Amerika yang demikian yang dibenci oleh semua! Representasi klasik kekuatan
imperium yang targetnya hanya menguasai world resources at all cost! Masih
ada yang ingin membela Amerika dan mengorbankan saudara seiman sendiri? Poor
souls...!

===

13 - 19 September 2007
Issue No. 862


In the opening years of this century, the world was presented with a
historic confrontation between the West and Islamic and Arab worlds. This
confrontation has been used in the pursuit of imperial agendas. American
failure in Iraq has left underlying reasons exposed. Can the damage done be
repaired?
Losing hearts and minds In its attempts to counter the backlash from its
policies, Washington has failed to draw Arabs to its side, writes *Amr
Hamzawi** <http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2007/862/sc2.htm#1>
------------------------------

It is virtually axiomatic that the major trends of US policy in the Middle
East today are directly linked to the aftermath of 11 September, 2001. The
war against terrorism, the invasion of Afghanistan, the occupation of Iraq,
the policies of regime change and promoting democratisation in the Arab
world have shaped the political scenery of the Middle East and have led the
US to become the major player in one of the world's tensest and most
trouble-ridden regions. Has this superpower succeeded, in the course of the
past six years, in safeguarding its interests and eliminating what it
regards as its main potential threats? Otherwise put, in political-strategic
terms, is Washington better off today in the Middle East than it was before
September 2001?

There is no need to recapitulate the developments during this period to
determine that the balance sheet of gains and losses clearly shows that the
threats to American interests are much graver and more diverse than they
were before 2001. Indeed, for the first time since the collapse of the
Soviet Union in the beginning of the 1990s there has emerged a regional
axis, lead by Iran, antagonistic towards the US and keen to defy the
American enterprise for regional and international hegemony.

No less dismal a failure is the Bush administration's attempt, in the
aftermath of September 2001, to reshape Arab public opinion of the US and of
US policy in the Middle East through the exercise of so-called instruments
of "soft power". The energetic public diplomacy programme, as epitomised by
the establishment of Al-Hurra, or "Freedom TV", and Sawa Radio using native
Arabic speakers, fell a long way short of winning the battle for the hearts
and minds of the Arab people. Recent opinion polls, many conducted by
American research centres, reveal that these television and radio stations
attracted only a smattering of Arab audiences and that from Morocco to
Bahrain, Arab opinion of US policy is more negative than ever.

In large part this failure of public diplomacy is the product of an
inappropriately designed approach, based almost exclusively as it was on the
concept that governed Washington's media and propaganda campaign targeting
the socialist bloc during the Cold War. Whether out of naiveté or pure
ignorance, the architects of this project ignored the fundamental difference
between the people of Eastern Europe, the majority of whom were fascinated
by the Western way of life and who would tune into Radio Free Europe and
seize whatever opportunities they could to read American and Western
European publications, in spite of the considerable risks they faced in
their police states, and the people of the Arab world who, when thinking
about America, are concerned above all about American policies towards the
Middle East and who regard these policies as hostile to Arab rights and
causes and relentlessly biased in favour of Israel. Any media directed
towards Arab audiences that could not address this concern, simply because
it could not alter the facts, was doomed to lack credibility.

But the architects of policies that gave rise to Al-Hurra TV and Sawa Radio
overlooked a more glaring difference between socialist Eastern Europe and
the Arab world. In Poland and East Germany in the 1970s and 1980s, people
had only the choice between their own state-run media and the more enticing
state-run media from the West. Arab audiences at the beginning of the 21st
century are inundated with choices, not only from land-based broadcasting
stations in Cairo, Riyadh and Amman, but also from satellite networks.
Al-Hurra and Sawa could not even begin to compete on the open airwaves with
such much more attractive and sophisticated stations as Al-Jazeera and
Al-Arabiya.

But there is also a technical reason for this failure. As though it was not
a difficult enough task to improve the image of the US in the Arab world at
a time when this superpower has forces occupying an Arab country that is
undergoing horrifying tensions and upheavals, and at a time when it
encouraged its Israeli ally to go on the offensive against another Arab
country in the hope of altering the map of regional alliances, the American
media targeting the Arab world was consistently poorly managed. Programming
and the substance of programmes never went beyond the blatantly
propagandistic campaign to vindicate American policies. How could it
possibly succeed?

The Bush administration lost the battle to win Arab hearts and minds. It is
difficult to foresee any reversal of US fortunes any time in the near
future.

** The writer is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace.*



-- 
Sesungguhnya, hanya dengan mengingat Allah, hati akan tenang


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