Foreign Policy Blogs

Public Diplomacy

Under Attack

Under Attack

A huge banner with a photo of David Plouffe festooned a media conference I attended in Croatia last week.  The former Obama campaign manager is coming to Zagreb later this year and those running local election campaigns are eager to welcome “the unsung hero” who “helped restore the trust in the United States of America.” […]

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PD 101

Fellow-blogger Ted Lipien makes some valid points about seemingly basic mistakes that the State Department has made in public diplomacy in the new Administration.  In particular, he notes, a chance was missed earlier this month to express solidarity with the victims of terrorist attacks in Ingushetia.  Eventually the Department did comment, but it took longer […]

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Sovereignty vs. Security

Public opinion is often hard to measure, but it’s a safe bet that assaults on a country’s sovereignty — real or perceived — can quickly inflame that nation’s public opinion.    We see it in a whole range of issues this summer, from the health reform debate in the United States, where opponents raise the […]

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"Uncle" Walter and the American Image

"Uncle" Walter and the American Image

“Uncle” seems almost condesending — I don’t mean it so.  Walter Cronkite was more than an avuncular presence in American homes.  He was a serious newsman at a time when TV news was being invented and we were all a bit in awe of the new medium and its ability to broadcast images as well […]

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A Tale of Two Posts

Today, a tale about what journalism has become, with implications for all those concerned with the weakening firewall between “news” and “message.” It’s a tale of  two Posts  — Washington and Huffington. A revolution is underway in the news media, one neatly illustrated by how these two competitive news gathering organizations — the Washington Post […]

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Pay to Play

As the slots get filled for new U.S. ambassadors, I have to modify my earlier praise:  too many sensitive overseas posts are being given to Obama fundraisers.  For every Carlos Pascual (veteran envoy now assigned to Mexico), there now appear to be several David Jacobsons (Illinois lawyer and Obama-Biden fundraiser set to go to Canada).  […]

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Mount Everest in Cairo

It may come to be known as the “new begininngs” speech.  The speech that Barack Obama delivered today at Cairo University was probably not his best speech, but it may be his most important and most widely disseminated ever.  The U.S. government distributed it immediately in many languages, it was broadcast live in its entirety […]

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Setting the Scene

As President Obama embarks for Riyadh and Cairo this evening, the “scene setters” appear:  the BBC headlines “what could be one of the most important speeches of his presidency”;  America’s own NPR features a pre-departure interview focused on the Cairo speech as a “high-profile opportunity to reshape America’s image among Muslim countries.” We’re all familiar […]

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The U.S. Foreign Offices

We often get reminders that a new Administration in Washington means new leadership at U.S. Embassies overseas.  Within a year of taking office, an incoming President generally will have nominated (and the Senate approved) new Ambassadors for all major overseas postings.  In many foreign government establishments, these appointments are highly anticipated events, more closely watched […]

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Inflaming Public Opinion

Further evidence that President Obama is prepared to take some political heat at home in order to improve America’s standing abroad comes in the form of his decision on torture photos. Obama said on Wednesday that publishing additional pictures, taken by U.S. servicemen in Iraq, similar to those previously published from the Abu Ghraib prison, […]

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The Big Speech

Barack Obama soon will make his second overseas trip as President, visiting Egypt, Germany and France.  Although Obama differs from his predecessors in many respects, some things are true of any Presidential visit to a foreign country.  The people at the White House who plan the trip want to set a theme, they want a […]

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(Not) An Indie Film

There’s nothing quite as satisfying as a good patriotic cry.  Russians and like-minded Ukrainians are lining up these days to see a movie, “Taras Bulba,” that allows them this public pleasure while undercutting Ukraine’s separate national identity.  A real “twofer” for the movie’s sponsors, the Russian government. The NYT report on the film’s opening in […]

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Calling Doktor "Haus"

This may turn out to be a footnote in the annals of public diplomacy, but it is an instructive one nonetheless.  The Amerika Haus in Berlin, a symbol of U.S.-government public diplomacy throughout the Cold War, has been quietly resurrected by a German-American not-for-profit to serve as a venue for America-related events in the German […]

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Master of Ceremonies

For all the brainpower that Barack Obama has brought to Washington, the only senior official with the right touch for articulating policy via the media seems to be the President himself. Last week he scored big in two TV firsts — a taped for broadcast greeting to Iran and an appearance on Jay Leno’s Tonight […]

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The People-to-People People

The People-to-People People

Now is the time for all good men — and women — to come to the aid of public diplomacy. I have in mind citizen travel to countries that, until recently, were off-limits to Americans, like Iran, Libya or Syria. Or Cuba, the only country that Americans need a “license” from their own government to […]

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