Assalamu aleikum.

"Approved by President Bush, the Muslim World Outreach
strategy is now being implemented across the
government."

"... Muslim World Outreach. Aimed at strengthening the
hand of moderates, the plan acknowledges that America
has done poorly in reaching out to them. But it goes
one big step further, stating that the United States
and its allies have a national security interest not
only in what happens in the Islamic world but within
Islam itself, according to three sources who have seen
the document. It further states that because America
is limited to what it can do in a religious struggle,
the nation must rely on partners who share values like
democracy, women's rights, and tolerance. Among those
partners: allied Muslim states, private foundations,
and nonprofit groups. 


---


Hearts, Minds, and Dollars 
In an Unseen Front in the War on Terrorism, America is
Spending Millions...To Change the Very Face of Islam 
By David E. Kaplan With Aamir Latif, Kevin Whitelaw
and Julian E. Barnes 
US News & World Report
4/25/05
http://sf.indymedia.org/news/2005/04/1713502.php
and
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050425/25roots.htm


As war games go, this one was unique: the first-ever
exercise on "strategic communications," its sponsors
said. It was July 2003, and the government's leading
players in winning the "war of ideas" against
terrorism had gathered at National Defense University,
in Washington, D.C. There were crisis managers from
the White House, diplomats from the State Department,
Pentagon specialists in psyops--psychological
operations. Washington's quick victory over Saddam
Hussein's Army that spring had done little to quell
surging anti-Americanism overseas. Across the Muslim
world--including U.S. allies like Indonesia and
Jordan--polls showed Osama bin Laden a more trusted
figure than George W. Bush.

The war game used an all-too-real scenario: As violent
anti-American protests rocked a host of Muslim
countries, pro-democracy students were being murdered
in Iran while terrorists in Iraq were being hailed as
patriots. The job for the government's top information
warriors was daunting: improve the image of America in
the Muslim world and help foster a stable democracy in
Iraq. Halfway through the exercise, however, the war
game was abruptly stopped. "Things were so
dysfunctional," recalls one participant, "we saw
little point in playing through the scenario."

The problems, others said, were a mirror of what a
dozen studies say has gone wrong in what may be the
most critical front in the war on terrorism today--the
battle for hearts and minds: no one in charge, no
national strategy, and a glaring lack of resources.
>From the CIA to the State Department, America's once
formidable means of influencing its enemies and
telling its story abroad had crumbled, along with the
fall of communism. "In the battle of ideas," said Marc
Ginsberg, a former ambassador to Morocco, "we
unilaterally disarmed."

"Radioactive." No more. Today, Washington is fighting
back. After repeated missteps since the 9/11 attacks,
the U.S. government has embarked on a campaign of
political warfare unmatched since the height of the
Cold War. From military psychological-operations teams
and CIA covert operatives to openly funded media and
think tanks, Washington is plowing tens of millions of
dollars into a campaign to influence not only Muslim
societies but Islam itself. The previously undisclosed
effort was identified in the course of a four-month
U.S. News investigation, based on more than 100
interviews and a review of a dozen internal reports
and memorandums. Although U.S. officials say they are
wary of being drawn into a theological battle, many
have concluded that America can no longer sit on the
sidelines as radicals and moderates fight over the
future of a politicized religion with over a billion
followers. The result has been an extraordinary--and
growing--effort to influence what officials describe
as an Islamic reformation.

Among the magazine's findings:

The White House has approved a classified new
strategy, dubbed Muslim World Outreach, that for the
first time states that the United States has a
national security interest in influencing what happens
within Islam. Because America is, as one official put
it, "radioactive" in the Islamic world, the plan calls
for working through third parties--moderate Muslim
nations, foundations, and reform groups--to promote
shared values of democracy, women's rights, and
tolerance.

In at least two dozen countries, Washington has
quietly funded Islamic radio and TV shows, coursework
in Muslim schools, Muslim think tanks, political
workshops, or other programs that promote moderate
Islam. Federal aid is going to restore mosques, save
ancient Korans, even build Islamic schools. This broad
engagement with Islam has raised questions about
whether the funding is legal, given the constitutional
line between church and state.

The CIA is revitalizing programs of covert action that
once helped win the Cold War, targeting Islamic media,
religious leaders, and political parties. The agency
is receiving "an exponential increase in money,
people, and assets" to help it influence Muslim
societies, says a senior intelligence official. Among
the tactics: working with militants at odds with al
Qaeda and waging secret campaigns to discredit the
worst anti-American zealots.

Despite the surge of activity, Washington's efforts to
win hearts and minds remain chaotic. Staffers on the
White House National Security Council have drafted
over a hundred papers proposing action against
Islamist propaganda and political activity, sources
say, yet almost none have been acted upon. To help
remedy the situation, the White House is creating a
new position, a deputy national security adviser for
strategic communication and global outreach.

The push for hearts and minds comes amid hopeful
signs, with a string of successful elections in the
Middle East and anti-Syria protests in Lebanon. The
events have boosted the Bush administration's hopes
for the region, but some experts on terrorism and the
Muslim world say the problems are so deep-seated they
may be growing worse, not better. A December report by
the CIA-based National Intelligence Council predicts
that masses of unemployed, alienated youth in the Arab
world "will swell the ranks of those vulnerable to
terrorist recruitment."

Even as the insurgency in Iraq shows signs of losing
steam, anti-Americanism now reaches across every
strata of the Muslim world. Rumors that U.S. soldiers
harvest organs from dying Iraqis or that Washington
caused the tsunami to kill Muslims appear in major
Arab media. Slick jihadist music videos and recruiting
CD s sell briskly on the streets of Arab capitals.
Many of the region's leaders believe America is at war
with the Arab world, or with Islam itself, according
to a March report by the Center for Strategic and
International Studies. "U.S.-Arab relations," the
report concludes, "are at their lowest point in
generations."

The tools with which to fight back are varied. To the
CIA, they are covert operations involving political
influence and propaganda. At the Pentagon, they are
called psyops or strategic-influence efforts. At the
State Department, it's called public diplomacy. All
seek to use information to influence, inform, and
motivate America's friends and enemies abroad. Many of
these tools have fallen into disuse. Many are
controversial, particularly in light of recent
revelations that administration officials have peddled
fake video news reports and paid columnists to boost
policies here at home. But to those toiling on the
front lines against terrorism, the war of ideas--and
the tools to fight it--are essential. How those tools
have come back into use, and what Washington is doing
with them, is a story that begins a half century ago,
in the heyday of Soviet communism.

At the peak of the Cold War, the U.S. government
fielded a worldwide network of propagandists,
publicists, and payoff artists. The United States
Information Agency (USIA) ran hundreds of information
specialists abroad and produced enough films to rival
Hollywood's top studios, all to sell the world on the
goodness of America--and the evils of communism. There
were USIA-run cultural centers and libraries in
foreign capitals, Fulbright Scholarships and other
exchange programs from the State Department, plus the
broadcasts of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty. The
CIA's covert payoffs, for better or worse, bought the
allegiance of entire political parties in Italy and
Japan. Other funds went secretly to sympathetic
journalists, scholars, and labor leaders.

Exposes of CIA funding and abuses took their toll
starting in the late 1960s, curtailing many of the
secret programs. With the implosion of communism,
Congress set about searching for a "peace dividend"
and pared back what programs of influence remained.
Convinced that USIA was a Cold War relic,
conservatives in 1999 forced the Clinton
administration to collapse the agency into the State
Department. Hundreds of staffers were let go or
retired, cutting the nation's public diplomacy corps
by as much as 40 percent. American libraries abroad
were shuttered, and exchange programs and foreign
broadcasting dropped by a third. By the time al
Qaeda's pilots flew their hijacked planes into Lower
Manhattan, the U.S. government had ceded management of
America's image abroad to Hollywood producers and rap
musicians.

"Spring chickens?" After the 9/11 attacks, U.S.
officials began to ponder how to get their message
out. The Taliban, for all their backwardness, were
scoring propaganda successes, and much of the Muslim
world refused to believe that Arabs were even behind
the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade
Center. To fight back, officials set up Coalition
Information Centers in Washington, London, and
Islamabad, Pakistan. But the centers focused largely
on breaking news, putting out fires in a 24-hour news
cycle the likes of which the Cold War had never seen.
Responding to the world's media, including the
often-inflammatory new Arab satellite network called
al Jazeera, left little time to formulate a strategy
that got at the roots of Islamic terrorism.

Pulling out those roots was a task more fitting for
the CIA, the White House concluded. Just weeks after
9/11, in a secret national security directive,
President Bush gave the CIA carte blanche to wage a
worldwide war against al Qaeda. Among the activities
authorized: propaganda and political warfare. But when
it came to campaigns of influence, the agency's
clandestine service was "dead as a doornail," says
former Middle East operative Reuel Marc Gerecht. Once
staffed by hundreds, the CIA's strategic influence
section was down to some 20 people by late 2001,
sources tell U.S. News . "We had precious few assets
left," says another agency veteran. "And none of them
were spring chickens." When a group of outsiders
visited the unit, one recalls, they were literally met
by a woman with a walker.

At the Pentagon, top officials wondered why more
wasn't being done. The military's psyop units ran
airborne TV and radio stations, showered millions of
leaflets on countries, and distributed everything from
comic books to giant kites in order to sway minds. But
they had little know-how in combating a global
movement of radical Islam. In response, military
leaders ordered up their own operation--a new Office
of Strategic Influence, charged with waging an
information war against Islamic terrorism and the
ideology behind al Qaeda. But stung by misleading
reports that it would spread disinformation, OSI
closed its doors just four months after it opened
(box, Page 30).

The war of ideas fared little better at the State
Department. To run public diplomacy, Secretary of
State Colin Powell brought in Charlotte Beers, the
only person to have served as chairman of two of the
top 10 worldwide advertising agencies. But her
workplace, as she later put it, was "a clumsy camel"
of an agency--skilled, even brilliant, at dealing with
other governments but shy and slow-footed at taking
its case to the masses. Worse, the surviving USIA
staffers, she found, were a demoralized lot, spread
across a bureaucracy that cared little about their
work. Nor was there much money. The entire annual
budget for public diplomacy was equal to what the
Pentagon spent in a day. Despite White House
utterances about winning the war of ideas, it was a
tough sell, even for one of the world's top ad people.
"We were asking them to deal with intangible values
like emotion, religion, and trust," she told U.S. News
. "It wasn't easy." Beers poured what funds she had
into a pilot project to open doors overseas--TV clips
showcasing the lives of Muslim Americans. While
criticized in the press, the spots actually played
well with Muslims abroad, studies showed. But after 18
months, Beers had seen enough. She quit in March 2003,
just as U.S. troops headed into Iraq.

To millions of Muslims, Washington's toppling of
Saddam seemed to confirm the imperialist caricature
painted by its worst enemies: an America that invades
and occupies an oil-rich Arab nation, thumbs its nose
at the world, supports Israel at the expense of the
Palestinians, calls for democracy but relies on
strongmen from Egypt to Pakistan. "The U.S. could have
the prophet Muhammad doing public relations, and it
wouldn't help," argued Osama Siblani, publisher of the
weekly Arab American News in Dearborn, Mich. "I don't
believe that people hate movie stars and Burger King.
They hate what the U.S. is doing to their lives."

Regardless of where one stood on the Iraq war, it was
clear Washington needed to do a far better job at
getting out its message. Complaints were piling up at
the White House: In fighting for hearts and minds,
America had no strategy and few resources for the job.
It fell to the National Security Council, charged with
coordinating the government's sprawling national
security apparatus, to sort things out. Under then
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, officials
in mid-2002 formed two interagency committees, whose
members were to include the government's top
specialists in waging the war of ideas. The first, on
"strategic communication," focused on public
diplomacy; the other, on "information strategy," was
created by classified memorandum and handled covert
activity. Neither group fared well.

Those working on covert plans tried to jump-start an
information offensive that would discredit al Qaeda
and its allies. One staffer, Arnold Abraham, ran a
panel designed to attack Islamist propaganda. In a
paper last year at the National War College, Abraham
wrote that his group "developed 50 different position
papers with proposed courses of action, but despite
very positive feedback on content, only a mere handful
of the actions were operationalized." The number of
proposals later topped 100, sources say, and almost
none were taken seriously by their bosses. Among the
ideas: using music, comics, poetry, and the Internet
to get across America's views to the Arab world.

The fate of the NSC's strategic communication group
was worse. Charged with crafting a national strategy
on public diplomacy, the group met several times and
then fell apart from lack of leadership. Its last
meeting was over 18 months ago. Back at the State
Department, meanwhile, Ambassador Margaret Tutwiler
had, at the urging of the White House, taken on the
job of public diplomacy chief. But Tutwiler lasted
only six months, and in June last year the job was
vacant again. By the end of Bush's first term, the
position had lacked an appointed leader for half his
administration.

"No virgins." Why the lack of priority? Fighting
bloody wars in Afghanistan and Iraq took the lion's
share of attention, to be sure. Yet in public, top
administration officials seemed emphatic. "This is a
battle of ideas and a battle for minds," declared the
Pentagon's No. 2 man, Paul Wolfowitz, in 2002. "To win
the war on terror, we must win a war of ideas," agreed
Condoleezza Rice a year later. But those working below
them saw a decided lack of interest. "The principals
have not indicated this is a priority," bemoaned one
key staffer, speaking of cabinet-level officials.
"They just didn't get it."

There were other reasons. Attempts at forging a
national strategy repeatedly failed. Policymakers
couldn't even agree on the target--worldwide terrorism
or Islamic extremism, or on its root causes--poverty,
Saudi funding, misunderstood U.S. policies, or
something else. Interagency meetings on the topic were
"agonizing," one participant recalled. "We couldn't
clarify what path to take, so it was dropped." Another
key factor was religion. Going after the roots of
Islamic fundamentalism would drag Washington into a
battle involving mosques, mullahs, and Scripture,
argued some, and that went against 200 years of U.S.
church-state relations. The inevitable turf wars also
came into play. The war of ideas cut across
otherwise-neat lines of responsibility in bureaucratic
Washington. At the Pentagon and the NSC,
public-affairs staffers warily eyed psyop officers who
argued that public diplomacy, press relations, and
psychological operations should be united under a
single information strategy. White House veterans of
tough political campaigns brought a short-term,
manage-the-news outlook to what others thought would
take a generation to fix. As a result, by
mid-2004--nearly three years after 9/11--the
government still had no one in charge of winning the
war of ideas and no strategy for winning it. That
summer, Government Accountability Office investigators
told Congress they found public diplomacy staffers
without guidance and a department short of linguists
and information officers. "Everybody who knows how to
do this has been screaming," complained one insider.
"There are no virgins in this."

A few bright spots emerged. A growing chorus of
criticism from Congress and the press helped gain big
funding boosts for public diplomacy and foreign aid
programs. The administration kicked off major new
initiatives in foreign broadcasting--Radio Sawa, a pop
music-news station in 2002, and Alhurra, a
satellite-TV news network in 2004, both aimed at Arab
audiences. The CIA's strategic influence unit and the
Pentagon's psyop group also won major funding
increases.

But the breakthrough finally came last summer, sources
say, when the NSC began reworking the White House's
National Strategy for Combating Terrorism. In 2003,
officials had released an earlier, public version of
the document, but there is a larger, classified
edition that includes annexes dealing with key
objectives, among them terrorism finance and winning
the war of ideas. Staffers rewrote the ideas section
with bold, new language and fashioned it into a
strategy called Muslim World Outreach. Aimed at
strengthening the hand of moderates, the plan
acknowledges that America has done poorly in reaching
out to them. But it goes one big step further, stating
that the United States and its allies have a national
security interest not only in what happens in the
Islamic world but within Islam itself, according to
three sources who have seen the document. It further
states that because America is limited to what it can
do in a religious struggle, the nation must rely on
partners who share values like democracy, women's
rights, and tolerance. Among those partners: allied
Muslim states, private foundations, and nonprofit
groups.
 
Approved by President Bush, the Muslim World Outreach
strategy is now being implemented across the
government. But it has stirred controversy. "The Cold
War was easy," says a knowledgeable official. "It was
a struggle against a godless political ideology. But
this has theological elements. It goes to the core of
American belief that we don't mess with freedom of
religion. Do we have any authority to influence this
debate?" The answer, for now, appears to be yes. "You
do it quietly," says Zeyno Baran, a terrorism analyst
at the Nixon Center who advised on the strategy. "You
provide money and help create the political space for
moderate Muslims to organize, publish, broadcast, and
translate their work." Baran, an expert on Islam in
central Asia, says the dilemma for Americans is that
the ideological challenge of our day comes in the form
of a religion--militant Islam, replete with its
political manifestos, edicts, and armies. "Religion is
just not an issue American policymakers are
comfortable discussing," she says. "But we're talking
about a fascist ideology."

In crafting their strategy, U.S. officials are taking
pages from the Cold War playbook of divide and
conquer. One of the era's great successes was how
Washington helped break off moderate socialists from
hard-core Communists overseas. "That's how we're
thinking. . . . It's something we talk about all the
time," says Peter Rodman, a longtime aide to Henry
Kissinger and now the Pentagon's assistant secretary
of defense for international security affairs. "In
those days, it was covert. Now, it's more open."
Officials credit publicly funded programs like the
National Endowment for Democracy, which have poured
millions into Ukraine and other democratizing nations.

The role of Saudi Arabia has repeatedly come up in
discussions of the new strategy, sources say. Fueled
by its vast oil wealth, the Saudis are estimated to
have spent up to $75 billion since 1975 to expand
their fundamentalist sect, Wahhabism, worldwide. The
kingdom has funded hundreds of mosques, schools, and
Islamic centers abroad, spreading a once obscure sect
of Islam widely blamed for preaching distrust of
nonbelievers, anti-Semitism, and near-medieval
attitudes toward women. Saudi-funded charities have
been implicated in backing jihadist movements in some
20 countries. Saudi officials say they've cracked down
on extremists, but U.S. strategists would like to see
opportunities for less fundamentalist brands of Islam.
Reform may be more likely to come from outside the
Arab world. "Look to the periphery," predicts a
knowledgeable official. "That's where change will
come." One solution being pushed: offering backdoor
U.S. support to reformers tied to Sufism, a tolerant
branch of Islam (box, Page 32).

Another strategy being pursued is to make peace with
radical Muslim figures who eschew violence. At the top
of the list: the Muslim Brotherhood, the pre-eminent
Islamist society, founded in 1928 and now with tens of
thousands of followers worldwide. Many brotherhood
members, particularly in Egypt and Jordan, are at
serious odds with al Qaeda. "I can guarantee that if
you go to some of the unlikely points of contact in
the Islamic world, you will find greater reception
than you thought," says Milt Bearden, whose 30-year
CIA career included long service in Muslim societies.
"The Muslim Brotherhood is probably more a part of the
solution than it is a part of the problem." Indeed,
sources say U.S. intelligence officers have been
meeting not only with the Muslim Brotherhood but also
with members of the Deobandi sect in Pakistan, whose
fundamentalism schooled the Taliban and inspired an
army of al Qaeda followers. Cooperative clerics have
helped tamp down fatwas calling for anti-American
jihad and persuaded jailed militants to renounce
violence. These sensitive ties have led to at least
one breakthrough--the July arrest in Pakistan of al
Qaeda's Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan, whose computer held
surveillance files of the New York Stock Exchange, the
World Bank, and other financial targets. Khan's
capture led to a dozen arrests in London.
"Engagement," says one official, "is absolutely key."

"Blowback" The emergence of the Muslim World Outreach
strategy comes as America's frontline troops in the
war of ideas may finally be hitting their stride.
Despite its slow start, the CIA has received dramatic
increases in money, people, and assets. It still lacks
an integrated approach to attacking the roots of
Islamic terrorism, insiders say, but individual CIA
stations overseas are making some gutsy and innovative
moves. Among them: pouring money into neutralizing
militant, anti-U.S. preachers and recruiters. "If you
found out that Mullah Omar is on one street corner
doing this, you set up Mullah Bradley on the other
street corner to counter it," explains one recently
retired official. In more-serious cases, he says,
recruiters would be captured and "interrogated."

Intelligence operatives have set up bogus jihad
websites and targeted the Arab news media, but they
are being exceedingly cautious. Unlike the good old
days of the Cold War, spreading propaganda in the
Internet age can easily result in "blowback," with
stories ending up in the U.S. media. "They're a bit
sheepish," says a CIA veteran. Indeed, some of the
acts seem decidedly minor league. "The biggest that I
heard about was a large banner at a major soccer
game," adds the former spook. "They considered it a
rousing success." Getting talented officers and
linguists into the field also continues to be a
problem, made worse by the drain of the Iraq war. "In
Iraq," jokes a former top spy, "we have 300 there, 400
ready to go, and 400 just back" --virtually the entire
overseas staff of the clandestine service.

At CIA headquarters outside Washington, the agency's
analysts have also been busy. The CIA's Office of
Transnational Issues has created a Global Information
and Influence Team, charged with pulling together
assessments of key U.S. targets. A public diplomacy
conference hosted by the group in February focused on
strategies to influence six nations, according to an
agenda for the meeting. On the list: China, Egypt,
France, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Venezuela. Also under
CIA auspices is a Cyber-Influence Conference Series,
which brings in cutting-edge experts from industry to
explore how to combat terrorist use of the Internet.

The CIA is not alone in the new push for hearts and
minds. Regular budget increases since 9/11 have lifted
spending on public diplomacy by more than 40 percent
since 9/11, to nearly $1.3 billion, and more is on the
way. The government's new Arabic broadcasting
services--Radio Sawa and Alhurra TV--are showing some
success, despite a barrage of complaints from critics.
Radio Sawa, which features pop music interspersed with
frequent newscasts, is now one of the most popular
stations in the Middle East. Estimates differ, but an
ACNielsen survey last year found that Alhurra, after
just six months on the air, was reaching between 20
percent and 33 percent of viewers with satellite
dishes in a half-dozen key Arab nations. There are new
initiatives to bring Alhurra to Arab speakers in
Europe, expand Persian broadcasts into Iran, and
increase programming in other key languages.

Many of the shock troops for America's new war of
ideas are coming not from the CIA, nor from the State
Department, but from the low-profile U.S. Agency for
International Development. In the three years since
9/11, spending by the government's top purveyor of
foreign aid has nearly tripled to over $21 billion,
and more than half of that is now destined for the
Muslim world. Along with more traditional aid for
agriculture and education are the kind of programs
that have spurred change in the former Soviet
Union--training for political organizers and funding
for independent media. Increasingly, those grants are
going to Islamic groups.

"Muppet diplomacy." Records drawn from the State
Department, USAID, and elsewhere reveal a striking
array of Islamic projects bankrolled by American
taxpayers since 9/11, stretching to at least 24
countries. In nine of them, U.S. funds are backing
restoration of Muslim holy sites, including historic
mosques in Egypt, Pakistan, and Turkmenistan. In
Kirgizstan, embassy funding helped restore a major
Sufi shrine. In Uzbekistan, money has gone to preserve
antique Islamic manuscripts, including 20 Korans, some
dating to the 11th century. In Bangladesh, USAID is
training mosque leaders on development issues. In
Madagascar, the embassy even sponsored an intermosque
sports tournament. Also being funded: Islamic media of
all sorts, from book translations to radio and TV in
at least a half-dozen nations. Often the aid doesn't
need an explicit Islamic theme, as in what boosters
are calling Muppet Diplomacy. An Arabic version of
Sesame Street has become one of the most popular shows
on Egyptian TV, and along with lessons on literacy and
hygiene, the program stresses values of religious
tolerance. Among the show's key backers: USAID, which
is helping bring out a pan-Arab satellite edition this
year.

In no country is the effort more pronounced than
Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim nation, with 240
million people. A bastion of moderate Islam, the
nation has nevertheless given birth to several radical
Islamic groups that include al Qaeda offshoot Jemaah
Islamiyah, responsible for the 2002 Bali bombings that
killed 202. Working behind the scenes, USAID now helps
fund over 30 Muslim organizations in the country.
Among the programs: media production, workshops for
Islamic preachers, and curriculum reform for schools
from rural academies to Islamic universities. One talk
show on Islam and tolerance is relayed to radio
stations in 40 cities and sends a weekly column to
over a hundred newspapers. Also on the grants list:
Islamic think tanks that are fostering a body of
scholarly research showing liberal Islam's
compatibility with democracy and human rights.

The grants, technically, aren't secret, but they are,
as one official put it, "done in a subtle manner."
Open ties to U.S. funds could spell the end of
programs in volatile regions and even endanger those
who work in them. Indeed, security is such a factor
for USAID workers that the agency now relies largely
on local hires. In Pakistan, where the agency once
fielded hundreds of employees, it now has only two
dozen.

Even when USAID does want to take credit,
anti-American sentiment can make it tough. During a
mission to Cairo by a State Department panel on public
diplomacy, visitors were repeatedly told how grateful
Egyptians were to the Japanese for building their
opera house. Yet they seemed wholly unaware that Egypt
is the second-largest recipient of U.S. aid--nearly $2
billion a year--and that Americans have funded Cairo's
systems for clean water, sewage, and electricity. U.S.
funds also saved from water damage that nation's
oldest mosque, built in A.D. 642, yet Egyptian
officials were reluctant to put USAID's red, white,
and blue sign outside the building. Frustrated, top
agency officials decided to create their own public
diplomacy corps and will soon have information
specialists attached to all USAID missions.

For those worried about future generations of
jihadists, what to do about madrasahs--traditional
Islamic schools--is a major concern. The 9/11
commission, in its final report last year, branded the
worst of them "incubators for violent extremism." A
World Bank study puts the number of madrasah students
in Pakistan alone at nearly 500,000. To attack the
problem, U.S. officials are employing a variety of
tactics. Perhaps the most surprising program is in
Uganda, which hosts a large Muslim minority. Last
year, the embassy announced it was funding
construction of three Islamic elementary schools.
"We're in the madrasah business," quipped one
terrorism analyst. In the nearby Horn of Africa, the
U.S. military is running a model program aimed at
winning hearts and minds by, among other things,
directly competing with the madrasahs. Military
officers gather intelligence on where militants plan
to start religious schools, Marine Maj. Gen. Samuel
Helland told U.S. News ; they then target those areas
by building up new public schools and the local
infrastructure.

Sisyphus. Elsewhere, U.S. officials are working
quietly through third parties to train madrasah
teachers to add math, science, civics, and health to
their curriculum. The most ambitious program is in
Pakistan, where sensitivities run so high that
allegations of U.S. funding are enough to prompt
parents to pull their children from schools, USAID
staffers say. The agency is working through private
foundations and the Pakistan Ministry of Education on
what officials call a "model madrasah" program that
may eventually include over a thousand schools.
Drawing the line on engagement, though, can be tough.
In January, the U.S. Embassy there ordered an abrupt
end to a $1 million contract to supply Internet access
to scores of madrasahs and other schools in Pakistan's
most restive provinces. The reason: an arrest of a
militant mistakenly thought to be tied to one of the
schools.

U.S. taxpayer dollars going to Islamic radio, Islamic
TV, Islamic schools, mosques, and monuments--no wonder
some officials find the strategy controversial. USAID
staffers argue that as long as they offer assistance
to all groups and their grants are meant for secular
activities, they are allowed to fund religious
organizations. "We structure our programming to be in
compliance with 'establishment clause' case law," says
Jeffrey Grieco, a USAID spokesman, referring to the
First Amendment's church-state divide. But some legal
experts question whether America's growing involvement
with Islam is legal, given that American courts have
found that tax dollars may not be used to support
religion. "For us to be doing this is probably
unconstitutional," says Herman Schwartz, a
constitutional law professor at American University.
In 1991, Schwartz and the American Civil Liberties
Union won a case against USAID to stop it from funding
20 Catholic and Jewish schools overseas. "But that
seems a long time ago," Schwartz adds. "I don't know
if anyone would support that kind of suit today."

Times have certainly changed. The nation's highest
officials now seem convinced that America's greatest
ideological foe is a highly politicized form of
radical Islam and that Washington and its allies
cannot afford to stand by. More proof that the
administration is finally engaged in waging a war of
ideas came last month, when the president tapped his
longtime communications adviser, Karen Hughes, to be
the State Department's new head of public diplomacy.
Although lacking foreign expertise, Hughes brings
proven communications skills and, equally important, a
direct line to the top. The White House is also slated
to announce a new position at the National Security
Council, a deputy national security adviser for
strategic communication and global outreach, whose job
will be to goad the bureaucracy into further action.

The increased focus, already, it seems, is bearing
fruit. A poll of Indonesians conducted last month
after the tsunami relief efforts led by the U.S.
military found that America's unfavorability rating
had plunged from a horrid 83 percent to 54 percent;
support for bin Laden, by contrast fell by more than
half. It would be folly, however, to think that the
road ahead will be easy. Veterans of information
warfare say the amounts being spent today are still
inadequate, while a new Government Accountability
Office study highlights an array of problems with U.S.
public diplomacy strategy. Hughes's predecessor at
State, acting Assistant Secretary Patricia Harrison,
told U.S. News that she felt at times like Sisyphus,
the Greek king banished to forever push a boulder up a
steep hill, only to have it roll down again. The
lesson Washington needs to learn, Harrison says, goes
back to the Cold War--that the world matters and
America needs to stay engaged. "You never declare
victory," she warns. "You do not declare that it's the
end of history and go home. The job is to continue
pushing the boulder up and up, to keep investing, keep
connecting."

http://sf.indymedia.org/news/2005/04/1713502.php
and
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050425/25roots.htm



                
__________________________________ 
Do you Yahoo!? 
Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new resources site!
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/resources/ 





------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
In low income neighborhoods, 84% do not own computers.
At Network for Good, help bridge the Digital Divide!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/hjtSRD/3MnJAA/i1hLAA/TXWolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 


***************************************************************************
{Invite (mankind, O Muhammad ) to the Way of your Lord (i.e. Islam) with wisdom 
(i.e. with the Divine Inspiration and the Qur'an) and fair preaching, and argue 
with them in a way that is better. Truly, your Lord knows best who has gone 
astray from His Path, and He is the Best Aware of those who are guided.} 
(Holy Quran-16:125)

{And who is better in speech than he who [says: "My Lord is Allah (believes in 
His Oneness)," and then stands straight (acts upon His Order), and] invites 
(men) to Allah's (Islamic Monotheism), and does righteous deeds, and says: "I 
am one of the Muslims."} (Holy Quran-41:33)
 
The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: "By Allah, if 
Allah guides one person by you, it is better for you than the best types of 
camels." [al-Bukhaaree, Muslim] 

The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)  also said, "Whoever 
calls to guidance will have a reward similar to the reward of the one who 
follows him, without the reward of either of them being lessened at all." 
[Muslim, Ahmad, Aboo Daawood, an-Nasaa'ee, at-Tirmidhee, Ibn Maajah] 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

All views expressed herein belong to the individuals concerned and do not in 
any way reflect the official views of IslamCity unless sanctioned or approved 
otherwise. 

If your mailbox clogged with mails from IslamCity, you may wish to get a daily 
digest of emails by logging-on to http://www.yahoogroups.com to change your 
mail delivery settings or email the moderators at [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the 
title "change to daily digest".  
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/islamcity/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to