Are Government 'Strategic Communications' Coming To American Airwaves?
By: Rachel Marsden
Did you hear about the new bill that would allow the U.S. government's 
official overseas information agency to rebroadcast its content onto American TV 
and radio? The bipartisan Smith-Mundt Modernization Act of 2012 was introduced 
in Congress last week by Reps. Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) and Adam Smith 
(D-Wash.), both of whom are presumably dissatisfied with their satellite TV 
package and think more government-produced content would go down better with an 
after-work beer.
Not really. As Thornberry explains on his website: "While the Smith-Mundt Act of 
1948 was developed to counter communism during the Cold War, it is outdated for 
the conflicts of today. Effective strategic communication and public diplomacy 
should be front-and-center as we work to roll back al-Qaeda's and other violent 
extremists' influence among disaffected populations. ... To do this, Smith-Mundt 
must be updated to bolster our strategic communications and public diplomacy 
capacity on all fronts and mediums -- especially online."
I see. So the Smith-Mundt Act was strictly limited to countering communist 
propaganda overseas, because the idea of conducting government propaganda 
operations within a country at a time when Joseph Goebbels was a household name 
would have triggered post-traumatic stress. Thornberry says the legislation is 
uselessly dated because terrorism is now our main security threat, and it's not 
just based overseas. So, he says, the federal government's foreign-information 
services have to be able to reach terrorists where they live -- and that means 
inside America.
All right, and while we're at it, why don't I just submit verbatim copies of 
press releases I receive from various federal government departments so you can 
read them in this space each week? Government or otherwise, I don't reflexively 
trust anything that anyone tells me. If someone said the sky was blue, I'd look 
out the window and ask two more people if it looked blue to them as well. It's 
the very least of the media's responsibilities.
And I'm especially skeptical when I know that the source of any given 
information has an agenda. In the case of the U.S. government's Broadcasting 
Board of Governors and Voice of America information services, Thornberry 
describes the proposed domestic objective as "remov(ing) a barrier to more 
effective and efficient public diplomacy programs."
There's certainly no barrier to anything online. The firewall is effectively 
limited to traditional media. Anything delivered as a pre-packaged item to the 
conventional media from the government or any other source should be vetted, 
tested, evaluated and packaged appropriately before being presented to a larger 
audience.
Even when an event occurs overseas, as in the case Thornberry cites, whereby 
Sirius Satellite Radio couldn't get the green light under the Smith-Mundt Act to 
carry live Voice of America broadcasts in the Creole language from the 2010 
Haiti earthquake zone, I'm sure there are foreign correspondents, credible 
freelance journalists and other reliable independent analysts who would provide 
an adequate, objective take on events. If any of them prove inept or biased, 
then the free market will weed them out. Americans who are interested in such 
coverage will find the best alternative available to them. It's not only 
unnecessary for the government to create legislation in order to insert itself 
into this domain, but also a slippery slope.
Moreover, a peacetime natural disaster is a horrible example, since it 
represents the sole instance in which it's already legally acceptable for the 
government or military to conduct an information operation on a domestic 
audience to support noncombat activities such as evacuations, per a Clinton-era 
executive order. If that's still insufficient, then how about amending just that 
part?
I don't doubt that Voice of America journalists are as credible and objective as 
their counterparts elsewhere, and this isn't about Americans having access to 
journalism. It's about the possibility of opening a Pandora's box whereby the 
federal government would be able to produce content for an American audience via 
an entity over which it has full control, and which has historically served as 
an official government communications instrument.
Worse, it won't be operating domestically as a stand-alone station. Instead, 
content would be seamlessly rebroadcast through private media outlets, possibly 
without the viewer being fully aware of its provenance. The U.S. Army's 
psychological operations manual qualifies psychological warfare (PSYOP) and 
information operations (IO) as "influencing the behavior of foreign target 
audiences to support U.S. national objectives." A "white" official PSYOP product 
with a clear source risks turning into a "gray" PSYOP product as the source 
becomes murkier, non-official, and dissolves into the domestic mass media.
COPYRIGHT 2012 RACHEL MARSDEN