‘“Power,” Harvard Professor Joseph Nye, Jr. tells
us “is the ability to alter the behavior of others to get what you want.
There are basically three ways to do that: coercion (sticks), payments
(carrots), and attraction (soft power).” Today’s American soft power—our
ability to influence others overseas through who we are and what we do—is
shrinking, as poll after poll shows. This loss of soft power reduces
America's ability to shape global developments in ways favorable to the
national interest. What can be done about this?
There are several reasons for the decline of America’s soft power. The
most immediate is President George W. Bush’s aggressive foreign policy. Since
our internationally condemned attack on Iraq, our country is seen as the
illegitimate sheriff that shoots first and asks questions later. Contrast this
to the worldwide sympathy for the U.S. immediately after 9/11, when we were
considered the attacked, not the attacker. Due to our unilateralism, we have
lost the respect—to be sure, never universal—that we earned as a world leader
resisting the totalitarianisms of the twentieth century.
Second to the aggression is the hypocrisy of Bush's rhetoric. The
president proclaims the pursuit of human freedom as his foremost goal while we
are becoming a parody of the Statue of Liberty, covered in prison torture garb
from Abu Ghraib, obsessed with our own security but with nothing liberating (or
even stabilizing) to offer to the rest of the world. Forget the
“democratization” programs (also called “transformational” ) hyped by Condoleezza Rice’s State
Department. For much of the world, the reality is that we prop up dictators in
Libya and Kazakhstan so long as they give us what we want. And, while claiming
that America cares about humanity, Bush disregards transnational issues such as
the global environment and supports visa regulations that offend foreigners who
wish to visit or study in the United States.
A third reason for our loss of soft power is that, with over six years
of Bush’s “we’re just plain folks” rule, our cultural exports increasingly fail
to seduce overseas. To be sure, the best purveyors of American consciousness
abroad don't necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. government. Yet, judging
by the barometer of pop culture, American style is no longer as "cool" as
it was, despite the international success of some Hollywood blockbusters.
Culturally, we are more and more perceived as the old New World. “[T]he
American brand isn't at its shiniest,” U-2’s Bono recently stated. “The neon is crackling."’
America's
Fading Glow
blast in the past
From the New York Times
The documents show that the C.I.A. ignored "clear evidence of a war crimes record" in recruiting another former SS officer, Tscherim Soobzokov, said another historian at the briefing, Richard Breitman of American University. Because it valued Soobzokov for his language skills and ties to fellow ethnic Circassians living in the Soviet Caucasus region, the C.I.A. deliberately hid his Nazi record from the Immigration and Naturalization Service after he moved to the United States in 1955, Mr. Breitman said.
But Soobzokov would not ultimately escape his past. He died in 1985 of injuries suffered three weeks earlier when a pipe bomb exploded outside his house in Paterson, N.J. The murder case has never been solved...
read more at the new York Times
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Gus: Nothing much changes... except the strength of our poisons...
Hairy thoughts!
PM sensitive about his hair: [http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=120504|Hewson]
Monday Aug 7 23:44 AEST
Former federal Liberal leader John Hewson says Prime Minister John Howard "has his moments", and is also "very sensitive" about things - like his hair.
Mr Hewson, who worked closely with Mr Howard during his time in politics, said the leader would have been upset by a comment from United States President George W Bush about his hair.
"John has his moments," said Mr Hewson, appearing on the ABC's Enough Rope program.
"I was just thinking the other day when George W Bush commented on his appearance and the fact that George had more hair than Howard had...
"I think Janette probably had a pretty rough night that night ..."
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Gus: see cartoon at top here... Our Johnnee Grocer was lucky he did not get a Texan massage as well...