Clearly, judging by his most recently released tape Osama bin
Laden "had some work done," as they say. Sporting a newly darkened
beard, he reminded the world on the anniversary of September 11
that he's still around, three years after his last
appearance.
The interpretation of the strange emanation offered by
Undersecretary of State Karen Hughes in Monday's Washington Post is
that radical Islam is in fact losing public support across the
world, and that bin Laden is trying to rally his supporters. This
would perhaps not be entirely surprising given what it has to offer
- death, destruction and violent oppression even of Muslims
themselves.
"What is new," so she writes, "is the dramatic decline in his
standing in majority-Muslim countries. Polls in the two nations
that have suffered some of the worst of al-Qaeda's violence -
Afghanistan and Iraq - show that more than 90 percent of those
populations have unfavorable views of al-Qaeda and of bin Laden
himself." This decline is not limited to those two countries, but
registers throughout the Muslim world, where support for suicide
bombings - according to the Pew Global Attitudes project - are
down. Five years ago, 74 percent of Lebanese thought suicide
bombing was an acceptable tactic. Today, the number is down to 37
percent, too much, but certainly a change. In Bangladesh, Pakistan,
Indonesia and Jordan the story is the same.
While these trends present a great opportunity for the United
States and its allies in the war on terror, whether America's
public diplomacy programs actually can take credit for any of this
sea change is open to debate.
Under Mrs. Hughes a good deal of work has been done to remedy some
of the damage done when the U.S. Information Agency was folded into
the State Department in 1999. Yet, while Mrs. Hughes extols the
empowering of young Arabs by teaching them English, the Bush
administration has shortsightedly proposed effective cuts in its
international broadcasting budget at a time when growth is
needed.
In the 2008 state and foreign operations appropriations bill,
which is currently in conference, Congress added $14 million to the
president's budget for international broadcasting for a total
budget of $682.3 million for 2008. This has meant not only a
reduction in languages (Georgian, for instance), but also the
elimination of English-language programs.
Now, the decision to allocate money for international broadcasting
rests with the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG), on which Mrs.
Hughes serves as one of nine members, representing the secretary of
state. Originally created to establish a firewall of protection
between the State Department and the international broadcasters,
the best known of which are Voice of America, Radio Liberty and
Radio Free Europe, the board has unfortunately become part of the
problem. With no strong executive, each board member has his own
fiefdom of services.
What is needed in the fight for hearts and minds of Muslims
throughout the world is coordinated leadership from the White
House. On the BBG, Congress needs to rewrite its charter to give a
strong board chairman the power and control to be a real executive,
who reports not only to the board, but also to the White House,
from which public diplomacy strategy ought to emanate. Also very
much needed is interagency coordination at the level of the
National Security Council, with a sense of urgency that accompanies
a top national security objective.
Presidential leadership and NSC coordination had everything to do
with the success of U.S. public diplomacy in the Cold War under
Ronald Reagan. In a paper released this week by the Heritage
Foundation, "Public Diplomacy and the Cold War: Lessons Learned,"
Carnes Lord argues precisely this point.
Under Ronald Reagan, the Great Communicator, the leadership on
public diplomacy would come from the White House. National Security
Directive 77, "Management of Public Diplomacy Relative to National
Security," established an interagency Special Planning Group under
the national security adviser. This group had oversight of various
planning committees, including the Public Affairs Committee and the
International Broadcasting Committee. At this time, the State
Department was also brought in as a full partner, one of whose key
activities was "Project Democracy," announced by Mr. Reagan in his
famous "ash heap of history" speech at Westminster in 1982.
By pushing for such changes, President Bush and his team could
enable his successor to grapple more effectively with the
challenges of a world where ideological and religious struggles
will remain fundamental foreign policy challenges.
Helle Dale is director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in the Washington Times