New Public Diplomacy Strategies of the Obama Administration

Published in Sohu
(China) on 11 October 2010
by Zhou Wenzhong & Wang Baodong (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Peixin Lin. Edited by Gillian Palmer.
Public diplomacy is an important component of overall diplomacy in the U.S. It mainly refers to the U.S. government’s interactions with the foreign public, including publicity and cultural exchanges. It also includes the related activities of non-governmental U.S. organizations funded or guided by the government.

One of the main motives of publicizing U.S. foreign policies and values to the foreign public is to increase knowledge of the U.S. social system, history, culture and diplomatic policies. This is, in turn, to increase sympathies and support for the U.S., construct beneficial public opinions and thus influence foreign diplomacies and policies dealing with the U.S. in an effort to maintain U.S. interests, safety and global supremacy.

Public Diplomacy Given Unprecedented Importance

Due to national and international developments, the Obama administration made major strategic adjustments to the Bush administration’s hardline unilateral diplomacy, adopting instead a flexible diplomatic strategy. There is now an increased value attached to developing public diplomacy inside and outside of U.S. borders. Thus, public diplomacy is now of unprecedented importance within U.S. diplomacy and foreign relations.

The Obama administration is of the opinion that the globalization of information and development within the communications industry has had an immense impact on the attitudes, speech and actions of the global community. Public opinion now has unprecedented influence on governments and the direction of international politics, even impacting the futures of the U.S. and of the world. With this backdrop, it is of greater importance now than ever for the U.S. to maintain contact with the foreign public through public diplomacy.

In facing a global challenge, the U.S. is adopting an integrated, multilayered public diplomacy strategy — including bowing down and listening attentively — to directly deal with the foreign public and exert influence. In addition, public diplomacy is aimed at two main demographic groups — youths [aged] 25 and under and women, who make up 45 percent and 50 percent of the global population respectively — and includes the explication of targeted strategies and a new public diplomacy agenda.

Using the words of Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Judith McHale, President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton understand that having direct contact with the global public must necessarily become an important aspect of U.S. diplomacy and have walked the walk in making public diplomacy an indispensible strategy in promoting national interests, pursuing diplomacy and ensuring national safety.

Pushing Forward New Public Diplomacy Strategies

Presently, the U.S. State Department is responsible for executing U.S. public diplomacy. In August 2009, the State Department evaluated the state of public diplomacy and public affairs, consulting the opinions gathered from the Congress, the White House Security Council, the Department of Defense, foreign embassies and consulates, the academia, non-governmental organizations and the private sector. Their conclusion is that U.S. public diplomacy has had remarkable results in promoting national interests, and at the same time, there is need to undertake reforms such that public diplomacy complements current U.S. diplomatic focus.

On this basis, the U.S. State Department announced in January 2010 a new global strategic framework for public diplomacy in the 21st century. According to this new strategic framework, the core mission of U.S. public policy is to expand and strengthen the relationship between the U.S. government and the foreign public, actively influence the foreign public, support U.S. foreign policy goals and objectives, advance national interest and improve national security. The U.S. State Department has come up with five strategic imperatives in advancing this new public diplomacy strategy:

1) “Shape the narrative”: strengthen communication with the foreign public on national, regional and global scales to actively publicize the U.S. image.

The U.S. State Department and various U.S. government-linked organizations with global presence need to cooperate, targeting all media contact, to actively promote news in the interests of the U.S. and at the same time quickly react to anti-U.S. discourse, ensuring that there is sufficient U.S. presence and maintaining the right to speech in both traditional and new forms of media that play crucial roles in the dissemination of information and political discourse. In order to strengthen coordination with and influence over foreign media, the U.S. State Department has also established a new office: the Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Media Engagement in the Bureau of Public Affairs.

2) “Expand and strengthen people-to-people relationships”: through the use of U.S. established platforms, keep in contact with both the elite around the world and expand and strengthen relationships with the foreign public.

The U.S. is especially paying attention to the use of online social media, such as Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, to expand contact with the public, ensuring that policy viewpoints are communicated in new social media.

President Obama’s speech on his visit to Ghana in July 2009 was officially broadcast through the integrated use of both traditional and new media, so that the message reached hundreds of millions of Africans.

The U.S. government is also looking to reestablish public spaces in foreign countries called “American centers” or “American corners.” Partnerships will be encouraged with various cultural institutions within the U.S. to promote culture to the foreign public through direct contact, increasing the attractiveness of U.S. domestic and foreign policies and American values.

3) “Combat violent extremism”: rapidly react toward dissemination of anti-American misinformation and the recruitment of new members by extremist groups.

In this area, the U.S. is mainly relying on the traditional media and new media such as the Internet to widely publicize the viewpoint of the U.S. government, strengthen “credibility” and discredit “misinformation.” At the same time, the U.S. is actively promoting training in areas such as sanitation, education and development in areas rampant with extremists, such as the Middle East and Southeast Asia, in order to exert pressure on local religious and secular leaders so as to indirectly influence the public opinion on the U.S. in the area.

4) “Better inform policy-making”: The U.S. State Department and overseas institutions need to strengthen research and planning of public diplomacy to better understand and master attitudes and opinions of the U.S. to better inform strategic planning.

In addition to establishing the office of deputy assistant secretary for international media engagement, additional deputy assistant secretary [positions] for public diplomacy have been created in the department’s six geographical bureaus to ensure that public diplomacy remains in the overall policy consideration of the U.S. and to coordinate regional public diplomacy initiatives and actions.

5) “Deploy resources in line with current priorities”: strengthen internal coordination to ensure public diplomacy remains a priority.

The U.S. State Department has strengthened McHale’s Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs office’s planning and resources, and at the same time, restated long-term strategic goals and performance indicators for all related positions in embassies. Well-defined job scopes ensure the effective allocation of required resources and that public diplomacy complements the current priorities in U.S. diplomacy.

Limits of U.S. Public Policy

Overall, in this era of globalization, information and the Web, as the world’s only superpower, the U.S., with its national strength and intentions, will be able to change its image and protect national interests and national security if it proactively performs public diplomacy.

The U.S. is strengthening public policy only to publicize and export its own ideologies and values, to promote U.S. “liberal democracy” and free market economy and to maintain its global supremacy. Thus, despite advertising “mutual trust and respect” as the principle underlying public diplomacy, as long as the U.S. maintains its bullying nature and does not abandon hard power diplomacy, the effectiveness of public diplomacy is likely to be limited.

(Zhou Wenzhong was the Secretary-General of the Boao Forum for Asia, previous Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs and editor of “Public Diplomacy Quarterly” [Chinese journal]; Wang Baodong is the press counselor of the Chinese Embassy in the U.S. Article has been abridged.)

(Editor: Heng Xiaojing)



奥巴马政府公共外交新战略

 美国公共外交是美国总体外交的重要组成部分。它主要是指美政府针对世界其他国家民众采取的对外宣传和文化教育交流活动,也包括那些受美政府部门指导或资助的美非政府组织针对外国民众进行的相关活动。
  其主要目标是,对外宣传美国的外交政策和价值观,增进外国民众对美社会制度、历史文化和对外政策的了解,赢得他们对美国的同情和支持,营造对美国有利的公共舆论,进而影响外国政府的外交政策和对美政策,以维护美国家利益、国家安全和全球霸主地位。
  被赋予前所未有重要地位
  奥巴马政府执政后,迫于国际形势发展和美内外处境变化,对小布什政府奉行的单边主义强硬外交政策作出了较大策略调整,实施所谓柔性“灵巧”外交战略,更加重视在国际上开展公共外交,并在美总体外交政策和对外战略中赋予公共外交前所未有的重要地位。
  奥巴马政府认为,信息全球化和通讯工业革命对各国公众的态度和言行产生着巨大影响,而公众意见又以前所未有的程度,影响着各国政府和国际事务的走向,甚至影响着美国和世界的未来。在此背景下,美通过公共外交与外国公众打交道变得比以往任何时候都更加重要。
  美国面临的全球挑战,要求其采取综合性、多层面的新的公共外交手段,包括放低身段和注意倾听,与外国公众直接进行交往和施加影响。美国还将公共外交重点放在两个群体上,一是占世界人口45%的25岁以下的青年人,二是占世界人口50%的各国妇女,并有针对性地确定新的对外交往和影响战略以及公共外交新项目。
  用美国务院主管公共事务的副国务卿麦克黑尔女士的话讲,美总统奥巴马和国务卿希拉里都认识到,与世界各国公众直接接触,必须成为美外交政策机制的重要组成部分,并身体力行,将公共外交作为推进美国家利益和对外政策、维护美国家安全的不可或缺的重要手段。
  美国推进新公共外交战略
  目前,美政府内部由国务院具体负责实施美公共外交事务。2009年8月,美国务院对公共外交政策和公共事务现状进行了系统审议,并广泛征求美国会、白宫国安会、国防部、驻外使领馆以及美学术界、非政府组织和私营部门的意见,结论认为,美公共外交对推进美国家利益成效显著,同时需采取变革措施,使其与美当前外交重点相辅相成。
  在此基础上,美国务院于2010年1月制定了面向21世纪的新的公共外交全球战略框架。根据这个新的战略框架,美公共外交的核心任务是,努力扩大和加强美政府和公众与其他国家公众的关系,积极向外国公众施加影响,促进实现美外交政策目标,推进国家利益,提升国家安全。美国务院还确定了开展公共外交的五项优先战略任务:
  第一,从国别、地区和全球等各个层面强化对外沟通影响能力,更加主动地宣传美国家形象。
  美国务院与美派驻全球的各种机构加强协作,重点针对各类新闻媒体制定和实施有针对性的接触计划,大力宣传对美国有利的信息,同时迅速应对反美言论,确保美在信息传播和政策辩论中的各种传统,以及在新型对话中获得充分的话语权。美国务院公共事务局还增设了主管新闻媒体事务的助理国务卿帮办职位,以加强涉及外国媒体事务的协调和领导。
  第二,通过美设立的各种公共外交项目和平台,在保持与各国精英界联系的同时,努力扩大和加强与各国普通民众的关系。
  美尤其重视通过强化使用互联网现代信息技术和脸谱(face book)、优突(youtube)、推特(Twitter)等网络社交平台,积极扩大对外接触面,确保美政策观点在新媒体和对话空间中得到传播。
  2009年7月,美国总统奥巴马访问加纳并发表演讲。美政府通过综合运用传统和新型媒体,最大限度使非洲亿万民众获得了这次演讲传达的信息。
  美政府还准备重新启动在外国公共场所建立所谓“美国中心”和“美国角”的计划,并与美国内各种文化机构合作,对外推广文化项目,直接面向外国公众开展宣传活动,增强美内外政策和价值观对外国公众的吸引力。
  第三,针对美是国际恐怖极端势力打击的头号目标这一现实,美政府及其驻外使领馆在国际上强化对国家形象正面宣传的同时,着力对暴力恐怖极端势力散布的反美信息和招揽新成员的宣传作出迅速反应。
  在这方面,美国主要也是依靠其拥有的强大传统新闻媒体和互联网等新媒体传播技术,广泛宣传美国政府观点,增强所谓“可信的声音”,反击“错误信息和虚假信息”。同时,美在中东、东南亚等恐怖极端势力猖獗的地区,积极开展卫生、教育、发展等领域的培训活动,对当地的宗教和世俗头面人物施加影响,并通过他们影响当地民众对美国的看法。
  第四,美国务院及驻外机构加强有关公共外交的研究和规划职能,更好了解和掌握外国公众对美国的态度和看法,为美开展全球公共外交提供更好的决策信息。
  美国务院内部除在其公共事务局增设主管新闻媒体事务的助理国务卿帮办职位外,还在各地区事务局设立负责公共外交事务的助理国务卿帮办职位,负责确保将公共外交纳入美总体外交政策考量之中,并协调涉及其所在地区的所有公共外交倡议和行动。
  第五,加强美国务院的内部协调和公共外交资源配置,使之服务于外交政策优先目标。
  美国务院加强了麦克黑尔副国务卿办公室的政策规划和资源运用职能,同时为美各驻外使领馆所有公共外交岗位重新制定长期工作规划和绩效评估机制,明确其职责和任务,并配置有效开展公共外交活动所必需的资源,确保开展的公共外交活动与美全球战略目标和当前优先外交任务相吻合。
  美国公共外交的限度
  总的来看,在全球化、信息化和互联网时代,美作为当今世界唯一超级大国,凭借其强大的综合国力支持和积极的进取心,在国际上大力推进公共外交,有助于改善美国国际形象,维护美国国家利益和国家安全。
  但美国加强公共外交的根本目的,是对外宣扬和输出美意识形态和价值观,推行美式“自由民主制度”和自由市场经济,为维护美全球霸主地位服务。尽管美国标榜本着“互信和尊重”的原则开展公共外交,但只要美骨子里不改变恃强凌弱的本性,不放弃强权外交,其公共外交成效恐怕是有限度的。
  (周文重系博鳌亚洲论坛秘书长、外交部原副部长、《公共外交季刊》编委;王保东系中国驻美国大使馆负责公共外交的参赞。文章有删节)
(责任编辑:Hengxiaojing)
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