Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Blogs - The New Diplomacy?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Blogs - The New Diplomacy?

    BLOGS - THE NEW DIPLOMACY?
    By Paul Reynolds

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/ africa/6083632.stm
    Published: 2006/10/25 17:57:05 GMT

    The attack on the government of Sudan by the UN's envoy Jan Pronk
    has perhaps pointed the way to a new kind of direct diplomacy -
    the diplomat's blog.

    Mr Pronk was expelled from Sudan after government anger at comments
    he made on his personal website. The government accused him of
    "psychological warfare" after he wrote that government forces had
    suffered two defeats in Darfur and that it had broken Security
    Council resolutions.

    The former Dutch cabinet minister is no stranger to controversy but
    his use of the internet to publicise his views is new and daring in
    diplomacy, which traditionally favours discretion.

    His blog was startlingly detailed, the kind of information that is
    normally sent back, encoded, only to national capitals. Sometimes in a
    one-on-one talk, a journalist can get something similar from a lively
    envoy, but to get it in the raw on the internet is an innovation.

    For example, Mr Pronk wrote of Darfur: "The morale in the government
    army in North Darfur has gone down. Some generals have been sacked;
    soldiers have refused to fight... Security Council resolutions which
    forbid armed mobilisation are being violated."

    He is given to public pronouncements on foreign policy. He once
    called for an "Iraq-style" intervention in Bosnia (Iraq-style as in
    the 1991 war to expel Iraq from Kuwait) long before the outside world
    took action.

    When the Serbs massacred Bosnian Muslims following the fall of
    Srebrenica, he was a cabinet minister. He immediately and publicly
    accused the Serbs of genocide. He then criticised the performance of
    the Dutch troops who were supposed to defend the town and resigned
    himself, followed by the whole government the next day.

    Uzbek example

    Another turbulent diplomat who would have loved a blog when he was
    trying to get his message over was Craig Murray, the British ambassador
    to Uzbekistan between 2002 and 2004. He eventually fell out with the
    Foreign Office over his public criticism of the Uzbek government's
    human rights record.

    You should be able to say more of what you really think - you can't
    have a cocktail party relationship with a fascist regime Craig Murray
    Former UK ambassador in Uzbekistan He is now a private citizen but
    still campaigns and uses a blog to do so.

    "I would have loved a blog when I was an ambassador, but they were
    not really invented then and I doubt even now if the Foreign Office
    knows what they are," he told me.

    "I did get permission for a speech I made making my views public but
    I was told that approval had been given at too low a level, so I got
    into trouble.

    "A diplomat's blog is a great idea. You should be able to say more of
    what you really think. You can't have a cocktail party relationship
    with a fascist regime."

    Such diplomats break the traditional mould. I know that Mr Murray's
    actions upset many of his colleagues who feel that vigorous reporting
    should be confined to private messages back to base. It is then up
    to governments to act.

    Update: I have had two e-mails pointing me to a blog by the British
    ambassador to Tunisia Alan Goulty! So the Foreign Office does know
    what a blog is.

    One of the e-mails was from Luke Cholerton-Bozier, a consultant for the
    British Council and the embassy at the time of the World Information
    Summit in Tunisia. He says that it was his idea and he mentioned it
    to an embassy official. The blog is the result.

    It is a mixture of politics and diplomatic life - and nothing
    controversial. The ambassador remarks on the Middle East peace process
    as well as issues like animal welfare. He invites comments which is a
    good part of any blog, leading in one posting to his rueful remark:
    "A correspondent in Gabes chides me for paying more attention to
    animal welfare in La Marsa than to poor people in the South. " He adds:
    "of course, both need help."

    But what happens when, as in Mr Pronk's case, the diplomat feels that
    nobody is listening on a matter of great importance?

    Armenian agony

    There was a famous case during World War I when the US ambassador to
    the Ottoman Empire, Henry Morgenthau, started reporting his conclusion
    that Armenians were the subject of genocide by the Turks.

    "It appears that a campaign of race extermination is in progress
    under a pretext of reprisal against rebellion," he wrote to the
    State Department.

    His cables to Washington did not have much effect so he began to talk
    to the New York Times and other papers.

    The modern equivalent might be to set up a personal website and talk
    directly to the world instead of to journalists.

    Vibbi's verbosity

    There was, on the other hand, the example of the young Croatian
    diplomat which governments are keen to avoid.

    Known online as "Vibbi," 25 year old Vibor Kalodjera blogged from
    Washington during the 2004 presidential campaign. He dismissed the
    Democratic candidate John Kerry as "no better" than George Bush,
    whom he in turn accused of being interested "in oil only".

    His opinion of diplomatic life in general came through when he
    commented on his attendance at a conference. "What a privilege! I'd
    rather have been at a concert."

    "Vibbi" was suspended.

    One example of a current diplomat's blog I came across was one run
    by the Syrian ambassador in Washington Imad Moustapha.

    His site is not exactly like Mr Pronk's. It has a picture of the
    ambassador sitting on a sofa and there is plenty of jolly talk about
    how wonderful Syria is. Perhaps the ambassador has to resort to this
    method of communication because he has little contact with the State
    Department these days. Syria is currently still part of the "axis
    of evil".

    At least he tries. A quick inspection suggests that most embassy
    websites are woefully dull.

    Embassy efforts

    The British embassy site in Dublin, for example, where you might
    think that an informal approach would be appreciated, looks as if it
    has been downloaded from a 1950s pamphlet. There is no personal word
    from the ambassador, just a long CV and a passport-style photo.

    Yet one might have thought that his travels around Ireland would
    produce an interesting commentary on the state of relations with
    Britain's important neighbour.

    On the other hand, the Irish Embassy's website in London is not much
    better and has misspelt the word "contact".

    The US embassy in London, whose ambassador Mr Holmes Tuttle is not,
    despite his status, one of the more visible diplomats in London,
    does not reveal much on its website about his activities. There are
    some pictures of the envoy in full white tie and tail, a garb somewhat
    distant from that of most Londoners.

    The internet does seem to be a foreign thing to most diplomats.

    [email protected]
Working...
X