|
| TOM DINE | |
January 16, 2002 |
|
|
The president of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty discusses U.S. outreach efforts to the Muslim world and plans for a new Radio Free Afghanistan. The following are extended excerpts of his interview with Terence Smith. The NewsHour Media Unit is funded by a grant from the Pew Charitable Trusts
|
|
TERENCE SMITH: This notion of Radio Free Afghanistan, what's it going to be? TOM DINE: It's going to be exactly what we do to the other countries to which we broadcast this will be our 28th country. The mission is promotion of freedom and democracy, and you do that as accurate, factual, balanced, objective news and information as possible. It's basic high, high standards of Western journalism. We're not going to try to fool the public. We're not negative propagandists. We are people who want to disseminate information that has a purpose, and the purpose here is democratic society, which includes the rule of law, includes tolerating diversity, pluralistic politics. If we can get those ideas across, we'll start to change the mindset that has almost sunk the place called Afghanistan over the last 20 to 25 years. TERENCE SMITH: And the target is the people of Afghanistan?
TERENCE SMITH: So you see this as not part of the war effort, but part of the postwar effort? TOM DINE: Oh, definitely. I don't even think of war. I think of the long-term. This nation is devastated. It was never a rich place to begin with, and now they've really got to start from scratch, in the urban areas particularly, and then all of the mine fields that have been scattered and will harm the population for a long time. So if the interim government can take hold, and then it's the successor government is oriented toward democratic reform, rule of law, economic liberalization, and is a member of the family of nations, then I think our radio, plus all of the other activities that will take place, will help to start rebuilding, recreating, reestablishing a functioning society that is also, hopefully, democratic.
TOM DINE: Correct. We folded it in the early '90s. TERENCE SMITH: And so are we closing the barn door after the horse has left here? TOM DINE: Well, if you only think in war terms. The Taliban is gone or almost nearly gone, the foreigners, the al-Qaida people are almost gone or in body bags or will be going. But in this case, it's about the promotion and the defense of democracy, and all societies in the world now are faced with this. Are they going to continue to be dictatorships or are they going to be part of this I'm using this from a positive point of view globalization, democracy, market economies, intervention of governments to make sure that the lower parts of the population rise up to meet the middle class and become middle class? And that's what this is all about. This is a major building block in the whole process of reestablishing Afghanistan as a functioning nation. |
|||||||||||||||||||
| Comparing U.S. public diplomacy radio broadcasts | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
TERENCE SMITH: Fit this, if you will, into the larger picture of public diplomacy that this country is trying to pursue in the wake of September 11th, in trying to get a different image of the United States and democracy out around the world. TOM DINE: Our brothers and sisters at the Voice of America are to promote the United States in their broadcasts. We do it differently. We are at the local level, and we will have stringers. We have stringers, as we speak, right now. Twenty people from Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty are in Afghanistan not just Kabul, but the other major places collecting stories, sending them back to our headquarters in Prague, and then we disseminate those to all of our listening audiences throughout Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
Now that government, I would guess, will be quite weak in the beginning. It won't have a strong centralization pull to it, but that's okay. If we can help Afghans communicate with each other and so that the people in Herat know what the people in Kandahar think and know, then that will be a contribution to tying things back together as best we can. TERENCE SMITH: How many listeners do you think you can get in Afghanistan? TOM DINE: The Voice of America has a very large listening audience. So does the BBC. And my guess is that, based on everything I know about the media in Afghanistan, pre-Taliban, Taliban, post-Taliban, that radio is the major means of receiving news. Newspapers are defunct, television was knocked out, and it was only the worst kind of propaganda, anyway, by the Taliban. Radio is where it is, and we'll therefore attract a large audience. Now, having said that, too, our kind of programming, news and information without rock and roll, without the latest in Southwest Asian popular music, will basically attract the influentials, and that's a very important audience. Who rules whom? Who are the opposition figures? We'll put on the air alternative views. They're not used to that. And we'll liven the place up with ideas, with information and, hopefully, show that the conflict between opinions is a lot more civil and a lot more productive than the conflict surrounding guns. |
||||||||||||||||||||
| America's unusual system | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
TOM DINE: The best thing the United States has, which is part of the problem, is our success: imagination, Hollywood, music, the arts in all kinds of ways, painters, poets, the fact that our government works, and we have this unusual system unusual from their perspective where it's by the consent of the governed, from grassroots up, that we change governments nonviolently. All of those things are foreign to parts of Europe that I work in Central, Southeastern Europe, former Soviet Union, the Persian Gulf, Central Asia where there are dictators. There will soon be a referendum in Uzbekistan which will allow President Karimov to stay in power. Well, that's foreign to us. But to them transitional governments through elections is foreign. So what I would call our successes are part of the problem. There's envy, there's jealousy. These are the natural forces of human nature. The fact that they don't like "a single superpower," the irritation, the psychological problems that people faced in looking at the United States started way before 9/11, way before "globalization" took hold.
In Central Europe, where I live, anyone who is not white-skinned is frowned upon, is condescended to, is discriminated against. A good one-third of our workforce in Prague are Asians. And every time they're discriminated against at a grocery store, at a sundry place, on public transportation, I hear about it, and I go at who it is, through letters, outspoken. And we've got to fight discrimination wherever it is, just the way we have to fight terrorism wherever it is. |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Changing public perceptions | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
TERENCE SMITH: Given all of these cultural differences that you're describing here, what can this country do in the wake of 9/11 to change the way it is viewed abroad? TOM DINE: We have to be true to ourselves. We have our interests. We're
going to pursue our interests. We are a fair society. We will try to
work with other countries. We cannot go it alone. Unilateralism before
9/11 was creating more problems than anything it was achieving. TERENCE SMITH: And we're not doing that effectively now? TOM DINE: I don't think we're doing enough. And every time I come back to the United States, and I look into this, because being in the United States international broadcasting, that's part of our public face. But we don't have a grand strategy. We don't have a, a coordinated approach to things, and so we've got a lot of work to do.
TERENCE SMITH: What would be a more appropriate budget for this kind of outreach that you're talking about? TOM DINE: Well, I wouldn't start with a budget figure. I'd start with what are our needs. Official America needs more representation on the ground around the world. Official America needs to have more cultural exchanges. Anybody who comes to this country usually likes it. That doesn't mean they're going to integrate and they're going to become us. We have to have educational exchanges, cultural exchanges. The best of America should be not exported abroad, but shown abroad, our painters, our poets, our filmmakers, our everything. And so I could envision a $1.5 billion budget, which is, again, what we're spending per day in Afghanistan on our military operations. TERENCE SMITH: Do you get any sense that people are willing to do that now, in the wake of September 11th? TOM DINE: Yes. I remember a congressional hearing in early October
chaired by Congressman Henry Hyde of Illinois, chairman of the House
International Relations Committee, in which he said we do Hollywood
so beautifully, why don't we do this better? So there's a yearning for
it. TERENCE SMITH: Have we done anything yet?
So we're up and surging, if you will. Secondly, we'll be broadcasting as many hours as possible in Afghanistan, and the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty are trying to have a 24-hour stream. They're on 12 hours, we're on 12 hours. So we're going to share the burden and share the output. There will be a program to the Arabic-speaking world that the Voice of America will sponsor the Middle East Radio Network. That's something new. That's something different. That's something to meet the dilemma now that we face in the Arab streets, and the focus will be the youth in the Arabic-speaking countries. |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Advertising America | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
TERENCE SMITH: We have also read about advertising making ads that might even involve respected American Muslim figures, like Mohammed Ali and others, talking to this part of the world. Does this make sense to you? TOM DINE: I don't know. I always have a suspicion that you can try
to sell and market mayonnaise to the housewives of America and the househusbands
of America, I'm not so sure it works in a nonmarketing, advertising
world, but that's part of globalization too. They're getting more and
more used to advertising.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
The NewsHour Media Unit, including this site, is funded by grants from: |
| Support the kind of journalism done by the NewsHour...Become a member of your local PBS station. | ||
| PBS Online Privacy Policy Copyright ©1996- MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. All Rights Reserved. | ||