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--Thomas Babington Macaulay; image from
"[T]he best solution is people, not systems."
--New social media guru Darren Krape, on Linked-in
SITE OF INTEREST:
Public Diplomacy Ideas - IdeaScale
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
Daily Press Briefing - US Department of State: "QUESTION: Can I change the subject? As far as this U.S.-Pakistan’s Strategic Dialogue is concerned, Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao is here in the State Department and she met with the Secretary. We don’t have much about between their – what took place, what happened, really. But before meeting the Secretary here, she told the groups of think tanks at Wilson Center that a very blunt warning to Pakistan that Pakistan must do more as far as if they want to continue dialogue between India and Pakistan to stop terrorizing India across the border. Do you have any idea of what went here in the building between the two, Secretary of State and Foreign Secretary of India? MR. CROWLEY [Assistant Secretary Philip J. Crowley]:
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Pay me to fight my war - Mosharraf Zaidi, The News International: "[T]he people of Pakistan don't have very much say in the direction that Pakistan's strategic dialogue takes in Washington DC. ... [W]hen faced with the ridiculous dual-faced Pakistani narrative of 'this is our war' and 'we are fighting your war so give us your money' the Americans have no response other than to delay and defer the payments which Pakistan is legitimately entitled to, while investing in public diplomacy programmes to see if a few adverts and talk shows can't turn the tide of a decidedly cynical Pakistani public opinion. The proper American response to a strategic dialogue with Pakistan should have been to ask Pakistan to develop an approach to the dialogue on the basis of a robust parliamentary debate. America could then have expected Pakistani parliamentarians, including both the coalition and the opposition, to own the dialogue. That dialogue may not have been qualitatively very different from what is being presented in Washington DC today. This is because of the generic lack of confidence of parliamentarians, and the resulting ownership of the policymaking function by bureaucrats, rather than politicians. Still, such a process would have had the same stamp of legitimacy that Secretary Clinton so desperately seemed to want to invest in when she visited Pakistan last year."
Where are Obama’s Arabic speakers? – Dan, www.mcdermottwire.com:
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On the Road – Again - Martha Bayles, World Affairs: If you have access to MBC-1, the premier entertainment channel in the 22-nation Arab market, tune in this Thursday and Friday for the first and second episodes of Ala al Tariq fi Amrika (On the Road in America). ... It is the creation of Layalina Productions, a Washington-based nonprofit that makes Arabic-language programs with the old-fashioned aim of increasing international understanding. ... MBC is one of ten firms that attract the lion’s share of the Arab audience, while America’s tax-guzzling white elephant, Al Hurra, is one of hundreds scrounging for crumbs. ... There are three reasons for this. First, the bureaucratic landscape of U.S. international broadcasting is so complicated, and so invisible to the average voter, that elected officials have little incentive to pay attention to it. Second, the BBG, a presidentially appointed bipartisan body that is supposed to oversee international broadcasting, is, in the words of political scientist Carnes Lord, 'a highly dysfunctional organization, whose members have become accustomed to freelancing according to their own particular interests.' The third reason for Al Hurra’s continued existence is related to the second. For the last several years, the majority of BBG members have come from the private sector and followed the simplistic logic laid down by former member and commercial radio mogul Norm Pattiz: Anything government can do, business can do better. That may be true in some realms, but it is not true in others—especially when the 'business' in question is not really competing but rather attaching itself ever more tightly to the government teat. Layalina takes a different path. By partnering with an Arab company that knows its audience, Layalina makes programs that appeal to Arab curiosity about the United States, without either preaching in the mode of diplomats, or pandering in the mode of the commercial media. At least, that was my impression when I reviewed the first season of On the Road in America. When I have watched the second, I will post an update."
Exclusive: So Much for Restoring our International Reputation - James Jay Carafano, Family Security Matters: "For a president who came into office claiming that he wanted to listen to what the world had to say, Mr. Obama has developed a fairly solid tin ear.
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Exclusive: Nuclear Terrorism: How Did We Get Here? Where Are We? And Where Can We Go? - Peter Huessy, Family Security Matters: "China, Russia and North Korea, as well as Venezuela, are the most important accomplices to the Iranian regimes quest for nuclear weapons. Threats to the U.S. include nuclear coercion as well as the a) detonation of a nuclear device in an American city by a terrorist group provided nuclear weapons by a terror master state/nuclear armed state, such as Iran, Pakistan or North Korea or a nuclear device used in an EMP-type attack from a ballistic missile. Current analysis of these threats is relatively weak, as it is shaped by [inter alia] ... (3) an assumption that the Iranian regime and other 'terror masters' are amenable to traditional international norms and public diplomacy."
Rebuilding a Republican Majority - Don Sutherland, blueocean.darktax.com: "The United States has an enlightened story to tell.
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An elaborate REPORT – A discussion on Communal Harmony – AMP India:
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CIEE Launches the Rainbird Scholarship to Bring International Students to U.S. [account suspended, according to Google Blogs] - Hao-Odnla, Press Release Service and Distribution: "CIEE, a world-leader in international study abroad and work exchange programs, has established the Rainbird Scholarship to support international university students coming to the U.S. for Summer Work/Travel exchanges. The scholarship, created in memory of long-standing CIEE senior staff member Ann Rainbird who passed away unexpectedly in October 2004, will cover the full program fees for up to 10 students who otherwise would not be able to participate on CIEEs Work & Travel USA program because of financial constraints. In its inaugural year, the Rainbird Scholarship will be offered to students from Poland, the Czech Republic and Bulgaria, and in subsequent years recipients will be chosen from three new countries on a rotating basis. In announcing the launch of the Rainbird Scholarship, CIEE President and CEO Dr. Stevan Trooboff commented, Ann Rainbird had dedicated her career at CIEE to expanding the number of countries and students able to partake on an exchange program in the US and we are pleased that the CIEE Ping Foundation has agreed to set up this scholarship in Ann[']s name. Student exchange programs such as this play a critical role in the increasingly important public diplomacy efforts of the United States."
Lynne Weil goes to USAID - Matt Armstrong, Facebook: "One of public diplomacy’s best friends on the Hill, Lynne Weil,
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Israel: Escaping the Image and Language Trap – A. Jay Adler, the sad red earth:
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IDF wraps 'counter-Goldstone Report'- Herb Keinon, Yaakov Katz, Jerusalem Post: "The IDF has completed a 1,000-page document dissecting the allegations in the Goldstone Commission report piece by piece, and lawyers in various governmental bodies are now going over the text to ensure it sounds like a legal document, rather than a military/public diplomacy one, The Jerusalem Post has learned. The report was written by the IDF and reads like a military document, one diplomatic official said Monday, adding that it needed to be 'laundered” so it sounded more like a legal paper. "
A Legend, A Velodrome & A Boludo - Miles Knowles, ♪Rockstar Diplomat♫ -- Culture and Public Diplomacy in Latin America:
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Public Diplomacy and Erasmus? - Nilo, The New Diplomacy 2010 D: "[P]ublic/cultural diplomacy goes beyond public speeches made by head of states and instead takes often various diverse forms."
Hope & Change vs. Fear & Loathing – Paul Rockower, Levantine: "[In the health care fight,] Obama stepped it up and pushed back, using that gift of communication that he so deftly wields. Still the Dems need good domestic public diplomacy to counter Republican misinformation and propaganda. Still, a good win that all partisans of Hope and Change can be be proud of."
MountainRunner.us: now available on Android - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner.us:
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Sixty-eight year-old veteran of the Information Wars confirms to NATO ally that he is still 'Vividly Alive' - Matt Armstrong. MountainRunner.us: "Today, in an example of the lasting power of USIA Public Diplomacy and the new power of social media, Harry Kuiper, a former Dutch journalist, posted a question about an American embassy Information Officer he knew in the 1970’s: Is Mr. Woody Demitz still vividly alive and looking as he likes? In less than two hours, Woody responded. Dag Meneer Kuiper! Hoe gaat 't met jouw? Ik voel me niet zo slechts. En jij? "
Leaving a legacy: Maxwell dean looks back on accomplishments as departure approaches - Kathleen Ronayne, SU The Daily Orange: "Mitchel Wallerstein,
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Faith and Culture: Scarf Diplomacy - Attia Nasar, ahmadiyyatimes.blogspot.com: "Attia Nasar is a graduate student in the Public Diplomacy program at Syracuse University where she is a candidate for an M.S. in Public Relations from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and an M.A. in International Relations from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. She is currently the Web Chair for the Association of Public Diplomacy Scholars and Public Diplomats for Human Rights."
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Mobile Phones Combat Taliban’s Afghan ‘Information Wastelands’ - Indira A.R. Lakshmanan, Bloomberg: Where the Taliban’s presence was strongest, phone coverage was weakest, crippled by Taliban sabotage of the towers, recalled Smith [Rear Admiral Greg Smith] and U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke in separate interviews. “We found that Afghans in the most-troubled, insurgent- held areas lived in information wastelands dominated by militant propaganda,” Holbrooke said March 17. “We are fighting back with a revamped strategy that puts the people and their ability to communicate at the forefront of our effort.” The U.S. is betting about $263 million in 2010 that winning this campaign will help it prevail on the battlefield. Smith, head of public communications strategy for U.S. and international military forces in Afghanistan, has a budget of almost $150 million for 2010. The U.S. State Department has $113 million to spend this year for civilian communications.
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The Internet is used as an operative and propaganda tool of Al-Qaeda and global jihad networks and needs policing and selective cyber strikes of jihad websites - Bill Warner Private Investigator