Note: We've finally, after much grousing and snark from the multitudes, changed the name to American Footprints from "Liberals Against Terrorism." The old address will still work, but the new one is http://americanfootprints.com
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Saturday, April 22
by
nadezhda
on Sat 22 Apr 2006 10:57 AM EDT
praktike has now moved to Cairo to study Arabic, and I can report first hand that Cairo seems to agree with him. He's looking decidedly content and healthy. He's now blogging primarily at American Footprints, where I can also be found with a number of other bloggers.
Sunday, June 18
by
nadezhda
on Sun 18 Jun 2006 09:07 AM EDT
While I'm on the topic of how online content can engage and enrich a journalist's traditional product, the Online Journalism Review at the Annenberg Center has a terrific interview with a Tacoma, Washington sports reporter who covers the Seattle Seahawks. Some highlights of the Q&A with Mike Sando:
OJR: Do you modify your voice when writing for the blog? And if so, how hard is it for a newspaper reporter to adapt to blogging? Sando: . . . [T]he first thing reporters need to do is lighten up and realize that the blog is not the newspaper. If a columnist somewhere makes an off-the-wall proposal that has people talking, or if you want to throw out some analysis on the topic of the day, the blog is the place to do it. In that sense I have definitely modified my voice for the blog. That was a little tough to do initially, but after running the blog for a while, I'm figuring out what works and where I want to go with things. I used the word "analysis" and not "opinion" because it's important for me to remain true to my identity as a journalist (that probably sounds higher-minded that I'd prefer, but hopefully the point holds up). [note: washingtonpost.com should probably stress the "analysis" category rather than stick the "opinion" label on their non-traditional-reporting online product, such as Dan Froomkin's daily White House review. It would help them avoid the Froomkin Froofraw (Joel Achenbach's term) they got into with the left blogosphere over Deborah Howell's swipe at Froomkin's "liberal" quasi-blog -- that supposedly needed to be distinguished from the paper's political news coverage, even though their reporters often provide "analysis" stories, and required a "conservative" countervoice. Followed by the infamously aborted experiment with a red-meat conservative blogger, Ben Domenech.] OJR: What reporting and information do you put in the blog that you can't or won't put in your newspaper stories? Sando: Here's a recent example: The Flint, Mich., paper published a story about former Seahawks receiver Daryl Turner, who enjoyed some productive years in the 1980s before disappearing in a haze of drugs and alcohol. It wasn't something we needed to chase for the paper, but I turned it into a quick blog item. There are numerous other examples. The blog allows more room to discuss (and sometimes debunk) rumors, too. OJR: Is there a difference in the feedback that you get for what you do on the blog versus what you do for the paper? Sando: I get way more feedback about the blog. In years past, I might answer 15 emails asking the same thing. Now I address the matter once on the blog and that's it; my time spent answering emails has almost disappeared. Along the same lines, having your own blog is sort of like hosting a radio show. It's more about the host, whereas people don't pay much attention to non-columnist bylines in the paper. For years I have written 350-500 stories per year for the paper, only to have people recognize me as the guy who spends 30 minutes a week during the NFL season as a guest on a sports-radio show. It's not that the radio station had more listeners than we had readers; rather, it's that the listeners were listing to me, whereas the newspaper readers were merely reading my stories. This is an important distinction. Blogs make reporters more relevant as individuals. This would seem to be good for reporters, long term. OJR: What is the editing process for your blog, if any? Sando: I post directly to the Internet. A blog with filters is not much of a blog, in my view. Immediacy is very important. The News Tribune trusts my ethics and my judgment. The paper also realizes, shrewdly, that online standards differ from print standards. This doesn't mean that anything goes in a blog. Basic journalism values still apply and management has a responsibility to enforce them wherever its name appears. It's just that reporters have more freedom on a blog. OJR: What do you see as the potential risks for a newspaper reporting in blogging? What have you done to try to overcome them? Sando: I think a blog will expose a poor reporter more quickly, while allowing a good reporter to flourish more demonstrably. Also, the comments section of a blog will test a reporter's restraint. I've spent a fair amount of time maintaining the comments section by discouraging crassness, hot-temperedness and overall idiocy. Friday, June 16
by
nadezhda
on Fri 16 Jun 2006 06:35 PM EDT
For some time now, I've been a fan of the way the Washington Post's online presence has been evolving. Last September, when the New York Times introduced TimesSelect and moved various features, including its columnists, behind the paywall, it was clear that the two companies were pursuing very different business models. And I speculated that those divergent business models were likely to produce very different models of a "news organization."
The Washington Post Company and washingtonpost.com are continually engaged in product innovation -- using technology to redefine "news" as dynamic, conversational, contextual content which is networked with related content across the internet (especially the blogosphere, but also including their other properties, Slate and Newsweek), and linked with their other media properties -- now including their new radio station. By contrast, the NYTimes is focusing on production/distribution innovation of their existing product -- using technology to improve the timeliness, relevance to the customer, and revenues from their traditional product, tweaked for online capabilities such as video. As I explained in September: The overall impression from [washingtonpost.com's] changes is that content is growing more dynamic -- no longer simply the electronic publication of a series of static stories, or photos or graphics. Each Post page becomes the center of, or portal to, a constantly changing network of relevant linky goodness. Washingtonpost.com has now introduced another example of precisely the sort of product innovation I described, called PostGlobal. It's potentially very good news for those of us who focus on US foreign relations. David Ignatius (WashPost) and Fareed Zakaria (Newsweek and his TV show, Foreign Exchange) will host roundtables on various timely issues. The responses will come from their stable of about thirty editors and journalists from around the world, their "PostGlobalBloggers." Readers have a thread for their own comments. And Ignatius and Zakaria will provide some sidebar notes and roundups in their "Editor's Inbox" blog. Here's how the site describes what they're trying to do: PostGlobal is an experiment in global, collaborative journalism, a running discussion of important issues among dozens of the world's best-known editors and writers. It aims to create a truly global dialogue, drawing on independent journalists in the countries where news is happening -- from China to Iran, from South Africa to Saudi Arabia, from Mexico to India. The first question, posted on Wednesday, was "If Iran becomes the dominant regional power in the Middle East, the region will be safer and more stable. True or false?" The True/False framing isn't all that interesting -- not surprisingly, it produced more "false" than "true" responses from the journalists. Far more interesting were the varied perspectives about the dynamics of the Middle East from journalists from around the world -- including Japan, India, Mexico. They had distinctive views on the prospects for Iran becoming "the dominant regional power," and just what that might mean. Good exercise in revisiting unstated assumptions that underpin a lot of what passes for debate in the US. The readers' comments were also interesting and, as Ignatius noted in his roundup post today, "in many cases adding a dimension you would not find sitting around a discussion table in Washington." Readers who don't parrot the conventional wisdom of Washington foreign policy elites -- who woulda thunk? As a further example of the potential for enriching content and conversation, Ignatius' first "editor's inbox" post broadened the discussion by asking "what would Kissinger do"? -- and linked to two documents detailing Henry Kissinger's secret diplomacy with China, which have just been released by The National Security Archive. A lovely reminder of just what a piece of work was Henry the K. And just how far the Bush Admin has moved away from anything resembling strategic thinking and effective diplomacy, even after its supposed return under Rice. Today's question is: "Should the U.S. and other countries send representatives to the G-8 counter-summit?" (being held by some Russian "liberal dissidents" such as Gary Kasparov at the same time as the G-8 summit in St Petersburg in July). Wonder of wonders, Masha Lipman actually provides a thoughtful response with considerable context for understanding the issue. Wish she'd bring the same nuance to the stuff she produces for Fred Hiatt and the WashPost op-ed pages! That suggests that this more conversational format -- with Ignatius and Zakaria as sponsors -- may actually be as liberating for the opinion-peddlars as for readers and commenters. One of the reasons why the Post's "global view" experiment may work is that, rare for American pundits, Ignatius and Zakaria both can put themselves in the shoes of non-Americans when looking at US policy and actions. Admittedly, neither has positioned himself as a contrarian, but rather as a mainstream observer whose insights don't fit neatly within the conventional wisdom. I fault both of them for timidity -- for sometimes not extending the logic of their observations to more forcefully challenge US policy. But it's refreshing that they aren't simply a part of the echo chamber on either side of the US political debates. And here's hoping that the voices they assemble will expand the views available to those debates. So back to the difference in business models between the WashPost and the NYTimes, and what that may mean for redefining the relation between traditional print and online media. Here's my speculation from nine months ago. I expect the difference in the two approaches will in the long run have an impact on the content of the two newspapers and ultimately their philosophy of what it means to be a news organization. The NYT proposes to continue to "deliver" its "product." The Post, by contrast, is becoming a portal to a dynamic network of content, only a portion of which is home-grown. But by placing its own content at the heart of the portal and letting its home-grown content interact both with other Post-produced content and with content produced by others, the Post is pursuing a far different model than a classic portal, which aggregates content produced by others. In the process of distributing that home-grown content via the portal, the Post's own way of producing content, and the content itself, will continually be changed or enriched by the interaction with other content and content producers. Maybe, if Eric Nelson is right, the process may even produce added insight from Post reporters on their blogs, or from the commenters or trackbackers or Technorati-linkers, even if they're not named Friedman, Dowd, Brooks, Tierney, Kristoff or Krugman. The new Ignatius/Zakaria joint venture appears to fit squarely within that prediction. I wish it great success! P.S. -- While we're on the topic of media, the Huffington Post (NOT my favorite site) has a new section/portal that's devoted to the media, Eat the Press. It's an aggregator, blog and linkroll that's a bit of cross in style/content between Romenesko, Media Matters, CJR Daily, Jeff Jarvis and the Guardian's media section. If you like tracking the nexus of media as a business, politics, and tech, it looks promising. [cross-posted at american footprints] Monday, May 8
by
nadezhda
on Mon 08 May 2006 03:09 AM EDT
Introduction
On the surface, the US has been saying it wants Russia's cooperation on Iran's nuclear program in the Security Council this week. So praktike wonders what to make of the timing of Cheney's anti-Russia speech in Lithuania, in which he accused the Russia government of using oil and natural gas as "tools for intimidation and blackmail," "unfairly and improperly restrict[ing] the rights of her people," and taking "actions that undermine the territorial integrity of a neighbor, or interfere with democratic movements." After that bit of raw chutzpah, Cheney proceeded, in the words of the NYT, to wade into the energy battles in Kazakhstan while embracing Nazerbayev with smiling praise for Kazakhstan's "political development." Cheney finished his tour in Dubrovnik with the endorsement of NATO membership for an unlikely trio of candidates, Croatia, Albania and Macedonia. Altogether, the trip was a tour de force -- a nicely judged combination of high-minded Cold War-style ideological conflict with cynical Great Game competition, carefully tailored at each stop to play to the specific anti-Russian (and pro-US) interests of key local players. Strategic linkagesI don't think there can be any question that the Bush Admin has been making a number of anti-Russian moves in recent weeks and that Cheney's trip was deliberately designed to be provocative. It appears to me that the Russophobe hardliners within the Bush Admin, led by Cheney, have won the internal debates about how to deal with Russia leading up to next month's G-8 summit in St Petersburg. As important, I also think the provocations directed toward Russia are part of a parallel program to delegitimize the UN process for dealing with Iran, where the US is transparently engaged in faux diplomacy. In my view, recent moves by the Bush Admin are comprehensible only when they are seen as linked -- part of a broader "forward-leaning" effort to aggressively reassert US hegemony. My fear is that the tactics the US is using in playing the "diplomatic route" re Iran may not only be extremely dangerous as a way of dealing with Iran itself. Those tactics are likely to have far broader and more profound long-term effects on the structure of the international system. Where are US foreign policy elites?Why so little reaction to the Bush Admin's tougher line on Russia by American foreign policy elites ("realists" and "liberal internationalists") who aren't the natural allies ("neocons" and "national greatness" conservatives) of the Bush Admin? Perhaps it's because most foreign policy elites tend to be experts in one area or another with limited overlap -- e.g. nuclear proliferation, Middle East, former Soviet Union, China, Latin America, defense, etc. Or perhaps it's because they've lost the old Cold War habits of seeing linkages across diplomatic and security issues and across regions. I also think, in part, it's because almost all "schools" of American foreign policy share unquestioningly the assumption that being the sole superpower is in the natural order of things. American hegemony is, at least in principle, assumed to be necessary and/or benign, and its maintenance and assertion is a good thing. What the various schools quarrel about is how best to maintain and assert American power (soft and hard) and "leadership." When liberal internationalists like John Ikenberry and Anne Marie Slaughter question whether maintenance of a unipolar system is actually in American interests, note how gingerly they approach the issue in order to avoid being treated as anti-American heretics. "Realists" and "liberal internationalists" may tut at Cheney's confrontational style, and some may question his blatant hypocrisy on the subject of democracy. But I'm rarely seeing any challenge to the basic narrative that Russia deserves a smack-down from the US. First, it's become conventional wisdom (albeit of the ahistorical variety) that Russia is rolling back democracy and increasingly flirting with dictatorship at home [ed. - without really explaining why, it seems to be assumed that Putin's "soft authoritarianism" at home should automatically have a negative impact on US-Russia relations on everything from terrorism to trade]. Second, there's a general feeling that Russia has been getting a bit uppity abroad [ed. - Russia is seen as somehow "meddling" where it doesn't belong, even where some American elites actually agree more with Russia's position than that of the Bush Admin -- e.g. issues such as Iran or the Palestinians] So maybe it's not surprising that it takes a rabid anti-imperialist who doesn't belong to any of the mainstream foreign policy schools, Justin Raimondo, to produce the first article I've read that condemns Cheney's anti-Russia attacks as something more than just undiplomatic and hypocritical. Even Raimondo, however, doesn't fully link Cheney's moves with the diplomatic games vis a vis Iran. A five-pronged strategic offensive?To see how recent Bush Admin policy moves are part of a broader strategy of reasserting hegemony, I find especially helpful the following observation by DrLeoStrauss (Stop the Spirit of Zossen). The U.S. is currently conducting five separate strategic grand offensives:(Sprinkle 'democracy' on all of the above). What's remarkable is that Iran intersects with all five "grand strategic offensives" plus "democracy." That helps explain how and why the Bush Admin has turned the nuclear dispute with Iran into a "crisis" (with considerable help from the Iranians themselves, of course). The Iranian situation offers the Bush Admin an opportunity to make "progress" on a number of its strategic offensives simultaneously -- not just with Iran or with the nuclear proliferation regime but with China and Russia as well. The UN process is set up for "failure" in the sense that the Bush Admin is not going to obtain the sort of robust steps against Iran that it has sought. Either the Security Council negotiations will produce some sort of deadlock over the statement or, as Bolton has suggested this weekend, the US intends to proceed without Chinese and Russian support. Either outcome would give the US the excuse to ignore the Security Council going forward -- Rice has already been claiming that the Security Council would suffer a fatal "loss of credibility" if it fails to take action on Iran. Next stop, as again Rice has already suggested, is "coalitions of the wiling." The Bush Admin will likely pin the blame for failure on the "ineffectiveness" of the UN (and international institutions), in general, and on China and Russia, in particular. We should expect the bill of particulars against China and Russia to be three-fold:
This three-pronged attack draws on several different policy rationales or motives, each with a different way of defining "threats" to American interests:
As DrLeoStrauss suggests, even if the Bush Admin's strategic goals were commendable (which I dispute), the simultaneous pursuit of such an ambitious collection of strategic objectives is likely to produce considerable incoherence in execution. Furthermore, as Cheney's trip illustrated, that incoherence will be compounded by relying on such a mix of "styles." It's difficult to reconcile the Cold War-style (e.g. Cheney's ideological assault on Putin's supposed lack of democracy) with the Great Game-style (e.g. fishing for gas deals with Nazerbayev while praising his fifteen-year contribution to Kazakhstan's "political development"). The advantage of this mixed bag of rationales, however, is the same the Bush Admin enjoyed in assembling support for the Iraq war: a bit of something for everyone -- liberal hawks, ideological warriors, "national greatness" conservatives, and old-fashioned military hawks. The fact that no one can explain the "real reason" the US went to war in Iraq isn't a bug, it's a feature. Of course, such an ambitious program can't be left entirely to the Bush Admin. They need help from pundits and politicians to frame, legitimize and sell the program. Not surprisingly, we've already begun to hear from the usual suspects. A mere four days before Cheney's appearance in Lithuania, Robert Kagan warned in the op-ed pages of the WashPost of a global threat to liberalism potentially greater than Al Qaeda: a "League of Dictators" (read China and Russia) that will use their positions at the UN to undermine the promise of a new international order. Although Kagan's essay is primarily an example of the Cold War-style, he deftly weaves in the "energy security" card by showing how China's ideological and strategic interests (i.e., access to energy) are likely to coincide in places like Africa or Venezuela. Max Boot has similarly been busy on the op-ed pages. The day before Cheney began his trip in Vilnius, Boot was lamenting the "dictatorship dividend" -- the windfall from rising oil prices enjoyed by "noxious dictators" like Putin and Chavez. Boot hit the trifecta -- the challenge to global "energy security," an ideological conflict, and the threat of "regional contagion." Vladimir Putin and Hugo Chavez can buy off their publics with generous subsidies and ignore Western pressure while sabotaging democratic developments from Central America to Central Asia. Since in this article Boot is concerned with nefarious energy suppliers, his list of villains doesn't include China, with which he is willing for the US to make common cause, at least as fellow energy consumers. In a longer piece, I'm confident he'd be able to find a way to lodge China in the enemy camp a la Kagan. As Matt Yglesias notes, Francis Fukuyama reminds us that the PNAC folks always need an enemy, and China was their pre-9/11 favorite. So they may just be reverting to form. If John McCain's speech at the Brussels Forum on transatlantic relations a week ago is any indication, the "national greatness" conservatives are on the same page as the neocons and, according to Dan Drezner, the "muscular liberals" in the person of Richard Holbrooke are in full agreement with McCain. And of course the human rights folks and democracy true believers have long had China in their sights and are delighted to hear Cheney take on the Russians. Reporting on his attendance at the Brussels Forum, Drezner notes: The general tenor of the conference so far has been to focus less on transatlantic frictions and more on the geopolitical and geoeconomic difficulties that Russia and China are posing to the West as a whole. More later, but a question to readers -- will the realpolitik of a rising China and a renegade Russia... be the ultimate driver for a closer transatlantic partnership? And should that be the main driver? Snark aside, Kagan and Boot give us a taste of the sort of arguments, from the same unholy alliance that brought us Iraq, that I expect to hear against Russia and China as the Bush Admin seeks to reassert American hegemony. This post certainly requires quite a bit more fleshing out, so let's call it an "Intro." As and if I develop some of these thoughts further, I'll update with links to future posts. cross-posted at American Footprints Saturday, April 22
by
nadezhda
on Sat 22 Apr 2006 10:50 AM EDT
Between the continued tanking of President Bush in the polls and this week's White House shakeup-that-is-no-shakeup, the question is no longer whether Bush is the lamest of ducks. It's how Bush, the US and the rest of the world are going to navigate the next almost-three years of historic levels of lameness.
But Bush isn't alone -- he's one of a growing "paddling of ducks" (a la an exhaltation of larks) in Western-style democracies. Simon Serfaty of the CSIS observes that European elections are producing governing coalitions with little authority or lattitude to govern. There could not have been any worse possible outcome to last week’s election in Italy than the political tie that leaves Romano Prodi with a plausible claim of victory, but a clear inability to govern. Such conditions had already been seen in Germany last September. They may well be seen next in France next spring — and in Spain the year after that. Everywhere, weak governments are getting weaker, making out their passivity to be a virtue and their flexibility to be a strength. Serfaty sees this trend as troublesome for transatlantic relations, as America's approach to Europe has been shifting away from the first Bush Administration's prediliction for divide-and-conquer, with its ad hoc coalitions of the willing, and towards renewing partnerships with Euro-wide institutions. [F]or the past 15 months, Bush has cultivated Europe not one state at a time, but all of them together in the context of the European Union to which the U.S. president has reasserted his country’s commitment. As a result, the central significance of bilateral relations — and, in this context, the personal dimensions of these relations — has been eroded. The issue is no longer what Italy — or Britain or Poland—can do for the U.S., but what the U.S. can do with Europe in the context of the two sets of organizations, N.A.T.O. and the E.U., that define the trans-Atlantic partnership. I note Serfaty's comment not as further evidence for profound Europessimism, which I don't particularly embrace. Rather, it's a warning that we may be headed for a "crisis of governance" period -- akin to the moody decade of widely shared malaise, in the 1970s and early 80s, when politicians, pundits and political scientists fretted about the "ungovernability" of democracies and the collapse of the welfare state. The Thatcher/Reagan neo-liberal response seems to have run out of energy -- at least in its political incarnation in parties on the Right -- and the Clinton/Blair Third Way, though retaining some centrist abstract appeal, is certainly suffering from the disappearance or weakening of its prime proponents on the world stage. A growing sense of anxiety coupled with desire for change -- rather than the embrace of an alternative governing philosophy -- may be the common thread in election results across Europe (Eastern and Western) and even Latin America. A compelling and coherent new vision from either Right or Left has yet to emerge. Instead, we have a hodge-podge of competing prescriptions for anxiety-reduction, which vary country-by-country according to which bundle of anxieties (economic, cultural, security) afflicts a given politician's electoral base. There's a growing sense that, whether in riot-riven France or in the US with its cratering approvals for Congress and the President, political elites are out of touch or, worse yet, irrelevant. If global macroeconomic trends lead to a new round of stagflation* -- especially if accompanied by the tensions produced by recycling petrodollars and a politically destabilizing slow-down of China's economic growth -- the recipe will be complete for another decade of gloomy pondering of the future for liberal democracy and the international system. It is this prospect of a globally-shared sense of impotence in the face of a world seriously off-track that I find more worrisome than the oft-repeated warning that Americans will become "isolationists" in a fit of pique that the Iraq war is a disaster. Certainly, an America that withdraws from the world as it is consumed internally with bouts of xenophobia and culture wars would be a threat to both the US and the rest of the world. But like most analyses by Americans of the international system, it's too US-centric. It assumes that the rest of the world isn't susceptible to similar pressures and anxieties and that the management of the global system will be principally a matter of US choices. We would be entering choppy waters if we were merely facing the prospect of a global hegemon having to come to terms with the limited utility of aggressively applying its power to pursue narrowly defined interests. Although "isolationism" might be one response, Jacksonian pugnaciousness might also produce a further outburst of "forward-leaning" aggressiveness. To navigate away from either extreme, it would be difficult but sufficient to execute the sort of unilateral shift in US grand strategy and national "personality" being advocated by John Ikenberry -- a rediscovery of the virtues of self-restraint and rule-set compliance and the importance of reassurance to other members of a unipolar international system. My fear, however, is that the international system is going to present far more challenging conditions for the US and other Western-style democracies to navigate if they are also suffering from a "crisis of governance" period in domestic politics. As Serfaty concludes with regard to Western Europe: Which gets us back to the disturbing tendency to go into democratic overtime as each election ends with an unwanted tie. That makes it difficult for each new or fading government to make the decisions needed to assuage its respective constituencies, for the E.U. to make the decisions needed to satisfy its members, and for the U.S. to be confident in its allies’ ability to not only be willing, but also capable and relevant. The same can be said for European lack of confidence in the US -- certainly during Bush's forthcoming years of lameduckness -- but potentially longer if we're looking at a governance crisis that is not unique to this President and is shared among Western-style democracies. ------------ * Stagflation is one of several plausible scenarios for the long-predicted and oft-postponed but inevitable adjustment of global economic imbalances. The Cunning Realist has been warning of the risks of hyperinflation as we approach the day of reckoning for US fiscal and monetary policies. Though I view creeping stagflation, in the absence of a hard landing, as a more likely scenario if inflation rears its ugly head again, TCR's regular analyses of inflationary pressures and financial market dynamics are well worth a read. Certainly, the extreme narrowing of spreads and the ongoing search for yield regardless of risk are symptoms of a coming bout of creative destruction in the financial markets. Just as the cover of Business Week has become a leading indicator of a company or sector about to reach its market highs, I expect that when we start hearing about the IMF no longer being needed to deal with the international exchange regime or global financial crises, we're about to painfully rediscover the relevance of the IMF as part of a reformed international financial architecture. The world will need a better response from the lameduck presidency than a cosmetic replacement for John Snow. Cross-posted at American Footprints Saturday, December 31
by
nadezhda
on Sat 31 Dec 2005 06:58 PM EST
I was flipping through the newest issue of Foreign Affairs and what should I see but an ad for the hot-off-the-presses book by Mark Lynch, aka Abu Aardvark, on Arab media: Voices of the New Arab Public: Iraq, al-Jazeera and Middle East politics today. Here's the catalog description:
Al-Jazeera and other satellite television stations have transformed Arab politics over the last decade. By shattering state control over information and giving a platform to long-stifled voices, these new Arab media have challenged the status quo by encouraging open debate about Iraq, Palestine, Islamism, Arab identity, and other vital political and social issues. These public arguments have redefined what it means to be Arab and reshaped the realm of political possibility. As Marc Lynch shows, the days of monolithic Arab opinion are over. How Arab governments and the United States engage this newly confident and influential public sphere will profoundly shape the future of the Arab world.Amen, to that last point in particular. And just maybe the much-hyped and much-criticized new public-diplomat-in-chief, Karen Hughes, has figured that out? One indicator is the decision to pull the plug on the innocuous teen-oriented Arabic lifestyle magazine, Hi. Another potential indicator is the doubling of the number of the State Department's media interviews in Arabic this year, to about 100, as reported by Steve Weisman, in a profile of Hughes in the NYT. Weisman also reports that Arabic satellite television is definitely on Hughes' radar screen. Ms. Hughes departs from one common policy among top American officials. She appears on Al Jazeera, the popular Arabic satellite television station accused by the Pentagon of cooperating with anti-American extremists. This past week, Ms. Hughes sparred with a Jazeera moderator over Iraq, Israel and democracy in the Middle East. "I came here because I respect Al Jazeera," she said. "You have a large audience, and I wanted to address that audience to communicate with the Arab world."Marc Lynch has set up a separate blog for discussions of the book, reviews, and his book-promotion schedule, and you can buy it there through his Amazon links. For a good intro to his views, see this recent article in the Wilson Quarterly, Watching al-Jazeera. cross-posted at American Footprints Wednesday, December 21
by
nadezhda
on Wed 21 Dec 2005 06:34 AM EST
This time David Ignatius nails it, although nothing he "discloses" is news to anyone who is a regular visitor to this site.
Many of the actions taken in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 may have made some sense at the time, but they were not well-thought through as long-term policy shifts. Since 9/11, however, the dominating fear of another attack has kept the White House focused on not losing the next skirmish rather than promoting the nation's long-term interests. The result of continuing to operate in a state-of-emergency mode, what Jack Balkin calls "governing through terrorism," has been a pattern of policymaking that has often turned out to be short-sighted and self-defeating, whether in the wars we've chosen to wage and how we've waged them, the methods we have used to capture and handle detainees, or the ways we have confused spin and propaganda with public diplomacy. Not surprisingly, as we've been belatedly learning in the press over the past several weeks, the loosening of constraints on domestic intelligence collection has also appeared to produce mission creep by some agencies or parts of the military, unaccountable privacy intrusions, and unwarranted surveillance of political activities. As we've pointed out frequently on this site, many of the Administration's post-9/11 policies, from the conduct of the Iraq war to the handling of detainees, have increasingly been opposed not only by the Administration's political opponents but by highly-respected professionals in the very departments and agencies devoted to security, intelligence and diplomacy. These "revolts of the professionals," as Ignatius calls them, can't be simply dismissed as classic turf-fighting. Instead, the pros have been trying to push the system back toward a more sensible, balanced and, in the long-run, more sustainable approach to strategy, operations and practices. The recent revolts by a number of Senators and Congressmen who are long known as strong advocates of the military and intelligence communities have been a clear signal that the pros have failed to get their message through to the White House, so they've decided that Congress must at least hear the full story. In saying that we're moving into a post-post-9/11 world, I'm not suggesting that the risks facing America are necessarily greatly reduced compared to what they were on 9/12/2001. In some respects, threats to American interests abroad are considerably greater. But rather, the US is now in a much better position to evaluate, manage and respond to those risks. Ignatius doesn't go as far as I would -- I think the proposal earlier this year to switch from the Global War on Terrorism to a Global Struggle Against Violent Extremism, how daffy the acronym, is another long-overdue shift to a post-post-9/11 world. However, he's certainly correct that it's no longer productive for the White House (or the OVP) to continue to insist on every executive prerogative and to dig in their heels on every issue of executive authority. As Ignatius argues, it's past time for the President to start providing leadership so we can start fashioning a workable consensus on how we will operate in a post-post-9/11 world. Revolt of the ProfessionalsAmen! cross-posted at American Footprints Tuesday, December 20
by
nadezhda
on Tue 20 Dec 2005 07:07 PM EST
I couldn't help stealing that great post title from Patricia Kushlis (PHK) of Whirled View. Her starting point is Elisabeth Bumiller's recent White House Letter ($ req'd), which noted that the Bush Administration is now "on message" regarding the existential threat of an AlQaeda-sponsored caliphate.
Needless to say, both the history and geography contained in the warnings from Cheney et al are more than mildly suspect, as PHK illustrates. But the Caliphate is certainly a colorful way to package the President's claims that the West is engaged in another generational struggle of near-apocalyptic proportions akin to the Cold War. Norman Podhoretz and the World War IV advocates must be highly gratified. "D" is for Dominoes? Few would argue that the US is not facing a long-term threat of terrorist attacks on US interests at home and abroad. The debate is rather about the appropriate strategy for addressing that threat, which depends in part on how one views the nature and sources of the enemy's strengths and weaknesses, and the best means to reduce its strength and counter its ability to cause lasting damage. And one of the central points of contention in that debate is the place, within the "global struggle against violent extremism" (yes, GSAVE is actually a useful concept despite its origins) of the current fighting with the AlQaeda-linked insurgents in Iraq. By introducing the caliphate argument, the Administration seems to be shifting away from crude "flypaper" logic, although certainly not abandoning the rhetoric entirely, based on the President's Sunday speech from the Oval Office. The handy feature of the caliphate argument is that it doesn't simply equate Iraq as the "central front in the GWOT" because that's where the terrorists are fighting. Rather, Iraq is proclaimed to be the main line of defense against the encroachment of a geopolitical enemy. We can't leave Iraq because it could be taken over by AlQaeda -- step one in the march to the caliphate. Echoes of dominoes anyone? Big Media Justin and his Cato colleague, Christopher Preble, have addressed the Administration's fear of an AlQaeda victory in Iraq in The Daily Star. After examining Iraqi and Arab public opinion, as well as the hostility against AlQaeda of other well-armed Iraqi insurgent groups and sectarian militias, they conclude that if America leaves, AlQaeda will not inherit Iraq. As Logan and Preble parse recent speeches by Administration figures, what emerges is not only the argument that AlQaeda's defeat in Iraq (by the US or by Iraqi forces?) will be critical to preventing AlQaeda from achieving its goal of a caliphate. That argument is supplemented by the assertion that a withdrawal by the US would be greeted by AlQaeda as a moral victory, which would in turn attract legions of bandwagonning Muslim supporters across the arc of instability. And "P" is for Peace with Honor? Shades of Nixon and Kissinger's "peace with honor," the President's Sunday speech expanded on the theoretical costs of America's losing credibility by prematurely withdrawing from Iraq, providing a laundry list of international audiences: We would abandon our Iraqi friends and signal to the world that America cannot be trusted to keep its word. We would undermine the morale of our troops by betraying the cause for which they have sacrificed. We would cause the tyrants in the Middle East to laugh at our failed resolve, and tighten their repressive grip. We would hand Iraq over to enemies who have pledged to attack us and the global terrorist movement would be emboldened and more dangerous than ever before. To retreat before victory would be an act of recklessness and dishonor, and I will not allow it. Logan and Preble respond to the President's final warning: The jihadis will certainly claim that the American withdrawal represents a victory for their side, but they will do so whenever U.S. forces leave - be that next year, or 10 years from now. In his Johns Hopkins speech, Rumsfeld declared that a "retreat in Iraq" would tell our enemies "that if America will not defend itself against terrorists in Iraq, it will not defend itself against terrorists anywhere." That's not to suggest that the Iraqis, the US and Iraq's neighbors shouldn't be concerned about AlQaeda taking advantage of chaos and low-grade civil war in western Iraq to maintain fluid bases of operations from which attacks outside Iraq could be carried out. The recent bombings in Amman underscore that threat. But that argues more in favor of working on the political dimensions of the non-AlQaeda insurgencies. (More on that later.) Not on casting the conflict in Iraq with Zarqawi's supporters as the battlefield on which the future of a caliphate is to be determined. As I've argued for a long time, the US needs a "peace with honor" exit for its own political equilibrium, not for its international standing, which will be helped, not hurt, by significantly scaling back its involvement in Iraq. And I'm willing to engage in a few harmless fictions from the Administration if it's helpful to that process. But ginning up new existential battles is a pernicious distortion of the threat from terrorism America is facing as well as of the nature of the conflicts in Iraq and the Middle East. As we should already have learned from the Iraq/WMD fiasco, fashioning and executing sensible strategy is considerably more difficult when the Administration engages in fanciful threat inflation. cross-posted at American Footprints Friday, December 16
by
nadezhda
on Fri 16 Dec 2005 03:20 PM EST
Note: See below for Bill Keller's initial response to the timing question.
As I noted in the sidebar miniblog, and as Praktike posts, John Yoo's fingerprints are once again on an "aggressive" reading of executive power, this time the NSA getting into the domestic surveillance of Americans -- just reported in a major article in the New York Times. No big surprise, the NYT report was used as ammunition in the Senate cloture vote on the Patriot Act that Feingold et al (three Dem and three GOP Senators) just won in a big way -- 46 votes (47 including Frist as a procedural move). [note: Feingold has been blogging the process at TPMCafe this week] Glad to see the Senate standing up for its version against the House. When the Senate engages in long negotiations that produce something everyone can live with, the House can't be allowed to eviscerate the deal in conference. As much as the Patriot Act, this vote is a triumph of bipartisanship in the Senate against the House/White House majoritarianism, which will hopefully have a healthy effect on the conference process in the future (e.g. the Rep Duncan Hunter's threats to water down the torture prohibitions in the defense bill). Anyway, the NYT report was helpful to the cause. But the Patriot Act's critics got a boost from a New York Times report saying Bush authorized the National Security Agency to monitor the international phone calls and international e-mails of hundreds — perhaps thousands — of people inside the United States. Previously, the NSA typically limited its domestic surveillance to foreign embassies and missions and obtained court orders for such investigations.If the NYT had held off on this story until after the Patriot Act was extended, it would have been another Big Media travesty. I simply don't get why the NYT keeps putting themselves in the position of at least appearing to be the Bush Administration's poodles. I wonder who decided they should include in the article that they'd been sitting on the story for a year. I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall in the editorial conference on that paragraph! On the substance, I don't understand why in the world the Administration can't comply with some simple, basic protections like a warrant. Although I'd certainly prefer that NSA didn't collect huge amounts of information of private conversations, my conscience isn't shocked that they may need to follow leads across borders back into the US. However, the FISA court procedures are super-fast and give enormous deference to the FBI and intelligence folks. If NSA needs some sort of rule that deals with their trolling large groups of phone numbers, I'm sure they could get a specific procedural waiver included in the Administration's precious Patriot Act -- something that gave the court a chance to look at the initial request, a process for dumping all the garbage info that a big sweep would collect, etc. And the Administration is so dreadfully short-sighted -- just as evidence acquired via torture may not stand up in court, evidence based on unauthorized privacy invasions may be fatal to a prosecution. Yes, hunting terrorists before they act isn't like trying to get the goods on someone who has already committed a crime, but with very small adjustments in process, they could retain the ability to "bring the bad guys to justice" even as they stop the bad guys from acting. And more fundamentally, there simply must be some basic safeguards that hold intel/law enforcement accountable to someone other than the internal John Yoos. What's increasingly clear is that "trust us" is just as feeble an excuse as we all figured it would be. You don't have to be a libertarian, civil or otherwise, to know that it's the simple nature of bureaucracies. But it's time to break the Catch-22, that the Congress, in its oversight function, is dependent upon the Administration's discretion to decide whether to report on how they are actually using their powers. The one encouraging thing about the NYT report was that the oversight by the FISA court and the Senate Intel Committee (Rockefeller) actually seemed to make a difference. Why? Because it gave the insiders who were opposing these measures some leverage to make their case heard. [noted: our need for the press to act as an effective watchdog, and use information from insiders who are concerned about Administration actions, is why I agree with Paleoprog that any prosecution in the Plame case NOT be based on the Espionage Act.] But that's a bigger lesson we're learning about Congressional oversight with the Bush Administration. They steamroll over the cautions of experienced professionals inside the agencies and departments. The oversight process permits these other, somewhat wiser views -- e.g. key parts of JAG and State on torture, CIA & State on renditions -- a chance to make their case. But it's only the leaks to the press that give the Senate the leverage they need over the Administration, which otherwise is less than forthcoming about what they're doing. And that brings me back to the NYT. Good to see they're starting to do their job. UPDATE:Scott Lemieux of Lawyers, Guns & Money has a somewhat more colorful version of my assessment of the Bush Administration's pattern of behavior. The Washington Post's report on the cloture vote cites Senator Specter's reaction to the news of the NSA's spying on Americans: Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, called the domestic spying "clearly and categorically wrong" and vowed to hold oversight hearings on the matter when the Senate reconvenes early next year after its holiday recess.And Atrios goes straight to the heart of the matter: How hard it is to get a damn warrant? The reason do such a thing is to simply assert that you can. FURTHER INFO: Phil Carter may be in Iraq these days, but he's not out of touch. He points to Orin Kerr at Volokh, who recommends Judge Sand's opinion in United States v. bin Laden, 126 F.Supp.2d 264 (S.D.N.Y. 2000) (pdf) as a good place to start to understand the legal/constitutional issues. Orin notes: While the statutory privacy laws have an exception for this type of monitoring, see 18 U.S.C. 2511(f), and the constitutional limits on e-mail surveillance are uncertain even in traditional criminal cases, the constitutionality of warrantless interception of telephone calls in situations like this is really murky stuff.Jack Balkin's a bit more blunt: Once you begin with the twin assumptions that (1) emergency justifies suspension of constitutional rights and (2) that the President cannot be bound by the rule of law when he acts as Commander-in-Chief, there is very little left to restrain the President. And so he has not been restrained. The NYT's first response to the heat to come: In response to a question about the timing of the article, Tim Grieve (Salon's War Room) has received a long fax with a statement from Bill Keller: We start with the premise that a newspaper's job is to publish information that is a matter of public interest. Clearly a secret policy reversal that gives an American intelligence agency discretion to monitor communications within the country is a matter of public interest. From the outset, the question was not why we would publish it, but why we would not.As with most such defensive responses, Keller's raises as many questions as answers. He gets the principles right. But he doesn't explain why the NYT, after months of investigation, didn't know what those of us amateurs who only vaguely follow these sorts of "legal constraints on intelligence collection" would have assumed: that disclosing that the Administration had unilaterally expanded its purported authority would not have exposed "any intelligence-gathering methods or capabilities that are not already on the public record." On the face of Keller's remarks, it looks like the NYT editors swallowed the Administration's representations that they were being good boys and, only recently, began asking themselves whether those assurances, and the "national security" hype, were bogus. But the NYT can't come out and say in so many words that they were lied to, so we have to read between Keller's lines. It certainly appears as if the NYT finally figured out that its remaining credibility would have evaporated if the report had been published following the big Patriot Act cloture battle, given the relevance of NSA's activity to the Patriot Act debate. [cross-posted at American Footprints] Thursday, December 15
by
nadezhda
on Thu 15 Dec 2005 12:19 AM EST
Steve Clemons has an extensive sneak peak of an article by Mark Leon Goldberg that will appear today in The American Prospect. Clemons adds his own intel to Goldberg's case that Bolton's back to his old tricks, undermining the Secretary of State as he pursues his own agenda. And that even though there's a new Secretary, State is once again forced to deploy the "put Bolton in the box" strategy.
As I wrote last summer, I was far less outraged than many who had opposed Bolton's appointment by his handling of the vast UN summit agenda when he arrived in New York in August. Quite simply, the draft he was presented was inconsistent with stated Bush Administration policy on a number of fronts. Only last weekend in Montreal, we saw a replay of a similar collision between a broad consensus among most developed countries over global warming and the Bush Administration's long-standing rejection of the Kyoto process. It wasn't a pretty sight, and the head of the US delegation in Montreal was none other than Paula Dobriansky, one of Steve Clemons' favorites to replace Bolton as the nominee for the UN position. So on some matters, it's clearly not the personality, it's the US policy that's the problem. But Goldberg has lots more episodes of more recent vintage where Bolton is described as going against, or actively undermining, Rice's diplomatic efforts. Most notably re Syria. And there's lots of goodies about how Rice and Foggy Bottom are end-running the UN ambassador in order to strike deals with allies and friends. On the matter of the UN budget, which could really provoke a crisis if the US insists on not approving it by December 31, the scuttlebutt is that Bolton managed to get support from the Oval Office to overrule Rice. (See Suzanne Nossel and Morton Halperin at Democracy Arsenal.) It will be interesting to see how much intel Goldberg's managed to collect on that particular conflict. As they say, stay tuned. UPDATE: Mark Leon Goldberg's The Arsonist is now online. As usual, you can follow all the action along with Stygius. To be fair, we should note that quarrels over the US paying its way in the UN, and the potential adverse impact on international peacekeeping efforts, is not purely a Bolton-manufactured problem. Lee Feinstein has just posted a report at America Abroad on several problems rearing their ugly heads in Congress, where the funding of international programs is low on the list of priorities in budget debates. The African Union's inadequate but essential force in Darfur would be one of the casualties. As for UN peacekeeping dues, Biden is trying to make sure that a gap of $25 million gets paid. But as Feinstein points out, it's not entirely a Congressional matter. [I]f Congress gives the administration all the money for UN peacekeeping it has requested ($1.03 billion), there will still be a $500 million gap between what Congress has funded, and the UN bills coming due. The main reason: the administration in March pushed for authorization of the critical UN mission in Sudan (to enforce the north-south agreement), but hasn't yet figured out how the US will foot its share of the bill. This sort of foot-dragging by the US on its commitments, which is not unusual behavior for either Republican or Democratic administrations, makes Bolton's grandstanding on the UN budget all that more difficult for our friends to swallow. But according to Goldberg, that may be one of Bolton's objectives. “The UN is simply one of many competitors in the global marketplace for problem solutions and problem solvers,” he told reporter Mark Turner [from the FT]. “If it is not good at solving problems, Americans will look to some other institution; some other organization; some other framework.” Campaign for the FY07 International Affairs Budget - Act NOW So now you're all steamed up again and revisiting the Bolton battles of last summer, don't just sit there fuming. Yes, there's not much to be done about Ambassador Bolton, at least for the next twelve months until his recess appointment expires. But there is an important step coming up to help address some of the funding problems. That's the Administration's FY07 International Affairs budget request. Right now -- until this Friday -- "sign-on" letters are being circulated in the House and Senate to register Congressional support for an increased budget. The sponsors are Senators DeWine, Feinstein, Smith and Durbin and Representatives Leach and Berman. To date, they have 103 signatures, the majority Democrats. A bipartisan organization of foreign policy heavyweights and American businesses and NGOs, US Global Leadership Campaign, is sponsoring a campaign for people to contact their legislators to encourage them to sign on. Here's their "tool-kit" page with links to information about the International Affairs Budget, the Congressional "sign-on" letters, the "write your legislators" campaign, how to contact legislators on a "priority" list, and even a telephone "script" if you prefer voice over written contact. Just two more days for this round. And then the campaign will gear up again when it's time to debate and pass the budget for FY07. We'll keep you posted. [cross-posted at American Footprints] |
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