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“General Erections”
--a scene from Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodovar’s "Pepi, Luci, Bom"; cited in The Times Literary Supplement, September 11, 2009, p. 17
PUBIC DIPLOMACY (no typo intended)
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--October issue of Foreign Service Journal
US to triple non-military aid to Pak- Economic Times: "The House of Representatives has passed a legislation seeking to triple non-military aid to Pakistan but with riders on preventing terror attacks against the West or neighbours like India. … Under the bill, the US Congress will not only triple aid
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Pakistanis Reject US Partnership: Jane Perlez, New York Times: "In order to improve American standing in Pakistan, the special envoy for Pakistan and Afghanistan, Richard C. Holbrooke, had ordered an overhaul of the public diplomacy programs and was sending several seasoned diplomats to bolster the embassy, a senior American official said. A public affairs strategy centered on the American desire for a strong relationship with Pakistan and focused on describing the common enemy as Al Qaeda and the Taliban was about to begin, the official said. The new effort included spending about $30 million on educational and cultural exchanges between Pakistan and the United States, and providing more Fulbright scholarships for Pakistanis to study at American universities." See also.
Najibullah Zazi Case Illustrates Al Qaida On Its Way Out: Analysis – C.M. Sennott, Huffington Post: "Through public diplomacy, he [Obama] was accomplishing a great deal to advance the ideas that America stands for among Muslims, and his efforts had some proven success as various opinion surveys have shown in the Muslim world. But the recent debate over the proposed surge of troops in Afghanistan suggests a strong current within his administration and the Pentagon that wants to regress back to the conventional
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Iran Again: Is Everyone Bluffing? - Immanuel Wallerstein, New York Times: "Iran is back in the forefront of public diplomacy. President Obama, jointly with Prime Minister Gordon Brown of Britain and President Nicolas Sarkozy of France, held a press conference in which they seemed to give Iran one more ultimatum: Conform to their demands, what they called the demands of the 'international community,' by December of this year or face new sanctions. Mr. Obama said that Iran is 'breaking the rule that all nations must follow.' … So, where does all this leave us? It leaves the world in a stalemate. Lots of words and very little action."
A Preview of Negotiations: Interview with Ambassador R. Nicholas Burns, former undersecretary of state for political affairs and lead Iran negotiator under President George W. Bush; Professor in the Practice of Diplomacy and International Politics, Harvard Kennedy School - Middle East Progress: "And how do you interpret their [Iranians’] mixed messages in the lead up to the talks in terms of the softer tone versus the missile test and the different actions in the past few weeks? I think this is classic Iranian negotiating tactics. They are obviously in a belligerent mood, or else why would they have ordered these missile tests that they made so public. Ahmadinejad tried a charm offensive with the press when he was in New York; I think he failed in that mission.
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October surprise in US-Iran relations - Kaveh L Afrasiabi, Asia Times: "[A] surprise move by the US Department of State to grant a visa to Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki to visit Washington, ostensibly to inspect Iran's Interest Section. Mottaki's presence in the US has been a major plus for US-Iran diplomacy, by allowing Iran to complement its moves at the negotiation table in Geneva with Mottaki's string of interviews to the US media, meant to bolster Iran's public diplomacy."
Caspian Basin: Pentagon Web Initiative Sparks Debate On Best Methods For Winning Hearts And Minds - Deirdre Tynan, eurasianet.org: "A US Defense Department Internet initiative is stoking a debate among experts about whether the Pentagon is overreaching. The $10.1 million Trans Regional Web Initiative (TRWI) aims to launch a series of language-specific websites, including Russian, Chinese, Farsi, Georgian, Armenian and Azeri.
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The United States can expect a long, difficult conflict -- among its international communication bureaucracies - Kim Andrew Elliott discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy: "The Pentagon websites [see above article] will probably not feature news, but a news-like content limited to friendly, soft stories (a common public relations technique). As such, the Pentagon sites will complement the US international broadcasting sites, which are real news. On the other hand, the Pentagon sites will duplicate the work of America.gov, which also provides news-like content in English, Spanish, French, Russian, Arabic, Persian, and Chinese. International audiences will be annoyed with the United States for making them figure out which website has the real news versus the ersatz news (though it won't be hard to spot which is which), and then to try to figure out why the United States has two sites providing real news (VOA and Radio Free Whatever) and two sites (America.gov and the new Pentagon effort) providing the soft, news-like content."
More on the September 17 public-diplomacy disaster – John Brown, Notes and Essays: "For days I have been trying to find out why September 17 was chosen as the date for the U.S. government's announcement on the new architecture of anti-missile systems, originally meant to be land-based in Eastern Europe. … The Bush missile system was crazy to begin with, but the Obama timing for announcing its dismantlement was crazy as well. The timing -- on the date of the USSR invasion of Poland in 1939 -- was a major public-diplomacy faux pas; no, not a faux pas (forget the French) -- too soft an expression -- a public-diplomacy disaster, in Poland at least. Another great-power deal, the Russians and Americans 'ganging up' against the Poles -- or so, I would say, many Poles felt. …
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PD Tomorrow: How to Make It Work, if We Want It to Work PD Today Part 5: Patricia H. Kushlis and Patricia Lee Sharpe, Whirled View: "[I]t’s hard to resist the conclusion that public diplomacy and development support should once again be housed in separate agencies, each with appropriate provisions for cooperation and coordination with the State Department, of course."
Cold War Calling - Morgan Roach, Heritage Foundation:
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What's happened to anti-Americanism, and to the State Department? The Obama administration and public diplomacy: March to mid-June 2009 - John Brown, Public Diplomacy Media Update: Place Branding and Public Diplomacy (2009) 5, 247–252. [paid subscription] "Abstract: If there has been one theme of the Obama administration and public diplomacy since March, it is that although the President won over overseas audiences (at least for now) through his high-profile foreign visits and tactful speeches in the countries to which he traveled, the public diplomacy apparatus at the State Department is broken and is in need of serious fixing. Anti-Americanism may no longer be as fashionable as it was during the Bush years, but – according to the media and government officials – America's public diplomacy, supposedly in charge of improving the US image, leaves much to be desired."
Two Words on National Security - Aaron, The Guild Review: "I recently came across two interesting bits of national security information on the internet. The first was this interesting website on strategic communication.
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Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - Katharine Keith, World Not Our Own: A Public Diplomacy Blog: "[F]riend and colleague, Paul Rockower opened a beautiful photo exhibit that 'pays homage to 'The Family of Man' exhibition that opened at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1955. The exhibition’s world tour proved a tremendous public diplomacy success for America.' The stunning compilation of photos from his world wide travels, chronicles the human condition. I was clearly not the only one who appreciated the beautiful works of Rockower."
Hearing aids, supplies help deaf students - Troop Scoop, Canada Free Press - "AR RUMAIYTHA [Iraq]— Various U.S. units recently joined forces here to deliver 80 hearing aids and much needed supplies to girls at the Amal School for the Deaf. This 2-room school house and primary education facility to over 40 girls was identified by the Muthanna PRT in 2008 as a facility greatly in need of support and resources. The school has a dedicated staff of 6 teachers and educates children from elementary school through high school—each with varying degrees of deafness . Albert Hadi, the media advisor for the Muthanna PRT, credits the former Public Diplomacy Officer for the Muthanna PRT, Aaron Snipe,
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UN Goldstone Gaza Report - Joel Leyden - PR, Internet Marketing, Journalism, Israel: "Also responding to the UN report, Israel Ambassador to the UN Gabriela Shalev said that it would hamper Middle East peace efforts. Speaking to Israel Army Radio, Shalev added that ‘the international atmosphere is very influential. We have already begun a public diplomacy campaign in world capitals in order to explain the extent to which the report is biased, one-sided and political.’”
Combating pro-LTTE separatist professionals’: Distortions about Sri Lanka in the West:
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Speech by H.E. Ambassador Deng Boqing at the reception marking the 60th Anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China - Press release, Dominica News Online: "Over the past 60 years, China has played an important part in promoting world peace, development and cooperation. We have worked closely with other countries to address various international disputes in a responsible manner. We have vigorously conducted economic, cultural and public diplomacy and have achieved fruitful results. The number of countries having diplomatic relations with us has increased from 18 in the early days of the People's Republic to 171 today.”
The Center on Public Diplomacy Announces 2009-2011 CPD Research Fellows
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RELATED ITEMS
"Next Generation Leaflet Delivery System" [in Afghanistan] - Kim Andrew Elliott discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy
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Nato's deadly propaganda battle Nato is dropping leaflets on the civilian population of Afghanistan to win hearts and minds – but not without fatal consequences - Jon Boone, Guardian. Image from
White House Eyeing Narrower War Effort:Top Officials Challenge General's Assessment - Scott Wilson and Anne E. Korblut, Washington Post: Senior White House officials have begun to make the case for a policy shift in Afghanistan that would send few, if any, new combat troops to the country and instead focus on faster military training of Afghan forces, continued assassinations of al-Qaeda leaders and support for the government of neighboring Pakistan in its fight against the Taliban.
Obama's tough choices: The economy, healthcare, Iran and Afghanistan -- all are problems with no easy answers - Tim Rutten, latimes.com: The president also was right when he called Iraq "a war of choice" and Afghanistan "a war of necessity." But what made the latter struggle necessary was not the presence of the Taliban but the Taliban's creation of sanctuaries from which Al Qaeda struck at the United States. If it were possible to disengage from Afghanistan without allowing Osama bin Laden and his followers to reestablish havens there, it would be a tragic choice for the Afghan people but a wise one for Americans. Image from
Hillary Clinton vs. Afghan reality: Basing U.S. policy on the opposite of intelligence - Editorial, Washington Times: Mrs. Clinton has a dubious record as a judge of counterinsurgencies.
Leaving Israel With No Choice? - Michael Gerson, Washington Post:
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Defusing Iran There's no simple solution to dealing with Tehran's nuclear plans: But diplomacy is the best bet – Editorial, Los Angeles Times
Germany Unbound - Roger Cohen, New York Times:
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The power, and threat, of Iran: The nuclear issue may be a distraction from the larger strategic implications of Tehran's growing regional influence Alastair Crooke - latimes.com: the nonaligned majority and most Muslim states support Iranian rights under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. For the U.S. to elevate the nuclear issue to an ultimatum, while ignoring the new strategic reality of a powerful Iran, is, as Ahmadinejad hinted, a course of action that Obama may come to regret.
In a tight race for 2016 Games, art of persuasion is in effect - Vicki Michaelis, USA TODAY
Propaganda for war should be prohibited by law: HRCP - Shahid Husain, The News: The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has suggested that propaganda for war should be prohibited by law, and that the injunctions of the Charter of Democracy into legal statutes as these measures enjoy the near consensus of political parties, The News has learnt.
Sixty Years of Propaganda: What 'The Founding of a Republic' says about China today - Leslie Hook, Wall Street Journal:
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