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WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- The United States is failing in its efforts
to explain the nation's diplomatic and military actions to the Muslim world, but
no public relations campaign can defend America from flawed policies, a Pentagon
advisory panel says.
The Defense Science Board released the harshly critical report on its
website Wednesday after the content was disclosed by the New York Times. It
urged the government to urgently change its approach to understanding and
communicating with the Muslim world.
The report said the United States has fundamentally misunderstood why many
Muslims are hostile toward the nation. "Muslims do not 'hate our freedom,' but
rather they hate our policies," it said.
In the eyes of the Muslim world, the report says: "American occupation of
Afghanistan and Iraq has not led to democracy there,but only more chaos and
suffering."
The report scolds the government for casting the new threat of Islamic
extremism in a way that offends a large portion of those living in the Muslim
world.
"In stark contrast to the cold war, the United States today is not seeking
to contain a threatening state empire, but rather seeking to convert a broad
movement within Islamic civilization toaccept the value structure of Western
Modernity - an agenda hiddenwithin the official rubric of a 'War on Terrorism,'
" the report stated.
"When American public diplomacy talks about bringing democracy to Islamic
societies, this is seen as no more than self-serving hypocrisy," it said.
The report, "Strategic Communication," proposes a permanent "strategic communication structure" within
the White House National Security Council and urges elevated
roles and responsibilities for a designated senior officer within other
government organizations, including the State Department and the Pentagon.
"To win a global battle of ideas, a global strategy for communicating those
ideas is essential," the Defense Science Board's chairman, William Schneider,
Jr. wrote in a memo introducing the report.
The report, completed in September, is among a series of reports produced
by the board, a group of nongovernment experts who advise the secretary of state
on a range of issues. Enditem |