"When I take action, I'm not going to fire a $2 million missile at a $10 empty tent and hit a camel in the butt. It's going to be decisive."
-- George W. Bush; image from, with caption: George W. Bush stares at a portrait of George W. Bush.
VIDEOS
a) George W. Bush, Catapult The Propaganda - YouTube
b) Practical Challenges for the Future of Public Diplomacy - youtube.com
c) N. Korea Propaganda Video: Dogs Attack Effigy Of South’s Defense Minister - livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com
d) Facebook Home Propaganda Makes Selfishness Contagious - Evan Selinger, wired.com: "Let’s examine the most egregious Facebook ad of them all: 'Dinner.' On the surface, it portrays an intergenerational family meal where a young woman escapes from the dreariness of her older relative’s boring cat talk by surreptitiously turning away from the feast and instead feasting her eyes on Facebook Home."
CONFERENCE
Public Diplomacy in Context: Past and Present of National Image Management among the Small Nations of Northern Europe --- Conference in Helsinki and Turku, Finland 26-27 April, 2013
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY IN THE NEWS
Rebalance to Asia II: Security and Defense: Cooperation and Challenges - Testimony, Joseph Yun, Acting Assistant Secretary, Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Statement Before the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Washington, DC, April 25, 2013 - U.S. Department of State: "United States’ policy toward East Asia and the Pacific reflects the profound recognition that the future prosperity and security of our nation will be defined by events and developments in the region. ... Our cooperation with the region is not limited to top-level engagement.
It also extends to ordinary citizens, including young people. Public diplomacy initiatives, such as educational and cultural exchange programs with citizens from across the Asia-Pacific region, are increasing grass-roots support for partnering with the United States. In addition, we are utilizing new outreach platforms such as social media and the innovative American cultural spaces in Rangoon and Jakarta, to reach younger audiences, highlight the multi-dimensional nature of U.S. foreign policy, and foster direct and long-term relationships with broader and more diverse populations." Image from
Good Service - Scott Moore, Foreign Affairs: "The country’s objectives would be ... served by expanding opportunities for national service through voluntary programs, particularly those that expose Americans to the outside world. The Peace Corps was established by President John F. Kennedy to make Americans return from abroad 'better able to assume the responsibilities of American citizenship and with greater understanding of our global responsibilities.' The value of the Peace Corps has only increased over time, and expanding the program would be a sound investment in U.S. public diplomacy. Currently, the Peace Corps provides fewer than 10,000 positions total despite receiving thousands of applications every year. The United States can and should encourage more Americans to serve their country both at home and abroad. But targeted investments in voluntary programs would advance U.S. interests far more effectively than compulsory national service."
More State Department senior officials exiting - Al Kamen, Washington Post: "Undersecretary for public diplomacy and public affairs Tara Sonenshine is leaving
in July after 15 months in the job, likely headed to an academic or media gig.The Emmy Award-winning former editorial producer of ABC News’ Nightline also worked on the Clinton National Security Council and was more recently executive vice president at the U.S. Institute of Peace." Image from
Sonenshine Travel to Ethiopia: Under Secretary Sonenshine Travel to Ethiopia - Media Note, Office of the Spokesperson, U.S. Department of State: "Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Tara D. Sonenshine will travel to Ethiopia to meet with government officials, local media, students, and activists to advance shared goals in the areas of press freedom, education, youth development, and conservation April 27-30. In Addis Ababa, Under Secretary Sonenshine will meet with officials from the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and the African Union; join a discussion on press freedom at a roundtable with the Association of Private Publishers; and mark Global Youth Service Day and Earth Day by participating in a tree-planting event with Ethiopian National Green Service Volunteers. April 30, Under Secretary Sonenshine will travel to Ethiopia’s second largest city, Dire Dawa, where she will speak to students at Dire Dawa University, one of Ethiopia’s newly established universities."
Public Schedule: Public Schedule for April 26, 2013 - U.S. Department of State: "UNDER SECRETARY FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS TARA SONENSHINE 11:30 a.m. Under Secretary Sonenshine meets with U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia Donald Booth, at the Department of State. (CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE)"
Public Schedule for April 25, 2013 - U.S. Department of State: "UNDER SECRETARY FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS TARA SONENSHINE 9:00 a.m. Under Secretary Sonenshine delivers remarks on wildlife conservation at the School Without Walls, in Washington, DC. (CLOSED PRESS COVERAGE) 2:30 p.m. Under Secretary Sonenshine joins Acting Assistant Secretary Zeya to launch the World Press Freedom Day, at the Foreign Press Center, in Washington DC. (OPEN PRESS COVERAGE) 6:00 p.m. Under Secretary Sonenshine attends a reception in honor of the 65th Anniversary of the U.S.-UK Fulbright Commission, at the British Ambassador’s residence. (MEDIA DETERMINED BY HOST)
Pimm’s Cup [scroll down link for item] - Amanda Gordon and Stephanie Green, businessweek.com: "Celebrating the U.S.-U.K. Fulbright Commission last night in Washington, Bay Fang, a deputy assistant secretary of state in the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, sipped a Pimm’s Cup. After Harvard, she went to Hong Kong and Beijing as a Fulbright scholar, studying international affairs.
Also in attendance at the residence of the British ambassador: John Jeffry Louis, incoming chairman of the U.S.- U.K. Fulbright Commission and an American venture capitalist living in London, and Tara Sonenshine, undersecretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs." Image from
United States Consul In Merida Visits Valladolid - The Yucatan Times: "The U.S. Consulate General in Merida celebrated U.S. National Library Week with a significant event at the Valladolid English Library (VEL), housed at Casa Hamaca in Valladolid. Consul Sonya Tsiros along with
Ms. Tricia Olivares, the Consulate Public Diplomacy Assistant, made the celebration memorable by bringing a wonderful collection of children’s English language books, a set of 24 DVDs featuring English language lessons through the use of video games, and a stunning book with dramatic color photos from around the world titled, Global Women’s Issues: Women in the World Today." Image from article, with caption: Ms. Tricia Olivares, U.S. Consulate Public Diplomacy Assistant
Apply for US grant before May 5 - The New Indian Express: "The US Consulate General, Chennai, has invited proposals for its small-grants program. Through this program, the Consulate provides partial support for public diplomacy programmes that further priority areas of the US Mission to India. The last date for applying for the grant is May 5 and the public diplomacy programmes must occur in South India. Proposals can include projects, seminars, conferences, workshops, cultural programmes, exhibitions and outreach campaigns, and should focus on one of the following areas: promoting better US-India bilateral relations with an emphasis on business ties; encouraging regional and global roles for India; and enhancing security cooperation. The proposals should be submitted via email or mail and should include a written narrative in English. This competition is open only to individuals, NGOs and other legally-recognised non-profit institutions. For details, visit www.chennai.usconsulate.gov."
Brazil's Orwellian Islamabad - Paul Rockower, Levantine: "Keola and company finally made our way out of limbo, and headed south via Miami to Brasilia. Nothing to report or speak of on the way down, and we arrived redeyed to Brasilia. ... Keola and company
headed out last night for dinner with my contact at the Embassy, Ramona the ACAO. We took a taxi to meet her and her husband Ted (who also works at the Embassy)." Image from PR Facebook, with caption: Prior to heading out on tour, Keola Beamer, Jeff Peterson & Moanalani Beamer were hosted by a local halau in Virgina for an afternoon of Hawaiian food, hula, music and talk story. Mahalo to Paul Ruden for sharing his pics from the lovely afternoon.
25 Steps towards a Smarter U.S. Foreign Policy - Brett Daniel Shehadey, internationalpolicydigest.org: "China and Russia are strictly engaging in increased bilateral diplomacy with smaller states to increase their influence, and these countries’ propaganda and public diplomacy initiatives are far more advanced than the US’s ability to counter it. In search of a new US grand strategy that fits the current international model, this article offers recommendations for fundamental redesign of US foreign policy. ... [Among them:] 16. Large-Scale VIP Public Diplomacy Initiatives [:] The State Department should take in highly experienced, influential, outsiders and director level government retirees, and ask them to be 'roving diplomats'
as 'direct commission' FSO appointees. These experts can represent critical needs or special positions in a given field, and set up foundational political networks, partnerships and programs of Americanism abroad, working with influential foreign leaders in all sectors. As overt intelligence operators, they will be responsible for sharing political knowledge, exchange, understanding, and negotiating the American interest (i.e. political assimilation, not cultural, or economic manipulation). ... 24. Indirect Methods of Public Diplomacy [:] Redirect the intelligence community to Americanization and the usage of massive [black] propaganda (i.e. information operations deniable to American sponsorship). Wage massive long-term covert strategic, regional and key state ideological warfare appropriate for each situation." Image from
Reconceptualizing Diplomatic Norms in the Digital Age - PD News–CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy: "[T]he U.S. will need to decide whether to align its digital platforms as a voice for promoting our values abroad, or simply conduits for engaging foreigners through other, less controversial, public diplomacy programs. Both options could lead to success, but I believe in the long run the former will be the better course of action. .. [T]he United States must embrace its values over all digital media. ... Alex Laverty is a graduate student pursuing a Master's degree in Public Diplomacy from USC's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism."
Why travel needs to have a bigger seat at the table in U.S. immigration debate - skift.com: "As the immigration reform debate is in full swing in U.S. Congress, all relevant parties are making sure their voices get heard. As part of that, tourism, a big stakeholder with thousands of jobs at stake tied to easing of the immigration and visa policies, has so far had a smaller voice at the table. Megan Smith, the commissioner of the Vermont Department of Tourism and Marketing, gave her testimony earlier this week, and made the case why the lawmakers should consider the economic value of travel and tourism as part of these reforms and work on making it easier for tourists to come to
Top Bush advisers debate former president's legacy - presspass.nbcnews.com: [Comment by
thkr:] "Public Diplomacy - Did we find ways to convince others not to bomb us, but join with us to make a safer or better world by embracing democracy?"
Remembering 43: 'Bush tended to... follow strong people' - John King, CNN: In conjunction with Thursday's dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center in Dallas, CNN circled back with several key players in the big debates and moments of the 43rd president's two terms. Here are some of their reflections and recollections:
KAREN HUGHES, longtime Bush communications adviser dating back to his days as Texas governor, who served in the Bush White House and later the State Department: ... On the government's response to Katrina, and its impact on the second Bush term: 'I was just at the beginning of my tenure as under secretary for public diplomacy. And people around the world, they didn't believe the United States of America, our powerful country, couldn't do anything. Therefore, they felt we were choosing not to do anything. And I think that's the most unfortunate perception; that somehow the government was choosing not to help its own people. And of course, that's not true. I think they felt their hands were tied. But that's the unfortunate perception that developed.'" Image from
‘Some Stirred-up Moslems’ - CTuttle, firedoglake.com: "eCAHNomics April 20th, 2013 at 9:03 pm 91 In response to donbacon @ 85 ... I think ayatollahs are as despicable as cardinals, popes, heads of Anglican denomination, etc. But this Iranian Khamanei is one clever SOB. Unlike his scowling predecessor, he knows just how to stroke world opinion. Karen Hughes should be jealous."
Great Women - woman2womanlifecoaching.com "Condolezza [sic] [Rice] is the second woman to ever be named U.S. Secretary of State, she also has the noted distinction of being the first African-American woman to hold the position. ... Quotes by Condolezza [sic] ... [']I’m a huge proponent of exchanges, student exchanges, cultural exchanges, university exchanges. We talk a lot about public diplomacy. It’s extremely important that we get our message out, but it’s also the case that we should not have a monologue with other people. It has to be a conversation and you can’t do that without exchanges and openness.[']"
Propagating China to the World: China’s “Public Diplomacy through Media” Strategy in the Age of Globalization - Shi Li, gnovis [nō'vĩs], n., Georgetown University’s peer-reviewed Journal of Communication, Culture andTechnology (CCT): "Abstract [:] In order to improve its global image and cultivate an international environment that would facilitate China’s continuous rise in the world, the Chinese government has developed, in recent years, an aggressive public diplomacy program. The extension of the global outreach of its media has become an essential component in the effort to propagate
the country’s international image. This paper maps out such undertakings by examining developments among four major media organizations: Xinhua, China Central Television, China Radio International, and China Daily. At the same time, in analyzing existing literature and online discussions, it appears that three factors have the potential to compromise China’s efforts: an absence of government and media credibility; a lack of proper understanding on the part of the authorities of China’s public diplomacy audiences; and the Chinese government’s reluctance and inability to develop social media tools that directly engage the foreign public as well as encourage people-to-people public diplomacy. Although China disposes of considerable soft power resources, the strategy of 'public diplomacy through media' might well be trapped in its own repressive political system." Image from
Beijing Film Festival: Technically Dazzling, Ultimately Disappointing - Adam Clayton Powell III, PD News–CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy: "The 3rd Beijing International Film Festival was a public diplomacy showcase this week for Chinese cinema at its best. ... The problem was not with the production technology or the performers: the problem was with the script. ... [T]his suggests lessons for CCTV at it prepares to launch a major daily television program service in
Responsibility doesn't end at profit - Meng Jing and Sun Yuanqing, China Daily: "Corporate social responsibility has always been a gray area for companies that operate in diverse nations and across various environment. But for many others like Mao Qiping, who looks after the international operations at one of the biggest Chinese oil companies, it is the calling card for sustained engagement and lasting relationships in Africa. 'What it really means is that CSR is something that needs to be handled with care.
Failure to do so can be disastrous,' he says. Mao's company, China National Petroleum Corporation, the largest integrated energy company in China, has been making steady progress with its CSR initiatives in Africa after expanding its oil business to Sudan in 1996. 'The real challenge initially was to find the best way to utilize the allocated budget for CSR activities, especially in the overseas markets,' he says. CNPC has to date spent more than $50 million in Africa on public welfare activities such as digging 160 water wells, building four hospitals and 35 schools and numerous roads and bridges. The jewel in its crown is undoubtedly the Sino-Sudan Abu Ushar Friendship Hospital, ranked by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as one of the best public diplomacy programs in 2011." Image from
Brand Australia’s brand new portal - psnews.com.au: "A new Government-only web portal has been launched by Austrade’s Brand Australia to bring together free and subscription information that can be used to formulate key messaging about Australia’s reputation. Project Manager of Brand Australia, Catherine Hill said Insights Unlimited was a single-source web portal that offered access to rich information on Australia's perceived and actual performance across a wide range of economic and social indicators. ... Ms Hill said Insights Unlimited was a valuable reference tool for presentations, policy documents, messaging for public diplomacy efforts, speeches, media statements, marketing collateral and country briefings."
The Lieberman fear factor - Uri Misgav, haaretz.com: "Israel's Foreign Ministry is patiently waiting for Avigdor Lieberman to finish up his legal affairs . ... The decision to keep the foreign minister's post empty and hold it in trust for Lieberman is an allegory. ... It is first of all an allegory of Lieberman's formidable political power. His deterrent force is impressive. The dread he strikes in the prime minister is paralyzing. We all know how insistent Benjamin Netanyahu is to defend the righteousness of Israel's actions. In his previous term he even set up a 'public diplomacy' ministry.
In response to the UN Assembly's declarative gesture to recognize a Palestinian state, Netanyahu raised a huge commotion. He postponed the ceremonial reconciliation with Turkey for three years and finally did it only when he had no choice - after Obama ordered him to. The excuse Netanyahu's office made for the prime minister's unnecessary trip to Margaret Thatcher's funeral was that it presented an opportunity to meet world leaders and 'explain Israel's policy.' Given Netanyahu's concern over Israel's image abroad, it is inconceivable that he accepts the idea of the government and state going without a foreign minister. ... Israeli society wants to deal only with itself. The craving for internal repairs, after years of neglect, is understandable and justified. But the inability to maintain interest in international affairs and strategic issues, at the same time, is a sign of a severe national attention disorder." Lieberman image from article
Syria, Iran, and terrorist connections - Anne's Opinions: "lialands says: 24 April 2013 at 13:38 pm Hi Anne, I am an intern for an interpersonal communications firm in Ramat Gan. Together with the Ministry of Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs, my company, Debate Co, is working on an Israel advocacy app called Israelight.
The website enables users to register for free access to Hasbara tips and techniques. Using the Israelight app, anyone can access to the interactive tool assisting them in public diplomacy for Israel! We provide powerful, short videos on various case studies as well as the key principles of Israel advocacy. We hope to empower people to become more effective ambassadors for the State of Israel. Would you consider registering for Israelight at http://www.israelight.co.il and perhaps mentioning the site in your blog posts? The faster we spread the word, the more advocates we can create for Israel, the more truth will be told!" Image: heading of blog
Israel’s top anti-BDS man [scroll down link for item] - Tony Greenstein's Blog: "Amir Sagie, the director, civil society affairs department, Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs was the Keynote Guest speaker at Sunday’s overwhelmingly successful Israel Advocacy Seminar in Joburg. This speech, by the man at the forefront of combatting the global BDS movement, was extremely informative and useful to all present – given that it was an Israel advocacy seminar. ... Amir Sagie has been involved with the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) since 1998. During his time there he has served as the Spokesman and head of the Public Diplomacy department in the Israeli Embassy in Beijing, China; he supervised the China, South Korea and Mongolia Desk in the North-Asia Department; he worked as the Deputy Director of the Information and Internet Department. ... Currently Amir holds the position of Director of the Civil Society Affairs Department in the Public Diplomacy Directorate."
Confession - Nurit Greenger, Doc's Talk: "I was born in British Palestine approximately nine months before Ben Gurion declared, on 14 May 1948, the state of Israel an independent state. ... Without the Jewish people there is no Israel and without Israel the continuation of the Jewish nation is at a great doubt. In my later years, when I realized that Israel can do with any and all help, I have joined the unofficial Public Diplomacy-Hasbara camp with the hope that even one percent of what I have to say or I do makes a slight difference and helps Israel."
'Full Spectrum Diplomacy and Grand Strategy' [Review of Full Spectrum Diplomacy and Grand Strategy: Reforming the Structure and Culture of U.S. Foreign Policy By John Lenczowski, Lexington Books, 212 pages] - Wes Vernon: "In 'Spectrum and Diplomacy,' Mr. Lenczowski proposes a sweeping reorganization of that entire range of government disciplines. A nerve center of such massive reorientation would be the U.S. Public Diplomacy Agency, whose portfolio is so extensive that its significance could not be ignored, and which would spur a culture of influence enough to be felt within the department and other relevant agencies. The agency would be in the State Department but not really of it. Basically, it would be removed from the department's culture and 'would operate at a greater effectiveness.'
The author notes the department's structure and culture of diplomatic policymaking were formulated before the arrival of the modern mass media. Mr. Lenczowski would supplement formal government-to-government diplomacy with public diplomacy's people-to-people approach. In that endeavor, he would enlist the assistance of Americans in and out of government. That would include visiting lecturers or scholars at educational institutions, performing artists and others who befriend the local populations. ... In an interview with this writer, Mr. Lenczowski said there is much yet to be learned about the recent debacle in Benghazi, but if reports are accurate that 'our people, CIA people were there to get arms, to get Libyan arms to the Syrian resistance,' then with the benefit of more information, we might determine if public diplomacy could have averted the crisis. ... Mr. Lenczowski would create agencies to see that disinformation about the United States conveyed to foreign populations is met with an effective response. Another agency would be responsible for 'ensuring a sufficient counterintelligence protection against foreign political influence operations and against the infiltration of U.S. public diplomacy programs by foreign agents of influence.' He cites the documented fact that during the Cold War, 'protection against infiltration at such institutions" as Radio Free Europe and Voice of America "was always weak.' This agency could also counter 'attempts by Islamists to secure a foothold of Shariah law' in the United States." Image from entry
One Day’s News Shows Effects of New Media - Philip Seib, PD News–CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy: "The availability of information contributes to a sense of empowerment among the public."
Bring Your Kid to Work Day! - Yo Ali, yoali.blogspot.com: "Yesterday was we celebrated Take Our Daughters And Sons To Work Day (you know any excuse for a party in this neck of the woods!), I thought it was Bring Your Kid to Work Day but maybe that didn't sound fancy enough. Whatever the name, the Embassy went all out and organzied a lovely little afternoon for all children of the Embassy. I think there was something like 18 kids signed up. They visited several sections of the Embassy to learn what each one does: Meet and Greet - with the Ambassador [;] Consular Section - they got a passport and an entry stamp [;] Public Diplomacy - how to speak in public (I can just guess how O did in this section) ... The afternoon ended with snacks and certificates!
Image from entry, with caption: Certificate of Appreciation - notice the cut out of Obama in the background!
Ann Coulter says 'hijab' statement on Hannity was meant to be a joke - Michelle Breidenbach, syracuse.com: "When Ann Coulter took the stage at Syracuse University Wednesday night, her friends and enemies visibly split into the people who jumped to their feet in applause and those who sat quietly in their seats. ... Earlier this week, on the show “Hannity,” she [Coulter] said the wife of suspected Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsnarnaev should go to jail for wearing a hijab. Wednesday in
APDS Conference: Public Diplomacy at the Front Lines Annual Conference - uscpublicdiplomacy.org: May 3, 2013 8:45 AM - 4:00 PM Venue: USC; Tutor Campus Center, Franklin Room [.]
The USC Center on Public Diplomacy is pleased to co-sponsor the Association of Public Diplomacy Scholars (APDS) annual conference on the new and traditional frontlines of public diplomacy." Image from entry
Diplomatic Forum of Seoul 2013 for Middle and High School Students: “International Approaches to Peace Building” (July 19-21, 2013) - EmanuelP, asia-institute.org: "Activities of participants [:] Creation of short film clips regarding world peace and international developments.
Exhibition of film clips as practice in effective messaging and public diplomacy for peace ..." Image from entry
Public Diplomacy in Total War: Estonian efforts to guide opinion in Sweden, Britain and the United States, 1940-45 - Kaarel Piirimae, prezi.com
Expert from Duke University to present on Asian values - University of Delaware "Liu Kang, director of the China Research Center at Duke University, will present
'China Model, Universalism and Asian Values,' the third lecture in the China Forum series hosted by the Confucius Institute at the University of Delaware, on Tuesday, April 30 . ... His current projects include global surveys of China’s image, Chinese soft power and public diplomacy, and political and ideological changes in China." Kang image from entry
Around the World, Mayors Take Charge: Leaders of major cities are increasingly taking on diplomatic and inter-state roles - Michele Acuto and Parag Khanna, theatlantic.com: "Michele Acuto is a research fellow for the Oxford Program for the Future of Cities, a fellow at the University of Southern California’s Center on Public Diplomacy, and author of the forthcoming book Building Global Cities (Columbia University Press)."
Forgotten Errands: Put Policy Before Politics to Reform American Immigration - Michelle Ryan, foreignaffairsreview.co.uk: "Michelle Ryan is a second year undergraduate student of International Relations, Economics, and Philosophy . ... Michelle enjoys traveling, live music, and her involvement with the St Andrews Hip Hop Society, and looks forward to studying abroad at the National University of Singapore and working with the Office of Economic Policy Analysis and Public Diplomacy at the United States Department of State in the coming months."
RELATED ITEMS
The Guantánamo Stain - Editorial Board, New York Times: Guantánamo is essentially a political prison. It stains America’s human rights record.
Why Obama remains cautious about Syria - David Ignatius, Washington Post: Administration officials believe that although Obama is facing growing domestic political pressure to intervene in Syria, there is also a strong public desire for convincing, detailed evidence that will provide a reliable basis for military action, in contrast to the Bush administration’s misfounded allegations about “weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq. Image from
Obama should remember Rwanda as he weighs action in Syria - Anne-Marie Slaughter, Washington Post: The distrust, cynicism and hatred with which the United States is regarded in much of the world, particularly among Muslims across the Middle East and North Africa, is already a cancer. Standing by while Assad gasses his people will guarantee that, whatever else Obama may achieve, he will be remembered as a president who proclaimed a new beginning with the Muslim world but presided over a deadly chapter in the same old story.
Why John Kerry could be a better secretary of state than Hillary Clinton - Aaron David Miller, Washington Post: The president’s need to delegate more of his global portfolio as he focuses on domestic issues, the sheer variety and magnitude of international problems to manage, and the fact that Kerry, unlike Clinton, has taken the job at the end of his political career, when he can afford to take greater risks — all these forces come together to give Kerry a chance to shine that Clinton never had.
How to build a second American century - Richard N. Haass, Washington Post: What stands in the way of the next American century is American politics. To paraphrase Walter Kelly’s Pogo, we have met the problem, and we are it. Special interests often crowd out the general national interest. The alternative to a U.S.-led 21st century is not an era dominated by China or anyone else, but rather a chaotic time in which regional and global problems overwhelm the world’s collective will and ability to meet them.
NT Welcomes our Marines - U.S. Ambassador to Australia Bleich on Facebook: Michael Scott, the owner of Crocosaurus Cove, called to offer a discount to any Marine who wants to experience a face-to-face
croc encounter from the "Cage of Death." Image: Ambassador Bleich in "the Cage of Death." Via
Outside Radio Broadcasts Undermine Domestic Propaganda: Source: More and More North Koreans Are Turning to Outside Radio As a Source of Information - North Koreans are increasingly turning to outside radio broadcasts for news and information, following weeks of increasingly hyperbolic rhetoric produced by North Korean state media. The seriousness with which outside observers took Pyongyang’s aggressive rhetoric notably declined as the “crisis” continued into April, fizzling out over the last few weeks and, according to reports by Seoul-based website the Daily NK, a similar process occurred domestically.“
In the absence of the Internet, radio remains the best way to send information into the DPRK because it’s the only technology that can cover the entire country,” Martyn Williams of North Korea Tech and NK NEWS Pro said. “Broadcasts are being scaled back to other parts of the world because people have largely moved on from shortwave broadcasting, but that’s not the case with
Cyber Propaganda: Iran-funded Hezbollah building a media empire - Adam Kredo, freebeacon.com: The Lebanese terror group Hezbollah has positioned itself as the most influential extremist group on the Internet in recent years and operates more than 20 websites in seven different languages across the globe, according to an Israeli intelligence organization. Hezbollah’s efforts are directly funded by
al Qaeda see their influence wane, according to a recent report issued by the Meir Amit Intelligence and
Approaching Israel-Palestine conflict without propaganda - Brendan Lyman, thehullabaloo.com (Tulane University): Tulane University for Israel showed a video outside McAlister Auditorium on Monday in objection to Israel Apartheid Week, an annual series of talks and events meant to portray Israel as an apartheid nation. The language was inflammatory. More importantly, the language elicited an emotional response. If Tulane University For Israel had hoped to start a constructive dialogue on the Israel-Palestine issue, they failed miserably. If we truly want to start a conversation on the Israel-Palestine issue, then we must do so by considering the humanity of the issue. We must discontinue the use of propaganda as portrayal of fact. We cannot proceed with the hateful rhetoric on both sides.
AA Milne may not have liked MI7, but propaganda played a vital wartime role: We should not condemn the great writers who joined the secret services – the alternative was to leave history to the liars - Alan Judd, telegraph.co.uk: Propaganda is probably as old as government itself, and so we shouldn’t be too surprised to read that A A Milne, creator of the immortal Winnie-the-Pooh, was part of MI7B, a secret First World War propaganda outfit. He was by no means the only writer to wield his pen in war. Milne’s MI7B was established in 1916 to help counter the effects of mounting war losses, industrial discontent, peace activists and German propaganda abroad. In fact, this was really the bureaucratic incorporation of an existing propaganda outfit set up by the journalist and Liberal Party politician, Charles Masterman. Formally called the War Propaganda Bureau, it was better known to those on the inside track as the Wellington House operation. In a brilliant exercise in improvisation, Masterman made effective use of his pre-war literary and artistic contacts to counter German propaganda in the US. He secretly sponsored books by reputable academics to send to influential Americans, and recruited writers such John Buchan, HG Wells and Arthur Conan Doyle. Within a month of the outbreak of war, Masterman had commissioned a book by his novelist friend Ford Madox Ford (who was in fact half-German), which was published six months later as When Blood is their Argument (a quote from Henry V – “For how can they charitably dispose of anything when blood is their argument”). This was not the crude German-bashing and flag-waving that seems to have made Milne unhappy, but a balanced and informed argument to the effect that the admirable German culture had been turned on its head by the ascendance of militarist Prussia. Ford followed it with another propaganda book, Between St Dennis and St George, a more discursive work stressing the value of French culture in opposing Prussian militarism. Unsurprisingly, it was picked up and translated by the French government.
Masterman’s activities extended beyond such relatively esoteric propaganda, however. He did much to publicise the German atrocities in Belgium in late 1914 and early 1915. These, attested by refugees, contributed significantly to anti-German sentiment both here and abroad, though lurid stories of babies being bounced on bayonets proved counter-productive in the longer term. For much of the 20th century, tales of the Belgium atrocities were written off as exaggerations – overshadowed anyway by what came later in the Second World War – but recent research has shown that they happened. The shell-shocked refugees did not make them up. Masterman also ensured that the German execution of nurse Edith Cavell on the spurious grounds of spying caused widespread outrage, evidence of which is her statue facing Trafalgar Square. His operation helped Kitchener mobilise the population, too, originating the famous poster of two children posing the awkward question to their father, “Daddy, what did you do in the Great War?” It wasn’t only writers that were involved with Wellington House, but painters such as Paul Nash and Francis Dodd, too. Masterman also incurred the lasting enmity of successive Turkish governments by publicising the Armenian genocide. Effective propagandising throughout much of the 20th century by totalitarian regimes – the Nazis, the Soviet Union and the Chinese communists – has of course given the practice a bad name. But before rushing to judgment on those who, in the eyes of their literary and artistic successors, might have compromised their integrity by arguing on our side, we should ask ourselves what we would do if we were facing an existential threat and believed our cause to be right. Milne seems to have been involved in the cruder end of wartime propaganda, found it distasteful and later became a pacifist. What we call jingoism nearly always is unpleasant, but propaganda doesn’t need to be emotional rabble-rousing. It is, surely, legitimate to try to ensure that the truth will out – especially when the alternative is to leave history to the liars. Image from article, with caption: A A Milne, pictured with his son Christopher Robin, was conflicted over his work for military intelligence. See also: (1) (2).
Facebook Home Propaganda Makes Selfishness Contagious - Evan Selinger, wired.com: The new ads for Facebook Home are propaganda clips. Transforming vice into virtue, they’re social engineering spectacles that use aesthetic tricks to disguise the profound ethical issues at stake. This isn’t an academic concern: Zuckerberg’s vision (as portrayed by the ads) is being widely embraced — if the very recent milestone of half a million installations is anything to go by. Critics have already commented on how the ads exploit our weakness for escapist fantasy so we can feel good about avoiding conversation and losing touch with our physical surroundings. And they’ve called out Zuckerberg’s hypocrisy: “Isn’t the whole point of Facebook supposed to be that it’s a place to keep up with, you know, family members? So much for all that high-minded talk about connecting people.” However, the dismissive reviews miss an even deeper and more consequential point about the messages conveyed by the ads: that to be cool, worthy of admiration and emulation, we need to be egocentric. We need to care more about our own happiness than our responsibilities towards others.
More Pacific Rim Poster Propaganda Pops Up - Ryan Turek, shocktillyoudrop.com: Pacific Rim's propaganda campagn continues to keep the public informed in the battle against the kaiju. This one has a very Starship Troopers-esque vibe.
Check it out inside. The film, directed by Guillermo del Tor, opens in theaters July 12th. For more posters, pics and more, click here. Image from entry
Check it out inside. The film, directed by Guillermo del Tor, opens in theaters July 12th. For more posters, pics and more, click here. Image from entry
What isn’t Propaganda? – Day 370 - paintersjourneytolife.wordpress.com: Propaganda in the hands of our elite is a study in near-perfection. Orwell might have called it “a matured totalitarianism” – a sophisticated matrix that has deformed our humanity… we bought their story and we have forgotten our ability to challenge tyranny. The antidote to propaganda is Truth: to stop telling lies – lies about ourselves, lies about the world.
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