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TacticalPeek Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 02:12 AM
Original message
The new Pentagon Paper - Sidney Blumenthal, Salon
The new Pentagon Paper

A scathing top-level report, intended for internal consumption, says that Bush's "war on terrorism" is an unmitigated disaster. Of course, the administration is ignoring it.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Sidney Blumenthal



Dec. 2, 2004 | Who wrote this—a pop sociologist, obscure blogger or antiwar playwright? "Finally, Muslims see Americans as strangely narcissistic -- namely, that the war is all about us. As the Muslims see it, everything about the war is -- for Americans -- really no more than an extension of American domestic politics and its great game. This perception is of course necessarily heightened by election-year atmospherics, but nonetheless sustains their impression that when Americans talk to Muslims they are really just talking to themselves."

This passage is not psychobabble, punditry or monologue. It is a conclusion of the Report of the Defense Science Board Task Force on Strategic Communication, the product of a Pentagon advisory panel, delivered in September, its 102 pages not released to the public during the presidential campaign, but silently slipped it on to a Pentagon Web site on Thanksgiving eve, and barely noticed by the U.S. press.

...

The task force discovered more than a chaotic vacuum, a government sector "in crisis," though it found that, too: "Missing are strong leadership, strategic direction, adequate coordination, sufficient resources, and a culture of measurement and evaluation." Inevitably, as it journeyed deeper into the recesses of the Bush administration's foreign policy, the task force documented the unparalleled failure of its fundamental premises. "America's negative image in world opinion and diminished ability to persuade are consequences of factors other than the failure to implement communications strategies," the report declares. What emerges in this new Pentagon paper is a scathing indictment of an expanding and unmitigated disaster based on stubborn ignorance of the world and failed concepts that bear little relation to empirical reality except insofar as they confirm and incite gathering hatred among Muslims.

The Bush administration, according to the Defense Science Board, has misconceived a war on terrorism in the image of the Cold War -- "reflexively" and "without a thought or a care as to whether these were the best responses to a very different strategic situation." Yet the administration seeks out "Cold War models" to cast this "war" against "totalitarian evil." However, the struggle is not the West vs. Islam; nor is it "against the tactic of terrorism." "This is no Cold War," the report insists. While we blindly and confidently call this a "war on terrorism," Muslims "in contrast see a history-shaking movement of Islamic restoration" against "apostate" Arab regimes allied with the U.S. and "Western Modernity -- an agenda hidden within the official rubric of a 'War on Terrorism.'"


more
http://www.salon.com/opinion (get the free day pass)


The report is here (pdf): http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports/2004-09-Strategic_Communication.pdf

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Rumba Donating Member (277 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 02:26 AM
Response to Original message
1.  See section 1.2, starting on page 14.
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grasswire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 03:07 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. would you kindly mind....
....copying that here for people who have trouble opening long pdfs?

Thanks.
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Rumba Donating Member (277 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 03:16 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. You can't copy from PDFs

Or at least I can't. That's part of why the format is used to distribute "official documents".
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NVMojo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 09:08 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. unless a pdf is locked, it can be copied
by clicking on the text tool in adobe reader, highlighting the sections of text on each page that you want, go up to edit, click "copy" and then take yourself to a word doc or to the internet site you want to paste it to, then place your cursor where you want it and then right click and click "paste" ...

here's page 1 of the report:

Executive Summary
The Defense Science Board Summer Study on the Transition to and from Hostilities was
formed in early 2004 (the terms of reference are contained in Appendix A) and
culminated in the production of a final report and summary briefing in August of 2004.
The DSB Task Force on Strategic Communication conducted its deliberations within the
overall Summer Study schedule and revisited a topic that was addressed in October
2001.1 Task Force members and Government advisors are identified in Appendix B. The
current Strategic Communication Task Force re-examined the purposes of strategic
communication and the salience of recommendations in the earlier study. It then
considered the following questions:
(1) What are the consequences of changes in the strategic communication environment?
(2) What Presidential direction and strategic communication means are required?
(3) What should be done about public diplomacy and open military information
operations?
The Task Force met with representatives from the National Security Council (NSC),
White House Office of Global Communications, Department of State (DOS), Department
of Defense (DOD), Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG), and the private sector (the
schedule of meetings, briefings and discussions is contained in Appendix C). Based on
extensive interaction with a broad range of sectors in the government, commercial, and
academic worlds, as well as a series of highly interactive internal debates, we have
reached the following conclusions and recommendations.
This Task Force concludes that U.S. strategic communication must be transformed.
America’s negative image in world opinion and diminished ability to persuade are
1 Report of the Defense Science Board Task Force on Managed Information Dissemination, October 2001,
http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/. The report was briefed to the Secretary of Defense, the Under Secretary of
State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs, the Under Secretary of State for Management, and the
National Security Council’s Senior Advisor for Strategic Communications and Information and Senior
Advisor for Democracy, Human Rights, and International Operations.
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Rumba Donating Member (277 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 10:37 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. Didn't know that!

Thanks!
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charlie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 03:20 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. Formatting is borked
but here you go:

14
1.2 The New Strategic Communication Environment
Anti-American attitudes. Opinion surveys conducted by Zogby International, the Pew
Research Center, Gallup (CNN/USA Today), and the Department of State (INR) reveal
widespread animosity toward the United States and its policies. A year and a half after
15
going to war in Iraq, Arab/Muslim anger has intensified. Data from Zogby International
in July 2004, for example, show that the U.S. is viewed unfavorably by overwhelming
majorities in Egypt (98 percent), Saudi Arabia (94 percent), Morocco (88 percent), and
Jordan (78 percent). The war has increased mistrust of America in Europe, weakened
support for the war on terrorism, and undermined U.S. credibility worldwide. Media
commentary is consistent with polling data. In a State Department (INR) survey of
editorials and op-eds in 72 countries, 82.5 % of commentaries were negative, 17.5%
positive.3
Negative attitudes and the conditions that create them are the underlying sources of
threats to America’s national security and reduced ability to leverage diplomatic
opportunities. Terrorism, thin coalitions, harmful effects on business, restrictions on
travel, declines in cross border tourism and education flows, and damaging consequences
for other elements of U.S. soft power are tactical manifestations of a pervasive
atmosphere of hostility.
Although many observers correlate anti-Americanism with deficiencies in U.S. public
diplomacy (its content, tone, and competence), the effectiveness of the means used to
influence public opinion is only one metric. Policies, conflicts of interest, cultural
differences, memories, time, dependence on mediated information, and other factors
shape perceptions and limit the effectiveness of strategic communication.
Perceptions of public diplomacy in crisis. Since the Defense Science Board’s October
2001 Task Force study, more than 15 private sector and Congressional reports have
examined public diplomacy: the Advisory Group on Public Diplomacy for the Arab and
3 Impressions of America 2004: How Arabs View America; How Arabs Learn About America, Zogby
International, July 2004; Views of a Changing World 2003: War With Iraq Further Divides Global Publics,
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, June 3, 2004; A Year After Iraq War Mistrust of America
in Europe Ever Higher, Muslim Anger Persists, Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, March 16,
2004; Iraq One Year Later: Global Media Assessment Largely Negative, U.S. Department of State, Office
of Research, April 29, 2004; Views from the Muslim World: Opposition to U.S. Foreign Policy Contrasts
with Admiration for American Innovation and Education, U.S. Department of State Office of Research,
March 31, 2003.
16
Muslim World (“Djerejian group”), the Council on Foreign Relations, The Heritage
Foundation, The Brookings Institution, The Aspen Institute, the Public Diplomacy
Institute, the Center for the Study of the Presidency, and several reports each by the U.S.
Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, the U.S. General Accounting Office, and
Congressional committees.4
There is consensus in these reports that U.S. public diplomacy is in crisis.5 Missing are
strong leadership, strategic direction, adequate coordination, sufficient resources, and a
culture of measurement and evaluation. America’s image problem, many suggest, is
linked to perceptions of the United States as arrogant, hypocritical, and self-indulgent.
There is agreement too that public diplomacy could be a powerful asset with stronger
Presidential leadership, Congressional support, inter-agency coordination, partnership
with the private sector, and resources (people, tools, structures, programs, funding).
Solutions lie not in short term, manipulative public relations. Results will depend on
fundamental transformation of strategic communication instruments and a sustained long
term, approach at the level of ideas, cultures, and values.
The number and depth of these reports indicate widespread concern among influential
observers that something must be done about public diplomacy. But so far these
concerns have produced no real change. The White House has paid little attention.
Congressional actions have been limited to informational hearings and funding for
Middle East broadcasting initiatives, Radio Sawa and Al Hurra. State Department and
Broadcasting Board of Governors responses to Congress and the General Accounting
Office (GAO) were not at the strategic level.
One limitation of these post-9/11 studies is that most did not look comprehensively at
civilian and military strategic communication assets. Several called for strategic
4 These reports are listed in Appendix E
5 Barry Fulton, Taking the Pulse of American Public Diplomacy in a Post-9/11 World, Paper presented at
the annual meeting of the International Studies Association, Montreal, March 18, 2004.
17
direction by the White House or the NSC. Some examined only State Department public
diplomacy programs, others U.S. international broadcasting, others both.
Terrorism as a national security frame. The events of September 11, 2001 were a
catalyst in creating a new way to think about national security. The Global War on
Terrorism replaced the Cold War as a national security meta narrative. Governments,
media, and publics use the terrorism frame for cognitive, evaluative, and communication
purposes. For political leaders, it is a way to link disparate events; identify priorities,
friends, enemies, victims, and blame; and shape simple coherent messages. For
journalists and news consumers the terrorism frame conflates and appears to make sense
of diverse national security stories – Al Qaeda, Jihadists, Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel, Iran,
Chechnya, Indonesia, Kashmir, the Philippines, Kenya, Spain.6
Frames simplify and help to communicate complex events. But like the Cold War frame,
the terrorism frame marginalizes other significant issues and problems: failing states,
non-proliferation, HIV/AIDS pandemic, economic globalization, transnational threats
other than terrorism, and global warming. Often the terrorism frame directs attention to
tactics not strategy. The focus is more on capturing and killing terrorists than attitudinal,
political, and economic forces that are the underlying source of threats and opportunities
in national security.
Volatile Islam. Islam’s internal and external struggle over values, identity, and change is
the dominant political arena in which strategic communication takes place. Analysts
differ on causes and consequences. But there is widespread agreement that terrorist
networks are symptomatic of a broader transformation within Islam and a continuation of
the 20th century conflict between tolerance and totalitarianism. Islam’s crisis must be
understood as a contest of ideas and engaged accordingly.7
6 Pippa Norris, Montague Kern, and Marion Just, eds., Framing Terrorism: The News Media, the
Government, and the Public, (Routledge, 2003); Robert M. Entman, Projections of Power: Framing News,
Public Opinion, and U.S. Foreign Policy, (The University of Chicago Press, 2004).
7 The literature on the struggle of ideas in Islam substantial. Particularly useful for strategic
communication are Cheryl Benard, Civil Democratic Islam: Partners, Resources, and Strategies, Rand
18
Islam’s struggle raises critical considerations for strategic communication:
• The contest of ideas is taking place not just in Arab and other Islamic countries but in
the cities and villages of Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Western Hemisphere.
• U.S. policies on Israeli-Palestinian issues and Iraq in 2003-2004 have damaged
America’s credibility and power to persuade.
• The hostile atmosphere in which terrorists act is reinforced by religious messages,
sophisticated media strategies, and advanced information technologies.
• Regimes based on consent may be intolerant and oppose U.S. policies.
• More sophisticated influence and attitudinal segmentation models are needed.
• Strategists face difficult trade-offs in determining feasible choices and funding
priorities in using persuasive, cooperative, and coercive instruments of power.8
New Arab Media. Satellite television, FM radio, international newspapers edited in
London and transmitted by satellite for printing in capitals throughout the Arab world,
and growing Internet penetration are creating a complex Arab media environment no
longer dominated by state-sponsored media. Qatar’s Al Jazeera, launched in 1996, is the
best known satellite TV network, but Saudi MBC, Lebanon’s LBC-al Hayat, Abu Dhabi
TV, Dubai-based Al Arabiya and other stations are contesting Al Jazeera with lively
news and talk shows that spark political argument in homes and cafes throughout the
Middle East.9
Greater amounts of real time information and decreasing costs are severely challenging
state censors and changing the ways governments interact with their citizens. Arabs in
the region and in Arab diasporas throughout the world increasingly see and read the same
information with consequences for Arab self-identity. Although Internet use in the
Corporation, 2003; Michael Vlahos, Terror’s Mask: Insurgency Within Islam, Applied Physics Laboratory,
Johns Hopkins University, 2002; Paul Berman, Terror and Liberalism, (W.W. Norton & Company, 2003);
Changing Minds, Winning Peace, Report of the (Djerejian) Advisory Group on Public Diplomacy for the
Arab and Muslim World, October 1, 2003, http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/24882.pdf.
8
The Task Force addresses many of these issues in Chapters 2 and 3 of this report.
9
Marc Lynch, “Taking Arabs Seriously,” Foreign Affairs, September/October, 2003, pp. 81-94; William
A. Rugh, Arab Mass Media: Newspapers, Radio, and Television in Arab Politics, (Praeger, 2004).
19
Middle East is the lowest in the world, this digital divide is narrowing, and cyberspace is
an arena for both conflict and conflict resolution in the region. These new Arab media
are creating the frames within which people understand and misunderstand events and
U.S. political goals.
Global transparency. Al Jazeera, CNN, and other television networks dominate
discussion of the information and media environment. But a host of information
technologies — in addition to satellite TV — are creating greater global transparency:
cell phones, wireless handhelds, videophones, camcorders, digital cameras, miniaturized
fly away units used by TV crews in remote locations, high resolution commercial space
imaging, blogs, and email. Many are cheap; costs are declining.10
These technologies have consequences for all three stakeholders in strategic
communication: governments, media, and publics. Policymakers, diplomats, and
military leaders face more breaking news from more places in a reactive mode.
Journalists rely less on “institutionally based news” (i.e., official sources, press
conferences). Publics (i.e., NGOs, image activists, soldiers with digital cameras) can
drive perceptions and policies with pictures and stories.
Transparency creates threats and opportunities – and changes in the strategy/tactics
dynamic. Tactical events can instantly become strategic problems (digital cameras in
Abu Ghraib). On the other hand, transparency can show strategic threats more clearly
and enhance the capacity to undercut an opponent’s political will and ability to mislead
(embedded media in Iraq).
Transparency is only one element in a global environment characterized also by faster
rates of change, shorter reaction times, asymmetry, interconnectivity, decentralization,
disintermediation, declining communication costs, content/transport disconnects, multiple
channels, more narrowcasting, Internet penetration at rates exceeding earlier
10 Steven Livingston, “Diplomacy in the New Information Environment,” Georgetown Journal of
International Affairs, Summer/Fall 2003, pp. 111-116.
technologies, greater volumes of information in less time, pervasive feelings of
saturation, short news and memory cycles, digital divides, and interactive tensions
between fragmenting consequences of conflict and integrative effects of cooperation.
There are critical consequences for strategic communication. New information
technologies often separate information from the sender’s identity and the social frames
that provide credibility and meaning. Social context on the Internet, for example, is not
self-evident. Nor is the identity of those who generate information.11 Terrorists use
websites in ways that mask their agendas. Their web-based narratives usually do not
celebrate violence so as to elicit sympathy and resonate with supporters.
Information saturation means attention, not information, becomes a scarce resource.
Power flows to credible messengers. Asymmetrical credibility matters. What's around
information is critical. Reputations count. Brands are important. Editors, filters, and cue
givers are influential. Fifty years ago political struggles were about the ability to control
and transmit scarce information. Today, political struggles are about the creation and
destruction of credibility.12
Strategic communicators need to understand this new information environment, train for
it, and deal with it.
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berni_mccoy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 10:54 AM
Response to Reply #4
7. Wow, these people really are evil
Check out this quote:
"Transparency creates threats and opportunities – and changes in the strategy/tactics dynamic. Tactical events can instantly become strategic problems (digital cameras in Abu Ghraib). On the other hand, transparency can show strategic threats more clearly and enhance the capacity to undercut an opponent’s political will and ability to mislead (embedded media in Iraq)."

So cameras in Abu Ghraib was a strategic problem for a 'tactical event'?!?!?
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kskiska Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 02:29 PM
Response to Original message
8. Same article, different headline is in the Guardian
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leftchick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 06:14 PM
Response to Reply #8
15. Thank You kskiska!
and printer friendly too! :)
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JDPriestly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 03:36 PM
Response to Original message
9. Question
Edited on Thu Dec-02-04 03:37 PM by JDPriestly
Don't we first need to make sure that our own government REALLY subscribes to these traditional American values?

"Respect for human dignity and individual rights
Individual education and economic opportunity
Personal freedom, safety and mobility"

page 64 of the 111 in the PDF doc.

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nadinbrzezinski Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 03:39 PM
Response to Reply #9
10. Yes now create the frame for john q citizen
You are under attack. They are attacking you. Remember stay away from the fear component, that triggers the conservative in people... aka the daddy component
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The Stranger Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 03:42 PM
Response to Original message
11. Even there were anything in it, the media would bury it.
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Nordic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 04:03 PM
Response to Original message
12. the mainstream media will never cover this
Which is why we should burn them to the ground
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JNelson6563 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 04:31 PM
Response to Original message
13. kick to keep on pg. 1
Zowie! Great stuff!
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understandinglife Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 06:06 PM
Response to Original message
14. Excellent post; thank you. Problem is the osd site...
....is getting hammered.

Any way for DU to host a copy of the .pdf file?

If not, I'll try again sometime between 1 and 4am EST.

Thank you.

"I Declare The 2004 Election Invalid: Someone I do not know was prevented from voting"

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leftchick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 06:16 PM
Response to Original message
16. remember the good old days....
when something as dramatic as this made front page of the NYT?

:(
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