.:[Double Click To][Close]:.
Spain, December 2009


Suri accessorized her latest outfit with a purse full of lip gloss visiting her dad Tom on the set of Knight & Day in Seville on Tuesday, 8.


Suri is wearing BEBOP Dress by Bonpoint, which she first wore on September 17th 2008.


and she continues to wear her new favorite Flamenco Shoes in Pink - can be purchased from flamencoexport.com, which she first wore yesterday.

Thanks to Sarah for notifying me that the pink flamenco shoes are not by Mix Mamas.

Source

Fashion Facts I Slept On: Rebecca Minkoff At Bluefly!!!!

Shame shame SHAME on me for not knowing that Bluefly.com has MAD Rebecca Minkoff bags!!!

($170, Rebecca Minkoff, Bluefly.com)
You ought to be adding this black-and-blue Rebecca Minkoff Morning After Bag post HASTE!

($285, Rebecca Minkoff, Bluefly.com)
SAMESIES for this black embossed suede Morning After Bag. So soft I could rest my head upon it and use it as a pillow.

December 8



"I love talking about nothing. It is the only thing I know anything about.”

--Oscar Wilde; image from

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Marketing the U.S. in Pakistan - Haider Mullick, Foreign Policy:


"The United States has signed billions of dollars in aid over to Pakistan but sitting in Islamabad two weeks ago I could hardly find a happy Pakistani. The overriding narrative usually goes as follows: the U.S. sporadically uses Pakistan's military, colludes with local leaders, and leaves millions of Pakistanis to clean up the mess. Failing to explain or market its soft power -- aid for schools and hospitals -- Washington relies on Islamabad to highlight its goodwill and mistakes. While this ostensibly strengthens local governance and protects foreign aid workers, it has placed Pakistanis in a state of combustible ignorance. After eight years today most Pakistanis are equally anti-Taliban and anti-U.S. That spells failure for U.S. public diplomacy. ... [T]he recent State Department $30 million public diplomacy campaign will fail if Islamabad does not end its pervasive doublespeak. Pakistani officials I talked to tell me that the mantra in Awan-e-Sadr (the Pakistani White House) is to take full credit for U.S. weapons, satellites, and dollars and still use the United States as a punching bag for drone attacks (even as they secretly tolerate them). This duplicity is must end with a reasonable ‘roadmap to transparency' that explains and sells the U.S.-Pakistan relationship. For example, United States should initiate public tours of its embassies and consulates. ... Washington and Islamabad should market U.S.-supported socio-economic and investment programs such as private electricity producers, Fulbright scholarships, and building roads for the tribal areas abutting Afghanistan." Image from

Best Performance in a Farce - Kelley B. Vlahos, Antiwar.com: "If there was any early competition for the direction of the Afghanistan war – diplomatic or military – that was over months ago. The COINdinistas like to patronizingly talk about the 'whole of government' approach when it’s politically expedient. But again, it’s not real. We all know where the bread is buttered these days: defense spending outpaced international affairs at the State Department 17 to 1 in 2009, according to Lawrence Korb at the Center for American Progress. Of course Obama & Co. blew in with high hopes, brandishing what they thought was a serious diplomatic arsenal, with Hillary Clinton, Dennis Ross, and especially Richard 'The Bulldozer' Holbrooke at the spear tip. They no doubt envisioned long tabletops and colorful shuras, hard-nosed and even feisty negotiations, which would all culminate in some photo-ready handshake and a Dayton-like accord. So far, crickets. And the 'civilian surge?' It has been plagued by low recruitment, lack of experience, and again, a shortfall in resources. So now the military says it is 'forced' to take over public diplomacy and to dominate the Provincial Reconstruction Teams. The burdens are enormous."

US signaling – Editorial, DAWN.com: ‎ "Mercifully, American public diplomacy can also get things right on occasion. On Sunday, US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates said:

‘Well, we don’t know for a fact where Osama bin Laden is. If we did, we’d go after him.’ More importantly, from a Pakistani perspective, Mr Gates also acknowledged that intelligence-sharing was not necessarily the problem between the US and Pakistan: ‘No. I think it’s because, if as we suspect, [Bin Laden] is in North Waziristan, it is an area that the Pakistani government has not had a presence in, in quite some time.’ Compare Mr Gates’s statements with what Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on her trip to Pakistan in late October: ‘I find it hard to believe that nobody in your government knows where [Al Qaeda’s leaders] are and couldn’t get them if they really wanted to.’ Are the US secretaries of defence and state really operating with fundamentally different scripts for American policy towards Pakistan or is it part of a complex game of signalling, a good cop/bad cop routine, in which the US is trying to goad Pakistan into ‘doing more’?" Gates image from

Why No Change Ten Years On? - Mark Dillen, Public Diplomacy: The World Affairs Network: "It is ten years since the U.S. government reorganized its public diplomacy effort, but we have yet, it seems to me, to arrive at a version of U.S. public diplomacy that is truly effective in both long-term relationship building and rapid transmission of political ideas. Instead, our relationship-building effort relies heavily on academic exchanges while our most noteworthy efforts at getting political information out quickly are taken up by the Pentagon, rather than the State Department. ... The outlook is not entirely bleak. The Obama Administration has recently nominated a first-class public intellectual, Walter Isaacson, to run the BBG. President Obama himself has made an enormous difference in how the world perceives the United States. The U.S. military 'gets it' — but that’s not enough. America still lacks a non-military institution that articulates her ideas and ideals overseas and provides timely tactical advice to advance foreign policy goals. Ten years after the end of the U.S. Information Agency, it is fair to ask how so many people could have allowed this to happen."

A Center to Defend Our Climate Stance - Ben Jervey, Adopt a Negotiator: “'No matter how you feel about them,' a friend from the Global South told me today, 'the U.S. is really good at this.' She was referring to the U.S. Center here at COP15, a public diplomacy/PR/outreach venue set up by the State Department to, basically, try to show others countries that–in terms of climate change–we’re a whole new America. My Southern friend’s reaction would seem to indicate that they’re doing a good job. Inside the little pavilion space is a boatload of our nation’s finest climate science, including the attention-grabbing centerpiece:

Science On a Sphere® (SOS)." Image from article

Obama and the Islamic World: Co-sponsored by the Asia Program and the Middle East Program – Events at the center, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars: "December 07 2009, 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Event Details Satoshi Ikeuchi, Japan Scholar, Woodrow Wilson Center and Associate Professor, University of TokyoSatoshi Ikeuchi explores principles and philosophies in the Obama administration’s discourse on Islam and Muslim nations. He examines public speeches and remarks by Obama and officials in the administration to assess the administration’s deliberate efforts in engaging Muslim nations. He also locates this discourse within the context of the many contested views on Islam. His presentation is an effort to put Obama's discursive policy on the Muslim nations in the context of worldwide debate on 'Islam,' and examines to what extent Obama's public diplomacy is causing change within a discussion dominated by the dichotomy of 'Islam and the West.' It also suggests how Obama’s distinctive approach affects U.S. policy on human rights and the promotion of democracy abroad."

Chinese college students flocking to U.S. campuses - Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY: "President Obama announced plans last month to 'dramatically expand' to 100,000 the number of U.S. students who study in China over the next four years, calling such exchanges 'a clear commitment to build ties among our people in the steady pursuit of cooperation that will serve our nations, and the world.' But .. . [l]ast year alone, 98,510 Chinese graduate and undergraduate students poured into U.S. colleges and universities, lured by China's emphasis on academic achievement and the prestige of U.S. higher education. China is second only to India when graduate students and undergrads are counted. ... . Nationally, an 11% growth in undergrad enrollments last year was driven largely by a 60% increase from China, a report by the Institute of International Education says. Grad student enrollments were up 2%. ... The increase also reflects a 'strong dialogue' between the two countries, says U.S. State Department deputy assistant secretary Alina Romanowski.

She says the recent growth can't be pinned to specific changes in visa policy, but some U.S. college officials say they detect a friendlier attitude among U.S. embassies and consulates, which review visa applications. One key question for any country is whether visa-seeking students can prove they will return to their home country upon graduating from a U.S. college." Romanowski image from

A culture clash over Confucius Institutes - Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY: "Just as the philosopher Confucius sought in ancient times to promote mutual understanding between cultures, China is stepping up efforts to do the same today. Over the past five years, the Beijing-based non-profit Confucius Institute has established nearly 300 centers in 87 countries around the world. The goal: to offer local communities opportunities to learn Chinese language and culture. And, some observers say, to soften China's image as an aggressor as it grows stronger economically and politically. ... The website for the Beijing-based Confucius Institute, which was established by an arm of the Chinese Ministry of Education known as Hanban, says there were 80 U.S.-based Confucius Institutes as of October. Hanban provides start-up money – about $100,000 at Nebraska – plus instructors and the opportunity for host sites to apply for more money. ... Some critics view the institutes as mostly a vehicle for propaganda. An Indian online business magazine reported in October that India had rejected China's efforts to establish Confucius Institutes there. Others raising concerns about China's motives include members of the Swedish Riksdag and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. y contrast, a recent Economist story on Confucius Institutes says the Pentagon helped finance some language courses at the institutes under an initiative launched in 2006 by then-president George Bush."

Publication – Journal Paper - Hak Yin Blog: “'China’s advancements in Central Asia: Limitations towards a regional power' (with Zhengxu Wang), East Asian Policy, vol.1, no. 4, 2009 Abstract:

As a main founder of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, China’s trading activities and energy investments in Central Asia have increased since the 1990s. Many analysts expect Chinese influences to increase in the region. This paper looks at the Chinese influence in trade, energy development, diplomacy and soft power, and finds that China can hardly be regarded as a dominant power in the region. China should further develop its public diplomacy in order to foster ties with Central Asian countries." Image from

Poland hosts NATO summit on WMD - UPI.com: "The North Atlantic Council, the highest governing body in the alliance, in September released its policy for preventing the proliferation of WMD and defending against chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats. Jacek Bylica, the top WMD official at NATO, said the directive 'provides high-level political guidance' for tackling a growing proliferation threat. The directive allows 'enablers' to work with partners to the NATO alliance to share intelligence and share efforts at public diplomacy and strategic communication."

NATO officials hail UAE's active role in Istanbul Cooperation Initiative - WAM, Emirates News Agency:

"An official at the media division of the public diplomacy directorate in NATO said that the UAE, a member of the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative, proved effective presence quickly among the member countries, strengthening cooperation with NATO in various fields to consolidate its regional and international presence." Image from

Middle East Gates Open to Turkey: Gul's Visit to Jordan - Sedat Laciner, Journal of Turkish Weekly: "Turkey cannot only trust the attempts of a handful of people in understanding the region, developing relations and maintaining them. Institutionalized assistance foundations should urgently emerge and the previous ones should work more actively and efficiently. Politics underpinned by trade should attach great importance to public diplomacy."

Death of James F. Brown, RFE/RL director 1978-1984 - Kim Andrew Elliott discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy

On VOA, family appeals for information about American missing in Iran - Kim Andrew Elliott discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy

Salahadin left the keys in Damascus - i figure wherever i am, that's where the world is: "The road to lasting Middle Eastern peace, it seems, runs straight through Damascus. And that is why I am here, working in a small way on that effort.

The role of Public Diplomacy is to reach the Syrian public and to change their attitude towards the United States, a crucial first step into changing the political attitude between Syria and America. It is an incredible time and opportunity to be a part of this change, incorporating the ideals and initiatives in Obama’s Cairo Speech, and I cannot begin to explain how much I am learning here, and how excited I am to be a part of this new beginning." Madeline Stoddart is student at Georgia Institute of Technology studying International Affairs. Her professional focus is on international development, foreign policy, and the Middle East, while her amateur forays into photography, cooking, writing, traveling, and general pursuits of adventure will most probably be much more common on this site. Damascus image from

Essay 3 - ~*Life through Literature*~: Tiffany Young Instructor: "Patty Hanahoe -DoschEN 102 December 6, 2009 Essay 3 New Plan for Afghanistan After the invasion of the Taliban and other terrorist extremists, the citizens of Afghanistan were left with almost nothing. Most Afghans are uneducated and lack basic necessities, including proper nutrition and healthcare. This forced citizens to wear the same clothing for several days in a row and make a minimal income by selling goods on the black market. The poor state of these communities is clearly from a country that 'had been at war for twenty-five years; the new government had been in place for only two weeks; there was no electricity between Heart and Kabul, no television and no T-shirts. . .' (Stewart, How to Save Afghanistan). Many military strategists realize that public diplomacy and development is important to the Afghan citizens and community; sending the correct message 'across with cultural nuances' and establishing a link between the security of development within communities is very pertinent (Mills).

EE a type of PD? - Katie Schoenberger, SIS 640 Group 1: "It seems that the articles on Entertainment Education and Open Source Public Diplomacy had quite a bit in common. Both focused on the typical approach of the West to use these tactics (EE and traditional Public Diplomacy) to 'impose' its values or beliefs on another country or region."

The top 5 EU blogsites missing from your bookmarks list – The Conservative Blog: "3. Errant European Errant European is a blog written by Gerald Loftus who describes himself as an Irish, American and errant European. Loftus is certainly worthy of being in the top 5, he has written for the Foreign Service Journal, American Diplomacy, The Middle East Journal, and the USC Center for Public Diplomacy, publications based in the United States.

In Brussels he has written for New Europe, and as a spokesman for Democrats Abroad Belgium, appears regularly in the Brussels media circuit and if that wasn’t enough also assists the Brussels-based Institut EuropĂ©en des Relations Internationales (IERI) in its relations with North American academic institutions and think tanks. What I particularly like about this blog is that it is written by someone who can be unashamedly non-partisan about the EU, something none of us Europeans can claim to be. It is interesting to see the views of somebody from America on the European Union, something we rarely hear about. Don’t let the fact that this blog is written by an American put you off (no, I don’t mean it in that way), he certainly knows his stuff, as his writing credentials above show." Loftus image from

First day of class - cheesetoasters under Iraq, Where the Wombats Are: "First day of class in FT 610 – Iraq Familiarisation. There are nine of us in the class. Three career US Govt guys (1 FBI and 2 State Dept security) and they are all the Uncle Grumbles type – no smiles. There’s a telecommunications guy who is going to put up satellites all over the country and he’s probably the liveliest of the bunch. Fun and friendly. There’s my buddy I did my HR intake stuff with and who’s been in Iraq since the invasion doing tactical ops (in charge of managing stuff if there is an attack on the embassy). Very nice guy though a bit quiet. There’s a guy I met last week from NEA/SCA PD (Near East Asia/South and Central Asia Public Diplomacy) who is going straight to the PRT (Provincial Reconstruction Team) in Irbil. And three FSNs (foreign service nationals) – non-Americans working at other embassies who’ve been given an opportunity to work for the US in Iraq."

A Job -- December 7, 2009 - Afflicted With Optimism - Stories From The Job Hunt: A Job Posting: "Another job at the Department of State... USA...Contractor Position: STATEMENT OF WORK U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) Senior Program Officer (Materials Writer) Background The Materials Branch, Office of English Language Programs (ECA/A/L) produces books, videos, and other materials related to the teaching of English as a Foreign Language (EFL) for use by teachers and educational institutions overseas.

These materials are specifically produced to be cost-effective resources provided to teachers and institutions through the public diplomacy efforts of U.S. embassies." Image from

RELATED ITEMS

The Next Surge: Counterbureaucracy - Jonathan J. Vaccaro, New York Times: The decision has been made to send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan, and Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top American commander there, is expected to speak to Congress this week about his strategy for the war. Our troops can win the war, but they will be more effective if the bureaucracy is thinned. When a suicide bomber detonates, the Afghan streets are abuzz with Taliban propaganda about the glories of the war against America. Meanwhile, our messages have to inch through a press release approval pipeline, emerging 24 to 48 hours after the event, like a debutante too late for the ball. Authority to release information could be delegated to units in contact with Afghans.

A price to pay, one name at a time
- Richard Cohen, Washington Post: The question for Afghanistan is not whether it's worth a trillion dollars or several hundred additional American lives. It's whether it's worth a single additional life. Below image from



A Fearful Price - Bob Herbert, New York Times: The idea that fewer than 1 percent of Americans are being called on to fight in Afghanistan and Iraq and that we’re sending them into combat again and again and again — for three tours, four tours, five tours, six tours — is obscene.

Too few troops, too much spin - Tony Blankley, Washington Times: A sense of unreality overshadows our debate on Afghan war policy across the spectrum of opinions. The unreality derives from the simple fact that we do not have enough troops to rationally implement an adequate defense of our national interests. So every argument for Afghanistan policy tends to seem unserious, perhaps pointless. Neither former President George W. Bush, nor Mr. Obama (nor, I'm sure, the American public) would consider, for example a draft to increase our fighting capacity. That level of sacrifice necessary to gain safety from the still-gathering threat of radical Islam is beyond current American sensibilities.

A war tax doesn't make sense: Fiscal responsibility is good, but a tax hike to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan is the wrong way to go – Editorial, latimes.com:

A better approach would be to pay the added costs of the war by redirecting some of the trillion $3.7 already being spent by the federal government. Image from

Afghanistan on Main Street - Roger Cohen, New York Times: America cannot forever languish in a la-la land where the great global security underwriter and the great global debtor never encounter each other, dishing out billions for far-flung fights with one hand and condemning the next generation of Americans with the other.

Pakistan and the War – Editorial, New York Times: President Obama has articulated a reasonably comprehensive strategy for Afghanistan, but there is no chance of defeating the Taliban and Al Qaeda unless Pakistan’s leaders stop temporizing (and in some cases collaborating) and get fully into the fight. Drones won’t be enough. Pakistan’s civilian and military leaders must finally be persuaded that this is not just America’s war, it is central to their survival.

Breakthrough in Iraq: A new accord gives democracy a chance to work -- and shows that high-level U.S. engagement is still needed - Editorial, Washington Post: President Obama's new strategy for Afghanistan resembles in many respects the surge launched by the Bush administration in Iraq nearly three years ago -- though the president, who opposed the surge, hasn't advertised that fact. So the news that Iraq's legislators had finally agreed Sunday on a law permitting national elections to go forward early next year gave cause for optimism on more than one front.

Losing our heads in war - Frank J. Gaffney Jr., Washington Times: The time has come for the public and its elected representatives in Congress to recognize the peril associated with the Obama doctrine of diminishing our country, emboldening our enemies and undermining our friends.

Tora Bora: An opportunity missed: Analysts say it would've taken only 2,000 or so U.S. troops to get Osama bin Laden in 2001, but military leaders failed to use all the firepower available. Our troops have been paying the price since - John Kerry, latimes.com

Esprit décor: Magazine editors bedeck 17 envoy spaces for Mission 'Diplomacy at Home' - Jura Koncius, Washington Post: With just two weeks' notice, editors from a half-dozen lifestyle magazines, including Martha Stewart Living, This Old House and Traditional Home, at the State Department Diplomatic Reception Rooms, swagged greenery (very, very carefully) around $100 million worth of American antiques. Their deadline was a reception Monday night at the State Department to honor families of government employees currently serving unaccompanied tours overseas in places considered too dangerous to bring family along. Called "Diplomacy at Home for the Holidays," the event was reminiscent of the high-profile gigs that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Chief of Protocol Capricia Penavic Marshall

pulled off at the White House a decade ago, when one was first lady and the other social secretary. In the State Department's John Quincy Adams State Drawing Room, Mother Earth News placed a bowl of Thomas Jefferson's favorite heirloom apples under an 1816 portrait of the first secretary of state. The State Department hopes to make the decoration process an annual event. Marshall image from

SPACE TRAVEL

Exclusive SpaceShipTwo unveiling gallery (Updated!)


The craft will take six tourists at a time to the edge of space. Each seat is $200,000, requires the traveler to pass a strenuous physical, and offers just a few minutes of zero-G flight.

December 7


"If I had my life again I'd make all the same mistakes. I would still sleep with as many women, and drink as much vodka. Any regrets would make me seem ungrateful."

--British actor Richard Harris; image: Hellraisers to the end: Richard Harris with Peter O'Toole

PUBLIC DIPLOMACY

Ann Stock nominated as Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs - Mark Overmann, Alliance for International Educational and Cultural Exchange: “President Obama announced Friday his intent to nominate Ann Stock as the Assistant Secretary at the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, Department of State. Stock’s nomination appears on the Senate record, and was also reported by the Chicago Sun-Times and by the Washington Post’s Reliable Source. The Sun-Times posted a White House press release from last Friday (not yet available on the White House website), which includes Stock’s biography:

‘Ann Stock is currently the Vice President of Institutional Affairs at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Ms. Stock oversees the Center's expanded efforts to increase its national and international profile and manages the Center's International Arts Management Programs. She also supervises the Government Relations Office, Press Office and Office of Institutional Affairs. From 1993-1997, Ms. Stock was Deputy Assistant to former President Clinton and the Social Secretary at The White House. Prior to that, Ms. Stock served as Vice President of Corporate Communications and Public Relations for Bloomingdale's Department Stores for ten years. Ms. Stock was also Deputy Press Secretary to Vice President Walter F. Mondale during the 1980 Presidential election campaign. Ms. Stock has a B.A. from Purdue University.'” Image: Ann Stock (left) and Sharon Rockefeller from

Talking Cultural Relations with foreign policy thinkers in Washington – Andrew Kneal, British Council Voices: “The foreign policy elites who deconstruct the ebb and flow of geopolitics on ‘the hill’, within the halls of power-house think-tanks, and amongst the prolific blogs which shape public opinion, talk more often of ‘Smart Power’ and the merits of strategic communications, and do not necessarily recognize the critical role of Cultural Relations. Increasingly however, I think this is more a function of language, rather than disagreement about the nature or importance of intercultural engagement.

Yesterday, Chief Executive Martin Davidson and Raoul Shah – one of the British Council’s trustees – were invited to participate on a roundtable at the New America Foundation, a public policy institute in Washington, DC. ... They discussed the merits of public diplomacy, cultural relations and other forms of engagement with those countries in which the UK and US have a deficit of trust, with the view to identifying what sorts of practices yield more positive, credible and closer relationships with these countries for the future.” See also; Kneale image from

A top watchdog on foreign affairs - Washington Post: “‎Jacquelyn Williams-Bridgers, managing director, international affairs and trade, Government Accountability Office Best known for:

As the inspector general at the State Department and now as a watchdog for Congress at the Government Accountability Office, Williams-Bridgers has led inquiries and evaluations of American foreign-affairs programs and activities including public diplomacy, development assistance, international security and nuclear nonproliferation. She is known for being smart, tough and a problem-solver.” Williams-Bridgers image from article

Philip Seib Speaks About Diplomacy - USC News: "Philip Seib, professor at the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism and director of the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, spoke on a panel about 'Winning Hearts and Minds: American Public Diplomacy in the 21st Century' at Johns Hopkins University on Nov. 16.

The audience of 120 included Hopkins faculty, students, officials from various government agencies and foreign diplomats. Seib talked about the importance of having substantive policy initiatives to back up public diplomacy efforts and the need to break away from the Cold War premises that have long governed U.S. international broadcasting.” Seib image from

Russian American Rule of Law Consortium: Maine Delegation to Arkhangelsk Oblast Assembly of Deputies (Duma) 21 June 2006—5 July 2006: Report of the Secretary of State, State of Maine - Maine.gov: “Delegation members were Matt Dunlap, Maine Secretary of State; State Representative John Brautigam (D-Falmouth), member of the Joint Standing Committees on Insurance and Financial Services and Utilities and Energy and a member of the House Standing Committee on Ethics;

Ray Pelletier, attorney with Verrill and Dana and Vice Chair of the Greater Portland Sister City Committee; Neale Duffett, attorney with Cloutier, Barrett, Cloutier and Conley and Co-Chair of the Greater Portland Sister City Committee; and Carol Lestock Lord, librarian and Co-Chair of the Greater Portland Sister City Committee.” Image (from article),with caption: The statue of Lenin remains in the Arkhangelsk city square

Canada and the World – Daryl Copeland, Guerilla Diplomacy: “[P]ublic diplomacy, or PD, as a technique for delivering international policy results through dialogue, plays directly to Canada’s soft power strengths (image, reputation, brand).

Equally significant, it minimizes the weaknesses and vulnerabilities associated with diminished hard power, ongoing capacity limitations and this country’s generally shrinking space in the planetary scheme of things. With an admirable reputation and positive image, public diplomacy is Canada’s strongest comparative advantage in international relations. It is incomprehensible that this function has taken among the the hardest of hits the recent round of resource reductions. Not only is this akin to shooting yourself in the foot when you are in a race, but if forces evern greater distortions and misallocations throughout the diplomatic network. Just what, for instance, are all of the Public Diplomacy Officers assigned to Canadian missions abroad supposed to do in the face of the reductions, and in some cases removal of their budgets for programming, travel or representation? How can the very significant administrative overheads and related costs associated with keeping these people in place be justified when in many cases no real work can be done?” Copeland image from

House of Lords debate on BBC includes discussion of BBC World Service and BBC Worldwide - Kim Andrew Elliott discussing International Broadcasting and Public Diplomacy

China’s involvement in Fiji and Australia and New Zealand’s position - Phillipa Brant, East Asia Forum: “Only five years ago China’s involvement in Fiji and the South Pacific region barely registered in Australian policymaking and media circles. In the five years leading up to 2009 China’s bilateral trade and investment with Fiji has significantly increased; it has announced an aid package worth $135m in concessional loans; and it has increased its support to the key regional organisations, tripling its funding to the Pacific Islands Forum. Australia’s aid budget to Fiji was $27m for 2008-09. ... Australia’s tit-for-tat

approach to disputes with Fiji, along with the reportedly domineering stance it took in the Pacific Islands Forum, especially at the Cairns meeting in August, stands in stark contrast to China’s politically appealing approach of responsiveness, respect, and effective public diplomacy.” Image from

Video: Israeli Tech 'Geeks' at'140-Character' Conference - Yoni Kempinski, ‎ Arutz Sheva: “Israel National News visited The 140 Characters Conference (‘#140conf’), which took place on Sunday at the Afeka College of Engineering in Tel Aviv, and spoke with the event's organizer and founder Jeff Pulver. ... Since the launch of the #140conf events,

conferences have taken place in New York City, Los Angeles and London. During 2009 the conferences explored the effects of Twitter on a wide range of topics including, celebrities, media, advertising, politics, music, education, public safety and public diplomacy. The organizers of the #140conf events explain that they provide a platform for the worldwide Twitter community to listen, connect, share and engage with each other, while collectively exploring the effects of the emerging real-time Internet on business.” Image from

Romania's Ambassador to Baku to present nato's vision on current security model - Roumanie.com: “On Jan. 1, 2009, Romania took over the mandate of NATO Contact Point Embassy (CPE) in Azerbaijan on the period 2009-2010. NATO contact point embassies in the partner states have an important role in the relation between the Alliance and the respective state. This includes support in the running of NATO activities, especially those in the public diplomacy field, locally, as well as the necessary approaches in order to secure a communication channel for the NATO policies in the partner state.”

Tsai soars, but image needs a tweak - Editorial, Taipei Times: “Following the gains the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) made in the local government elections on Saturday, the popularity of DPP Chairperson Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) has increased alongside the power she wields within the party. ... Tsai has reached a point where people are more likely to listen to her.

Now’s the time for her to engage in public diplomacy to dispel the myths that have long haunted her party and to rid it of those who risk undermining its image as a responsible alternative to the KMT [Chinese Nationalist Party].” Tsai Ing-wen image from

Knight Center Foreign Policy Seminar Part I - Uncle Jimbo, Blackfive: “I attended a Foreign Policy seminar as Fellows of the Knight Center for Specialized Journalism at the University of Maryland. ... [W]e went on a morning trip to the State Department and had a chance to question Ian Kelly, a State spokesman on Smart Power. He was somewhat responsive, but all in all fairly typical of someone in his role; he volunteered little that wasn't common knowledge. Then we had a rep from the Public Diplomacy group who was woefully non-communicative. ... All in all the State Department was a waste of time.”

JOTW 49-2009
– Ned’s Job of the Week: A World in Communication: “36.) PRT Public Diplomacy Officer, Afghanistan Support Organization (ASO), Department of State, Washington DC Metro Area, DC/TDY to Afghanistan”

RELATED ITEMS

Obama zeroes in on jobs, healthcare, Afghanistan: After taking office with a raft of priorities, he's realized he needs to focus on a few key issues at a time - Doyle McManus, latimes.com:

On Afghanistan, aides say Obama now regrets the hasty decision he made in March to announce that the goal in Afghanistan was to defeat the Taliban and forge a stable democracy. Obama told columnists last week he now realizes his initial definition of the mission was too grand and led his military commanders to "start viewing the mission expansively." Instead, he said, he wanted to define a "narrow mission" -- not building a new Afghanistan, merely "ensuring enough stability that we're able to keep pressure on Al Qaeda." Image from

Obama, the anti-Churchill? - Fareed Zakaria, Washington Post: Obama is searching for a post-imperial policy in the midst of an imperial crisis. The qualified surge -- send in troops to regain the momentum but then draw down -- is his answer to this dilemma. By the end of 2011, the United States will have spent 10 years, thousands of lives and $2 trillion trying to create stable, democratic governments in Iraq and Afghanistan, two of the most difficult, divided countries in the world. It will be time to move on.

In Afghan troop surge, shades of Iraq - Fred Hiatt, Washington Post:

Iraq shows that forceful, strategic intervention can shape events and redefine inevitability.

Images from and from

When Islamist foreign policies hurt Muslims: Turkey's government and leader bash the West for transgressions while absolving anti-Western regimes of their sins. This hurts ordinary Muslims from Darfur to Chechnya to Iran - Soner Cagaptay, latimes.com: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to meet today with President Obama in Washington. This is a chance for Obama, who visited Ankara in April in a charm offensive to win Turkish hearts, to have a discussion with Erdogan about Turkey's ill-conceived foreign policy, which is bad for the West and for Muslims.

Beyond Copenhagen – Editorial, New York Times: Nobody should expect a planet-saving agreement from the negotiations that begin this week in Copenhagen aimed at reducing global emissions of greenhouse gases. But the talks were in real danger of blowing up not long ago. Now there is a good chance for at least an interim deal, mainly because the United States and China, the world’s two biggest emitters, have promised to reduce or slow their emissions and their two leaders have agreed to attend. Below image from

Fresh air in Copenhagen: A sound approach for getting climate-change aid to developing countries - Editorial, Washington Post: While the commitments on the table before the conference -- most recently from the United States, China and the subcontinent -- are almost certainly inadequate, they have made possible a Copenhagen agreement that will at least put the world on the right path.

US propaganda film: about Lebanon in 1958 - As'ad, Angry Arab News Service: This is an amusing US propaganda film about the 1958 mini-civil war in Lebanon, and US intervention.


ONE MORE QUOTATION FOR THE DAY

"This country has too many parties without people and too many people without a party."


--A participant in an anti-Berlusconi demonstration in Rome; image from
Spain, December 2009


Suri & Katie visit Tom on the set of his new film “Knight and Day” in Sevilla, Spain on Monday, December 7.


Suri is wearing White Silk Ruffle Dress by Holmes & Yang and Pink Flamenco Shoes - can be purchased from flamencoexport.com

Suri is carrying around Facet Button Cardigan in Oatmeal Color by SEED, she worn the same one in Cherry Red on October 26th. (sold out on line)


Suri's dress is the newt addition to Holmes & Yang Collection - it is made of White Silk with dots and has an asymmetrical cut hem - Beautiful Dress!!


and a lovely picture of Suri indulging in an ice-cream... :)

Source

Lace... is Everything!

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House Arrest Alina Rock in Zink Holiday 2009


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Who’s That Boy Iris Strubegger in Hercules FallWinter 2010


John Galliano (style.com)














Dolce & Gabanna













Alexander McQueen

Carlos Miele


Chanel

Christian Cota

Christian Dior



Douglas Hannant

Erdem



House of Holland

Malandrino

Marchesa

Naeem Khan

Nina Ricci

Preen

Sonia Rykiel

Valentino












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Emina Cunmulaj for Elle Germany