Losing Hearts and Minds?: Public Diplomacy and Strategic Influence in the Age of Terror

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Bloomsbury Academic, 2006 M08 30 - 139 pages

There is a broad consensus among informed observers both inside and outside the Beltway that American public diplomacy leaves much to be desired. Recent studies describe ineffectiveness, inadequate resources, and a general lack of direction. Further complicating this situation, there is no real consensus among critics on what must be done to fix current problems. Moreover, the ills afflicting public diplomacy are poorly understood. Losing Hearts and Minds? situates these problems within the complex environment of U.S. government bureaucracy, and relates them to other instruments of national power, particularly diplomatic activities and military force. This book prompts debate by analyzing obstacles to effective public diplomacy, and offers a comprehensive vision of this critical dimension of statecraft, which without improvements will ill serve the nation in its ongoing efforts to counter the global threat of terror.

After a systematic exploration of the concepts and terminology used to characterize public diplomacy and the wider domain of strategic influence, Carnes Lord examines the contemporary security environment and sketches an overall strategy that should guide the United States in projecting influence in the war on terror and in pursuing larger global interests. The author then looks at the cultural and institutional problems that have long handicapped the performance of the U.S. government in these areas. The book concludes with a detailed examination of the specific problems facing governmental agencies involved in public diplomacy and kindred disciplines, including the Departments of State and Defense, international broadcasters, and the White House.

About the author (2006)

CARNES LORD is Professor of Military and Naval Strategy in the Strategic Research Department at the Naval War College in Newport, RI. Dr. Lord is a distinguished scholar, educator, and former government official who served as the National Security Advisor to the Vice President and the Director of International Information and Communications Policy on the National Security Council Staff at the White House. His most recent book, The Modern Prince: What Leaders Need to Know Now, was acclaimed by The Wall Street Journal as "an instant classic."

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