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Propaganda, Public Diplomacy
& Psychological Operations
Lecture
WHAT IS PUBLIC
DIPLOMACY?
Prof. Philip M. Taylor
Official ‘Information’ Components
Features: -
• Propaganda vs counter propaganda (by
another name!)
• Hard Power vs Soft Power
• Public Diplomacy and cultural diplomacy
• National & International broadcasting
• News management at home and abroad
• Educational and cultural exchanges
Public Diplomacy Definitions
• PD ‘deals with the influence of public attitudes on the
formation and execution of foreign policies. It
encompasses dimensions of international relations
beyond traditional diplomacy; the cultivation by
governments of public opinion in other countries; the
interaction of private groups and interests in one
country with those of another; the reporting of foreign
affairs and its impact on policy; communication
between those whose job is communication, as between
diplomats and foreign correspondents; and the
processes of inter-cultural communications’.
PD – the role
‘Public Diplomacy – the open exchange of ideas
and information – is an inherent characteristic of
democratic societies. Its global mission is central
to … foreign policy. And it remains indispensable
to … [national] interests, ideals and leadership
role in the world’.
(US Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy,
1991 Report).
Instruments of International
Relations (the DIME framework)
Diplomatic
Economic
Military
Informational
(‘Hard’ and ‘Soft’)
National Policy
Objectives
Diplomatic & Informational
‘Traditional’ Diplomacy
• Government elite to foreign
government elite
• Professional civil services
• Secrecy justified in terms of not
alerting rival /adversary
diplomatic alliances
• Less accountable to public
criticism
• ‘secret diplomacy leads to war’
Public Diplomacy
• Government to foreign publics
(elite vs. mass)
• Professional media practitioners
• Publicity justified in terms of
democratic accountability/open
government
• Open to public scrutiny, thus
bound by telling ‘the truth’
• Public diplomacy ‘leads to
greater mutual understanding
and peace’
The Information Dimension:
The Global Information ‘space’
(or battlefield)
Features: -
 Propaganda vs counter propaganda
 Hard Power vs Soft Power
 Public Diplomacy and cultural diplomacy
 International broadcasting
 News management
 Educational and cultural exchanges
The Informational/Perceptual Environment:
A Global struggle for ‘hearts and minds’?
Mass Media
Official Information
Personal Experience
Rumors,
disinformation,
counter propaganda
Our ‘window on the world’ and the ‘pictures inside our heads’
Hard Power
HARD = actual use of military force,
economic sanctions, coercive
diplomacy etc
 ‘Hard power is the ability to get others to do
what they otherwise would not do through
threats or rewards. Whether by economic
carrots or military sticks, the ability to coax or
coerce has long been the central element of
power.’ (Keohane & Nye)
Soft Power
‘Soft power …is the ability to get desired outcomes
because others want what you want. It is the ability to
achieve goals through attraction rather than coercion.
It works by convincing others to follow or getting them
to agree to norms and institutions that produce the
desired behavior.
Soft power can rest on the appeal of one's ideas or
culture … and …depends largely on the
persuasiveness of the free information that an actor
seeks to transmit. If a state can [do this] it may not
need to expend as many costly traditional economic
or military resources.’ (Keohane & Nye)
Propaganda for Peace?
• Is this ‘propaganda’ or ‘persuasion’?
• It depends which side you are one!
• Propaganda usually benefits the source
• PD/CD rests on mutual understanding and
mutual interests in order to benefit…..who?
A key element of soft power =
public (and cultural) diplomacy
 Long term = cultural and educational exchanges,
establishment and maintenance of credibility and
mutual trust
 Short term = credible information dissemination
through all available media (espec. Broadcasting)
 News based (Public Affairs/Public
Information/Media Operations) for domestic
audiences)
 Public Diplomacy for overseas audiences
 But where is the line between national and
international anymore?
Public & Cultural Diplomacy
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
CULTURAL
RELATIONS
INTERNATIONAL
BROADCASTING
PSYCHOLOGICAL
OPERATIONS
(Long-term;
Elites are main
Target audience)
(Short-term)
…And what about another line?
• Is this ‘propaganda’ or ‘persuasion’?
• It depends which side you are on!
• Propaganda usually benefits the source
• PD/CD rests on mutual understanding
and mutual interests in order to
benefit…..who?
• News or Views?
National Media Image vs National
Official Image
PD/CD Landmarks
• ‘Open covenants, openly arrived at’
• French invented CD – language teaching
schools (Alliance Francaise)
• British Council founded 1934 to provide an
alternative view of the world other than
totalitarianism
• BBC began foreign language broadcasts in
1938
• Voice of America began 1942
• USIA founded 1953, closed 1999
The Cold War (of Words)
• Competition between two ‘ways of life’
• Long-term Soviet commitment to international
broadcasting since 1920s
• US sets up Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty
etc in 1950s
• Radio Swan for Cuba
• The Reagan Reinvigoration in 1980s
• Radio Marti, Radio this, Radio that….
• PD or Psychological Warfare?
The Cold War ‘won’ – then
losing the peace
• Gorbachev and Glassnost
• Chernobyl, 1986
• ‘The Voices’ and their impact on Eastern
Europe
• The end of Soviet jamming
• The arrival of new technologies (faxes,
satellite TV, then the internet)
• PD in decline in 1990s: US power left to speak
for itself while others filled the info-space with
anti-Americanism
PDD 68 (1999): International
Public Information
• Goal: Achieve national objectives without
resorting to force, or act as a force
multiplier in the event force is required
• Objective: ‘to enhance US security, bolster
America’s economic prosperity and to
promote democracy abroad’
• USIA incorporated into State Department
1999
US Public Diplomacy
• Under the State Department's reorganization
on October 1, 1999, Evelyn Lieberman
became the first Under Secretary for Public
Diplomacy and Public Affairs.
• As she remarked in her confirmation hearing:
"[P]ublic diplomacy, practiced in harmony with
traditional diplomacy, will enable us to
advance our interest, to protect our security,
and to continue to provide the moral basis for
our leadership in the world."
http://www.usinfo.state.gov
US Organisation
• Bureau of Public Affairs (domestic) ‘to help
Americans understand the importance of
foreign affairs’
• Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs
(overseas) ‘fosters mutual understanding
between the people of the United States and
other countries’ – Fulbright & Rhodes
scholarships
• Elite audiences, not masses (e.g. the Arab
‘street’) the main target audience
The Voice of America ‘family’
• VOA and Worldnet TV
• Radio Free Asia
• Radio & TV Marti
• RFE/RL
• Radio Free Iraq
1750 hours of programming per week in total,
reaching 100 million people in 60 languages at
a cost of $1.1 billion in 1999 – BUT only 7
hours per day in Arabic
9/11 and the failure of US PD
• Charlotte Beers and the ‘branding’ of America
• ‘Why do they hate us so much’?
• 9/11 hijackers were from elite not mass
• Erosion of world-wide sympathy for US
immediately after 9/11 (‘we are all Americans
now’)
• Failure (?) of PA as well – in 2003, 70% of
Americans believed Saddam was behind
9/11! Or is this what the Bush administration
needed to help promote Iraqi Freedom?
US Diagnostics
• ‘The gap between who we are and how we
wish to be seen, and how we are in fact seen,
is frighteningly wide’. (Beers, 2003)
• ‘As widely known, the portrait of the United
States that most people absorb through mass
culture and communications is skewed,
negative, and unrepresentative.’
(Christopher Ross, 2002)
‘A force for good in the world’?
a world unconvinced
Percentage drops in favourable views of US since
start of year 2003 (Pew Centre, 18 March)
- France: from 63% to 31%
- Italy: from 70% to 34%
- Russia: from 61% to 28%
- Turkey: from 30% to 12%
- UK: from 75% to 48%
EVEN WORSE IN ARAB & MUSLIM WORLD
Reinvigorating PA/PD since
2001
• Office of Global Communications (now
closed)
• Office of Strategic Influence (aborted)
• Freedom Promotion Act, 2002
• Broadcasting Board of Governors
• Radio Sawa (‘Together’) replaces VOA Arabic
Service in 2002 – ‘Hi’ magazine 2003 - now
closed)
• Radio Farda (Iran)
• Al Hurrah (‘Free One’) TV/Karen Hughes
Key Documents 1
• “Report of the Defense Science Board Task Force on
Managed Information Dissemination” (2001), by the Office
of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology and Logistics;
• “Building America’s Public Diplomacy Through a
Reformed Structure and Additional Resources” (2002), a
report of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public
Diplomacy;
• “Finding America’s Voice: A Strategy for Reinvigorating
U.S. Public Diplomacy” (2003), the report of an independent
task force sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations;
Key Documents 2
• “U.S. Public Diplomacy” (2003), by the U.S. General Accounting
Office;
• “Strengthening U.S.-Muslim Communications” (2003), from the
Center for the Study of the Presidency;
• “How to Reinvigorate U.S. Public Diplomacy” (2003), by Stephen
Johnson and Helle Dale, published by the Heritage Foundation;
• “The Youth Factor: The New Demographics of the Middle East
and the implications for US Foreign Policy” by The Brookings
Institute, 2003;
• “Changing Minds, Winning Peace: a new strategic direction for
US PD in the Arab and Muslim World” by the Advisory Group on
PD, October 2003.
From ‘Changing Minds, Winning
Peace’
‘Our adversaries’ success in the
struggle of ideas is all the more
stunning because American values are
so widely shared. As one of our Iranian
interlocutors put it, “Who has anything
against life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness?” We were also told that if
America does not define itself, the
extremists will do it for us.’
Conclusions
• PD has never been debated as much as it is
now
• Would it be fair to describe it as ‘soft
propaganda’ or ‘propaganda of soft power’?
• ‘Truth is the best propaganda’ – but whose
truth?
• ‘Credible truths’ compete in the global info-
space
• PD can only work if the policy is saleable.

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WHAT IS PUBLIC DIPLOMACY?

  • 1. Propaganda, Public Diplomacy & Psychological Operations Lecture WHAT IS PUBLIC DIPLOMACY? Prof. Philip M. Taylor
  • 2. Official ‘Information’ Components Features: - • Propaganda vs counter propaganda (by another name!) • Hard Power vs Soft Power • Public Diplomacy and cultural diplomacy • National & International broadcasting • News management at home and abroad • Educational and cultural exchanges
  • 3. Public Diplomacy Definitions • PD ‘deals with the influence of public attitudes on the formation and execution of foreign policies. It encompasses dimensions of international relations beyond traditional diplomacy; the cultivation by governments of public opinion in other countries; the interaction of private groups and interests in one country with those of another; the reporting of foreign affairs and its impact on policy; communication between those whose job is communication, as between diplomats and foreign correspondents; and the processes of inter-cultural communications’.
  • 4. PD – the role ‘Public Diplomacy – the open exchange of ideas and information – is an inherent characteristic of democratic societies. Its global mission is central to … foreign policy. And it remains indispensable to … [national] interests, ideals and leadership role in the world’. (US Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, 1991 Report).
  • 5. Instruments of International Relations (the DIME framework) Diplomatic Economic Military Informational (‘Hard’ and ‘Soft’) National Policy Objectives
  • 6. Diplomatic & Informational ‘Traditional’ Diplomacy • Government elite to foreign government elite • Professional civil services • Secrecy justified in terms of not alerting rival /adversary diplomatic alliances • Less accountable to public criticism • ‘secret diplomacy leads to war’ Public Diplomacy • Government to foreign publics (elite vs. mass) • Professional media practitioners • Publicity justified in terms of democratic accountability/open government • Open to public scrutiny, thus bound by telling ‘the truth’ • Public diplomacy ‘leads to greater mutual understanding and peace’
  • 7. The Information Dimension: The Global Information ‘space’ (or battlefield) Features: -  Propaganda vs counter propaganda  Hard Power vs Soft Power  Public Diplomacy and cultural diplomacy  International broadcasting  News management  Educational and cultural exchanges
  • 8. The Informational/Perceptual Environment: A Global struggle for ‘hearts and minds’? Mass Media Official Information Personal Experience Rumors, disinformation, counter propaganda Our ‘window on the world’ and the ‘pictures inside our heads’
  • 9. Hard Power HARD = actual use of military force, economic sanctions, coercive diplomacy etc  ‘Hard power is the ability to get others to do what they otherwise would not do through threats or rewards. Whether by economic carrots or military sticks, the ability to coax or coerce has long been the central element of power.’ (Keohane & Nye)
  • 10. Soft Power ‘Soft power …is the ability to get desired outcomes because others want what you want. It is the ability to achieve goals through attraction rather than coercion. It works by convincing others to follow or getting them to agree to norms and institutions that produce the desired behavior. Soft power can rest on the appeal of one's ideas or culture … and …depends largely on the persuasiveness of the free information that an actor seeks to transmit. If a state can [do this] it may not need to expend as many costly traditional economic or military resources.’ (Keohane & Nye)
  • 11. Propaganda for Peace? • Is this ‘propaganda’ or ‘persuasion’? • It depends which side you are one! • Propaganda usually benefits the source • PD/CD rests on mutual understanding and mutual interests in order to benefit…..who?
  • 12. A key element of soft power = public (and cultural) diplomacy  Long term = cultural and educational exchanges, establishment and maintenance of credibility and mutual trust  Short term = credible information dissemination through all available media (espec. Broadcasting)  News based (Public Affairs/Public Information/Media Operations) for domestic audiences)  Public Diplomacy for overseas audiences  But where is the line between national and international anymore?
  • 13. Public & Cultural Diplomacy PUBLIC DIPLOMACY CULTURAL RELATIONS INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS (Long-term; Elites are main Target audience) (Short-term)
  • 14. …And what about another line? • Is this ‘propaganda’ or ‘persuasion’? • It depends which side you are on! • Propaganda usually benefits the source • PD/CD rests on mutual understanding and mutual interests in order to benefit…..who? • News or Views?
  • 15. National Media Image vs National Official Image
  • 16. PD/CD Landmarks • ‘Open covenants, openly arrived at’ • French invented CD – language teaching schools (Alliance Francaise) • British Council founded 1934 to provide an alternative view of the world other than totalitarianism • BBC began foreign language broadcasts in 1938 • Voice of America began 1942 • USIA founded 1953, closed 1999
  • 17. The Cold War (of Words) • Competition between two ‘ways of life’ • Long-term Soviet commitment to international broadcasting since 1920s • US sets up Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty etc in 1950s • Radio Swan for Cuba • The Reagan Reinvigoration in 1980s • Radio Marti, Radio this, Radio that…. • PD or Psychological Warfare?
  • 18. The Cold War ‘won’ – then losing the peace • Gorbachev and Glassnost • Chernobyl, 1986 • ‘The Voices’ and their impact on Eastern Europe • The end of Soviet jamming • The arrival of new technologies (faxes, satellite TV, then the internet) • PD in decline in 1990s: US power left to speak for itself while others filled the info-space with anti-Americanism
  • 19. PDD 68 (1999): International Public Information • Goal: Achieve national objectives without resorting to force, or act as a force multiplier in the event force is required • Objective: ‘to enhance US security, bolster America’s economic prosperity and to promote democracy abroad’ • USIA incorporated into State Department 1999
  • 20. US Public Diplomacy • Under the State Department's reorganization on October 1, 1999, Evelyn Lieberman became the first Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs. • As she remarked in her confirmation hearing: "[P]ublic diplomacy, practiced in harmony with traditional diplomacy, will enable us to advance our interest, to protect our security, and to continue to provide the moral basis for our leadership in the world." http://www.usinfo.state.gov
  • 21. US Organisation • Bureau of Public Affairs (domestic) ‘to help Americans understand the importance of foreign affairs’ • Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs (overseas) ‘fosters mutual understanding between the people of the United States and other countries’ – Fulbright & Rhodes scholarships • Elite audiences, not masses (e.g. the Arab ‘street’) the main target audience
  • 22. The Voice of America ‘family’ • VOA and Worldnet TV • Radio Free Asia • Radio & TV Marti • RFE/RL • Radio Free Iraq 1750 hours of programming per week in total, reaching 100 million people in 60 languages at a cost of $1.1 billion in 1999 – BUT only 7 hours per day in Arabic
  • 23. 9/11 and the failure of US PD • Charlotte Beers and the ‘branding’ of America • ‘Why do they hate us so much’? • 9/11 hijackers were from elite not mass • Erosion of world-wide sympathy for US immediately after 9/11 (‘we are all Americans now’) • Failure (?) of PA as well – in 2003, 70% of Americans believed Saddam was behind 9/11! Or is this what the Bush administration needed to help promote Iraqi Freedom?
  • 24. US Diagnostics • ‘The gap between who we are and how we wish to be seen, and how we are in fact seen, is frighteningly wide’. (Beers, 2003) • ‘As widely known, the portrait of the United States that most people absorb through mass culture and communications is skewed, negative, and unrepresentative.’ (Christopher Ross, 2002)
  • 25. ‘A force for good in the world’? a world unconvinced Percentage drops in favourable views of US since start of year 2003 (Pew Centre, 18 March) - France: from 63% to 31% - Italy: from 70% to 34% - Russia: from 61% to 28% - Turkey: from 30% to 12% - UK: from 75% to 48% EVEN WORSE IN ARAB & MUSLIM WORLD
  • 26. Reinvigorating PA/PD since 2001 • Office of Global Communications (now closed) • Office of Strategic Influence (aborted) • Freedom Promotion Act, 2002 • Broadcasting Board of Governors • Radio Sawa (‘Together’) replaces VOA Arabic Service in 2002 – ‘Hi’ magazine 2003 - now closed) • Radio Farda (Iran) • Al Hurrah (‘Free One’) TV/Karen Hughes
  • 27. Key Documents 1 • “Report of the Defense Science Board Task Force on Managed Information Dissemination” (2001), by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics; • “Building America’s Public Diplomacy Through a Reformed Structure and Additional Resources” (2002), a report of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy; • “Finding America’s Voice: A Strategy for Reinvigorating U.S. Public Diplomacy” (2003), the report of an independent task force sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations;
  • 28. Key Documents 2 • “U.S. Public Diplomacy” (2003), by the U.S. General Accounting Office; • “Strengthening U.S.-Muslim Communications” (2003), from the Center for the Study of the Presidency; • “How to Reinvigorate U.S. Public Diplomacy” (2003), by Stephen Johnson and Helle Dale, published by the Heritage Foundation; • “The Youth Factor: The New Demographics of the Middle East and the implications for US Foreign Policy” by The Brookings Institute, 2003; • “Changing Minds, Winning Peace: a new strategic direction for US PD in the Arab and Muslim World” by the Advisory Group on PD, October 2003.
  • 29. From ‘Changing Minds, Winning Peace’ ‘Our adversaries’ success in the struggle of ideas is all the more stunning because American values are so widely shared. As one of our Iranian interlocutors put it, “Who has anything against life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?” We were also told that if America does not define itself, the extremists will do it for us.’
  • 30. Conclusions • PD has never been debated as much as it is now • Would it be fair to describe it as ‘soft propaganda’ or ‘propaganda of soft power’? • ‘Truth is the best propaganda’ – but whose truth? • ‘Credible truths’ compete in the global info- space • PD can only work if the policy is saleable.