http://www.wanniski.com/showacrticle.asp?ArticleID=2264
Wanniski
Oct 18 1999
Supply-Side University
Supply-Side University, Fall Semester #7 Political Public Relations
Memo To: Supply-Side Students
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: PR and Propaganda: Feeding the Doves
A
public-relations campaign is in the same family as a propaganda
campaign (of the kinds we discussed in last week’s lesson.) With
propaganda, a political team will attempt to deceive people
into doing something they would not otherwise do. A PR campaign does
not attempt to deceive, but does attempt to get people to think better
of the person or enterprise that is waging the campaign. With PR, your
aim is to put your “best foot” forward or put “a good face” on your
client,” or “accentuate the positive” in a person or enterprise that
has obvious negatives. Propaganda is necessarily a short-term effort,
as deceit can only last as long as its objectives do not get to the
underlying truths, either by examination or experience. PR has to be
based on more or less solid stuff so the effort has lasting effect.
You
have heard of “political spin” and expert “spinmeisters” on the
campaign trail. This is a form of PR, not propaganda, where political
“operatives” circulate among reporters after their candidate’s
performance in debate or in a speech. They attempt to knock off the
rough edges of the performance and highlight the good points as best
they can, even to the point of arguing that what seemed like a faux
pas
by their man was a fiendishly clever ploy. That takes a “meister”
spinner. There is a tradition in grand opera where a performer new to
an audience will hire a “claque,” a group of people to lead the
applause at a performance, another form of spinning.
For a new
President with little or no experience in foreign policy, it is useful
for him to understand that every
major industrial and political power
has at its center a finely-tuned collection of hawks and doves.
They
are the pessimists and the optimists among a nation’s intellectuals,
diplomats and military folk. On one side there are those watchdogs who
bark at any rustling in the trees, who believe they are threatened by
their neighbors or by distant foreign powers. On the other side are
those who assume their neighbors mean them no harm and behave as if
there were nothing but blue skies and sunshine in the firmament.
The best
book I’ve read on the outbreak of the Cold War after World War II was Shattered
Peace by
Daniel Yergin. Written originally as an academic dissertation,
Yergin
makes the clear and simple case that because there was so little
communication between Moscow and Washington, the hawks in both capitals
always had the upper hand. There were doves in Washington who
argued
that Moscow was not planning communist aggressions, but because there
was no free speech or free press inside the USSR, “behind the Iron
Curtain,” the doves lost all their arguments. The hawks in our
government, Democrats as well as Republicans, presented worst-case
scenarios on Soviet intentions and as Yergin points out, they won their
arguments by default.
A few years ago, I bought several copies of Shattered Peace
and gave them to friends and acquaintances at the Chinese Embassy in
Washington, urging them to take the message seriously and at the very
least open themselves to questioning by the foreign press on a regular
basis. They needed to be able to confront the suspicions constantly
being raised by the hawks in our “anti-China coalition,” or our doves,
including me, would lose all the policy arguments. And in Beijing, our
dove counterparts would lose all their arguments to the hawks, who
naturally insist on escalating pressures on the U.S. when they see us
escalating pressure on them. I’ve also made the argument that we and
they should set as a goal a reciprocity in our relationship based on
the Golden Rule. In wartime, anything goes, of course.
Winning
is everything, and in the Cold War I was always with the hawks. When
peace broke out, I broke with my old hawk allies [a
Nov 2005 "copy" of this has the following at this point:
-- Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Bill Kristol and Donald Rumsfeld -- ]
and began arguing that
in peacetime, it is more appropriate to follow the rule that we should
do unto others as we would have them do unto us, and expect the same of
them. When we began complaining to Beijing about their casualness in
respecting intellectual property rights, for example, I made the point
to the Chinese Ambassador at the time that while they do not have much
intellectual property to protect right now, as they grow they will
create such capital and wish to have it respected by others. Perhaps my
suggestions helped move the ball along in those negotiations, which
ended successfully.
Without a Golden Rule
at the heart of our
relationship, we are left with what our hawks define as the
Moral
Equivalence doctrine. This is the notion that some nations
are more
“moral” than others, so the Golden Rule will not work. We are more
“moral” than the People’s Republic of China, which means we are able to
hold the PRC to higher standards than we can permit them to hold us.
In
this specific case of the airplane collision, for example, we must be
permitted to fly along their coastline, giving them only a 12-mile
cushion, but if they come within 200 miles of our coastline, we won’t
simply harass them, we will shoot them down. Our hawks carry this Moral
Equivalence doctrine into every corner of our relationship with China,
and with Russia. Did we sign an ABM Treaty with the government in
Moscow? No, our hawks say we signed that treaty in 1973 with some old
government in Moscow, when we were engaged in Cold War with the
communists. Now that the communists are no longer in control of the
government, our hawks insist the ABM treaty no longer applies. Treaties
can be devalued just that easily when we insist a foreign government
does not have Moral Equivalence.
In my efforts to avoid war in
the Middle East, I recently made these arguments to Mohammed Aldouri,
who is Iraq’s ambassador to the United Nations. I argued that most of
his problem was in public relations, that Saddam Hussein and the
Baghdad government did not have such a terrible image in the rest of
the world, because the pros and cons of what they have done and
are
doing now are discussed with some degree of balance. In the United
States, there has been no such discussion, only a perpetual flow of
“propaganda” about Iraq by the warriors in Washington. As long as the
warriors believe we are at war with Iraq anyway, anything goes,
including the use of “strategic influence,” or deceit, in gathering the
support of the American people for a military campaign. If Iraq wants
to avoid war, Baghdad must be more diplomatic in its utterances. And
its diplomats who are able to speak to the American people should do
likewise. A soft answer turneth away wrath. Starve the hawks
and feed the doves.
Here is a good example of putting your best foot forward, with
Aldouri taking my advice in an op-ed he wrote for Thursday's New
York Times.
Iraq States its Case
By Mohammed Aldouri
After
so many years of fear from war, the threat of war and suffering, the
people of Iraq and their government in Baghdad are eager for peace. We
have no intention of attacking anyone, now or in the future, with
weapons of any kind. If we are attacked, we will surely defend
ourselves with all means possible. But bear in mind that we have no
nuclear or biological or chemical weapons, and we have no intention of
acquiring them.
We are not asking the people of the United
States or of any member state of the United Nations to trust in our
word, but to send the weapons inspectors to our country to look
wherever they wish unconditionally. This means unconditional access
anywhere, including presidential palaces in accordance with a 1998
signed agreement between Iraq and the United Nations - an agreement
that ensures respect for Iraq's sovereignty and allows for transparency
in the work of the inspectors. We could never make this claim with such
openness if we did not ourselves know there is nothing to be found.
Still,
we continue to read
statements by officials of the United States and
the United Kingdom that it is not enough that Hans Blix, head of the
United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, and
his team of inspectors have unconditional access. They say this
is
because the Iraqi government may be hiding weapons that will not be
found, or is moving weapons from place to place, or is developing new
weapons in roving vans or in underground locations.
The United
Nations officials with whom our government has worked on these matters
know that these concerns have no foundation. In December 1998, when the
United Nations weapons inspection team left Iraq on the orders of
Richard Butler, the chief
United Nations arms inspector at the time, it
had exhausted all possibilities after seven years of repeatedly
examining all possible sites; only small discrepancies existed.
It
is now widely conceded that Iraq possesses no nuclear weapons and that
it could not develop them without building facilities that could be
spotted by satellite. Since 1999, we have allowed the International
Atomic Energy Agency to visit Iraq. If it wishes, it can inspect any
building anywhere. The agency's inspectors will find nothing untoward.
Scott
Ritter, who led many United Nations inspections, has said that
he
questions whether Iraq possesses biological weapons. Mr. Ritter also
has been on CNN in recent months explaining that his inspection team
destroyed plants that could produce chemical weapons. If these plants
were reconstructed, Mr. Blix and his team would quickly find them out.
Building such weapons costs billions of dollars and requires enormous
facilities and huge power sources. The idea that such projects could
be
moved around in trucks or stashed away in presidential palaces
stretches the bounds of imagination.
It is my belief that the
American people are not aware of this history because, in my opinion
and the opinion of my government, no American political figure has been
seriously interested in discussing these matters with our government.
The United Nations was created in 1945 to provide a forum for nations
in conflict to come together to work out their disagreements. It was
designed expressly for the purpose of making the use of force an
absolute last resort.
For more than 11 years, the people of Iraq
have suffered under United Nations economic sanctions, which have been
kept in place largely by American influence. According to statistics
compiled by the Iraqi Ministry of Health, these sanctions have caused
the death of more than 1.7 million of our citizens. The embargo has
been so severe that we have been prevented from importing chemicals
needed for our sewage and water and sanitation facilities.
At
the same time, the last three American presidents have stated that
these sanctions would not be lifted as long as our president, Saddam
Hussein, remains the nation's leader.
Iraq is not a threat to
its neighbors. It certainly is not a threat to the United States or any
of its interests in the Middle East. Once the United Nations inspection
team comes back into my country and gets up to speed, I am confident
that it will certify that Iraq has no weapons of mass destruction - be
they chemical, biological or nuclear. Such certification we hope will
remove the shadow of war and help restore peace between our nations.
Mohammed Aldouri is the Iraqi ambassador to the United Nations.
# # # #
I’d
like to continue this discussion next week with a Q&A session on
propaganda and political pr. These are profoundly important topics for
the world’s only superpower as it tries to figure out how to manage the
family of nations, with force and diplomacy as the chief tools. You can
send questions to me directly at jwanniski@polyconomics.com.Or post
them in TalkShop, where we will begin a string on these issues. Please
do not make speeches. Just pose questions.
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