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Saturday November 21, 2009

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Past Event

A Foreign Policy and U.S. Relations with the Islamic World Event

Voices of America: U.S. Public Diplomacy for the 21st Century

Diplomacy, Foreign Policy


Event Summary

Public opinion holds more sway now than at any previous time in history. Information and communication technologies are cheap and ubiquitous. It is in this context that the United States must increasingly engage, persuade and attract the cooperation of foreign publics to achieve its national interests. Yet, the United States must do this in a world that has changed markedly in the years since its public diplomacy institutions were created.

Event Information

When

Tuesday, November 25, 2008
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On November 25, the Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World and Foreign Policy at Brookings hosted Kristin Lord, who presented Voices of America, a new Brookings report on the effectiveness of public diplomacy that includes specific recommendations for the next administration. Drawing on extensive research, approximately 300 interviews and the advice of a distinguished board of ten advisers, Voices of America presents a comprehensive vision for U.S. public diplomacy in the twenty-first century. It argues for the creation of a new non-governmental organization to tap extensive private sector expertise and mobilize the talents of Americans and partners around the world. The report also presents wide-ranging recommendations regarding strategy, leadership, organization, resources and methods of U.S. public diplomacy and how this important instrument of statecraft should be integrated into a broader foreign policy strategy.

Lord was joined by a distinguished panel of experts including Strobe Talbott, president of the Brookings Institution; Thomas A. Miller, vice president of Business for Diplomatic Action; and Charles Vest, president of the National Academy of Engineering. Senior Fellow Martin Indyk, director of the Saban Center for Middle East Policy, offered introductory remarks and Carlos Pascual, vice president and director of Foreign Policy, moderated the discussion.

Read the report ยป

Transcript

KRISTIN LORD:  Today's most pressing challenges cannot be addressed alone: climate change, infectious disease, international terrorist networks, reforming international institutions, and the trafficking of goods and people. These are all issues that require the active cooperation of others. Al Qaida and like-minded groups around the world are bolstered by ideology, and at least partially they need to be confronted on those grounds as well. And then, finally, many of the currently security threats that imperil our nation cannot be confronted with force alone. When threats are diffused and asymmetric, when force actually mobilizes support for enemies and thereby strengthens them, states have to find what the military folks here would call nonkinetic means to address security challenges.

These conditions are reshaping the global landscape requiring America to communicate both more and more effectively within an incredible diversity of audiences. In new ways and in the midst of what I think is an information tempest, more than ever before America has to compete for attention and credibility. That's not something we've become accustomed to, and it must do so in a world where winning public support is increasingly important to achieving national interest.

I believe firmly that America can adapt to these challenges and, in fact, I think the world is changing in ways that should play to our country's strength, very much so, in fact, and however our country needs to reform in ways that strengthen the voice of government, empower our own people, and engage the like-minded around the world, and use new median technologies in agile and innovative ways.

Participants

Moderator

Carlos Pascual

Vice President and Director, Foreign Policy

Panelists

Kristin M. Lord

Fellow, Foreign Policy, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, U.S. Relations with the Islamic World

Strobe Talbott

President, The Brookings Institution

Thomas A. Miller

Vice President, Business for Diplomatic Action

Charles Vest

President, National Academy of Engineering


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