Just Above Sunset
July 25, 2004: More to be said - Kafka and Soft Power
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You might recall the news
item on freelance reporter Elena Lappin, the British freelance reporter who failed to produce a press visa upon her arrival
here at LAX (Los Angeles International Airport) – and this led airport officials to handcuff her and take her to a detention
center. She was subsequently deported. Reporters Without Borders was all worked up that a dozen other foreign correspondents,
including six French reporters, were treated in a similar fashion at the Los Angeles airport. Well, she was roughed up a bit.
But this is war, isn’t it? Just five months before American voters decide who will be appointed to the most powerful office
in the world, the US state department said it would no longer allow overseas journalists to renew visas from within the country.
So, how’s it all
going now? I have just entered the United States. Since I was on a so-called J-1 visa, this was quite an
achievement. First I had to fill in a form asking my host university to send me another form. Armed with that form, I filled
in three further forms, including such obviously relevant information as my brother's telephone number, and the names of two
people who could verify this information. Then I had to go to Barclays bank to get a special receipt for paying the fee. Then
I had to supply a passport photograph 2 inches square in which "the head (measured from the top of the hair to the bottom
of the chin) should measure between 1 inch to 1 inches (25mm to 35mm) with the eye level between 1 1 18 inch to 1 inches (28mm
and 35mm) from the bottom of the photo". Only a few photoshops do these and, once found, Snappy Snaps charged me £24.99 for
a double set. Snappy, indeed. The first time you apply, you also have to go for an interview at the embassy. Well, in times of world
war the hurt feelings of a few Brits may not matter. Yes, I know that the United States was attacked by terrorists on September 11 2001, and some of
those terrorists had entered the US on J-1 visas. I understand, obviously, that the country has had to tighten up its security
controls. But this is more than just a personal grouse. Heads of leading American universities have publicly complained that
such bureaucratic and intrusive procedures are reducing the number of foreign students willing and able to come to study in
the US. (I have heard it argued in London that this creates a significant opportunity for British universities.) This raises
the larger question of whether the United States' "soft power", its power to attract others and to get them to do what it
wants because they find it attractive, has been diminished by the way the Bush administration has reacted to the 9/11 attacks.
That, in turn, raises the even larger question of who is winning this "war": al-Qaida or the US? So let’s get this
straight, what is happening here indicates the United States has lost real influence and power, and that in turn indicates
the United States is really losing the war or terror? Because we get a kick out harassing British journalists who in
turn seem to get their kicks out of questioning the effectiveness if not the basic intelligence of the man we have chosen
to be our leader? And because we like to bedevil young British women who might be planning to do, perhaps, sexual things
with an American boyfriend? Folks need to realize we respect our leader here, and don’t ask questions, and we,
at least, are serious about how evil sex can be. …American hyperpower, by contrast with the one-dimensional superpower of the Soviet Union,
has always depended on having all three dimensions: military, economic and "soft". The soft power of a country is more difficult
to measure than its military or economic power, but one yardstick is what I call the "Statue of Liberty test". In this test,
countries are rated by the number of people outside who want to get into them, divided by the number of people inside who
want to get out. Thus, during the cold war, many people wanted to emigrate from the Soviet Union, while very few wanted to
go and live there, whereas hundreds of millions wanted to enter America and very few to leave it. By this rough measure, America
still has bags of soft power. Someone needs to tell George
and his posse – because this is our method. We know no other. Could the liberal, multilateralist, French-speaking John Kerry, who launches his campaign in earnest
at the Democrats' convention in Boston next week, change all this, and restore a Kennedyesque glow to America's image in the
world? I find many people in Europe already answer that question with a firm no. Something deeper has changed, they say.
Even if America reverts to its previous form, attitudes towards America will not. Gloom and doom. Gloom and doom. … Perhaps it's just the effect of sitting here in the Californian sunshine, watching this
extraordinary multi-ethnic society working all around me, but I think America's underlying attractions are still all there
- damaged by 9/11, diminished by economic competition from booming Asia, but still formidable. If Kerry can summon a spark
of charisma, aided by his appealing running mate John Edwards, and if the monstrous ego of Ralph Nader will kindly fall under
an appropriately eco-friendly bus, the Democrat has a chance of reminding us that the other America still exists. And much
of the world, even the Arab and Muslim world, will respond. Ah, I like that gerund
- hoovering-up. … Republicans are covertly supporting their most extreme opponent, Ralph Nader, because
he will take votes from John Kerry, and al-Qaida terrorists will be backing Bush, because he's their best recruiter. But can
they do anything to affect the outcome of an American presidential election? Of course they can. A major terrorist attack
on the American homeland a few days before November 2 would almost certainly not have the effect that the Madrid pre-election
bombing had, sending swing voters to the anti-war opposition. Yeah, well. |
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This issue updated and published on...
Paris readers add nine hours....
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