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September 2-3




"People should know when they're conquered."

--A Roman officer in the film "The Gladiator"; image from

"They are powerful, what can I do? I cannot do anything.”

--Afghan parliamentary candidate Abdul Wahid Khurasani, among the three wounded by a NATO air strike

NEW ARTICLES

PDiN MONITOR: A Review & Analysis of Current Public Diplomacy in the News
Digital Diplomacy. Featuring a closer look at: Digital Diplomacy

Featuring:
--A New Breed of Foreign Policy by Tori Horton
--Beyond the BlackBerry Ban: Realpolitik and the Negotiation of Digital Rights 8 by Shawn Powers
--PDiN Extras: 10 World Cup Wrap-Up Floods in Pakistan & Aid Diplomacy
--Everybody’s Diplomacy 13 by Matt Armstrong
--No Simple App for Public Diplomacy 15 by Anoush Rima Tatevossian

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Public Diplomacy: Books, Articles, Websites #52 (Courtesy of Bruce Gregory)

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY IN THE NEWS

Joe Biden update: Turning over the keys in Iraq - Los Angeles Times: "Vice President Joe Biden's remarks at change of command ceremony, Baghdad, as provided by the White House: '... an outstanding ambassador, Jim Jeffrey [US ambassador to Iraq] ... may be new to this particular job, but is certainly not new to the region nor this country. His knowledge and commitment run deep.

They go back to his earlier service in the Bush administration as a Deputy National Security Advisor, as well as at one point the DCM right here in Baghdad. And he is backed by an extraordinary team of Foreign Service professionals and civilian experts, who are moving to the forefront of our effort now. They have always been engaged, but now they’re moving to the forefront, people like Erin Eddy, a former Peace Corps volunteer in Ecuador, who now serves 'outside the wire' as a public diplomacy officer on a regional -- provincial reconstruction team in Kirkuk." Biden image from; on sunglasses, see

Defining The Obama Doctrine, Its Pitfalls And How To Avoid Them - Kim R. Holmes, James Carafano, Eurasia Review: "The U.S. must insist that other concerned countries enforce the strongest possible targeted sanctions on the regime in Tehran and on its internal security organs; ban all foreign investment, loans and credits, subsidized trade, and refined petroleum exports to Iran; and deny visas to its officials. It should launch a targeted public diplomacy campaign to expose the regime’s human rights abuses and help facilitate communications among the dissidents. It should find ways to aid the opposition. It should strive to reduce Iranian meddling in Iraq by maintaining the strongest troop presence there; a stable and democratic Iraq will offer Shiites an alternative model that helps to delegitimize Iran’s Islamist system."

Welcome to the U.S.... Not - Yelena Osipova, Global Chaos: "As reported by BBC News: ['] Pakistan's military has said it cancelled talks with American defence chiefs after a delegation sent to the US met 'unwarranted' airport checks. The officers were traveling to Tampa, Florida, for a three-day conference with the U.S. Central Command, which was scheduled to start on Tuesday.

When they boarded the Tampa-bound plane at the D.C. Dulles airport, they had already had several layovers in what was, by then, a 22-hour trip.['] ... [G]iven the billions of dollars that the U.S. has been, and is still, spending on its public diplomacy efforts in that country, and given that there has been a sizable amount of discontent about the lack of sufficient flood aid from the U.S., the airport incident should come as a cause of concern." Image from

Imam Feisal Meets With UAE Mosque and Money Crowd 2 days ago - Claudia Rosett, The Rosett Report: "As the imam behind the Ground Zero mosque project, Feisal Abdul Rauf, continues his State Department-hosted 'public diplomacy' visit to the United Arab Emirates, the glimpses of his activities over there get ever more interesting. Back home, Americans are now reading the Bergen Record’s dispatches on Rauf’s history as a New Jersey landlord with a tangled financial trail and angry tenants registering recurring complaints about his premises, listing such items as infestations of cockroaches and rats, piles of unremoved trash and 'filthy halls.' Meanwhile, in the UAE, U.S. State Department officials have been squiring Rauf around on the final leg of his taxpayer-funded $16,000 swing through the Middle East (that tab includes an allowance of $496 per day to keep him comfortable in Abu Dhabi). ... Kudos at least to the U.S. Embassy in the UAE for providing at least minimal information on Rauf’s doings while he travels in comfort on the taxpayers’ tab. The U.S. embassies on his previous taxpayer-funded stops, in Bahrain and Qatar, were rather less forthcoming (here’s the official account of his multi-day stay in Doha). The State Department in Washington has been either remarkably uninformed about the specifics of his travels, or pretty much mute. And Rauf himself, before embarking on this tour, spent weeks in Malaysia, where he has longstanding ties and keeps an office. Whatever he was doing there, he has yet to disclose. It does seem that his State Department 'public diplomacy' itinerary included a stop in Saudi Arabia; apparently cancelled by State at the last minute. Did he go there anyway? Let’s assume not. But how would we know?"

America's Faltering Search for Peace in the Middle East: Openings for Others? - Sabbah Report: Remarks to staff of the Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and, separately, to members of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs Ambassador Charles W. ('Chas') Freeman, Jr. (USFS, Ret.)* 1 September 2010, Oslo, Norway. ... [Freeman: ] Now to my suggestions, presented in ascending order of difficulty, from the least to the most controversial.

First, get behind the Arab peace initiative. Saudi Arab culture frowns on self-promotion and the Kingdom is less gifted than most at public diplomacy. Political factors inhibit official Arab access to the Israeli press. The Israeli media have published some – mostly dismissive – commentary on the Arab peace initiative but left most Israelis ignorant of its contents and unfamiliar with its text. Why not buy space in the Israeli media to give Israelis a chance to read the Arab League declaration and consider the opportunities it presents? I suspect the Saudis, as well as other members of the Arab League, would consider it constructive for an outside party to do this." Freeman image from article

Camp David Redux: A Look Back At Lessons Learned - NPR: "NPR's Robert Siegel talks to negotiators who were present at Camp David about the experience and the lessons of those talks: Ghaith Omari of the American Task Force on Palestine, who was a legal adviser to the Palestinian delegation; Gideon Grinstein of the Reut Institute, who was the youngest Israeli staffer at Camp David; and Aaron David Miller of the Woodrow Wilson Center, who was a longtime State Department adviser. ... Mr. OMARI: ... The issue of messaging. I think the biggest failure of Camp David was not in substance. We made many breakthroughs. It was in messaging. What you tell your people? How do you prepare them for an agreement? How do you take an incomplete summit and turn it from a failure through messaging - from a half empty glass to a half-full glass? Thats what the U.S. should be focusing on, in my view in the initial months. SIEGEL: Aaron David Miller, what do you think about that? Is it best to tell these leaders, look, we'll give you cover so you dont have to say anything for a while, and just to make a little bit of progress? Or here, it's very important that you speak to your people about whats happening? Mr. MILLER: I mean it's a point - I dont like the word messaging because it implies a certain amount of public diplomacy, which implies a certain amount superficiality, in effort to sell something that people really dont believe in. But I take Ghaith's point."

Schenker on the LAF - The Mideastwire Blog: "Since the inauguration of the Cedar Revolution

in early 2005, US officials constantly and very publicly ratcheted up their rhetoric over the 'unqualified' support – the total, unrestricted support for a robust LAF [Lebanese Armed Forces]. But at the same time, 'careful assessments' were not determining the quality and level of support – a desire to not disrupt Israel’s QME was. At some point, the whole LAF-Bush Administration episode may stand as a classic exercise in how not to go about credible public diplomacy (as the rise and fall of the Cedar revolution should also stand as a test case of how not to go about a colour revolution)." Image from

Obama's Big Speech - Tom Maguire, JustOneMinute: "Matt mentioned this a couple of threads back, but left out the relevant part of this report in the Atlantic: ... Current U.S. public diplomacy centers on selling America to the Muslim world, but we should also work to undermine some of the myths built up around our enemies by highlighting their incompetence, their moral failings, and their embarrassing antics. ... Posted by: bunkerbuster August 31, 2010 at 08:53 PM."

Celebrating and Building on the Private Generosity of Americans - Mark Green, modernizingforeignassistance.org: "I recently began posting a series of pieces with some of the reasons why I believe (a) America needs foreign assistance reform and (b) Conservatives should take up the cause. Done right, foreign assistance

can play a crucial role in our foreign policy. Unfortunately, the status quo isn’t 'done right' or, at least, done as well as it could be.To summarize, here are my first seven reasons: [including] ... Reason 5: The combination of fragmented authorities and overlapping bureaucracies in our current assistance framework is watering down public diplomacy efforts." Image from

Troop withdrawal mere propaganda - Sam Makinda, Business Daily Africa: "Whatever the spin, propaganda or public diplomacy, as it is sometimes called, people of good conscience will always regard the invasion of Iraq seven years ago as an unnecessary war that has left the country ruined, millions of its innocent citizens killed, maimed or displaced, and a large number of American and British families mourning or living with relatives who have been physically, emotionally and mentally destroyed."

The U.N.’s Arms Trade Treaty: A Dangerous Multilateral Mistake in the Making August 31, 2010 - Capt. Karl: "Published on August 21, 2009 by Theodore Bromund and Steven Groves WebMemo #2309 ... On October 31, 2008, the U.N. General Assembly

voted 145 to 2 with 18 abstentions for a resolution entitled 'Towards an arms trade treaty: establishing common international standards for the import, export and transfer of conventional arms.' ... The two nations voting against the resolution were the United States and Zimbabwe. ... The U.S. has taken a beating in the world press and in the court of public opinion by being paired with Zimbabwe as the only two states opposed to the U.N. resolution. ... Few commentators and none of the treaty’s advocates noted the significance of the Chinese and Russian abstentions. The U.S. statement in the General Assembly before the vote was serious, but it did little to elucidate the issues for a press already predisposed to favor the treaty. ... The U.S. is being defeated in the realm of public diplomacy

and is doing nothing to make up ground, thus setting itself up for more defeats–or tame acquiescence–in the years to come." Image 1 from; image 2 from

VOA history in the news (updated) - Kim Andrew Elliott reporting on International Broadcasting

Filling the Global Security Gap - Judah Grunstein, World Politics Review: "Addressing the possibility that the U.S. and Europe will shy away from military interventions post-Iraq/post-Afghanistan, Richard Gowan suggests that emerging countries -- Brazil, China and India, in particular -- could very well step in to fill the gap

in the context of U.N. state-building operations. It tracks well with what Matt Armstrong wrote in his WPR feature article, U.N. Peacekeeping as Public Diplomacy." Image from

PRÉ-vue [discourse’s-analysis] TRI-vium - Modern Diplomacy - Paul Shipale, New Era (Nambia): "Ms Pamela H. Smith, ancient Minister-Counselor for Public Affairs, US Embassy, in London starts with something very bureaucratic to explain what public diplomacy is, using the USIA’s mission statement, which defines public diplomacy as: To understand, inform, and influence foreign public in the promotion of the national interest and to broaden the dialogue between people and institutions and their counterparts abroad. This is summarised as 'retail politics on a global scale'. ... The people practising public diplomacy are the ones disseminating the President’s latest speech on foreign policy, explaining its points to a skeptical local newspaper editor, or writing a speech on the same theme, but adapted to local conditions, for the Ambassador to give. On another day, the public diplomacy practitioner is helping select candidates for academic exchange programmes and attending a seminar or cultural event that connects the country where he is posted. He knows people from several age groups and across the political spectrum, hence the term 'diplomacy.' ... [T]he profusion of sources and amounts of information available results in a public overwhelmed and confused by the welter of messages wondering what is true? What is real? Who has time to figure it out? One significant solution to this nexus of problems is a robust government public diplomacy programme that organises, conveys, verifies and authenticates information about its country, so that the interested public, including opinion leaders, have a reliable source. Perhaps it is for this very reason that smaller powers need public diplomacy programmes, just as major powers do. ... Given the geopolitical trends already underway, public diplomacy will no longer be a job just for certain specialists, like press attachés and cultural attachés. There will, however, still be public diplomacy specialists, and they will be people who combine the skills of systems managers, modern librarians, publishers, database experts, marketers and cultural interpreters."

New consul general focusing on ‘digital public diplomacy,’ outreach - Michael C. Duke, Jewish Herald-Voice: "The region’s new top-ranking Israeli diplomat is looking to online social media as an effective tool for public diplomacy.

Meir Shlomo assumed the duties of consul general of Israel to the Southwest last month, taking over from Asher Yarden, who has returned to Israel after completing a four-year stint. The consulate office is based in Houston. It serves a five-state region, spanning Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico and Oklahoma. ... The new consul general arrives in Houston as a seasoned foreign ministry official, with an educational background in political science, mass communications and public diplomacy. ... The consul general has outlined short-term and long-term goals for his new assignment. ... 'The first goal is to try to understand the political scene across the Southwest region ... . The second goal is public diplomacy. We want to show the true face of Israel, to let people know what Israel is really about. Most people either know very little about the State of Israel, or most of what they know is from the media and has to do with conflict.' 'We want to show Israel beyond the news, to show that the real Israel is warm people, great beaches, a wonderful place for arts and technological innovation. It’s a fusion – not just in food, but a cultural fusion,' he said. 'I think public diplomacy is so important,' he continued. 'When I hear an Israeli or anybody complaining about Israel’s public diplomacy, I don’t get offended. I take it as a sign that they really care what Israel is doing or is not doing. That’s good, because the worst thing that could happen for us is people being indifferent about what’s happening or not happening in Israel,' he said." Image from

Ghana wants new identity - "Mr. Akotia [Mr. Mathias Akotia, Chief Executive Officer of Brand Ghana] pointed out that nation branding was not new saying that "many countries have promoted their identities for different reasons to be able to attract international attention. 'An example was South Africa which, in realising a gap between the international perception and the reality of the country, launched the Brand South Africa project which has correctly positioned it'. He said India, Malaysia, Egypt, Costa Rica, New Zealand and many more countries also had active nation branding programmes in spite of the existence of state institutions, such as investment, tourism, exports and public diplomacy dedicated to country product, services and reputation promotions."

‘Let’s Brand Ghana With Cocoa’ - business.peacefmonline.com: "The Chief of Staff, Henry Martey Newman has urged Ghanaians to support initiatives aimed at finding a brand identity for Ghana. Mr. Newman was of the opinion that to build a better brand identity for Ghana, cocoa, which is the major foreign exchange earner of the country,

should be rebranded and redesigned to look more attractive. ... The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Brand Ghana Office, Mathias Akotia noted that ... country branding is also about 'harmonization of channels of national expressions as varied as acts and policies of government, values and behaviors of the citizenry, education, culture, sports, public health, taxation, public diplomacy, export and investment promotion and infrastructure development.'” Image from

Remarks by Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi at the Launching Ceremony of China's Foreign Affairs 2009 Photo Album - press release, MFA China: Jiechi: "The year 2009 was a fruitful year for China's diplomacy. Amidst a fast-changing international landscape, we seized the opportunities and rose to the challenges. We intensified exchanges with major countries and pursued all-round deepening of friendship and cooperation with neighboring countries and fellow developing countries. We vigorously engaged in summit diplomacy and stepped up economic, security and public diplomacy."

Mayangs, Flat Noses and Nationalism: Time for Public Diplomacy - Amar Yumnam, KanglaOnline: "I strongly feel that the Indian hyperbolism on issues would not serve any productive purpose in long term international political economic purposes in at least her relationships with the South East Asian countries are concerned. Here I am reminded of the focus and the purpose of public diplomacy study programmes in the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

This university, where I had spent quite some time as a visiting scholar recently, took up this programme while the other universities in the United States were focussing on clash of civilisations post September 11. This programme has significance when government to government relationships are bad and difficult to stabilise. In such contexts, the government can think of appreciating and talking to the public of the foreign country instead of allowing all channels of communication go dead. In fact, public diplomacy can serve the purpose of both democracy and peace." Image: Poincaré Hyperbolic Disk

Sainthood demeans what Mary MacKillop stood for - Robert Irwin, Sydney Morning Herald: "Australia's ambassador to the Holy See, Tim Fischer, has lauded the canonisation of Mary MacKillop as a 'very public salute to a great Australian, as well as a matter of public diplomacy and celebration'. Mary MacKillop was a great Australian. But Fischer was wrong on two other counts. First, sainthood is an internally invented showpiece of the Vatican – it is not simply a matter of public diplomacy and celebration.

And second, Mary MacKillop will not become Australia's first saint but the Catholic Church's first Australian saint." Image from article

Discussions on Digital Diplomacy - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner.us: "The July/August issue of PDiN Monitor, the electronic review of public diplomacy in the news by the USC Center on Public Diplomacy at the Annenberg School, focuses on the subject of Digital Diplomacy. ... [W]e will be successful when the term 'digital diplomacy' disappears and all we talk about is engagement."

Romanian Review Of Political Sciences And International Relations, No.2/ 2010 Contents - Isprijournal's Blog: "Cultural Diplomacy Today - New Steps Towards A Research Agenda - Lucian Jora Abstract. This study launches and responses to the following questions: What distinguishes Cultural Diplomacy form Propaganda and what would be the demarcation line which separates them? When Cultural Diplomacy degenerates in Propaganda and with which effects? What is the new environment and variables which impose today a new approach towards cultural representation? How can we measure the effectiveness of Cultural Diplomacy? Key words. Public Diplomacy, Cultural Diplomacy, Lobbyism, International Relations[.]"
Solo icons farewell Easton - Solomon Star: "SOLO Icons this week farewelled Deanna Easton, who’ll be leaving the country today back to Australia. 2007 Solo Icon winner Faye Indu, speaking on behalf of the Icons, thanked Ms Easton for her work with all the Solo Icon contestants. ... Ms Easton

also runs public diplomacy programs, which includes Australian funding for sport under the Australian Sports Outreach Program, support for International Women's Day, Clean up the World in Honiara, Harmony Day, Reconciliation Week Celebrations and support for Solo Icon. Image from article: Solo Icon winners with Deanna Easton at the farewell function early this week

The End of the Virtual World - Denise Harrison, thejournal.com: "'It's like somebody died." That's how at Rik Panganiban described the K-12 education community's reaction to the closing of Teen Grid at a recent inworld meeting between educators and other members of Nonprofit Commons in Second Life. 'It's a horrible tragedy that I wish could be avoided.' Panganiban is assistant director of the Online Leadership Program for Global Kids, which for four years has relied on the Teen Grid to educate urban youth from around the world about such topics as racism, the genocide in Darfur, child trafficking, public diplomacy, and the digital divide, in collaboration with UNICEF, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Youth Ventures, and more."

The African Assignment - blackbloggernetwork.com: "Wilson Aiwuyor is a researcher and co-founder of CONNECT. A graduate of International Relations from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and public Affairs at Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York, he was a Public Policy and International Affairs (PPIA) fellow at the Woodrow Wilson School of Princeton University. ... Wilson’s interests include public policy, regional integration, globalization, global political economy, governance and human rights, political organization, global peace and security, and public diplomacy."

The Endurance - Tom, Blue safari:
"2009 Oct 09: Took Foreign Service Officer Test
2009 Oct 28: Received notice I passed the FSOT
2009 Nov 17: Completed Personal Narratives
2010 Jan 27: Notified I passsed the Personal Narrative portion
2010 Feb 10: Scheduled Oral Assessment for 8 Jun in Wash DC
2010 Jun 08: Passed FSO Oral Assessment with score of 5.3 (Public Diplomacy)
2010 Jun 08: SF86 Top Secret background investigation initiated
2010 Jun 19: Physical exam at VA Hospital San Diego


2010 Jun 27: Labs and exams completed and sent to State Dept
2010 Jul 15: Background interviews conducted
2010 Jul 26: State requests more medical information (I initiate request at VA)
2010 Aug 05: Veterans preference points added. Score bumped to 5.65
2010 Aug 16: VA nurse finally responds to my request for additional information
2010 Aug 24: Took phone test in Mandarin (failed)
2010 Aug 26: After phone interview with State Dept doctor, Class One Medical Clearance granted
2010 Sep 04: Target date for completion of background investigation
TBD: Final Review Panel
TBD: Placement on Register"; image from

Regional Communication Adviser UNAIDS/10/FT50 - "UNAIDS: Title: Regional Communication Adviser Grade: P4 Contract type: Fixed-term appointment
Duration of contract: 2 years fixed-term appointment ...
Competencies:
-Professional networking and relationship building skills
- Organizing public relations events on AIDS issues
- Ability to identify and analyze trends among opinion makers
- Public diplomacy
- Writing skills for internal and external audiences (briefing notes, talking points etc.)
- Understanding of multimedia products (photo, film, video etc.)"

Internship Programme 2010 – NATO - resultspundit.com: "Interns will benefit by experiencing an international organisation from the inside

while substantiating their Curriculum Vitae. Internships are offered in the following areas: [including] ... Public Diplomacy[.]" Image from

RELATED ITEMS

Obama's Post-Iraq World - Roger Cohen, New York Times: Obama, subtly but persistently, is talking down American exceptionalism in the name of mutual interests and mutual respect, two favorite phrases. He is downsizing American ambition — the eventual Afghan exit is now pre-scripted along neither-defeat-nor-victory Iraqi lines — in the name of American rebuilding.

The economics of war - Doyle McManus, latimes.com: One of the lessons

of our recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has surely been this: Invasions are relatively easy, but counterinsurgency is far more difficult. Invasions draw on our advantages: size, wealth, technology. Counterinsurgency taxes our weaknesses; it requires deep understanding of local culture, a willingness to take casualties and, above all, patience — none of which we possess in much quantity. Image from

The 2007 Passport Fiasco, Maura Harty and State’s 2009 Presidential Rank Awards - Patricia H. Kushlis, Whirled View: The State Department announced its prestigious Foreign Service 2009 Presidential Rank Award winners in the July/August 2010 State Magazine. Four of the Foreign Service recipients had previously held top positions in either Iraq or Afghanistan and one has just returned to Iraq as Ambassador. Given the tenor and tone of US foreign policy since 9/11 these awards make sense. Other winners, however, include Nancy Powell, State’s own Director General of the Foreign Service; Philippe Lussier, head of the Office of Resource Management; and Foreign Service Institute Director Ruth Whiteside – in essence members of State’s own management team also rewarding, ahem, who else? Themselves? ... Presidential Rank Awards are “for exceptional service over an extended period.” The recipients are “nominated by their agency heads, evaluated by citizen panels and designated by the President” according to the write-up in State Magazine. So it’s difficult to understand how Maura Harty, the recipient in question, could have possibly qualified for an award that covered over a year when she was no longer employed by the US government. Not only had she already left the Department almost two years before but her final assignment as Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs (2002-8) had been fraught with scandal.

North Korea Slams South's Efforts to Block Online Propaganda - Evan Ramstad, Wall Street Journal

Chinese Prop Art - Sino Matter: China has opened itself completely to the outside world.

Politics have largely disappeared from the poster. China’s leaders (Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin) are now seen as ordinary people and even Mao increasingly looks like a movie star. Image from article

Towards An Interactive Goebbels: Can Propaganda Videogames Be Made More Effective And Is Resistance Futile? - Gamasutra, gamecareerguide.com: Current propaganda videogames do not tend to be particularly effective compared to historical propaganda in other mediums. In summary, it seems that there are a number of immediately apparent steps available to be taken that will increase the effectiveness of propaganda games. Propaganda games should appeal to their desired audience in terms they can understand, believe and agree with. Widely known facts should not be ignored and arbitrary conditions should not be forced upon players, for fear that they will reject the work outright.

Propaganda games should be made more enjoyable, and perhaps even addictive, so that they receive prolonged and repeated viewings. The potential of players emotional responses should not be ignored. Propaganda should be included subtly and made to appear to be a natural part of a game. Game mechanics, particularly rewards, penalties and ludic goals, should be used to drive players towards specific, desired behaviours. The way in which game mechanics are contextualised should be used to both express a position openly and to enhance any message they are designed to convey. Games should be designed to discourage oppositional readings. Wherever possible, propaganda messages should be encoded as an enthymeme in the gameplay itself, rather than as an additional message tacked on in the form of narrative. All possible elements of the game should be used to increase the likelihood of provoking the desired response in players. Image from article

Protest vs. Propaganda - Art Cat: “Protest vs. Propaganda”,

a group art show at Sacred Gallery in New York, opening September 4th and running through September 24th. Image from article

MORE QUOTATIONS FOR THE DAY

"President Obama announced the end of Operation Iraqi Freedom. ... He said, 'We have given the Iraqis a western-style government.' Well, we certainly have, haven't we? Their economy is in shambles, their congress is corrupt, and their country is broke."

--Talk show host Jay Leno, cited in Bulletin News, LLC

"Operation New Dawn, its name suggesting a skin cream or dishwashing liquid, now begins."



--Andrew J. Bacevich, New Republic; image from