-Caveat Lector-

>>>Yeah, yeah, I know.  I forwarded an article very much like this
one from CBC the other night.  Yet, I couldn't (and can't) help but
think that as Bill Jeff suggested the Irish "belly up to the bar" to
settle their differences, it seems also all so appropriate that
Arbusto realises that the solution to his problems may lie in some
Beers as well.  Anyone from Tejas still favour them long-necks (Lone
Star, Bud, e.g.) ?  Betcha Arbusto would know!   If only he could get
UBL to dip in the cooler.  A<>E<>R <<<

>From WorkingForAChange (URL @ bottom)


}}}>Begin
Spin Dr. Bush
David Corn - WorkingForChange
11.12.01 -

"Don't worry. You'll be safe. We know how to take care of terrorists
here."
So said the chuckling immigration officer at Port of Spain the other
day. I had been dispatched to Trinidad by the U.S. State Department
to conduct a two-day seminar on investigative reporting for local
journalists (your tax dollars at work!), and the first Trini I
encountered could not resist needling the Americans.
The next day, amid talk of the Freedom of Information Act, finding
sources, and Internet-assisted-reporting, one of the fifteen island
journalists asked me and my colleague, Bonnie Goldstein, a former
investigative producer for ABC News, what we thought of the U.S.
media's coverage of the September 11 attacks. Before we could
respond, several participants volunteered their opinions.
"The first day was fine, then it was too much, too much."
"Hysterical."
"It was, 'oh, poor, poor us.'"

"Like the United States was the only country ever to be hit by
terrorism."
"Self-pity, plenty of self-pity."
A consensus formed: a self-indulgent America was excessively obsessed
with its own suffering.
And this was coming from our friends -- reporters who live in a city overflowing with 
KFC restaurants and who had, on their own accord, come to the information office of 
the U.S. embassy desperately seeking pointers from
American journalists. They were not insensitive to the horror of September 11, but 
neither were they overly sympathetic to America's pain and fear or deferential to U.S. 
concerns.
This exchange might have served as a focus group for the White House, as Bush presses 
his (latest) new initiative to sell overseas the war against terrorism. After a month 
of bombing, the Administration seemed to conclude
 it was, as the media cliche went, "losing the PR battle." The Bush White House was 
not admitting this in public. But others were saying so.
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told a newspaper he saw "danger signs" the West 
was falling behind in this part of the struggle. Various commentators issued similar 
warnings. The war-worriers cried that Bush was not
only losing ground in the Muslim world but that he also was slipping in Europe.
Bush's actions showed he agreed. In speeches he started comparing the Taliban and al 
Qaeda -- the "evildoers" -- to the "fascist totalitarians" of the Soviet Union and 
Nazi Germany. The goal was, as several White House re
porters put it, to "demonize" Osama bin Laden. Bush opened rapid-response centers in 
Washington, London and Pakistan to counter Taliban reports. He sent Karl Rove, his 
chief political strategist, to Hollywood to take a me
eting with studio execs and discuss what the flix-folks can do to bolster America's 
wartime image. And he hired Charlotte Beers, an advertising honcho once dubbed the 
Queen of Madison Avenue, to pull together a message op
eration to pitch the war -- partly via a television and advertising campaign to 
influence Islamic opinion.
Beers, famous within advertising circles for having handled the Uncle Ben's rice 
account, serves as undersecretary of state for public diplomacy. She told Andrea 
Mitchell, "I dislike that phrase selling because that's way
 too arrogant for where we are now. I think the best we can do is open a dialogue of 
mutual respect and understanding. I'd actually be very satisfied with that."
A dialogue? That's not a very high standard for an ad exec. In another interview, she 
noted, "What we haven't felt the need to communicate is what is the value system [of 
the United States] ... What are our beliefs? What
do the words 'freedom' and 'tolerance' mean? We are having people who are not our 
friends define America in negative terms. It is time for us to reignite the 
understanding of America."
In other words, people elsewhere have America pegged wrong. And that is the fault of 
the foes of the United States. What does the Administration have in mind to turn this 
situation around? A Bombing for Tolerance campaign
? Ads with Michael Jordan attesting to the goodness of America? (The slogan: "Be like 
us.") Will Bush intensify Operation Demonization and start referring to bin Laden as 
the anti-Christ? Movies that show Middle Eastern t
errorists plotting mass murder against the decent civilians of the West? (That base 
has been covered.)
This is not to make light of the seriousness of the massacre committed on September 11 
by people who are indeed evil or to diminish the threat of further violence that still 
exists. But talk of reselling the war kicks up
a question Bush and his advisers have not addressed in public: why have they had such 
a tough time closing the sale?
Bush could not have had an easier set-up. A villain out of a James Bond film unleashes 
murder and mayhem against thousands of civilians -- including many from countries 
other than the United States. He essentially acknowl
edges his culpability and threatens more of the same. He calls for uprisings against 
various Arab states. He is protected by a regime of totalitarian, misogynistic, 
extremists who maintain official relations with only thr
ee other nations in the world.
How could Bush be outflanked by this foul individual? How much more can bin Laden be 
demonized? (He's Lucifer and he has nuclear weapons!) Shouldn't a just war, a good 
war, be largely self-evident? No spinning required? I
n recent days, pundits, commentators, and administration officials (the latter 
speaking off the record) have asserted that Washington needs to find and promote 
Islamic voices that can present the case for the war. As form
er U.N. ambassador Richard Holbrooke said, "We need to use authentic and credible 
Muslims, clerics and religious leaders and political speakers ... speaking in their 
own terms, not just President Bush and Prime Minister B
lair, to make clear to the people in the Middle East and the whole Muslim world ... to 
make clear to them what's going on." But this advice ignores a sad reality: such 
persons have not felt compelled to spout ringing endo
rsements of Bush's war. What might be the reasons for this?
Here's a partial answer with two pieces: throughout much of the world, America has no 
credit to draw upon, and, beyond that, Bush has so bungled the meta-framework of this 
war that PR efforts may be useless at this point.
 When you're the only superpower left standing, large portions of the rest of the 
world may feel resentment and not possess a charitable attitude toward you. But the 
United States' decision to share only a meager slice of
 its tremendous wealth with other nations, its my-way-or-the-highway approach to 
certain international matters, its rapacious consumption of a disproportionate amount 
of global resources (see SUVs), its occasional heavy-h
anded interventions on behalf of less-than-exemplary regimes -- all of this has left 
it little good will in the bank of international sentiment. It rescued Europe six 
decades ago. But there's been a lot of oil under the b
ridge since then.
Among my new friends in Trinidad, I sensed a bit of satisfaction that America received 
a dose of comeuppance. We're sorry, of course we are, yes, but why did you believe you 
were entitled to protection from the dangers of
 the world order that you have helped shape, that you benefit from so greatly, and 
that you claim to lead? So when the United States requests help from others, many are 
not eager to fall in.
Moreover, Bush has presented his war in a manner that exacerbates rather than 
ameliorates ambivalence (or antagonism) toward America. He and his aides keep saying 
either you're with us or against us. In other parts of the
 world, this sort of talk might sound bullying, which can reinforce perceptions of 
U.S. arrogance. The notion that the United States is fighting for freedom, as Bush 
continually insists, ought to come across as laughable
to anyone abroad with a sense of history.
Washington has a long record of supporting governments that opposed freedom (Chile, 
Argentina, the Philippines, Cuba, Nicaragua, South Africa, Greece, Iran, among 
others). Now it makes common cause with Saudi Arabia, Turk
ey, Uzbekistan, nations that do not offer freedom to all their citizens. And it 
maintains a close relationship with Israel, which denies freedoms to non-Jews within 
its borders. The United States is not fighting for freed
om. It is not fighting for tolerance. (If so, it would send troops into Saudi Arabia). 
It is fighting to protect itself and to destroy a small group of barbaric individuals 
who also threaten other nations. That's not a mi
nor thing. But an honest depiction of what was underway might carry more resonance 
than the phony rhetoric Bush pushes -- and which will be enshrined in sophisticated, 
celebrity-laden commercials.
As for the civilian casualties in Afghanistan, they indeed are a PR nightmare, and 
they should be. But is it possible that civilian deaths are even more upsetting when 
they occur under a false flag?
The problem is not just message. It's deeds -- past and present. This is hardly a 
radical view. As the subversive Wall Street Journal reported this past week, the 
Administration's call "for a united front against terroris
m" is "gaining little credence" in the Muslim world because U.S. policies "are 
perceived as biased" and "anger at America serves as a lightning rod for social, 
economic and political dissatisfaction." The paper quoted a d
iplomat from a pro-U.S. country, who observed, "So far, the United States is treating 
this as an advertising and public-relations campaign. To capture the hearts and minds 
of people, one has to tackle those issues closest
 to their heart. The U.S. has to convince people of the integrity and
fairness of its policies." The diplomat noted that "the kinds of
things Arabs and Muslims are looking for" include "a demonstrated
willingness to pressure Israel to moderate its policies toward the
Palestinians ... and a policy toward Iraq that targets" Saddam
Hussein "without penalizing the Iraqi people."
Holbrooke gripes that "our message isn't getting through because we
have bad messages and bad messengers." No doubt. Yet how effective
can the policy be, if it is so difficult to explain?

� 2001 WorkingForChange.com
URL: http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?ItemId=12312

End<{{{
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