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White House to Open Communications Office to Counter Anti-U.S. Sentiment 

The White House is formally opening its Office of Global Communications targeting the Middle East and Europe to enhance its image abroad.

WASHINGTON, July 30 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The White House will formally open an Office of Global Communications to bolster U.S. efforts at public diplomacy and enhance the U.S. image abroad, spokesman Ari Fleischer said Tuesday. 

The office will specifically target the Middle East, where Arabs feel the United States is pro-Israel at the expense of Palestinians and cannot be trusted, and Europe, where many are appalled at what they perceive as a go-it-alone foreign policy: two key areas where the United States has an image problem. 

Angering many allies, Bush has disavowed international pacts on global warming, missile defense systems, germ warfare and an international criminal court; threatening war against Iraq; and his support for capital punishment. Last week, he withheld $34 million from a United Nations population fund, reports news agencies. 

One U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said, "Right now it would be safe to say that Europe and the Middle East are serious priorities, but the focus is going to be on the whole world, Asia, Africa, Latin America, everywhere." 

The White House Coalition Information Center, an operation with branches in London and Islamabad, was set up on Oct. 26 in response to concerns that the United States and its allies were losing the information battle with Afghanistan's former Taliban leadership, reports news agencies. 

"Public diplomacy is an ongoing and important part of America's mission abroad to get the American story out to other nations," Fleischer told reporters at the White House, confirming a report that appeared Tuesday in the Washington Post about the creation of such an office. 

Fleischer said the office would seek to explain "what America is all about and why America does what it does." 

"The President... carries a very important megaphone about what America is, what our ideals are as a country, what we represent abroad and this is a sign of the importance the President attaches to how other nations see the United States," Fleischer said. 

The new office will add "thematic and strategic value" as well as presidential clout to the role already played by the U.S. State Department in presenting the public face of the United States to the rest of the world, a senior Bush administration official told the daily. 

In response to questions whether the new office might duplicate efforts by the State Department, Fleischer said officials there "know it can boost their efforts to communicate their seriousness and their purpose around the world when they see that the President and the White House are involved in it." 

He also assured that there would be no deliberate disinformation campaigns emerging from the office. 

The Pentagon was embroiled in a controversy over such a possibility last spring, when plans to create an office of Strategic Information fell by the wayside after revelations of a suggestion that false or misleading information could be deliberately planted in foreign media. 

Among the projects of the new office, to be up and running by autumn, is Radio Sawa, a 24-hour U.S. government radio station that began Arabic-language transmission in FM to Amman, Kuwait, Dubai and Abu Dhabi in the spring, the daily reported. 

From AM transmitters in Kuwait and Rhodes, it is also audible in Iraq, Egypt, Lebanon and Syria. U.S. officials have cited anecdotal evidence from the region to say the experiment has been a success, reports news agencies. 

The U.S. image abroad, particularly in the contentious Middle East, has become tarnished, analysts observed, so much so that it is suffering from an acute global image problem, the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) concluded Monday. 

A CFR report released Tuesday urged the Bush administration to reach for "a deeper understanding of foreign attitudes and more effective communication of our policies," to keep global alienation to a minimum, reports news agencies. 

"Negative attitudes about U.S. policy are also pervasive in frontline states in the war on terrorism and among our closest allies," the CFR task force of scholars, former diplomats and news executives said. They cited a "love-resentment divide" that characterizes much of the worldview of the United States. 

"A consensus is emerging, made far more urgent by the war on terrorism, that U.S. public diplomacy requires new thinking," said the report. "We must come to understand and accept that 'image problems' and 'foreign policy' are not things apart: They are both part of an integrated whole." 

News agencies report, however, there was no indication given the office will undertake an evaluation of the policies that have upset other nations.
 

 

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