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--Line from Love Story, the oh-so-late-twentieth-century bestseller from the recently deceased (at age 72) Erich Segal; image from; see also
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
Osama Bin Laden as Che Guevara, and Other Dumb Narratives - Joshua Holland, AlterNet (blog): "[T]he truth is that the al Qaeda movement is broad and attracts a lot more of those 'wretched of the earth' from Waziristan than it does high-flying physicians with connections in the Jordanian intelligence community. The latter may offer the kind of stories the Western media investigate in depth, but that doesn’t make them representative of the larger dynamic. And from that flawed analysis comes some really poor conclusions [by Washington Post columnist Anne Appelbaum]: ['] Perhaps it sounds strange, but they remind me of the early Bolsheviks, who were also educated, multinational and ambitious, and who also often lacked the social cachet to be successful. Lenin's family, for example, clung desperately to its status on the lowest rung of the czarist aristocracy...['] The analogy to the Cold War is as lazy as it is prevalent. And of course, it leads to the conclusion, as it inevitably does, that we need to waste more money
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Are Glassman and Doran right on Iran? - Daniel Florian Blog: "Last week, I had a brief Twitter dispute with Matt Armstrong (@Mountainrunner) on James K. Glassman’s and Michael Doran’s Wall Street Journal article on what kind of diplomacy the USA should use to 'undermine the regime in Tehran'. In this article, Glassman (who was George W. Bush’s last Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and gained a great reputation for his clever use of social media tools) and Professor Doran argue that rather than using force to eliminate thre threat of a nuclear Iran, the US should use its soft power.
Obviously, I am all for this approach, but it nevertheless seems to me that some of their proposals are too far reaching and rather resemble clandestine operations than public diplomacy instruments or soft power. ... [I]f public diplomacy becomes a synonym for regime change, it will loose the broad support it needs in order to be successful." Image from article
Winning the Ground Battles but Losing the Information War - Gina Cairns-McFeeters, John Shapiro, Steve Nettleton, Sonya Finley and Daryk Zirkle, Small Wars Journal: "As we move toward a whole of government solution on extremist websites, and the use of the wider information environment to incite violence, we must keep in mind the dynamic nature of the internet and use that to our strategic advantage. While we conduct operations to reduce the amount of extremist messages, we must also be able to continuously fill the gaps with viable alternatives to the extremist narrative. As reported by the AP, Saudi Arabia has had relative success in directly engaging potential terrorist recruits and offering them a less radical path. Of 2,631 militants engaged by the Saudi program, 1,170 withdrew the support for extremists. An analogous U.S. program would necessarily have to be run by credible constituents. Fortunately, the U.S. has experience in this, as exemplified by the Alliance of Youth Movements discussed by former Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James Glassman in April. This approach requires long term strategic planning, a tolerance of criticism from within the government, and assistance from international partners for maximum effect. ... It is absolutely critical for every government agency within the U.S. government to participate, coordinate, cooperate, and arrive at a final, integrated and definitive standard of Strategic Communications against terrorists. ... The war fighting environment is changing and the arsenal is now communications and information systems. Keyboards
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The lies and fabrications of US propaganda outlets: the case of Radio Sawa - As'ad, The Angry Arab News Service/وكالة أنباء العربي الغاضب
Panel speaks about future of media - Terri Kleckner, Central Florida Future: "A panel of seven professional journalists spoke Thursday, Jan. 21, on how the news media is transforming in today's digital age. The program explored the topic of ‘News Media in Transition: Trends and Future Prospects’ and was co-sponsored by the Global Perspectives Office, UCF LIFE, UCF Political Science Department, UCF Nicholson School of Communication, and the Global Connections Foundation. Suzanne Seggerman,
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The 1960 VOA essay that still generates other essays on art and ideology – Kim Andrew Elliott reporting on International Broadcasting: "'Nancy Jachec ... in 1998 claimed that because ‘Modernist Painting’ was written for the Voice of America (VOA), [art critic Clement] Greenberg 'would have been particularly attentive to its political slant.'
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Obama likely to skip opening ceremonies [at winter Olympics] - Stephanie Levitz, Toronto Sun: "While ... leaders ostensibly attend Games in order to show support for their athletes, there is a measure of public diplomacy involved.”
India warns West: 'We have to grow' - Faisal Islam, Channel 4 News (blog) – "[T]he environment minister [the Indian environment minister Jairam Ramesh], himself now sees the need to engage in some public diplomacy with the West. The message: Stop consuming and sacrifice some of your own energy rich lifestyles, before you try to bind the likes of India."
Y&F People: All About Alina Syunkova - Beverly Rose, The Young and Fabulous:
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New Path - Wandering Aimfully: "If I have any followers these days, I would let you know that I have certainly been wandering aimfully out of range of this blog for quite awhile. But much good stuff is happening. The world will be pleased to know that the wanderer has returned to the blogosphere, thanks to an assignment in my Public Affairs class at Emerson College. Subsequent posts this spring will relate to Public Relations, Public Affairs and Public Diplomacy...and of course, anything else I happen to wander into.”"
CULTURAL DIPLOMACY
International Students and US Global Power in the Long 20th Century - Paul A. Kramer, Japan Focus: "[T]he history of foreign student migration ought to be explored as U. S. international history, that is, as related to the question of U. S. power in its transnational and global extensions. In this sense, my argument here is topical: that historians of U. S. foreign relations might profitably study international students
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Gov't outlines main foreign policy directions - ANA: "Presenting Greece's main foreign policy goals and directions on Monday, Alternate Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas stressed that the key aim for Athens is to occupy its rightful position on the international scene. ... He referred to a series of planned changes in the organisation and working methods of the foreign ministry and Greek diplomacy, in order to better use the country's 'added value'. The minister also announced that the focus will be shifted more to economic and energy diplomacy through the support of Greek businesses abroad, secondly to cultural diplomacy and promoting Greece as a tourism destination through closer cooperation with the culture ministry. Thirdly, he emphasised developmental diplomacy, with a shift toward green development."
Istanbul festival employs cultural diplomacy - Delphine Strauss, Financial Times: [by subscription; entry from Google]: "Cultural diplomacy is becoming an important tool for Turkey as its bid for European Union membership falters."
President perfects art of cultural diplomacy at ambassadors' party - Grainne Cunningham, Irish Independent: "58 diplomats and their families attended President Mary McAleese's
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Top Spanish Art Showcased in Ljubljana - STA-Slovenska Tiskovna Agencija (subscription): [by subscription; entry from Google]: "[Slovenia’s Minister of Culture] Majda Sirca underscored the importance of cultural diplomacy, noting that Spain had come to Slovenia not only with Picasso, 'who rules by definition.'"
Ankole needs identity, not a king - New Vision: "Instead of seeking to crown a king, the Nkore Cultural Trust should, through cultural diplomacy, help the clans of Nkore to federate into a new Nkore cultural identity.
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RELATED ITEMS
Kabul Promotes Its Side of Taliban Attack - Yaroslav Trofimov, Wall Street Journal: The propaganda war between the U.S.-backed Afghan government and the Taliban has just escalated, as each side offers starkly different accounts of Monday's insurgent attacks on central Kabul. Until recently, the Taliban proved far better than the disorganized Afghan government in spreading their message. But this time, Afghan officials -- with American support -- have mounted a newly sophisticated effort to present their view of events, culminating with an award ceremony Thursday for Afghan soldiers who helped repel the insurgents.
Arabs demand special satellite channels to beam Islamic propaganda into Europe/America, promise not to fuel terrorism and anti-American incitement…- sheikyermami, Winds Of Jihad: Arab Information Ministers hold a meeting on Sunday to discuss proposals to forge a common media strategy to counter Israeli plans to Judaize Jerusalem and demolish Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound.
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Exhibition of Soviet-Era Posters to Open at the Fleming Museum - Art Daily: Nearly twenty years after the demise of the Soviet Union, the Fleming Museum brings to Vermont an extraordinary collection of Soviet graphic arts. The exhibition Views and Reviews: Soviet Political Posters and Cartoons opens at the Fleming Museum on Friday, January 29 and presents a stunning array of images spanning more than six decades from the time of the Russian Civil War (1918-1921) - during which period the Bolsheviks and their western-backed opponents struggled for control of the new state - to the late Soviet period. Propaganda in the Soviet Union took many forms.
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MORE QUOTATIONS FOR THE DAY
“[T]he time is not far off when the typical 10-year-old will have the equivalent of the Library of Alexandria in her backpack.”
--Daniel Akst, a former columnist and technology editor at the Los Angeles Times
"In 1976 Harvard psychologist Ellen J. Langer and Judith Rodin, now president of the Rockefeller Foundation, conducted a study in a New England nursing home in which the residents were given plants, but only some had the opportunity to water them.
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--Michael Shermer, "Cultivate Your Garden," Scientific American (February 2010), p. 30; Image not from article