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Commentary: Irrelevance Threatens All Of Us

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  • Commentary: Irrelevance Threatens All Of Us

    COMMENTARY: IRRELEVANCE THREATENS ALL OF US
    By Joseph J. Honick

    HNN Huntingtonnews.net
    http://www.huntingtonnews.net/c olumns/081008-honick-columnsirrelevance.html
    Oct. 8, 2008
    USA

    The greatest single danger to America may not be terrorists, housing
    foreclosures or the many, many other media reported catastrophes. More
    than any of those is the reality of how we are becoming irrelevant
    in the minds and decisions of other nations important to us -- and
    the roles key PR firms and advisers may well be playing in all of this.

    Were it not for our wealth, natural resources and military power,
    all of which are being squandered at a record pace, it is hard to
    believe very many other nations would pay much attention to us with
    reference to their own major decisions.

    It does not take much to observe realities of key nations virtually
    thumbing their noses at us as they form alliances with hardly a
    consult with America.

    Russia and Iran wind up as nuclear sweethearts and arms partners even
    as we publicly try to figure out how or whether we need to think
    about attacking Iran in retribution for alleged smuggling of arms
    and other help to our enemies in Iraq.

    North and South Korea figure out how to cooperate in a manner we could
    not work out with our former enemies. Japan says it has had enough
    of the Iraq mess and starts the pullout of the cooperation with us
    there with cries of "no more American wars." Then North Korea and
    Syria are found unabashedly dancing together with apparent nuclear
    cooperation until, that is, Israel took action similar to its efforts
    in 1981 against Iraq, and knocked out the Syrian site.

    We have made common cause in vast commercial investment, diplomatic
    and other means with Communist North Vietnam which had killed about
    58,000 of our armed forces even as we could not find a path toward
    diplomatic relations with Cuba only 90 miles from our shores, now
    warning that nation about its means of succession at the top.

    But these are only a few examples of how, in only a few years, we have
    lost the power and dignity of presidents from Franklin Delano Roosevelt
    to Bill Clinton, including even the disgraced Richard Nixon who, in
    his better days, had accomplished significant diplomatic successes
    in China and elsewhere.

    In short, few if any nations seem to give a tinker's dam about our
    opinions on most any international major concern. One of the more
    recent shockers was the report in the reliable Financial Times of
    London that China will help out GE by building a research laboratory
    in that country.

    Our relationships with Turkey have so deteriorated that this nation
    has had to determine whether to invade Iraq to beat back Kurdish
    agitation, even as some in Congress want to pass a resolution to
    condemn allegations of Turkish genocide of Armenians nearly 100 years
    ago. However justified or otherwise that charge might be, the timing
    once more reveals how fragile national leadership is.

    These are only a few examples of the realities. What most Americans
    do not think about or even figure on is how so many of these actions
    can be accomplished with little or no action by our own leadership
    which seem virtually impotent in the face of these events.

    It is imperative to determine what all of this implies for the future
    no matter who replaces George W. Bush. The question remains: is the
    United State still relevant on the horizon of world affairs?

    But where will you find this concern framed in the media or political
    discourse anywhere. Answer: virtually nowhere.

    Much of this is revealed in the direction our economy is taking at
    the same time as our dollar takes a nose dive further discouraging
    investment from abroad. There was a time, and not very long ago, that
    such international disruptions would have to include our leadership in
    very profound ways. Today we have our own Secretary of State putting
    together enough air miles rotating around the world to develop a
    thousand first class flights on all airlines combined -- but with
    little to no progress at any single and major point.

    Underneath all of much of these realities are the results of some of
    the world's largest and most powerful public relations firms or the
    work of many former high level operators within the federal government
    or the Congress who are influencing events.

    For instance, Robert D. Blackwill, once the Iraq director for the
    National Security Council, pushed to have a tough, secular Shiite Ayad
    Allawi made Prime Minister of the "new" Iraq. That didn't work out but
    has not stopped Blackwill's efforts to make things tough for Nuri Kamal
    al-Maliki,ultimately the victor in free elections. He and his firm,
    Barbour Griffith & Rogers, received $1.4 million to promote a nuclear
    deal between the United States and India, oil contracts with Kurdistan.

    What stands out in the abbreviated array of much broader ventures is
    the shadow impact on American foreign policy that not only confuses
    that much of the public who actually cares but also our theoretical
    friends who are not part of these efforts and, ultimately decide either
    to throw up their hands in frustration or simply ignore us altogether.

    Among other things, the results of this increasingly profitable public
    relations representation for any and all comers with the money to
    pay for it raises questions that extend well beyond ordinary limits.

    So it should not be at all surprising that the White House propaganda
    chief Karen Hughes recites the confusion of nations around the world,
    or, as she reportedly told PR Society, "People around the world aren't
    just sitting around to hear from America anymore," especially with
    our involvements in an endless war. What she did not say, however,
    was how much of the confusion is developed by influences from public
    relations firms and former high level American officials.

    It is not naive to be raising these points since we all understand
    the logic of going after business to help influence opinions that
    count for clients. What all of us as professionals and Americans
    must understand and calculate very carefully is how this expanding
    influence has already contributed to our nation's irrelevance abroad
    even as it may accomplish the ends of international, corporate and
    special individual clientele in an increasingly complex world at what
    some call the "Tipping Point."

    * * *

    Honick is president of Bainbridge Island, Wash.-based GMA International
    Ltd, the consulting and public relations firm he formed in 1975 to
    help companies broaden their business abroad especially in China and
    Japan. He also contributes to a variety of publications on public
    policy issues. This article was originally published Oct. 31, 2007
    in O'Dwyer's PR Report.
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