Quote on the US Foreign Policy

"The Americans have run away again" — former-SADF (South African Defence Force) soldier in Afghanistan (who will remain anonymous as he’s serving with a private security company possibly in contravention to SA law).

Despite recalling "the facts as we knew them", the reality on the ground is a shifting foreign policy, and with it (foreign) public trust, does matter. While the Administration and Republican in Congress decry the Democratic proposals to "cut-and-run" and how that will send the wrong message, the message has already been sent in Afghanistan.

Prior to putting Afghanistan in the "win" column, focus, American and international, was shifted to Iraq. Put in the place of Afghani’s, and now Iraqis in light of the deterioriating situation there of our own allowance, one would choose a path of future security even it is not desirable. David Galula, in his book Counterinsurgency Warfare: Theory and Practice (PSI Classics of the Counterinsurgency Era), noted the very same when he wrote of examples in the early 1950’s. For example:

In July, 1954, during the Korean War, the aNationalists decided to make a raid on the mainland of China… The Communist garrison was made up of a regular battalion plus a thousand-man militia. The latter, the Nationalists thought, would put up no real fight. Indeed, every piece of available intelligence indicated that the population was thoroughly fed up with the Communists… The [Nationalist paratroopers] were virtually annihiliated. The militia fought like devils. How could they act otherwise when they knew that the Nationalist action was just a raid?

The Case for Cultural Diplomacy: Engaging Foreign Audiences

Making the case against the Clash of Civilizations and its wholesale aggregations (see other posts in the Cultural Warfare category), Helena Finn (in 2003) explains the need to engage. From the socio-political perspective this means listening and understanding. From the military-political persepective, this is the groundwork and foundation for Cultural Warfare. Either way, it is necessary to not see a binary world and not to assume that Arab speakers, Muslims, or some other "condition" as some would call it, as inherently defective and antagonistic to "us".

The Case for Cultural Diplomacy: Engaging Foreign Audiences (also at Foreign Affairs) abstract:

In the past few years there has been an alarming rise in anti-American sentiment around the globe, centered in the Middle East. To reverse this tide, the United States must begin working immediately to establish meaningful contact with the silent majority in the Muslim world, in ways other than through military force or traditional diplomacy. The anti-U.S. aggression witnessed today represents the boiling over of intense frustration, exacerbated by a sense that Muslims have somehow fallen behind. Rather than assuming that Islam is inherently more violent than other religions, U.S. policymakers should realize that there are practical causes of the widespread discontent in the Middle East, and try to offer practical solutions. As they do so, they should take inspiration from the successful cultural diplomacy of the Cold War, while tailoring their efforts to the new circumstances and enemies with which they are confronted. Cultural diplomacy is one of the most potent weapons in the United States’ armory, yet its importance has been consistently downplayed in favor of dramatic displays of military might.Like its predecessors during the early Cold War era, the Bush administration must realize that in waging its self-proclaimed war against extremism, winning foreigners’ voluntary allegiance to the American project will be the most important prize of all.

Embassy’s are representative of the state. So what does the new American Embassy in Baghdad say?

A couple of months ago I wrote about the fortress we (the US) are building in Baghdad. Besides being prime real estate along the Tigris, it is a massive and imposing facility with walls designed to "2.5 times the standard" thickness and "no-go" areas for enhanced security, the Embassy is substantial. While the GAO reports on staffing limits by various federal agencies as a result of sharing the burden of construction in some 150 Embassies around the world, the Baghdad Embassy will likely not suffer the same.

Funding for this project has not been a problem. According to an April 2005 CRS report (and previous March report),

A week after submitting his FY2006 budget to Congress, the President sent Congress an FY2005 emergency supplemental funding request. Included in the supplemental is more than $1.3 billion for the embassy in Iraq: $690 million for logistical and security costs for the embassy in Baghdad and $658 million for construction of the new embassy compound there. Included in the latter are the costs of housing, a power plant, enhanced security, and expedited (24-month) construction.

While Baghdad, among other Iraqi cities, suffers from electricity shortages and water supply issues, the Embassy will not. The fact this is one of the few massive capital projects in the country that is on time and secured by Marines, not private security, has been noticed around the world, notably in Iraq itself. From the ArabNews, US Building Massive 104-Acre Embassy in Baghdad (28 April 2006):

Three years after a US-led invasion ousted Saddam Hussein’s regime, only one major US building project in Iraq is on schedule and within budget: the massive new American Embassy compound…

The high-tech compound will have 21 buildings reinforced to 2.5 times usual standards. Some walls as said to be 15 feet thick or more. Scheduled for completion by June 2007, the installation is touted as not only the largest, but the most secure diplomatic embassy in the world.

…being built inside the heavily fortified Green Zone by 900 non-Iraqi foreign workers who are housed nearby and under the supervision of a Kuwaiti contractor…

…Work for the embassy was quietly awarded last summer to a controversial Kuwait-based construction firm, First Kuwaiti General Trading & Contracting (FKTC).

FKTC has been accused of exploiting employees and coercing low-paid laborers to work in Iraq.

Several of the US contractors competing for the Baghdad embassy project said they were amazed at the US State Department’s decision to award the contract to FKTC.

They say that some competing contractors possessed far stronger experience in such work and that at least one award-winning company offered to perform the all but the most classified work for $60 million to $70 million less than FKTC.

Several other contractors believe that a high-level decision at the State Department was made to favor a Kuwait-based firm in appreciation for Kuwait’s support of the invasion and occupation of Iraq.

“It was political,” said one contractor.

My previous post on this noted some of the issues with the foreign workers and their conditions, notably the image of the US as an employer (why not employ locals? why house them in cramped conditions? why sweatshop-like conditions?) and as a provider. The political process and corrupt processes, which are now being investigated in Iraq, have clearly hurt our image and damaged our credibility.

While the American media talks about the problems with Custer Battles, KBR, and others who provided poor equipment, bad water, and shody services, the reality of the situation is the failure to create a livable environment. All the while, a project for the US goes humming along. A project that further insulates our outpost in comfort and away from the realities of the territory, nee country or state, in which it is placed.

DoD Announces Increase in Foreign Language Pay

Briefly, somebody in the Government gets that we need to be able to communicate with the world. Should it have been State, they are afterall the ones who "own" public diplomacy, right? DoD Announces Increase in Foreign Language Pay.

The Department of Defense announced
today an increase in Foreign Language Proficiency Pay (FLPP) for
military personnel who qualify effective June 1.

The Fiscal Year 2005
National Defense Authorization Act authorizes the Secretary of Defense
to increase FLPP pay from a maximum of $300 per month to a maximum of
$1,000 per month for qualified active duty members and offer a $6,000
per year bonus for qualified Guard and reserve members.

Enhancing the department’s
FLPP program is a critical facet of the overall Defense Language
Transformation initiative.  The purpose of the program is to:

Encourage people with a language capability to self-identify in order to employ the language skills existing in the force.

Encourage more people to study a language.
The Defense Language Program must stimulate the acquisition of language
skills and be able to maintain language skills of strategic importance
to the department.

Encourage people to increase their language proficiency to create a cadre of language professionals operating at an advanced level of proficiency.

Increase the capability in languages of strategic need to the department.

The enhanced program will emphasize languages needed to support the
Global War on Terror, the recommendations of the Quadrennial Defense
Review, and those of strategic importance to the Department of Defense.

Before reforming public diplomacy, we need a strategy

For all the governement and special commission reports, all of the blogs and media analysis, and for all of the books, the United States still does not get public diplomacy. It does not matter if a team in the State Department "gets it" or if the Pentagon "gets it". What really matters is the very top "gets it". Without participation and buy-in from the very top, we are wasting our time fanstasizing about the efficacy of official public diplomacy, wondering about cultural imperialism of the entertainment industy, and "advocacy" of our "ideals".

The reality of getting "them" to "know us" and what we’re about seems a little misguided when only 33% of American’s like what we do. When the world has lost the seperation between America and American — sentiments like "we dislike your President, but love your country" is in the past — what are we really doing?

The 28 April 2006 Wall Street Journal demonstrates how talk on reshaping US Public Diplomacy apparatus is nothing but folly. We missing the crucial keystone of an effective public diplomacy: acceptance and support from the very top. Until then the public diplomacy of the United States will continue to be a hodge podge of efforts chiefly led by the US military and not the State Department. 

Even before China’s bolder courtship of Africa began to galvanize new attention in Washington, Gen. Jones was executing the Bush administration’s national-security doctrine of preventive action there "in an effort to preclude parts of Africa from becoming the Iraqs and Afghanistans of the future," he says.

He and Deputy Commander Chuck Wald, his point man for Africa at the European Command headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany, are overseeing a think tank on Africa. To improve coordination of U.S. initiatives, they have put together a group in Stuttgart with the participation of 15 U.S. government agencies. Gen. Jones has worked with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to bring business leaders with him to Africa. It’s all in service of what he sees as the military’s new role as forward scout and animator for integrated U.S. response.

"The fight in the 21st century," he says, "is about coordinating all elements of national influence so that it works together in a seamless way. If nothing follows the military in Africa, we won’t succeed."

"Coordinating all elements of national influence" sounds a lot like "smart power". Reaching out proactively to engage and understand is generally understood to be the mission of public diplomacy. So where is Karen Hughes in this critical region of national importance?

The value and shortcomings of US public diplomacy is captured in "too many reports", in Karen Hughes’ own words, and books. Yet, very little action has been done or attempted to address these concerns spanning a few years. Ah, you might say bureaucracies take time to change. Surely recreating USIA or something similar isn’t even close to creating the Department of Homeland Security, perhaps the second worse strike against the security of this nation by this Administration to protect our nation (Iraq having slid into #1)? Anything, right or wrong, can be done if the will is there. A commitment from the top is required and the will trickles, or floods, down from there.

Made clear is that Karen Hughes is not on the "take-off’s and
landings"
and that Condoleeza Rice will not give or fight for Hughes or her mission. Let’s stop wasting our time wondering how a certain policy of Karen
Hughes will impact public diplomacy. The reality is this President
continues to appointment Ambassadors as political favors without consideration to competency or value to America,
continues to empower the Defense Department as the communicator and
coordinator with civilian agencies and governments, and continues to work around instead of reform programs (e.g. creating the
Millenium Challange Account outside of USAID). Repeatedly, this President reiterates his lack of lack of vision and understanding of the value of image and content, policy and deeds, while at the same time demanding other countries follow up words with action. Until the President understands "small" things like 20,000 non-military security contractors operating in Iraq reflect back on the United States, that Iraqi reconstruction projects after years of effort are still unfinished or extremely poorly done reflect back onto the United States, and that the value of the word of the United States has diminished as a result of his policies (consider Iran’s challenge on sanctions), we will not have an effective public diplomacy strategy because we will constantly be fighting our own messages and actions, leaving no room to educate, engage, or counter misinformation.

The National Security Strategy of 2006 completely ignores notions of mutual understanding
and two-way communication, despite "too many" reports highlighting their
significance. However in a flood of academic articles, the US military increasing acknowledges and incorporates cultural awareness and understanding as critical to "scouting", preventing, and short-circuiting conflict.

Back at State, Hughes’ Four E’s emphasize "advocacy" without understanding and without real listening. Obviously, Hughes did not read the reports or what was in but not reported in the reports. The GAO
report of 2003
included survey questions that were, interestingly, not addressed in the report itself. Among these were questions noting that while 87% of US diplomatic posts responded
"public diplomacy" was a "strategy and/or tactic for meeting other
strategic goals", 77% responded that "mutual understanding" was no in
their Mission Performance Plans. Other questions noted the 42% of the diplomatic posts worked coordinated with the USAID office in country while 59% coordinated with US military elements in country.

President Bush has dictated a policy of unilateralism but the
military sees the writing on the wall. Perhaps it is because they are a
more agile organization than State, but when papers like "Avoiding a
Napoleonic Ulcer- Bridging the Gap of Cultural Intelligence (Or,Have We
Focused on the Wrong Transformation)" (from 2004) are published seeking
cultural-based models of the past, present and future, we have to ask where
is State?

Should we be concerned that Rumsfeld is asked about his vision of USIA? When was the last time Rice was asked about USIA?
 

Apparently the impact of policy, perception, demographics, and knowledge on our
security is not apparent to State. While the military conducts exercises with media
(TV, radio, web) participating to practice media diplomacy, State Department officers dedicated to
countering-misinformation from speaking directly to the press

National Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice once implored we must

undertand
their challenges and their cultures and their hopes; to speak their
languages and read their literature; to know their cultures in the
deepest sense. Our interaction must be a conversation, not a monologue.
We must reach out and explain, but we must also listen.

Yet as Secretary of State we don’t see this. Is it really bureaucratic resistance or a lack of commitment to at least establish a policy? Too often we simple attribute the failure of State to move as intranginsince of career officers. It isn’t just State conducting our public diplomacy, and it isn’t just the Defense Department stepping up to the plate. Worthy organizations like Keith Reinhard’s Business for Diplomatic Action step up to fill an obvious void. This is not privatizing as much as its outsourcing by default.

State provides Shared Values and sons of Shared Values. If we just tell the story a little different next time maybe it’ll work. Long term visionaries like Norm Pattiz are cut at the knees because they don’t "advocate" the US position enough or don’t show the "numbers" to "prove" success. As Albert Einstein once said, "Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts." In a Long War we need to have patience.

Listening requires connections through radio or in-person. Consular offices that are described as "Crusader Castles" or maximum security prisons inhibit any kind of communication. Is the "last three feet" the no man’s land / killing zone between the 10′ fence topped with razor wire and the walls with tiny windows? Stories about visa procedures ($100 non-refundable application fee??) and entry problems abound. An over-arching strategy and commitment, if it existed, must trickle down to TSA supervisors and officers to be aware of their role in forming the image of the United States. Instead, we consider huge projects like the "model" terminal in Houston.

In Baghdad, we are building the largest embassy in the world, a facility larger than Vatican City, built with imported Southeastern Asian labor housed in miserable conditions. If the Istanbul Consulate is a "crusader castle", what will this monstrosity be called?

It was General Abizaid of CENTCOM who said

In order to fight this long war, we ought to become as ‘expert’ in the Middle East as we were ‘expert’ in Central Europe for the past 50 years… we have to educate, train and develop the next generation of leadership to be as familiar and comfortable with this culture, it’s threats and opportunities. The near term battle is for linguists, intelligence experts and FAOs (foreign area officers). The long term battle is to develop an Officer Corps (and Senior NCO Corps) that is as comfortable and acculturated operating in this region tomorrow, as we were in Central Europe yesterday.

The effort to inoculate, a word used by SACEUR General Jones to Congress in 2005, is the goal of the mission described in the Wall Street Journal article. It is import to deny sanctuary to terrorist beliefs, support networks (implicit and explicit), and overall build up the security and, more importantly, capacity of states around the world to reject terrorists and guerrillas. But again, where is State and where does all of this fit into our Public Diplomacy strategy? Until we pressure for a top-level strategy, we’re justing wasting bandwidth, time, and energy chasing windmills while Bush and Company go about their merry way.

Air Force One Graffiti Hoax

The internet can create news where there isn’t any and give a platform to those who otherwise would be voiceless. In Mexico, the Zapatista’s so effectively used global communication that a new paradigm was named for them: Zapatista Effect. The Netwar is less denial-of-service attacks and more of what the Air Force One Graffiti Hoax symbolized its potential.

A startling internet video that shows someone spraying graffiti on

President Bush’s jet looked so authentic that the Air Force wasn’t immediately certain whether the plane had been targeted….

"We’re looking at it, too," said Lt. Col. Bruce Alexander, a spokesman
for the Air Mobility Command’s 89th Airlift Wing, which operates Air
Force One. "It looks very real."

Swift-boating to a new level, a determined party will take advantage of the 24-hour news cycle (and its inherent desperation). This requires deep and effective counter-information capabilities with speakers who understand how to communicate and have an established level of trust.

See the original video here.

American Military Partnership Makes Big Hit in The Gambia

EUCOM is really expanding in Africa. US soldiers are becoming cultural links between Gambians and the United States.

The security partnership between the U.S. Defense Department and TheGambia has come in for praise, in part because of a recent visit to the
country by soldiers of the U.S. European Command (EUCOM), who shared
valuable experiences with their Gambian counterparts.

EUCOM,
headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany, is responsible for military
partnerships with most sub-Saharan African nations.  It organized the
March 13-17 visit to The Gambia in cooperation with the U.S. Embassy in
Banjul, The Gambia, and the Office of Defense Cooperation at the U.S.
Embassy in Dakar, Senegal.

According to the U.S. Embassy in
Banjul, the soldiers’ conversation centered on operations aimed at
helping Africans secure their countries against terrorism as well as
counter crimes like illegal fishing and piracy.

The Americans were well received and drew "enthusiastic reactions from the Gambian government and media," the embassy reported….

The event coincided with a successful donation project operated by
the Defense Department called the Humanitarian Assistance Program
(HAP).  In The Gambia, HAP spurred the donation of excess U.S. property
to nongovernmental organizations, including a vehicle, medical supplies
and school and office furniture.

Compared to Defense Department
partnerships with larger African nations, the overall U.S.-Gambian
military relationship is relatively modest — funded at between
$100,000 and $150,000 a year.  The centerpiece of that involvement is
the International Military Education and Training (IMET) program, which
brings foreign officers to the United States for professional training
at service schools.

In 2003, IMET spent more than $11 million to train more than 1,500 African troops from 40 countries in Africa.

This is how we win the "hearts and minds". Why is it being led by the Defense Department?

Security is "a regional problem and requires a regional solution," the
admiral said.  "These nations need to protect their natural resources
and provide for safety and security to their coastlines."  To that end,
he said, the meeting gave the United States "the opportunity to build
effective peer networking among the African professionals and
strengthen our emerging partnerships with those nations."

Security of the region is important not just to deny sanctuary but also to protect oil and other natural resources. Developing deep partnerships through cultural and public diplomacy is far cheaper than waging war and goes a lot further in the trust deparment.

Military to Protect U.S. Aid Teams in Iraq

Briefly, the Pentagon (Rumsfeld?) actually so wanted to draw down in Iraq that it wanted State Department to use private security companies. Military to Protect U.S. Aid Teams in Iraq:

The announcement followed months of disagreement between the Pentagon and the State Department over whether to use U.S. troops or private security guards to ensure the safety of dozens of diplomats, aid workers and other civilian specialists who would staff the new outposts. State has argued that the teams warrant U.S. military protection, but the Pentagon, eager to reduce the number of U.S. troops in Iraq, had resisted committing to the new mission.

Is the next step Rumsfeld pulling out Marines from guarding the US Naval Academy? Wait, that’s already been done. Perhaps pulling them out of all diplomatic posts? That might just be necessary just to protect the new Baghdad base, er, embassy.

More on Fortress Baghdad, er, the New American Embassy

060414_embassy_hmed_3phlarge The wisdom of the Bush Administration hits the news yet again. While Condi is admiting, perhaps unwittingly, to the mistakes of the Administration in Iraq (by mostly pointing the finger at Rumsfeld by the way), comes more news in the mainstream media about what will become a legendary debacle of US Public Diplomacy. The American embassy in Iraq, as  reported by MSNBC (picture of all the construction cranes at right should be warning itself), will be massive and the largest in the world at 21 buildings and 104 acres.

The fortress-like compound rising beside the Tigris River here will be the largest of its kind in the world, the size of Vatican City, with the population of a small town, its own defense force, self-contained power and water, and a precarious perch at the heart of Iraq’s turbulent future.

Interestingly, the MSNBC report parroted the names of the security
measures built into the compound. So-called "no-go areas" used to be
called "killing zones", "no-man’s land", or similar clearly named
places to avoid.

The over 5,000 (!!) American and Iraqis who will work in the embassy will be isolated from interaction with the unwashed masses of the public to carry out the new ‘special’ brand of diplomacy, whatever that is. Should we ask how many of the 5k+ will be DoD reports with Rumsfeld taking more of a role in public diplomacy?

Iraq_jobsDavid Phinney’s story on the embassy back in February goes deeper into the impact of this embassy on our worldwide relations. Not only are we building a structure that will intimidate the state it is in (and dominate the skyline of the capital city we are guests in with our sovereign territory), but we are importing labor from other countries with lies, deceit and low-pay. How do think that plays back in their home countries?

Well, at least we’re continuing to give our friends the Kuwaitis financial assistence. It’s good to help friends, right?

More than a few U.S. contractors competing for the $592-million Baghdad
project express bewilderment over why the U.S. State Department gave
the work to First Kuwaiti General Trading & Contracting (FKTC).
They claim that some competing contractors possessed far stronger
experience in such work and that at least one award-winning company
offered to perform the all but the most classified work for $60 million
to $70 million less than FKTC….

Mohammad I. H. Marafie, chairman and co-owner of FKTC, is a member of one of the most powerful mercantile families in Kuwait….

American contractors witnessing the plight of some of these migrants at
military camps around Iraq have openly complained that the Asians
endure abysmal working conditions, live in cramped housing, eat poor
food, and lack satisfactory medical care and safety gear.

Typically,
these migrants work 12 hours a day, often seven days a week, and earn
as little as $500 a month performing tasks considered unsuitable for US
war fighters. They work construction, drive trucks, run laundries,
clean latrines, pick up rubbish and operate stores, dining facilities
and warehouses. Without them, and the "body shop" subcontractors that
provide such laborers, the US and coalition military camps — virtually
small cities — would shut down.

I listened to a CorpWatch interview with Phinney when this first came out. I suggest you do the same if you don’t want to read the entire article.

What do you think this will do to our image? Probably not much since it will only reinforce the perceptions of America. Tell me how this embassy, and its construction, symbolizes the United States?

Istanbulconsulate
Is a place that looks like a "remote crusader castle" or a "maximum security prison"? Both of which were used to describe our $83m Istanbul Consulate. What again does this tell the local population?

Rumsfeld on USIA

Who is in charge of our public diplomacy? It was supposed to be the State Department when the USIA was rolled into in 1999. However, Remarks by Secretary Rumsfeld at the Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Pa. indicate something else. He is talking about USIA and our foreign image. State and Condi is not for they ‘do not talk directly to the people’, leaving it the military to do our person to person communication.

Read the transcript below and ask yourself if it sounds like the Secretary of Defense or the Secretary of State talking. I would have highlighted a few items, but the entire speech and the Q&A requires your attention if you want the full impact of the cross-over from Defense to State. Rumsfeld clearly sees himself, with the acquiesence of the President and Cheney, as the guy to best communicate our strategy and direction directly to the people of the world. Between the Rendon Group and CENTCOM reaching out directly to bloggers (no, not me), among other examples, perhaps USIA should be reconstituted within DoD? (Just joking… kind of.)

After
the September 11th attacks the United States fashioned a very large
global coalition who worked together to protect our people and protect
their people. This coalition is probably the largest in the history of
the world, with some 80 or 90 countries working together to make it
more difficult for terrorists to do everything they need to do to be
successful. More difficult to train, to recruit, to raise money, to
establish sanctuaries, to acquire weapons, to cross borders,
communicate.

But the strategy must do a great deal more to
reduce the lure of the extremist ideology, like standing with those
moderate Muslims advocating peaceful change, freedom and tolerance.

Progress is being made. Afghanistan has gone from a
country where the government protected terrorists and imprisoned women,
to one that imprisons terrorists and protects women.  Iraq has gone
from Saddam’s mass graves to mass participation in democratic
elections. A recent survey showed that a large and growing number of
Muslims believe that free systems can work in their country.

The extremists see these changes and they’re desperate
to prevent that progress. One suspects that the terrorists preferred
the battles before September 11th when they were often the only ones on
the offensive.

Today there are some who want America to go back on the
defensive, to the strategy that failed before September 11th. They say
that a retreat from Iraq would provide an American escape from the
violence. However we know that any reprieve would short lived. To the
terrorists the West would remain the great Satan. The war that the
terrorists began would continue. And free people would continue to be
their target.

From time to time one hears the claim that terrorists’
acts are reactions to particular American policy. That’s not so. Their
violence preceded by many years operations in Afghanistan and Iraq and
their violence will not stop until their ideology is confronted by the
values millions on every continent take for granted. The ideas that
liberated moderate Muslims are risking their lives every day to defend
including free systems, individual rights. We must recognize this and
steel ourselves for the long struggle ahead.

QUESTION: [Inaudible]. My question has to do with the war on terror as a war of ideology. The National Defense Strategy, QDR (Quadrennial Defense Review), talks about the war on terror having a significant component as a war of ideology. What do you think we’re doing well with respect to the war of ideology, and what do you think we could do better?

SECRETARY RUMSFELD:
If I were rating, I would say we probably deserve a D or D+ as a
country as how well we’re doing in the battle of ideas that’s taking
place. I’m not going to suggest that it’s easy, but we have not found
the formula as a country.

It’s
basically a struggle not between the West and Muslims. It’s a struggle
within the Muslim faith. There are a relatively small number of violent
extremists and a very large number of moderates who do not believe in
violent extremism in that faith. We’re going to have to find ways that
we can encourage and support those moderate voices because they’re the
ones who are in the struggle.

In the
20th century when I went to Washington fresh out of the Navy in 1957
and we had something called the United States Information Agency. It
wasn’t perfect, but it had libraries around the world, made movies, had
various seminars and opportunities for people to learn more about the
United States. I don’t know what the 21st century version of that is,
but we need it badly and we haven’t got it.

When I was in Congress I remember
President Kennedy was president.  The USIA made a film about the
Kennedy family going to India. It was very promotional and favorable to
them.
It was played back in the United States and Congress got all excited
because taxpayers’ dollars were being used to propagandize the American
people. So the USIA was highly criticized and eventually it was
abolished for all practical purposes.

We had
various other things at Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, and other
activities that we engaged in. But this is a wonderful country, the
United States of America. The American people are enormously generous.
And we are tolerant as a country. We accept diversity and differences.
We’re far from perfect. But the image that the United States has in the
world as a result of the characterizations by others is unfortunate.
And when people are leaning toward you, as you all know, things are
easy. When people are leaning away from you, things are much more
difficult.

We’re
conducting a war today that for the first time in the history of the
world, in the 21st century, where with all of these new realities —
video cameras and digital cameras and 24 hour talk shows and bloggers
and the internet and e-mails and all of these things that have changed
how people communicate. And as a result, everything anyone says goes to
multiple audiences.  Every time the United States
tries to do anything that would communicate something positive about
what we’re doing in the world we’re criticized in the press and in the
Congress, and we have a reappraisal and say oh, my goodness, is that
something we should be doing? How do we do it in a way that is
considered acceptable in our society?

Right
now we have this issue about some folks out in Iraq working for General
Casey hired a contractor and they wanted to get some truth out — true
stories, not inaccurate stories, not disinformation, but true stories
and the contractor wanted to get those placed in some papers and they
wouldn’t take them, and he paid, apparently paid, the report hasn’t
come to me yet but as I understand it, the contractor apparently paid
some newspapers to run, without putting the word advertisement on it.
It was the truth. They were not lies that were being put in the paper.
They were accurate. But the fuss and the concern in the country has
just been a frenzy over it, so we’re having an investigation. General
Casey ran an investigation of it. He’s now going to send it back and
I’ll look at it and we’ll have to figure out whether that’s something
we ought to do.

If you
put yourself in the shoes of the people in the theater, and they’re out
doing decent, good things frequently day after day, and the press is
just reporting bad things about you in the Iraqi press, the
neighborhood press for example, and they want to get something good
about the fact that they did build a hospital, or they did put a
generator in the school, or they did something else because their
patrols are going out and they want the population to have a balanced
view of what the troops are doing. So they worked with a local
newspaper to try to get those stories in because they felt it would
save lives if the community understood what it is we were doing
completely and not just negative things that were being said through
al-Jazeera or one of the networks that tend to be negative on the
coalition forces.

You can understand their desire to do that. Then you look at the reaction.

So
we’re going to have to find better ways to do it and thus far we
haven’t as a government. The government’s not well organized to do it.
I worry, frankly, about people because of the fact that we do need the
ability to communicate more effectively as a country, and people in the
military have to be willing to do that. If every time anyone in the
military sticks their head up they get penalized for having touched the
third rail, namely done something with the media, that’s not a great
incentive for you folks. Right? But it’s critically important that each
of you have the ability to communicate, to deal with the press, and to
understand where the red lines are and where the lanes are that we have
to stay in because in our society we have to find them. The problem is
that we’ve not yet adapted to all of these new realities that exist and
we’re going to have to do a much better job of it.

New embassy design?

Palaceofsoviets1934_1 Is this a drawing by someone in the Administration of what the Baghdad embassy should look like? Has it entered the blogosphere through FOIA? Alas, no. It does represent "imminent triumph" but not of America or even the West, but of Communism. More here

"The competition for the Palace of Soviets in
Moscow was one of the most extensive and impressive of this century.
The idea of constructing a building which could be a symbol of the
"imminent triumph of communism" in the capital of the world’s first
state of workers and peasants was mooted in the 1920s. The chosen
location was the site of the demolished Church of Christ the Saviour.
The competition was launched in 1931 and carried out in stages.
Overall, 160 entries were submitted, including 12 commissioned ones and
24 which were fiors concours, as well as 112 project proposals. Twenty
four proposals were received from foreign participants, among whom were
such universally acclaimed architects as Le Corbusier, W.Gropius and
E.Mendelssohn."

Africa in the QDR

The Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) published by the DefenseDepartment is generally taken as a (not ‘the’) roadmap for future
strategy and force structuring of United States Armed Forces. As such,
it is a good read. Frequently, the more interesting read is what
various groups "hear" in the document and what they highlight. Looking
at the Voice of America (VOA), it is noteworthy they highlighted a
small theme in the report: Africa. Within the 92 page report, Africa
does not get too much attention.

Continue reading “Africa in the QDR

USN Public Diplomacy in West Africa

More public diplomacy brought to Africa by the military. From Stars & Stripes:

Sailors from the submarine tender USS Emory S. Land have been working to build better relationships in Gabon one wrench turn at a time.

Dozens of sailors from the ship’s 1,400-member crew worked with the Gabonese navy and made repairs on two of its ships during a visit to the West African country’s Port Gentil.

The visit, which ended Friday, was the second stop on the Land’s current Gulf of Guinea deployment. The deployment is the ship’s second to the region in two years.

“These are not liberty port calls,” said Capt. Michael D. Budney, commander of the ship based in La Maddalena, Italy. “These are working ports.”

The ship is in the region as part of the U.S. European Command’s bid to strengthen everything from security in the area to relationships between the U.S. and nations around the Gulf of Guinea, which has large oil reserves.

But Land’s sailors have been more focused on the basics, strengthening those relationships at the lowest level, between sailors and their host-nation counterparts.

This is a great opportunity for interaction. How will we carry the goodwill forward? Will the locals treasure toys of US military ships or aircraft like the C-130 toys in Pakistan? We need to consider building upon these foundations for long-lasting relationships. The Pentagon is not the place to establish and maintain civilian relationships. We have the finest military in the world but do we want our global interface to be uniforms and weapons of war or something else? We could also throw in here the ever expanding stories (I still need to get to Bremer’s book) on how Rumsfeld himself shorted the civil affairs, er, reconstruction effort in Iraq.

Has State ceded all responsibility to DoD?

From the Associated Press comes Pace Tries to Ease Iraq Concerns:

ISTANBUL, Turkey – In the troubled region surrounding Iraq, a frequent question posed to the top U.S. military officer visiting the area was not when his troops will pull out of Iraq, but how long they will stay.

From the glittery King’s palace in Saudi Arabia to the devastated slopes of the Pakistani mountainside and a staid Turkish symposium, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sought last week to ease concerns about whether opposition to the war at home could pressure American forces to leave Iraq before it is stable.

"I think it’s fair to say that in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, there is a clear desire for the U.S. to stay with it until the job is done – which, coincidentally, is how we look at it," Pace said Sunday as he left Istanbul for Washington.

On his first diplomatic-oriented trip since last fall, Pace traveled to three countries whose leaders are worried about the U.S. commitment to the Iraq war and the global war on terror. Failure to secure Iraq could fuel insurgencies in their countries and instability in the region, where terrorism is a familiar threat.

I wish I had the time to analyze the news for word usage and framing in the context of the military doing "diplomacy" and related terms. Official DoD news releases do not use the word "diplomacy" or "diplomatic" but do use other key phrases normally associated with State.

  • Pace said that he “did more listening than talking” during the
    meetings. Still, he was able to answer questions from his counterparts
    on U.S. government policy on Syria, Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan. "It
    made for a full and open dialogue," he said….In Turkey, Pace said he tried "to solidify the superb relationship"
    between the two countries. "I looked them in the eye and told them the
    truth," he said….The chairman said his visits built on previous ones by other government
    officials, and said further visits will build on his progress. "We have
    to keep the dialogue open so you have ample opportunity to answer the
    questions before the questions become confusion," Pace said.
  • Good governance, economic development, and education are more important
    in ultimately choking off terrorism than military might
    , Pace said at
    the symposium, which is sponsored by the Turkish General Staff. There
    is a role for the military in providing security, but economic programs
    that create jobs will be the long-term solution to terrorism, he said.
    "Once we have security in place, the other elements of national power
    will be the keys to the long-term victory in the war on terror," he
    said…."Good education systems that do not teach hate, but tolerance of
    various religions, ideas and principles" will also help defeat
    terrorism, Pace said. "How can any country reach its full potential if
    it does not include various sectors of its people, whether it be for
    religious purposes, or color of skin or for any other reason, like
    gender?" he said.

Where is Condi and her State Department?

Simulated Media for Pentagon Exercises

War is about to break out between Bogaland and Gotland. Reportings in the capitals of each country, Huvudstad and Visby, respectively, tell of an deepening crisis. This isn’t real the real deal. It’s part of a media simulation the United States Joint Forces Command, "simumedia" if you will.

The nine year old World News Network, with its 1,000th newscast as part of a yearly US-Japan exercise, trains the military to consider, manage, and interact with the media.

The branch provides training on how the presence of mass media affects the planning and execution of military operations. The purpose is to educate commanders and their staffs on the influence mass media can have on their operations, and how to effectively work with the media while accomplishing their missions.

The more nimble, compared to State, Pentagon continues to leverage the massive amounts of money thrown at it as part of the GWOT. Through bureaucratic morass, budgetary constraints, and failed perceptions of value, the Pentagon engages the Rendon Group and cut-outs to seed black, gray, and white propaganda overseas to influence foreign and domestic audiences. Through these programs, DoD continues to get more sophisticated as an actor in media diplomacy, to the exclusion of or in advance of State.

World News Network, an internal services, "broadcasts" during exercises news on television, radio and the web. Placing and keeping the military on the front lines of the media war requires honing communication skills.

“We don’t just ‘deal’ with the media anymore,” Stephens explained. “We help the media tell our story. That’s the paradigm shift we’re making. The media in a free society provides a valuable service to its citizens, and we need to be open and honest in telling our story to them so they can tell the public. That’s what free societies are all about.”

The realism of the SimuMedia is emphasized in feedback and is necessary for effective training of the military.

“One of the challenges we have is operating in an exercise environment that blends live, virtual and constructed elements,” said Williams, who also serves as the branch manager. “Trainees don’t always get to see the entire picture. WNN has become another model. We are giving them images, voice, analysis and discussion that the other resources they have can’t provide. And we’re able to do it on the fly.”

The creation of JPASE as a permanent resource for public affairs (aka public diplomacy if were conducted by State) is another piece in the mosaic of military-centric communications with the world.

“JPASE brings the public affairs focus to the training and helps us shape the training we give to the public affairs professionals on those staffs,” Williams said. “We’re providing media those public affairs staffs have to work with during operations. It’s important that we stimulate public affairs staffs during training.”

Adding to the realism is contracted staff from outside the military or government.

“Using contractors also allows us to draw talent from the outside,” Green said. “We have people on the team who really were television reporters and producers before coming here. Others are former military public affairs professionals. We have a team of people with diverse talents and skills that operates as a cohesive unit.”

“We recognized a couple of years ago that we were trying to emulate television news and newspaper organizations, so we asked ourselves, why not hire people from that environment?” Williams said.

Where is State? They are forced to sit on the side without the money or resources to provide a non-military face to foreign publics while the military continues to become more sophisticated in participating in and managing media diplomacy. Is this the path we really want to be going down?

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There Is No Buck

I have been wanting to post on this Administration’s dodging of accountability for sometime. Total Information Awareness’ There Is No Buck does it better than I would have.

American critics of the Bush ‘administration’ – Democratic politicians, particularly – have long had a conceptual problem in their quest to effectively counter it, politically. It’s been fairly clear for a while now that what we face is not mere incompetence in a traditional context, but an entirely different organizational context – unaccountability (and its product, incompetence) is a feature, not a bug.

Read the post.

Cold War Diplomacy in Iraq

The Volokh Conspiracy posted a demonstration of Cold War-style public and cultural diplomacy at work in Iraq. This is how the sea that harbors or tolerates guerrillas rejects them. This is long range work that can’t be measured using metrics. It’s fuzzy and at the same time enduring and deep.

See also MisbahAlHurriyaa.org. This is cultural diplomacy at work.

Relations with the Turkish street is crashing

What happens when states with formerly friendly relations have, at best, exchanges only at the highest political levels? When citizen exchanges through tourism, education, or commerce are slowed, perceptions can get skewed. A dual university exchange program with SUNY and a Turkish university isn’t supported by State because it "takes too long". Sacrificing the long goal for the short-term gain is extremely myopic and dangerous. What happens when people don’t know the United States? When they no longer disassociate America with its often (to them) annoying leadership? When the American Military Imperialism is seen as here and now? You get a domestically made movie with the largest budget ever seen in Turkey. To see the movie you almost have to make reservations because theaters across Turkey are sold out. It’s doing well with Turkish audiences in Germany as well.

What’s the plot, you might ask. Starting as phenomenally popular TV series, "Kurtlar vadisi – Irak" is about American soldiers in Iraq, but not the guys we know. Starting with a real event in July 2003, it reinforces the perception of what too many Turks have of Americans, as reinforced by Abu Ghraib, Gitmo, Afghanistan wedding parties getting shot, etc. Incidents we here in the US don’t really see or don’t understand the impact of. The movie has a massacre of a wedding party, fire-bombing a mosque, executions, and Gary Busey (yes, that Gary Busey) as an evil doctor harvesting organs from Iraqi prisoners for patients in the US, Israel and Britain. Except for Busey’s role, these incidents in some form or another have played out in reality making the movie not as far fetched to foreign audiences as one might initially think. However, the movie is an extreme and should be considered dangerous to our relations with the Street. See the trailers, especially the one about the cargo trailer, here.

Maybe this will take the attention from the Tom Clancy-style novel Metal Firtina ("Metal Storm") about a 2007 American invasion of Turkey (and here)?

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