SLUG: 8-210 CQ FOCUS: International Broadcasting Future DATE: NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=07-28-03

TYPE=FOCUS REPORT

TITLE=CQ INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING FUTURE

NUMBER=8-210

BYLINE=BRENT HURD

DATELINE=WASHINGTON

EDITOR=ED WARNER

///EDITORS: RE-RUNNING TO CORRECT TYPOS GRAFS 4, 15///

INTRO:

Despite the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime and efforts to bring democracy to Iraq, the depth of Anti-Americanism remains unparalleled throughout the Muslim world, especially in the Middle East. With hundreds of thousands of U-S troops deployed around the world, many analysts say the soldier has indirectly become the face of American diplomacy. Some top U-S officials say equally important to a strong military is robust pubic diplomacy. VOA's Brent Hurd reports on the calls for renewed public diplomacy efforts - including U-S international broadcasting - after more than a decade of budget cuts and mergers.

TEXT:

At 21-years of age, U-S Sergeant Chuck Hagel volunteered to fight against the communist forces of North Vietnam. In April 1968, a land mine hurled searing bits of shrapnel into his face and chest. ///NAT SOUND EXPLOSION///

During his recovery, he vowed he would influence the future of U-S foreign policy in a way to guard against the horrors he had endured in the Vietnam War.

Thirty-five years later, Chuck Hagel is now a senator on the influential U-S Foreign Relations Committee. At a recent conference at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington research organization, Senator Hagel emphasized the importance of public diplomacy.

///HAGEL ACT///

It may be today, and for the future of our security and stability in the world, important that we focus on public diplomacy more than ever before. Raw power alone won't do it. If the people of Iraq are against you, or in Afghanistan - we learned a little something about that in Vietnam - you can have 500-thousand troops or more but it won't carry the day [i.e., to win or prevail]. ///END ACT///

Senator Hagel says public diplomacy is particularly important during wartime when fear often breeds rumors that can rapidly spread. International broadcasting - a major component of public diplomacy - is often an effective way to counter such talk with accurate information.

Michael Gloukhov (pron GLEW-kov), a reservist with U-S Naval Intelligence, agrees broadcasting plays a critical role during war. During the NATO strikes against Serbia in 1999, a radar-seeking missile from a U-S warplane strayed into Bulgaria - a future NATO member - and struck a house near the capital Sofia.

///GLOUKHOV ACT///

That was immediately used by a hostile press stating that NATO is attacking us. ///END ACT///

The missile was designed only to strike radar systems. Mr. Gloukhov says whenever an enemy activates its radar, the U-S plane detects the signal and sends a missile. Sometimes the radar is turned off intentionally after the missile is released. In this case, it deactivates in the air and falls to the earth, doing much less damage than if it had blown up.

Mr. Gloukhov says the Voice of America broadcast this information immediately after the missile fell in Sofia.

///GLOUKHOV ACT///

When you explain the function of the missiles and why they went stray and why it did not explode because it did not hit a radar, that gives a very rational explanation. But if this explanation is not given, then it is open to interpretation and hostile forces will turn it against the United States any way they wish. ///END ACT///

The dangerous situation in Iraq today is fertile ground for similar rumors to spread and breed resentment. In the initial months after the war ended, many frustrated Iraqis said they couldn't understand why the world's superpower was unable to restore electricity. Many areas - especially in and around Baghdad - had only a few hours of power each day.

Rumors spread that U-S forces were intentionally keeping Iraqis in darkness and misery. The reality was far different: the lack of security prevented electricians from repairing Iraq's electricity pylons. Yet without adequate international broadcasting, analysts say this information does not reach local populations.

Some analysts say the vital task of international broadcasting is not part of the U-S military mission. The Pentagon is simply not designed to carry out diplomacy, says William Maurer, a former public diplomacy director. He believes the fight against international terrorism has put too much focus on the Pentagon and U-S national security.

///MAURER ACT///

September eleventh and wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have thrust the Defense Department into the forefront of our foreign policy. But I would argue that the Defense Department does not do public diplomacy because their focus is not on a foreign audience, but primarily on an American audience. The State Department focuses on foreign officials and public diplomacy officers focus on a foreign audience. The Defense Department - in its public statements, films and public relations - is focused on an American audience and is not all that concerned about foreign reaction. ///END ACT///

Public diplomacy is often called people-to-people diplomacy. It includes cultural and academic exchanges, promotion of information on American democracy and values and broadcast of global news and U-S policies in native languages.

Alan Heil, a former chief of News and Current Affairs at the Voice of America, says that international broadcasting is most effective when it combines accurate news and analysis with a complete range of cultural and economic features. As U-S international broadcasting brought honest news to East Europeans during the Cold War, it can do the same today in other parts of the world that lack a free and fair press.

///HEIL ACT///

Democracy is a fire in the minds of man. That fire feeds on constant communication back and forth, a sharing of information, ideas, skills and experience. There is the possibility today, that U-S international broadcasters, simply by sharing the facts with their listeners, can help breathe substance into faint new embers of reform in some totalitarian governments around the world. ///END ACT///

The most recent VOA television initiative is a daily news program broadcast in Persian called 'News and Views.'

///10 seconds of 'News and Views'///

Seth Cropsey is director of the International Broadcasting Bureau, the office that oversees U-S international broadcasting services. He says programs like 'News and Views' are reaching foreign audiences through not only radio, but also various media channels.

///CROPSEY ACT///

Now we have multiple channels and no government is in a position to block our message if we use a variety of channels including the Internet, e-mail and satellite. By overloading the system every time, we magnify the problem of those that fear the unimpeded flow of information. ///END ACT///

Analysts say new initiatives like 'News and Views' are too few. Many public diplomacy programs -- including popular exchange programs that bring world leaders to view American democracy in action -- have been sharply cut in the last decade.

Mark Helmke, a senior staff member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, says funding for public diplomacy remains painfully small.

///HELMKE ACT///

While America's military has gone through a major overhaul and significant new funding since the collapse of the Soviet Union, our State Department and therefore our public diplomacy efforts, have suffered from neglect. Today, for every one dollar the United States spends on the military, we spend only seven cents on the State Department. ///END ACT///

However, U-S legislators are pondering new diplomatic efforts - including a public diplomacy plan for the Arab and Muslim world. Mark Helmke says there is no time to lose.

///HELMKE ACT///

We have to start changing very quickly. The United States has a military rivaled to none. We will also need to have a diplomatic corps and a public diplomatic corps that is unrivaled to none throughout the world. ///END ACT///

Analysts say public diplomacy and international broadcasting alone may not be able to turn the tide of anti-Americanism, but they remain vital in delivering America's message to the world.

For Focus, this is Brent Hurd