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A Brief Word From the MSM

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

For reasons that are obscure to me, a staffer at CBS named Jen felt it was important that I share this embed of Lara Logan recounting the risks of reporting recently in Afghanistan. There’s also a camera guy named Ray who is a Vietnam veteran and a former Marine who is kind of an interesting character in his own right. Since a number of ZP readers are either there now, have been to or are going to Afghanistan soon or are Marines or are veterans of the war in Vietnam – this might possibly be of some interest to them.

And with that, here you go, Jen.

UPDATE:

Heh. This video is best viewed in iE and not Chrome or some other browser.

Lexington Green and the Glenn Beck Show

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

My fellow Chicago Boyz blogger and co-author, Lexington Green, has hit the big time – as a story on the nationally broadcast Glenn Beck Program . Having written an incisive post on the strategic Boydian aspect of Beck’s recent rally at The Lincoln Memorial, Lex today discovered that his analysis would be read on the air by Beck himself:

Glenn Beck: This guy gets it

GLENN: All right. So this guy, Lexington Green, I’m assuming that’s not his real name, writes in Chicagoboyz.net: I think I see what Glenn Beck is doing.

I think this is the only guy that really gets it. The Glenn Beck rally is confusing people. Why? He is aiming far beyond what most people consider to be the goalposts. Using Boyd’s continuum for war, which, you are all for that one, right, Pat?

PAT: Sure. Boyd’s continuum? How many times have we talked about Boyd’s continuum?

GLENN: Okay. Well, let’s make it once. Material, intellectual, and moral. He is using for political change elections, institutions and culture. Beck sees correctly that the conservative movement has only had limited success because it’s good at Level 1, the elections, for a while. Weak at Level 2, institutions. And barely touched Level 3, culture. Talk radio and the tea party are Level 3 phenomena, popular outbreaks which are blowing back into politics. Someone who asks what the rally has to do with the 2010 election is missing the point. Beck is building solidarity and cultural confidence listen to this. This is it.

PAT: A smart guy…..

Agreed. 

Read the rest of the transcript or listen to the audio here.

I have never watched Glenn Beck on TV, except a brief snippet of his interview with Sarah Palin, but as a major media personality, it was very gracious of him to reach out and acknowledge Lexington Green. That level of exposure is something that has been a long time coming for Lex, and IMHO, it is richly deserved.

Having gotten to know Lex in the last few years well enough to call him a friend, and having been a guest a number of times at his book-lined home, I can attest that Lex’s keen intellect and depth of knowledge gives his writing the cultural verve that deserves a larger audience than our humble corner of the mil/strategy blogosphere. He’s one of those small minority of bloggers toiling out there who has the right stuff to play at a much higher level.

Congrats Mr. Green!

Armstrong on “Making American Public Diplomacy Safe for Americans”

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Blogfriend and public diplomacy expert Matt Armstrong of MountainRunner has a new op-ed at World Politics Review:

Reforming Smith-Mundt: Making American Public Diplomacy Safe for Americans

American public diplomacy has been the subject of many reports and much discussion over the past few years. But one rarely examined element is the true impact of the Smith-Mundt Act of 1948, which for all practical purposes labels U.S. public diplomacy and government broadcasting as propaganda. The law imposes a geographic segregation of audiences between those inside the U.S. and those outside it, based on the fear that content aimed at audiences abroad might “spill over” into the U.S. This not only shows a lack of confidence and understanding of U.S. public diplomacy and international broadcasting, it also ignores the ways in which information and people now move across porous, often non-existent borders with incredible speed and ease, to both create and empower dynamic diasporas.

The impact of the “firewall” created by Smith-Mundt between domestic and foreign audiences is profound and often ignored. Ask a citizen of any other democracy what they think about this firewall and you’re likely to get a blank, confused stare: Why — and how — would such a thing exist? No other country, except perhaps North Korea and China, prevents its own people from knowing what is said and done in their name.

But in hiding from the public, Congress, and even the rest of the government what the U.S. government says and does abroad, this imaginary separation between foreign and domestic audiences reduces awareness of the State Department’s effectiveness (as well as that of USAID and the Millennium Challenge Corporation), increases the cost of engagement while decreasing overall effectiveness, and limits accountability. Its negative impact on the State Department, in particular, helped propel the militarization of U.S. public diplomacy, as the Defense Department stepped in, clumsily, to fill gaps left by ineffectual or absent civilian efforts. Overall, Smith-Mundt is a lose-lose scenario for the American public and people around the world.

Read the rest here.

The Runaway Reporter: McChrystal Revisited

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Michael Hastings of Rolling Stone Magazine

Army Times (Sean Naylor) – Sources: Rolling Stone quotes made by jr. staff

Huffington Post (Jason Linkins) – Michael Hastings, Rolling Stone Reporter, Inks Book Deal With Little Brown

It looks increasingly like recently resigned General Stanley McChrystal is partly the victim of an ambitious, lefty, reporter who was motivated by political sentiments and the prospect of financial gain to seriously misrepresent the context of comments made during his profile interviews with General McChrystal and McChrystal’s staff. Michael Hastings implied that the most derogatory and offensive comments emanated from the senior officials in MChrystal’s inner circle ( flag officers and colonels) when they were allegedly offhand comments from junior officers assigned to clerical or orderly type duties. No word on when Hastings had begun his negotiations with publisher Little, Brown & co. but if he had begun before publication of “The Runaway General” it would seem to me to be a serious breach of journalistic ethics.

Let’s not hold our breath waiting for Rolling Stone to investigate the integrity of their reporter’s journalistic work. 

As for General McChrystal, his staff has served him poorly, both by inviting a reporter with Hastings background and in trusting Hastings with colorful and highly damaging “off the record” statements in violation of basic military public relations  practice and common sense. Captains and majors are certainly old enough to know better and someone higher up on McChrystal’s staff should have been alert to the possibility of a “hit piece” and run interference to make certain that the interviews were all on the record and professional and not conducted after hours in a bar with staff members drinking heavily. Senior staff are supposed to look out for their boss at that level.

That said, General McChrystal’s offense here, while still a serious gaffe, has a different and mitigated character from how matters first appeared and my previous criticism of him was harsher than his actions deserved.

David Kilcullen with Diane Sawyer

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Dr. Kilcullen seems to have charmed Diane Sawyer quite handily, who gave a nice plug for his new book Counterinsurgency.

Hat tip to SWJ Blog.


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