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--Walter Wanger, the independent producer behind the film Foreign Correspondent (1940), who got his first taste of the power of film during World War I when he handled publicity for the American embassy in Rome; image from
CONFERENCE
Iran's Blogosphere and Grassroots Voices: Risks and Rewards of Engagement (April 12): Presented by Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication and the Broadcasting Board of Governors
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
Obama's 'Intelligence Czar' Plugs a New Counterterrorism Catchphrase - Mark Hosenball, Newsweek: "In a speech today before a conference on post-9/11 intelligence-reform efforts, Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair
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"Collateral Murder" – Lena, Global Chaos: "The Wikileaks video, showing Iraqi civilians and reporters (Reuters reporters!) being shot at from a U.S. Army Apache helicopter in Baghdad in July 2007, was released yesterday, and later, was confirmed by a senior U.S. military official to be authentic. ... What happened to the need to 'capture the hearts and minds' of the Iraqi people? It's so sad to be hearing about all those casualty figures among the Coalition forces, and yet, it is even sadder to see the lives of Iraqi civilians being neglected in such a way. Can the U.S. public diplomacy or the voice of an American-backed Iraqi government be expected to have improving credibility given this context?" See also.
A “U.S. base” in Rio? - Adam Isacson, Plan Colombia and Beyond - "During his stop in Quito yesterday, the assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs, Arturo Valenzuela, was asked about reports that the United States and Brazil are talking about creating a joint anti-narcotics facility in Rio de Janeiro. Valenzuela responded that the United States and Brazil are discussing a bilateral security agreement. He insisted that this will not resemble the Defense Cooperation Agreement signed by the United States and Colombia last October, which granted U.S. personnel access to seven Colombian military bases.
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Afghan Girls Bring Drinking Water to Their School - Anna P. Mussman, DipNote: "Students in Jalalabad involved with the Department of State's Global Connections and Exchange (GCE) program were recently offered $150 to create and implement a small project to benefit their communities. This small grant project was facilitated by the La Jolla Golden Triangle Rotary Club Foundation, a Department of State grantee organization which implements GCE in Jalalabad. Nagina Shafiqi and her team at the Bi Bi Aisha Girls High School were the first to complete their project. … Read more about the GCE program in Afghanistan here."
State Department Provides Short Notice to Public for Comments on Renewal of Italian MOU - Cultural Property Observer -- A Web Log Championing the Longstanding Interests of Collectors In the Preservation, Study, Display and Enjoyment of Cultural Artifacts against an "Archaeology Over All" Perspective:
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An Overview of Turkish-Syrian Relations by Using SWOT Analysis – Yasin Atlioğlu blog: "Even though Turkey and Syria have historical, cultural and geographical proximities, psychological prejudices and security concerns have kept them apart from each other as political and economic in post-Ottoman era. ... [A]cademic activities defining negative Turkish and Arab images in both sides’ textbooks ought to be encouraged and the media ought to be used as a tool of public diplomacy by both countries’s government."
Donner Prize shortlist: Finalists for best Canadian public policy book announced - Vit Wagner. Toronto Star: "Foreign policy-themed books hold three of the four spots on the shortlist for this year’s Donner Prize, which awards $35,000 to the best volume on Canadian public policy. The finalists include ... Evan H. Potter’s
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Yale Richmond on the Cold War - John Brown, Notes and Essays: "Patricia Kushlis of Whirled View says she has not seen any evidence that foreign radios caused the downfall of the Soviet Union. She will also not see any evidence that the Soviet downfall was caused by U.S.-Soviet scholarly and scientific exchanges, U.S exhibitions, American jazz bands, Hollywood movies, the Amerika magazines read by Gorbachev and other Soviet leaders, or even rock’n roll. Yet, when you add up all those exchanges with the Soviet Union over the years following the death of Stalin, plus similar exchanges conducted by the West Europeans, it can be argued that cultural exchanges were one of several factors that, taken all together, led to Soviet reforms that eventually brought about the downfall of the entire communist system. For more on this read my keynote address, 'Cultural Exchange and the Cold War: How the West Won,' delivered October 30 at a conference in Helsinki held by the Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki."
Bibliography Public Diplomacy, Cultural/Educational Exchanges, International Broadcasting - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner.us: "The below bibliography is of the works of Hans 'Tom' Tuch. Tom is a retired Career Minister in the U.S. Foreign Service, served in public diplomacy positions in Germany, the Soviet Union, and Brazil. He was Deputy Chief of Mission and charge in Bulgaria and Brazil. In Washington, he served as Deputy and Area Director for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in USIA, and as Deputy and Acting Director of the Voice of America."
And the second prize is.... – Nukes & Spooks: "Last time we checked in on our friend Alberto Fernandez, the State Department official and career Foreign Service Officer was the charge d'affairs [sic] in Khartoum, Sudan. Fernandez, one of the department's better Arabic speakers, will forever have a place in our hearts for his unusual truth-telling back in 2006, during the height of Iraq's sectarian violence, when he acknowledged that the United States had shown 'arrogance' and 'stupidity' in Iraq. This did not win him many friends in the Bush administration, which frequently had an interesting relationship with reality.
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Just A Little Busy Today - Ren's Micro Diplomacy: My to-do list 8:15-10 research hours at the Center on Public Diplomacy 10-11:45 sit in class discussion with exchange students from American University of Dubai on how Americans view the Palestine/Israel conflict 11:45-12: present paper to a room full of prospective MPD student – think they liked it, but couldn’t really tell. 12-1:15: attend Fulbright Canada presentation on exchange diplomacy 1:15-5: grab lunch and run to work at the Office of International Services 5-7: dinner with prospective MPD students (miss class to attend) 7P-?: go home and do homework for tomorrow’s PD Evaluation class."
Climate Change, Press and Communication Intern - Rede RP - Relações Públicas:
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RELATED ITEMS
"Taliban hate ... The Offspring, Metallica and Thin Lizzy," and so they are played very loudly - Kim Andrew Elliott reporting on International Broadcasting: "'US special forces have a novel weapon in the fight to expel Taliban from a desolate and war-weary farming community in southern Afghanistan -- heavy metal music. When insurgents open fire in Marjah, an armoured vehicle wired up to powerful speakers blasts out country, heavy metal and rock music so loudly it can be heard up to two kilometres (one mile) away. The playlist has been hand-selected to annoy the Taliban, according to one US special forces officer.
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Karzai called Erratic, even Druggie; In fact, he is posing as liberator in shadow of Empire – Juan Cole, Informed Comment: Here is the reason it is so important that President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan has begun behaving so erratically. It is because the path President Obama chose in Afghanistan requires a strong, upright, and relatively efficient local partner. Moreover, the US needs to gain hearts and minds, but a series of costly errors of judgment have scandalized the Afghan public. Put the two developments together, and you get a 'surge' that so far is not going well and in which the loyalty of America's partners cannot be taken for granted.
Al Jazeera English increases its US penetration one half hour on one community TV station at a time - Kim Andrew Elliott reporting on International Broadcasting: "'The Al Jazeera English News Bulletin will be available on WilliNet, the [Williamsburg, Massachusetts] community access station. ... The half-hour global news report begins its weekday, 9 p.m. regular schedule on Channel 17 on Monday, April 5. The bulletin's broadcast is being sponsored by Williamstown resident Scott Walker. 'I am pleased to sponsor Al Jazeera,' he said. 'We're a connected world and desperately in need of mutual understanding, and Al Jazeera's reasoned, objective, and from-another-place perspective is vitally important to every citizen.' iBerkshires.com, 5 April 2010."
Iran: Obama's new nuke policy 'propaganda' - Ynetnews: Iran on Wednesday dismissed US President Barack Obama's new nuclear policy as 'propaganda' and called on Washington to make good its promises to rid the world of atomic weapons.
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The e-book revolution hits North Korea: Perhaps it's still too soon to see iPads in Pyongyang, but North Koreans are reported to be enjoying "a wealth" of e-books - Marjorie Kehe, Christian Science Monitor: According to the Korea Times, South Korean activist Kim Seong-min has reported that Electronic Library Mirae (Future) 2.0, a North Korean e-book computer program, is allowing readers in North Korea to choose among a "wealth" of e-book titles. Kim, a North Korean defector and founder of Free North Korea Radio, says that North Koreans are digging into e-books that range well beyond government propaganda.
Will internet popularity in Russia lead to internet restrictions in Russia? - Kim Andrew Elliott reporting on International Broadcasting: "'Nearly one Russian in four now goes online on a daily basis, and almost half of those who do use the Internet to get their news, a challenge to the Kremlin’s control of much of the electronic media and a development that is prompting some of the powers that be to look at the way in which Belarus and Turkmenistan are trying to control the web.'
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Cannon slams Russian plan to drop paratroopers in Arctic – CTV News: Canada's foreign minister blasted a Russian plan to drop paratroopers on the North Pole later this week, calling it a propaganda stunt. "It's another stunt like the flag planting some years ago. It doesn't affect Canada's sovereignty," Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said Tuesday, referring to the planting of a flag on the North Pole seabed by a Russian submarine in 2007.
Azerbaijani propaganda clear violation of OSCE norms: Nalbandian - news.am: RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and Janez Lenarcic, Director of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) discussed the course of democratic reforms during their April 6 meeting. The sides also touched upon the issues on Armenia — OSCE/ODIHR cooperation, RA foreign ministry press service informed NEWS.am. Nalbandian noted that Yerevan is ready to continue close cooperation with ODIHR office. RA Foreign Minister drew OSCE official’s attention to Azerbaijan’s anti-Armenian propaganda that sows national enmity, emphasizing that it is clear violation of OSCE norms.
Why do we need oil painters in a war zone? – Finlo Rohrer, BBC News:
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American Made Anti Communist Propaganda Cartoon from 1948 - "Our Weapon Is The Truth": An animated anti-communist film produced by the US in 1948, this video is funny stuff and the quality of the animation considering it was produced by a college is absolutely awesome.
"Foreign Correspondent" — A "Masterpiece of Propaganda" - Alfred Hitchcock Geek: The film (1940) by Alfred Hitchcock was successful both commercially and as a propaganda piece, and that is powerful combination — after all how effective would propaganda be, without an audience to receive it? Furthermore, audiences got the coded message. The connection was so obvious that they were unaware that the film was not about the Germans. None other than Nazi Germany's minister of propaganda Joseph Goebbels declared it "a masterpiece of propaganda."
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