, its armies stretched, its budget broken, its principles compromised, its dollar diminished. And it came to pass that this profligate nation, drinking oil with insatiable thirst, could not cure itself of this addiction, and so its wealth was transferred to other nations that did not always wish it well.

Reduced Dominance Is Predicted for U.S.: Analyst Previews Report to Next President - Joby Warrick and Walter Pincus, Washington Post: An intelligence forecast being prepared for the next president on future global risks envisions a steady decline in U.S. dominance in the coming decades, as the world is reshaped by globalization, battered by climate change, and destabilized by regional upheavals over shortages of food, water and energy. The report was previewed in a speech by Thomas Fingar, the U.S. intelligence community's top analyst.

Hard Russia vs. Soft China - Joseph S. Nye Jr., Moscow Times: China and Russia have just provided the world with sharp contrasts in the use of power. As the French analyst Dominique Moisi recently put it, "Whereas China intends to seduce and impress the world by the number of its Olympic medals, Russia wants to impress the world by demonstrating its military superiority. This is China's soft power versus Russia's hard power."

China, Russia and the new world disorder: Is authoritarian capitalism a stable, durable model? That is among the greatest questions of our time - Timothy Garton Ash, Los Angeles Times: What has proved false is the neoconservative claim that a single threat now defines the whole pattern of world politics; that, as Norman Podhoretz puts it, the struggle against Islamofascism is World War IV. The future of freedom depends on new versions of modernity evolving -- whether in India, China or the Muslim world -- that are distinctly non-Western yet also recognizably liberal, in the core sense of cherishing individual freedom.

Mindanao War, The Battle For Propaganda - Mindanao Examiner: Mindanao Island, in the southern Philippines, has become a battleground, not only of skirmishes between Filipino troops and Moro rebels, but of their propaganda.

NGOs criticise Bulgarian state propaganda on Belene - Ekolist.cz, Czech Republic: Bulgarian and international NGOs today asked the EU Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes to investigate the tendering procedures for the construction of the Belene nuclear power plant in northern Bulgaria. They also criticized the propaganda war that the Bulgarian government is waging in order to hide the problems around the project.

'Muslim Massacre' computer game condemned as tasteless by British MuslimsThe Times (London): A computer game in which players control an American soldier on a mission to “wipe out the Muslim race” has been condemned as tasteless and offensive by British Muslim groups. The game called Muslim Massacre, which is available as a free download over the internet, allows players to take control of an “American Hero” whose goal is to “ensure that no Muslim man or woman is left alive.”

Bookshelf: A Charm Brigade Raids Washington [Review of The Irregulars By Jennet Conant] - Philip Terzian, Wall Street Journal: Ms. Conant tells the story of a handful of young, handsome, cosmopolitan British officers sent to Washington before Pearl Harbor -- at Prime Minister Winston Churchill's direction -- to ingratiate themselves on the social scene, subvert American isolationism and advance the British cause through good manners. But it is unlikely that anyone who mattered in Washington had any doubt that the small army of enchanting officers attached to the British Embassy were engaged in anything other than gentlemen's espionage.
(link will lead to page with article’s headline)

AMERICANA

Hot Beef Sundaeboingboing: People fortunate enough to reside in Nebraska get to enjoy these hot beef sundaes [photo provided].

Sex addiction can mess up your advertisingAdweek: In general, sex addiction is tough to build marketing materials around.

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY RESOURCES

Intended for teachers of public diplomacy and related courses, here is an update on resources that may be of general interest. Suggestions for future updates are welcome. Compiled and kindly provided by:

Bruce Gregory
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Media and Public Affairs
George Washington University

(202) 994-0389

Kurt Amend, "Counterinsurgency Principles for the Diplomat," Small Wars Journal, Posted July 19, 2008. Amend, (a serving U.S. Foreign Service Officer with assignments in Afghanistan, India, Kosovo, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Tajikistan) looks at the gap between the wealth of military counterinsurgency doctrine and the lack of comparable doctrine for diplomats. Amend reviews the literature and offers guidelines for diplomats in counterinsurgency operations. Written also for development officials, intelligence officers, civilian experts, and civil affairs officers, his article looks at how insurgent groups have become smaller and more dispersed with flattened command structures and goals that often seek to weaken governments rather than replace them. Amend discusses the need for a strategic narrative; political strategies aimed at local populations; deep expertise; methods that require non-traditional roles; maximum contact with local leaders and citizens; and connected activities of participants: military, diplomatic, development, intelligence, NGO, and host-government.

Constance G. Anthony, "American Democratic Interventionism: Romancing the Iconic Woodrow Wilson," International Studies Perspectives, Vol. 9, Issue 3, August 2008, pp. 239-253. Working back from a history of unsuccessful efforts to transfer democracy through military intervention, Anthony (Seattle University) critically examines the content of Woodrow Wilson's democratic theory and its use in ideals of national mission and destiny. Her assessment of the history of democratic interventionism from a variety of realist and idealist perspectives leads her to question the interventionist project on moral and pragmatic grounds.

Matt Armstrong, "Rethinking Smith-Mundt," Small Wars Journal, Posted July 28, 2008. Armstrong (MountainRunner public diplomacy and strategic communication blog) looks at the history and purposes of the U.S. Information and Educational Exchange Act of 1948 as amended (aka the Smith-Mundt Act) and its prohibition on dissemination of program materials and public diplomacy advocacy activities in the United States. Armstrong concludes that the Act has been misinterpreted, is unnecessarily limiting, and should be "revisited."

Jules Boykoff, "The Dialectic of Resistance and Restriction: Dissident Citizenship and the Global Media," Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, Summer/Fall, 2008, pp. 23-31. Boykoff (Pacific University) examines the continuing power of traditional media (notwithstanding the rise of new media) to suppress dissent intentionally and as a byproduct of norms of professional journalism. His essay offers a definition of dissent, a brief discussion of the media's role in the development and demobilization of social movements, and an empirical typology. Boykoff argues that media suppression occurs through censorship, "bi-level demonization" (media framing of government portrayals of individuals as dislikable or dangerous), media support for those "who operate within the system," underestimation of crowds, false balance of opposing sides, and disregard of social movements. Journalists, he concludes, also must "be more critical and courageous when government officials flash the national security trump card."

John Brown's Public Diplomacy Press and Blog Review, Version 2.0. John Brown, teacher, retired U.S. diplomat, and long-time compiler of news items and other useful information on public diplomacy and related subjects, has launched a new blog.

Steven R. Corman, Angela Trethewey, and H.L. Goodall, Jr., Weapons of Mass Persuasion: Strategic Communication to Combat Violent Extremism, (Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., 2008). The editors of this volume (also authors of many of its essays) are founders of Arizona State University's Consortium for Strategic Communication. Their essays, grounded in modern communication theory and case studies, challenge heavy reliance by U.S. political leaders on an "antiquated, linear, and simplistic model of communication" and failure to plan, coordinate, and execute successful strategic communication. The volume's eight essays include: "Strategery (sic): Missed Opportunities and the Consequences of Obsolete Strategic Communication Theory" (Goodall, Trethewey, and Corman); "Strategic Ambiguity, Communication, and Public Diplomacy in an Uncertain World: Principles and Practices" (Goodall, Trethewey, and Kelly McDonald); and "A New Communication Model for the 21st Century: From Simplistic Influence to Pragmatic Complexity" (Corman, Trethewey, and Goodall). The final essay, "Creating a New Communication Policy: How Changing Assumptions Leads to New Strategic Objectives" (Corman, Trethewey, and Goodall) rewrites the State Department's "U.S. National Strategy for Public Diplomacy and Strategic Communication" (2007) using the author's alternative assumptions and principles.

Graham Cormode and Balachander Krishnamurthy, "Key Differences Between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0," FirstMonday, Vol. 13, No. 6, June 2, 2008. The authors, researchers at AT&T Labs, describe the social networking world of Web 2.0 in terms accessible to the non-specialist. They identify its primary technological, structural, and sociological characteristics. The essential difference, they suggest, is that "content creators were few in Web 1.0 with the vast majority of users simply acting as consumers of content, while any participant can be a content creator in Web 2.0." Includes a critical examination of analytical issues, methods of user interaction, Web 2.0's "fundamentally different philosophy," and challenges beyond Web 2.0.

Stephen Franklin, "The Hunger: Egypt's Bloggers Want to be Journalists," Columbia Journalism Review, July/August 2008, 37-40. Franklin, a journalist for the Chicago Tribune on leave in Cairo on a Knight fellowship, writes about Egyptians in the media space between the government's press and the opposition press "for which facts are often considered fungible." He finds a robust arena characterized by an appetite for investigative articles, fact driven reporting, and creative use of the Internet and blogging to test the limits of media freedom.

"Global Visions for America," The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4, Autumn 2008, pp. 115-173. The editors invited six authors to address the question: "In an ideal world, what role would you want the next U.S. administration to perform with your country, region, and/or the world?" The essays are preceded with data from the Pew Global Attitudes Project on perceptions of global threats and high expectations "that the next president will take America's foreign policy in a new direction." Includes articles on Russia, Europe, the Middle East, India, East Asia, and Japan. Dimitri Trenin (Carnegie Moscow Center), "A Less Ideological America"; Robin Niblett (Chatham House, London), "Europe's Call for a Leader by Example"; Glenn Kessler (The Washington Post) "Fix This Middle Eastern Mess"; C. Raja Mohan (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore), "India's Quest for Continuity in the Face of Change"; Wu Xinbo (Fudan University, Shanghai), "A Forward-Looking Partner in a Changing East Asia"; Yoichi Kato (Asahi Shimbun), "Return from 9/11 to Global Leader." Abstracts available online.

Bruce Gregory, "Public Diplomacy and National Security: Lessons from the U.S. Experience," Small Wars Journal, Posted August 14, 2008. This article agrees with calls to build greater civilian capacity in national security and stronger public diplomacy capabilities. It argues, however, that U.S. public diplomacy's principles and methods are rooted in 20th century models of communication, governance, and armed conflict, which contribute to an inability to learn from recent experience and foster real change. The article defines public diplomacy, describes forces shaping the context of 21st century public diplomacy, and identifies five lessons from recent experience that point the way to change: abandon message influence dominance; drop the "war on terror" narrative; leverage knowledge, skills, and creativity in civil society; emphasize net-centric actors and actions; rethink government broadcasting and adapt to new media.

Eric Gregory, Politics & the Order of Love: An Augustinian Ethic of Democratic Citizenship, (University of Chicago Press, 2008). Gregory (Princeton University) frames a liberal ethics of citizenship informed by the Augustinian tradition, theology, feminist theory, and political philosophy. He examines Augustine's classic themes of love and sin in the context of contemporary secular political theory: related notions of care, solidarity, and sympathy on the one hand and cruelty, evil, and narrow self-interest on the other. His book looks at the role of religion in liberal society and the political implications of Augustine's thinking for three strands of modern liberalism manifest in the legacies of Reinhold Niebuhr's realism, John Rawls' proceduralism, and Martin Luther King, Jr.'s civic liberalism.

Thomas L. Friedman, Hot, Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution and How it Can Renew America, (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008). New York Times columnist Tom Friedman (author of The Lexis and the Olive Tree, 1999, and The World is Flat, 2005) turns his attention to two issues: "America's loss of focus and national purpose since 9/11" and a planet challenged by global warming, growing populations, and "the astonishing expansion of the world's middle class through globalization." He calls for a green revolution that will be the biggest innovation in American history.

International Crisis Group, Taliban Propaganda: Winning the War of Words? Asia Report No. 158, July 24, 2008. In this 34-page report, the International Crisis Group concludes the Taliban, despite lack of widespread active support, "has created a sophisticated communications apparatus" to tap into strains of Afghan nationalism, to exploit sources of alienation and policy failures of the Kabul government and its allies, and to weaken support for nation-building. The report examines the strengths and limitations of the Taliban's communication strategy and its use of a full range of media: a website named for the former regime, magazines, DVDs, audio cassettes, pamphlets, mobile phones, and traditional nationalist songs and poems.

Hafsa Kanjwal, "American Muslims and the Use of Cultural Diplomacy," Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, Summer/Fall, 2008, pp. 133-139. Kanjwal (2008 graduate of Georgetown University) looks at the role a "younger generation of American Muslims plays in using cultural expression to bridge the gap between Western and Muslim societies." Calling on American Muslims to adopt "a non-traditional diplomatic role" in representing Islam to Americans, she identifies two methods: "public relations diplomacy" (a "more direct, and often reactionary engagement") and "cultural diplomacy ("nuanced involvement with culture and society that does not always stem from a need to serve as an 'Ambassador of Islam'"). Drawing on analytical frameworks and cases, she concludes that "cultural diplomacy should take precedence over public relations diplomacy."

Luminita Kohalmi, "Postmodern Theoretical Models of Strategic Communication: Communication Through Attractors," Romanian Military Thinking, 2, April-June, 2008. Kohalmi (Information and Public Relations Directorate, Romanian Ministry of Defense) discusses strategic communication in the context of chaos theory and nonlinear systems. Her article examines the importance of "initial conditions sensitivity" in complex systems, John Boyd's OODA loop, and four principles of strategic communication through attractors: perception attractors built on symbols and values, understanding changes in key parameters in the external environment, segmentation of publics, and creative use of third parties. Her article is published in English and Romanian.

Kristin Lord, "Public Diplomacy and the New Transatlantic Agenda," The Brookings Institution, August 15, 2008. Lord (Brookings Institution) summarizes views expressed in a Brookings workshop held in cooperation with the British embassy in Washington on the importance of public attitudes in achieving transatlantic goals. Her paper looks at the relevance of public opinion to the transatlantic partnership overall; attitudes on terrorism, climate change, and international trade; and how public diplomacy can help governments achieve five strategic objectives in the short- and long-term transatlantic agenda.

Brendan Luyt, "The One Laptop Per Child Project and the Negotiation of Technological Meaning," FirstMonday, Vol. 13, No. 6, June 2, 2008. Luyt (Nanyang Technological University) applies insights from Actor-Network Theory -- the importance of social forces and multitudes of actors, perceived or not perceived, to the successful adoption of new technologies -- in a case study of the One Laptop project let by MIT's Nicholas Negroponte. Forces favoring One Laptop: the changing nature of global capitalism, requirements for new kinds of workers, enthusiasm for open source content, and social desires for technological solutions to global problems. Forces challenging One Laptop: competition from for-profit firms and teachers, education bureaucracies, and development experts who have different strategies and are invested in the status quo. Luyt argues One Laptop's future will depend on the extent to which it can stay true to its vision while pragmatically negotiating "the meaning of the new technology" with social forces that will affect the outcome.

NAFSA, Association of International Educators, International Education: The Neglected Dimension of Public Diplomacy, Policy Brief, Vol. 3, Issue 5, August 12, 2008. NAFSA's agenda puts "building, conducting, and sustaining long-term relationships" at the heart of public diplomacy and calls for restoration of "American international legitimacy" through a major Presidentially led international education initiative. NAFSA's key recommendations: enact a comprehensive national program to establish study abroad as an integral component of U.S. undergraduate education; restore America's status as a magnet for students and scholars, future leaders, and innovators; coordinate federal agencies responsible for access, visa reform, and immigration reform; strengthen exchange and volunteer service programs. Available online and in pdf format for download.

Martha C. Nussbaum, "Toward a Globally Sensitive Patriotism," Daedalus, Summer 2008, pp. 78-93. The University of Chicago's Nussbaum reexamines her views that duties to all humanity take precedence over other duties and that particular obligations are derivative from universal obligations. Drawing on the writings of John Rawls, Jurgen Habermas, and others in the classically liberal tradition, and on the political activism of Abraham Lincoln, Mohandas Gandhi, and Martin Luther King, she concludes that "national sentiment can play a valuable role in creating a decent world culture." Nussbaum finds much to criticize in exclusionary forms of patriotism that demonize others and play to fear and anxiety. But if nations are to pursue goals of global justice "that require sacrifice of self-interest," then they need to appeal to "patriotism, in ways that draw on symbol and rhetoric, emotional memory and history." Abstract and first page available at link.

"Politics and the Media," The Hedgehog Review: Critical Reflections on Contemporary Culture, Summer 2008. The University of Virginia's Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture devotes this issue to an examination of the role and current health of the media in society -- and to how political process is changing in the context of new media forms. Contains the following essays:

-- Michael Schudson (Columbia University), "News and Democratic Society: Past, Present, and Future"
-- Kiku Adatto (Harvard University), "Photo-op Politics"
-- Doris A. Graber (University of Illinois), "Do the News Media Starve the Civic IQ: Squaring Impressions and Facts"
-- Paul Freedman (University of Virginia), "Thirty-Second Democracy: Campaign Advertising and American Elections"
-- Thomas E. Patterson (Harvard University), "The Negative Effect: News, Politics, and the Public"
-- Robert W. McChesney (University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign), "Journalism: Looking Backward, Going Forward"
-- Kristine Ronan (University of Virginia), "Review Essay: The Public Presence of American Political Cartoons"
-- Charles T. Mathewes (University of Virginia), "An Interview with [Washington Post columnist] E. J. Dionne, Jr."
-- Christopher McKnight Nichols (University of Virginia), "Democracy, Politics, and the Media: A Bibliographic Essay"Available through link.

Gem from the Past

David Pearce, Wary Partners: Diplomats and the Media, Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University, (Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 1995). Drawing on his skills as a foreign correspondent (Associated Press, The Washington Post) and as a U.S. Foreign Service Officer (assignments in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and United Arab Emirates), Pearce examined relationships between diplomats and the media, the changing nature of diplomacy, and "terms of engagement" for practitioners in both professions. Regrettably no longer in print, Pearce's study continues to be relevant and instructive.

For previous compilations of Public Diplomacy: Books, Articles, Websites, visit a wiki kindly maintained by the University of Southern California's Center on Public Diplomacy.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

September 10


"Tagging, Tracking and Locating"

--Newfangled technologies designed to track people from long distances, without the targeted people realizing they are being tracked

“You can't use the Internet if you can't read.”

--Cyrus Farivar, “Google, HSBC and others want to bring satellite-based Internet to the developing world” (Salon)

NEW BOOK

Hans N. Tuch, Arias, Cabalettas, and Foreign Affairs‏: A Public Diplomat’s Quasi Musical Memoirs (New Academia/Vellum Books, 2008)

UPDATED READING LIST ON PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Netherlands Institute of International Relations ‘Clingendael’ Library and Documentation Centre

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Report: Asia Requires Urgent U.S. Attention - Business Wire: According to America's Role in Asia: Asian and American Views, a new published volume of foreign policy recommendations written by 20 distinguished Asian and U.S. experts, the United States would be well advised to set a good example of upholding the very values it espouses. U.S. allies in Asia are acutely aware of America’s poor image among their own publics and want the next administration’s foreign policy to pay special attention to public diplomacy. Both Americans and Asians will benefit if the political, intellectual, and cultural bridges are strengthened.

Why cultural diplomacy remains so important - Harmony Beat; News about Cultures in Harmony, published by its director, William Harvey: The copious public diplomacy efforts of the U.S. government and numerous cultural diplomacy organizations have been nowhere close to sufficient. On a grand scale, the project of ameliorating the American image over the past seven years has been a failure. What will be needed is public diplomacy at a scale previously unimagined. We need to send Americans to the Middle East to listen, not just to talk. We need to send Americans to the Middle East to learn, just to teach. When Cultures in Harmony launches projects, it conceives of them as fully equal exchanges.

Paranoid Conspiracy Theories - Leo Americanus: “[H]ow can U.S. public diplomacy ever succeed in winning hearts and minds? I don't think that it can, because those who will believe our public diplomacy are already convinced. Those that aren't convinced will never believe a word out of our mouths. The only way we can change perceptions is through a long term demonstration of results, not words, and, more importantly, the spread of more moderate perceptions from those in the [Middle East] region who can see both sides to those who cannot. Really, the hearts and minds can only be won from within the region, not through U.S. public diplomacy.”

Creating The Neoliberal Consensus - Patrick Vessey, UK Libertarian Party, The unofficial blog of the UK Libertarian Party: “Working alongside democracy promotion is ‘media assistance,’ or ‘development communications.’ According to a recent USAID policy document -- just about the most explicit material you’re going to get on the subject -- ‘A global analysis of USAID media programmes indicates that independent media assistance has contributed to the achievement of many foreign policy goals. It often, though not always, produced the same results that public diplomacy sought to achieve.’”

Senator Obama's Civilian National Security Force – papabear, The New Beginning: Obama will set up an America's Voice Initiative to send Americans who are fluent speakers of local languages to expand our public diplomacy. He also will extend opportunities for older individuals such as teachers, engineers, and doctors to serve overseas.

“Oh… My… God… I’m a Diplomat” – Smaug, Cave! Hic Dragones: “Fran Drescher was named a public diplomacy envoy by the US State Dept. A joke should write itself. (Actually, when she was on Favreau’s 'Dinner for Five' she was quite charming).”

Do a Great Thing for Your Country – Host an Exchange StudentiContactCommunity: EF Foundation students are between 15 and 18 years old, and arrive with health insurance and their own spending money. EF Foundation for Foreign Study is a nonprofit organization with thousands of volunteers across the country that brings high school students from all over the world to live and study for a year in the United States. Karen Hughes, former Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, named international exchanges as one of the four strategic pillars needed to strengthen America’s ties with foreign nations.

Awakening Moment - Irene Eng, The Kibbitzer: Former Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Karen Hughes’ blunder on her first maiden voyage to the Middle East was a telling indicator just how much the Americans understand the world. When Hughes expressed hope that one day “[Saudi] women will be able to fully participate in society,” the audience, 500 women all clad in black from head to foot, was bewildered.

‘Basketball’s more than a game’ - John Nchimbi, Daily News: “Olympic gold medallist Jennifer Azzi who is among the US basketball envoys who started a three day clinic in Dar es Salaam yesterday, has said basketball is more than simply being a great athlete seen on court. … The US Public Diplomacy Officer Karen Grissette said the programme is a reflection of the deep friendship between the people of Tanzania and America. 'It is a friendship that goes beyond policy and truly unites Tanzanians and Americans -- our love of Sports,' said Karen.”

Thornbill on goodwill mission to NagalandThe Morung Express: “On a goodwill mission to meet and interact with representatives from different sections of society, visiting Deputy Public Affairs Officer at the US Embassy in New Delhi, Elizabeth Thornbill expressed her keen desire to return to Nagaland saying that she felt ‘welcomed and at home among the Nagas’. … Coming across as a strong votary of dialogue and public diplomacy, Thornbill spoke on the need to communicate with citizens in other societies and to take a common approach to solving problems whether it is global warming, violence, HIV/AIDS, trafficking and all. … [S]he informed that an agreement was signed recently between the US Government and the Government of India for financing educational exchange programs known as the US-India Educational Foundation, awarding ‘Fulbright-Jawaharlal Nehru Scholarships and Grants.’”

Some Reflections on Naga Ceasefire - U A Shimray, Mainstream: The remote North-Eastern region [NER] has also been affected by the wave of “globalisation.” The wave is in the form of market and resource extraction. Recently, the Government of India has proposed dozens of dams in Arunachal and Sikkim, uranium mining in Meghalaya and Special Economic Zones in Nagaland. India’s newly created Public Diplomacy Division [PDD] in the Ministry of External Affairs [MEA] is keen enough to learn about the North-East.

Commentary: Canada’s ‘bird poo politics’The Zimbawe Guardian: Western public diplomacy on the crisis in Zimbabwe and the Sadc region has been abysmal, filled with gesture politics that does very little for progress and improvement of the lives of millions of Zimbabweans.

US diplomat to negotiate for UN in Western Sahara - Martin Barillas, Spero News: US diplomat Christopher W. S. Ross is apparently the new United Nations Secretary General’s personal envoy for the Western Sahara. Ross has served as US ambassador to Algeria and Syria and was US State Department Senior Adviser for Arab World Public Diplomacy.

Was ist das? No DW TV In Germany? - Nana Agyeman Birikorang, G-News: “Was ist das? (What’s that?) No DW TV in Germany?...That was my initial expression in Deutsch when I heard that it is almost impossible to receive the transmission of Deutsche Welle Television (DW TV) the German external broadcaster in Germany. I was shocked to the bone. … As if the Seminar Moderator Friederike Boge knew what was going through my mind during the lecture in the sense that we were divided into four groups and fortunately unfortunately my group was given a topic on 'Public Diplomacy and the Transformation of International Broadcasting' and I was chosen by the group to do the presentation.”

APDS - Paul Rockower, Levantine: “We had the first meeting of the Association of Public Diplomacy Scholars (APDS), the student group that represents Pub D students. I am running for class representative. I gave a little ad hoc presentation on my candidacy. … Apparently, the class decided differently, and elected someone else. … Otherwise, was out the other night on a blind date with a rabbi. Reminds me of the riddle about the doctor not being able to operate on ‘my son,’ the punchline being that the doctor is a woman.”

RELATED ITEMS

BBC Poll: In 22 Nations, Obama preferred over McCain – Melinda Brouwer, Public Diplomacy and the 2008 U.S. Presidential Elections

'Transatlantic Trends' Survey 2008: Europeans Back Obama but Not Necessarily His Policies - Gregor Peter Schmitz, Spiegel: According to a major survey, Europeans want the Democrats to win back the White House this year. But Barack Obama's positions on Iran's nuclear program and Afghanistan are not widely supported in Europe, and the huge European interest in the election may not translate into closer trans-Atlantic ties.

The Foreign Policy Difference: Obama offers a sharp break with the postwar consensus on American exceptionalism - Fouad Ajami, The Wall Street Journal: Mr. Obama truly believes that he can offer the world beyond America's shores his biography, his sympathies with strangers. In the great debate over anti-Americanism and its sources, the two candidates couldn't be more different. Mr. Obama proceeds from the notion of American guilt: We called up the furies, he believes. Our war on terror and our war in Iraq triggered more animus. He proposes to repair for that, and offers himself (again, the biography) as a bridge to the world.

The 20 questions we would ask Sarah Palin - Rebecca Frankel, Foreign Policy Passport

Obama, Mccain And Al Qaeda : On Election Day, remember 9/11 - Jeffrey Goldberg, International Herald Tribune: The next president must do one thing, and one thing only, if he is to be judged a success: He must prevent Al Qaeda, or a Qaeda imitator, from gaining control of a nuclear device and detonating it in America. Everything else -- Fannie Mae, health care reform, energy independence, the budget shortfall in Wasilla, Alaska -- is commentary.

Seven years on, three big 9/11 lies - Muhammad Cohen, Asia Times: After enjoying virtually the entire world's goodwill after 9/11, polls showed America's standing in the world plummeted after the Iraq invasion. Favorable ratings are only recovering now because the Bush administration is approaching its end. It's impossible to calculate the impact of that tide of anti-Americanism in areas from the value of the US dollar to the potential Einsteins and their parents who have decided against moving to Bush's America.

US, Iran, and the Axis of Friendship - Rita Nakashima Brock and Amir Soltani, Boston Globe: Americans have an opportunity to reignite the remaining embers of the international goodwill of Sept. 12, 2001. War between Iran and the United States is not inevitable; it would be stupid, senseless, tragic, and expensive.

Worshiping the Indispensable Nation - Andrew Bacevich, TomDispatch: The United States will not change the world's political map in the ways top administration officials once dreamed of. There will be no earthquake that shakes up the Middle East -- unless the growing clout of Iran, Hezbollah, and Hamas in recent years qualifies as that earthquake.

America's Unwelcome Advances: The Pentagon's foreign overtures are running into a world of public opposition - Chalmers Johnson, Mother Jones: The United States now seems to be the last of a dying species -- the sole remaining multinational empire. The pressures of America's massive indebtedness, the growing contradiction between the needs of its civilian economy and its military-industrial complex, and its dependence on a volunteer army and innumerable private contractors strongly indicate an empire built on fragile foundations.

Kremlin's PR Machine Falling on Deaf Ears - Vladimir Frolov, Moscow Times: A serious communications breakdown between Russia and the West over the Georgian crisis has escalated into an unwillingness to speak to each other in normal diplomatic terms. Russia and the West are simply shouting past each other.

Dividing Line: War in the Caucasus Propaganda 2.0 - Matthias Kolb, Süddeutsche Zeitung: The fight for the right of interpretation between Russia and Georgia has broken into a full-fledged battle. It is taking place parallel to the fights on all channels -- on television, in newspapers and especially in the Internet.

Kitsch Trumps Baroque: Koons' Versailles Show Ruffles Feathers in FranceSpiegel: The pomp and splendor of Versailles is about to be invaded by pop art as a major retrospective on US artist Jeff Koons opens Wednesday. The decision to display the 17 works of kitsch in the former royal palace has upset quite a few French conservatives.

Facebook unveils new look with a new approach – AP, USA TODAY: The popular online hangout Facebook is forcing users to adapt to a redesigned website -- whether they like the new look or not -- starting today.

State Department Staffer Responds to Condi's "Not Enough Blacks at the State Department" Bullshit - Princess Sparkle Pony's Photo Blog: I keep track of Condoleezza's hairdo so you don't have to.

World War II Posters: Don't talk about ship movement or cargo (Part 2)

AMERICANA

Snowbilly Strip Malls: Take a Tour of Beautiful Wasilla, Alaska! - Wonkette

The Americans secessionist streak: In a recent poll, one in five agreed that states have the right to peacefully secede from the Union - Christopher Ketcham, Los Angeles Times

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

September 9


"I have lamented that I can go into a meeting at the Department of State -- and as a matter fact I can go into a whole day of meetings at the Department of State -- and actually rarely see somebody who looks like me. And that is just not acceptable."

--Dr. Condoleezza Rice, Secretary of State

“She didn’t look like me; she’s a couple of decades older than me. And I’m English, for goodness’ sake.”

--Actress Thandie Newton, reacting to Oliver Stone asking her to play Condoleezza Rice in “W,” his forthcoming biopic of George W. Bush

"Yes, Leezza, Leezza, Leezza … I love her very much."

--Libya's Moammar Gadhafi last week, on the eve of his meeting with the U.S. Secretary of State in Tripoli

VIDEO

Condi Rice Speaks Out: Sarah Palin Is A Governor, of Some State, In the United States! Wonkette

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Real Public Diplomacy - Abu Ghazala Dies, Foreign Policy Association: Egypt, The Largest Network of Global Affairs Blogs Online: Unfortunately, the United States government has lost a great deal of credibility in the Middle East since invading Iraq. It would do well to dispense with lofty rhetoric of what Midlde Eastern societies “need to do to change,” and instead talk about how the United States will treat the region with respect. The first move should be a high profile listening tour by a senior U.S. official -- either the new Secretary of State (not the Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy, who has no control over U.S. policies in the region), or a high profile Middle East Envoy (Bill Clinton?). That would be some real public diplomacy.

Experiencing America: Public Diplomacy at its Best
The Heritage Foundation: The Office of the Chief of Protocol, under the leadership of Ambassador Nancy Brinker, is taking groups of foreign diplomats far away from the Washington Beltway to “Experience America.” The trips are designed to highlight the spirit and vitality of America’s communities, the innovative drive of its businesses, the dedication of its non-profits, the vitality of academia, and the variety of ways that state and local governments are tackling the challenges of modern life.

U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors T[rie]d to Hire Paula Zahn As Their Public Relations Guru While Cutting Radio Programs to Countries Without Free Media - Ted Lipien, Free Media On Line Blog: The BBG has consistently put a high priority on itself while cutting and reducing U.S. broadcasts to people around the world who are deprived of free access to information and live under repressive regimes.

Part 1: Examining key differences between Obama and McCain - Tom Brune, Newsday.com: McCain pledges to revitalize U.S. public diplomacy and create independent agency with purpose of getting America's message to the world.

Obama v. McCain pros and cons - Sarah, Three Till Seven: McCain “'[p]ledges to revitalize U.S. public diplomacy and create independent agency with purpose of getting America’s message to the world.' Getting our message to the world? That sounds vaguely creepy to me, and like a first step in invading other countries like Iraq to force our governmental style down their throats.”

Actress Fran Drescher Takes on Role as U.S. Public Envoy - newsmarket.com: Actress Fran Drescher, best known for her role in the television sitcom “The Nanny,” has been named a U.S. public diplomacy envoy. Drescher, a cancer survivor and advocate of female empowerment, will support U.S. diplomacy efforts aimed at health organizations and women’s groups. Video includes soundbites from Actress Fran Drescher and Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs Goli Ameri.

World's most annoying woman now US diplomat
- Tim Norton, Stop the world Mummy, I want to get off...: Actress Fran Drescher has joined the ranks of celebrities working for the government -- after taking on a new role for the U.S. State Department. The 50-year-old cancer survivor was announced as a U.S. public diplomacy envoy by Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs, Goli Ameri, on Monday (08Sep08).

JNJ Johnson And Johnson Received Benjamin Franklin Award For Public Diplomacy By US State Department – webmaster, encyclocentral.com: JNJ is famous for its reputation at the corporate level and is ranked at the topmost position in Harris Interactive's National Corporate Reputation Survey. It was also regarded as the initial corporation that received the Benjamin Franklin Award for Public Diplomacy by the U.S. State Department to provide funds for international education programs.

Romania needs a strategy for economic diplomacy - Financiarul, Romania: The annual meeting of the Romanian ambassadors and consuls unfolded under the theme "An expanding economy, a dynamic diplomacy." This year’s meeting tackled such issues the role of public diplomacy and cultural diplomacy in the management of worldwide challenges and the conduct of political dialogue.

CPD Distinguished Speaker Series: The Public Diplomacy of the Emerging World Powers India - Shashi TharoorEvents Calendar, USC Annenberg: The USC Center on Public Diplomacy presents former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, Dr. Shashi Tharoor, as part of the CPD Distinguished Speaker Series: The Public Diplomacy of the Emerging World Powers. Based on his recent book The Elephant, the Tiger, and the Cell Phone, Dr. Tharoor will discuss India's rise to world leadership and how India represents itself to the world through public diplomacy.

Seib's new book examines the "Al-Jazeera Effect" and global politicsUSC Annenberg News - Journalism and public diplomacy professor Philip Seib's recently published book, The Al-Jazeera Effect (Potomac Books), discusses the influence of new media on global politics, particularly in relation to the Middle East.

Beschreibung des Praktikums - Praktikumsdetails: Mentions a cultural relations think-tank, based in London, UK. Its work focuses around five main themes: Public Diplomacy, Multiculturalism, Secularism and Faith, Identity and Cyberactivism.

H.E Richard Lyne Soon to Leave Solomons - Solomon Times Online, Solomon Islands: The National Government has accepted the nomination of Timothy Smart as the next British High Commissioner to the Solomon Islands. Mr. Smart is a member of the British Diplomatic Service and has until recently been the Deputy Head of the Public Diplomacy Division in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, FCO, in London.

RELATED ITEMS

Sarah Palin's Foreign Policy Education Is Ongoing, But Rice Doesn't Sound Impressed - Across The Pond Dw-World

A comedy of areas – Spengler, Asia Times: Not everyone is going to make it. That should be America's mantra. America was settled by people who didn't think that Europe was going to make it, and decided that the better part of valor was to bail out and start something new. Georgia and Ukraine are not going to make it. They are past the point of no return. Nothing will save them. America's obsession with a happy ending for all -- otherwise known as Wilsonian idealism -- is the ultimate source of the problem.

Georgia's wary protectors - H.D.S. Greenway, Boston Globe: Russia has gained in power and influence in the last eight years, while under the Bush administration America's standing has declined. For the Bush administration to say that invading countries and changing borders is unacceptable in the 21st century is risible, given Iraq and Kosovo.

Russians Doubt Objectivity Of Official Media While Sharing Their Sentiments - Jonas Bernstein, Eurasia Daily Monitor: A national poll conducted by Russia’s independent Levada Center over August 15-22 -- that is, in the immediate wake of the five-day Russo-Georgian war -- found a high degree of anti-Western and particularly anti-American sentiment. A total of 75 percent of the respondents stated that Russian-American relations were to one degree or another not good, with 39 percent saying relations were “chilly,” 28 percent saying relations were “strained,” and eight percent saying relations were “hostile.”

Kazakh Elite Gets A British School - Olzhas Auyezov, Moscow Times: Haileybury Almaty is the first private British school in Central Asia and a concrete sign of the economic prosperity brought to Kazakhstan by oil and gas.

Google To Archive 244 Years Of Newspaper Articles Online
- Michael Liedtke, The Huffington Post: The project announced Monday extends Google's crusade to make digital copies of content created before the Internet's advent, so the information can become more accessible and, ultimately, Google can make more money from ads shown on its Web site.

Social networking goes gaming – Mike Snider, USA TODAY: Spore has landed, and the long-awaited video game brings with it an evolutionary shift in how players interact with -- and help create -- games. A Spore game-changer: Everything players create is transmitted to the game's network, run by publisher Electronic Arts and becomes part of a constantly updated universe. All players will encounter material designed by others, from a menagerie of creatures to buildings and vehicles, in the spirit of sharing that has gained millions of devotees for sites such as YouTube and Facebook.

AMERICANA

100 goats turned loose on a downtown L.A. plot:
A city agency hired them to clear thick weeds on a slope next to Angels Flight at 4th and Hill streets. The scene delights office workers, who snap photos - Bob Pool, Los Angeles Times

Tortilla Nation: Why Americans are all wrapped up - Victorino Matus, Weekly Standard: In a 2002 study commissioned by the Tortilla Industry Association, tortillas trailed white bread in American consumption by a mere 2 percent.

MORE QUOTATIONS

"not to democratize them, but to normalize them."

--Henry Kissinger, regarding his goal with the Russians

“One method of torture used in Florentine jails during the glorious days of the Renaissance was the strappado: a prisoner was hoisted into the air by a rope attached to his wrists, which had been tied behind his back, and then suddenly dropped toward the floor as many times as it took to get him to confess. Since the procedure usually dislocated the shoulders, tore the muscles, and rendered one or both arms useless, it is remarkable that Niccolò Machiavelli, after reportedly undergoing six such 'drops,' asked for pen and paper and began to write.”

--Claudia Roth Pierpont, The New Yorker

Monday, September 8, 2008

September 8


Note: To receive the Public Diplomacy Press and Blog Review by e-mail, please so request at johnhbrown30@hotmail.com

***

“After all, listening is branding, too.”

--Bob Greenberg, CEO and global chief creative officer

"[T]he Americans are just one more militia."


--The viewpoint of journalist Nir Rosen about the US occupation of Iraq, which Prime Minister Maliki and his cohorts appear to have adopted, according to professor of sociology Michael Swartz


PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

An Education on Higher Education for the Next President - The Chronicle of Higher Education: Marlene M. Johnson, executive director and chief executive of Nafsa: Association of International Educators: "[E]ducation is not peripheral to public diplomacy, but rather at its core. It is impossible to conduct effective public diplomacy without accomplishing two things that universities are uniquely positioned to do: first, to ensure that students graduate with basic knowledge and understanding of the world and an ability to communicate in the world's languages; and, second, to attract international students and scholars to be educated in the United States and to experience and develop lifelong relationships with America. The next president should announce a major international education project designed explicitly to foster an America that knows, understands, and is able to communicate with the world, and to strengthen the relationships through which the American people and the world's people can relate to, interact with, and understand each other.”

Surrogate Broadcasting 101 -- Why BBG and RFE/RL Are Failing in Russia - Ted Lipien, Free Media online: The policies of the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG), which manages U.S. international broadcasting, have forced the semi-private, U.S.-funded surrogate broadcaster Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty to lose much of its independent surrogate status and become more like yet another domestic Russian broadcaster fearful of the Kremlin.

Letter To Editor: International broadcasting - Vello Ederma, Springfield, Washington Times: “For people who care about America's image around the world, these are trying times. Ever since the Board of Broadcasting Governors (BBG) was created, the problems surrounding public diplomacy in general and the Voice of America (VOA) in particular have intensified. Isn't it time that the powers that be understand that and do something about it? BBG is the problem, not the solution.”

In the Republican Party platform, the only mention of television is TV Martí - Kim Andrew Elliott Discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: The paragraph on public diplomacy deals only with international broadcasting, and makes no mention of VOA, Alhurra, or Radio Sawa.

India to sell nuclear deal to world, soothe critics - Krittivas Mukherjee, Reuters: India will take its civilian nuclear deal with the United States to the world looking to secure fuel supplies and reactor technology, analysts said, while seeking to soothe critics with a strong non-proliferation pitch. Robinder Sachdev, president of public diplomacy think tank Imagindia, said he expected India would adopt a two-pronged approach: making public announcements on disarmament, while lobbying the two houses of Congress and overseas Indian groups.

RELATED ITEMS

Editorial, Boston Globe: The decision of Turkey's president, Abdullah Gul, to accept an invitation from Armenia to attend last Saturday's soccer game between the two national teams could open a welcome new chapter in relations between the historically hostile nations.

Taliban learning how to win key propaganda battles - Paul Koring, Globe and Mail, Canada: The Taliban, once dismissed as too stupid to know they would lose if they dared to fight well-trained Canadian and allied troops, have proved themselves resilient, if still ill-equipped, warriors, learning from their early defeats and adapting to stage sophisticated attacks, inflicting serious casualties and winning key propaganda battles.

Afghanistan's Communications Revolution - David A. Gross and Amir Zai Sangin, Washington Post: Today, Afghanistan bears little resemblance to the nation it was long forced to be. Working together after the Taliban was removed from power, the U.S. and Afghan governments recognized the importance of dramatically increasing access to communications networks and establishing access to the Web. David A. Gross is ambassador and U.S. coordinator for international communication and information policy. Amir Zai Sangin is Afghanistan's minister of communications and information technology.

Urgent aid for Pakistan - Anatol Lieven, International Herald Tribune: Limited American financial help can tide Pakistan over its immediate crisis. At the same time, the United States should urgently craft longer-term aid programs intended to strengthen resistance to the spread of insurgency.

Destroying Democracy - Melik Kaylan, Forbes: As the world's press has generously noted, Moscow conducted its military-strategic maneuvers with great competence. So why on earth don't they acknowledge that the whole thing was planned meticulously ahead of time, including a highly effective disinformation campaign to suggest that Georgia provoked the action gratuitously? Strangely, no one seems willing to acknowledge the Kremlin's successful propaganda offensive, as carefully prepared and executed as the rest.

The Trouble With Saakashvili - Jackson Diehl, Washington Post: All of the funds of the $1 billion aid package Bush administration rushed to Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili are earmarked for economic support and reconstruction; none are aimed at strengthening democratic institutions or civil society.

Official American Sadism - Anthony Lewis, New York Review of Books: President Bush and his top officials have evidently succeeded in persuading many with their contention that "enhanced interrogation techniques," as they call torture, produce valuable information. But in any event the cost of the policy to America's reputation -- and its national security -- has been enormous. It has aroused much of the Muslim world to hatred of the United States. And it has sapped the belief of many Americans in the righteousness of their country.

The Darker Side - Benny Morris, The New Republic: The story peddled by latter-day Arab propagandists (and reinforced by some Jewish scholars, who tended in decades past, sometimes for apologetic reasons of their own, to highlight the medieval "Golden Age" of Islamic Spanish Jewry) -- that the Jewish minorities in the Muslim Arab countries before the advent of Zionism enjoyed a pleasant fraternal existence among the majority populations -- has often been trotted out for the benefit of ignorant Westerners, to illustrate Muslim Arab tolerance of minorities and, politically, to promote plans for a multi-ethnic, one-state solution for Israel/ Palestine. Contemporary Muslim anti-Semitism is not all of Qur'anic derivation; it also owes a great deal to modern European hate-merchants.

The next big thing in journalism: At BusinessWeek, we're engaging our readers in new ways. Here's what we've learned - John A. Byrne, Christian Science Monitor: If this were the Renaissance, the Web would be Florence, a place of amazing experimentation where all the old mediums -- in this case, print, radio, and television -- suddenly converge in one dynamic and democratic place. Yet, the multimedia dimensions of digital journalism are only part of the story. The most powerful attribute of this new journalism is how it directly engages our readers as active participants at every stage of content creation. In short, we're turning our readers into citizen editors.

How Companies Use Twitter to Bolster Their Brands: Microblogging lets an airline, for instance, monitor customers' gripes -- and tweet back. Is this a creepy trend? - Rachael King, BusinessWeek: A growing number of companies are keeping track of what's said about their brands on Twitter, a pioneer of microblogging, a way for users to keep others informed of their current status by way of text messaging, instant messaging, e-mail, or the Web. The attention to Twitter reflects the power of new social media tools in letting consumers shape public discussion over brands.

You Can't Avoid Ad Avoidance: A new survey shows how far consumers can (and would) go to spurn marketing messages - Greg Stuart, Adweek.com: As is increasingly apparent to everyone -- and as new research confirms -- as all media become digital, the consumer is more in control than ever, and tools for ad avoidance are free and require little to no consumer effort. As a result, the advertising industry can afford less than ever to be unresponsive to consumers' views and preferences.

Are the Army's New Marketing Tactics a Little too Kid-Friendly? - Natalie Zmuda, AdvertisingAge: The Army Experience Center, which opened Aug. 29, is a 14,500-square-foot educational facility that is the centerpiece of a program to test and evaluate new marketing strategies and is not a recruiting tool, Paul Boyce, an Army spokesman, said. "It's very much geared to show young people today what the U.S. Army is like in a very rich, immersive, educational and factual environment," Mr. Boyce said. "And it's