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U.S. embassy launches campaign to correct errors in Pakistani media

Marxist

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ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN -- Some reports are deemed "a paranoid fabrication," such as the claim that all Pakistanis are stripped naked in U.S. airports.

Others are "false and malicious," such as the one about the Americans moving Pakistani Taliban leaders to Afghanistan to prepare them for a battle against Pakistan's army.

So says the U.S. Embassy here, which for nearly eight months has issued statements countering every major error about American foreign policy that it finds in Pakistan's boisterous media.

It's a herculean task that embassy officials say has been undertaken by no other U.S. mission in the world -- because nowhere else, those officials say, does U.S. policy face such disdain and misrepresentation.

The statements -- called "Corrections for the Record" -- are issued a handful of times a month. Whether they are effective is hard to measure, though embassy officials express confidence. Taken together, the missives serve as a chronicle of the uphill battle the U.S. government faces in Pakistan in its sometimes clumsy efforts to influence opinion.

Much is at stake. The Obama administration views Pakistan as a crucial partner in its fight against Islamist terrorism, and it has spent the past year trying to convince Pakistanis that the United States is a steadfast, well-intentioned ally. So far the public has not been swayed: A recent Pew Research Center survey found that 17 percent of Pakistanis view the United States favorably, and only 8 percent expressed faith in President Obama -- his lowest rating in 22 countries surveyed.

The corrections have challenged widely believed theories in a nation with a penchant for conspiracies: that Americans were behind deadly bombings ("absurd, baseless") or plotting a "massive infiltration" by U.S. Marines of Pakistan's militant-riddled tribal areas ("entirely false").

The correction campaign comes as the media in Pakistan grow in size and influence. As of 2002, there was one state-owned television station in Pakistan. Now there are more than 90 private channels, many of which feature roundtable-style political debate, plus countless newspapers, magazines and journals.

The content is raucous and the journalists are free, within certain nebulous limits; many avoid criticism of the powerful security establishment, though they savage the civilian government. The United States, which is expanding its footprint here, often features as an all-powerful schemer, a depiction embassy officials complain is exacerbated when Pakistani journalists do not seek the American side of the story.

Some observers, though, say the real problem is the two nations' spy novel-like relations. Secrets surround so many aspects of the relationship that the resulting vacuum is easily filled by rumors.

Against that backdrop, some Pakistani journalists say, official embassy denials carry little weight. "Our government does not have a history of giving out information. If the U.S. pulls another Pakistan on the Pakistani media . . . it's only natural they would be hostile," media analyst Adnan Rehmat said. "The hostility stems from this space where secrecy is the norm."

That attitude has been compounded by confirmations -- in the American press -- of reports that initially seemed to be wacky conspiracy theories, said Huma Yusuf, a columnist for Dawn newspaper. Those CIA drones that strike militant mountain hideouts? Turned out they are indeed allowed by Pakistan, despite the government's public denials. The rumors about U.S. troops on Pakistani soil? American officials confirmed in 2008 that U.S. commandos had conducted a ground raid and more recently that about 200 Special Forces are training elements of Pakistan's military.

Still, Yusuf said, many of Pakistan's newly minted journalists are learning as they go, and "making stuff up" is a common way to generate news.

"If you can take even the slightest thing and turn it into a story that proves the U.S. is the evil demon . . . it's going to sell papers," Yusuf said.

Embassy officials say that they have stepped up interaction with Pakistani media but that the embassy's press shop -- set to grow to five people by next year -- is small for the job.

The U.S. special envoy for the region, Richard Holbrooke, has met with Pakistani journalists on many of his visits, as have many U.S. lawmakers while passing through, said Larry Schwartz, the embassy's senior spokesman. They often focus on the less-clandestine aspects of the U.S.-Pakistan relationship, such as aid for power plants and schools, even if the news media do not.

"We really are trying to develop a meaningful and supportive relationship with this country," Schwartz said. "The distortions that we see in the media do need to be countered."

In this duel, the embassy says its biggest foe is the Nation, an English-language newspaper. It has published photos of houses it says were rented by menacing American operatives employed by the security company Blackwater; in one case, according to a U.S. Embassy correction, the resident was a U.S. aid worker.

More recently, the newspaper reported what it called "stark confirmation of the vicious U.S. agenda": Police had detained a U.S. military official driving an "ammunition-laden vehicle" and "trading heavy weaponry." The embassy retorted that the truck carried "equipment" used in Special Forces training, with the consent of authorities.

Shireen Mizari, the editor of the Nation, responded to questions about its coverage and the embassy corrections in her column.

"If the police confirm a piece of information, we have no reason to doubt it," she wrote of the article about the truck. Regarding the house photos, she wrote that "if we see anyone doing something suspicious, it is our job to report it."

But the market for English-language newspapers is small. Television, where 70 percent of Pakistanis get their news and anti-Western venom flows, may be the biggest arbiter of public opinion. The embassy rarely issues corrections about television reports, which are too numerous to monitor.

Even so, the Americans might want to lighten up, Rehmat said. Given the surge in programming, most has nothing to do with the United States, and some is even positive, he said. Instead of corrections, the embassy should focus on getting more American scholars, scientists, artists and athletes -- not just Washington officials -- into Pakistan to mingle with journalists.

"For us, America is either Obama or Bush, or it's 50 Cent and Michael Jackson," he said. "We're missing all the other amazing spectrum."

washingtonpost.com
 
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Media has transformed into salesmanship.

More hype - More selling.

That the problem of Media - a TOUGH COMPETITION.

So they go over the board in order to be at ahead or at least at par with their competitors.

Media has to learn to report correctly.
 
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hay US plz check washington post as well!
i find "paranoid fabrications" here quite often!:P

lol, Washington Post is one of the biggest propagandist and paranoid newspaper I have ever came across.... BTW CNN is not that behind.
 
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Some observers, though, say the real problem is the two nations' spy novel-like relations. Secrets surround so many aspects of the relationship that the resulting vacuum is easily filled by rumors.

From the early days of the transition, one could ask an Obama Administration official about Pakistan and the first - sometimes only -response would be that his eyes would roll. Imo the GoP asks the U.S. to keep many things secret from the Pakistani people and the U.S. agrees because the USG feels (1) doing so is in the short-term interest of the U.S., and (2) if the U.S. really did go public with its GoP secrets Pakistanis wouldn't believe much of it anyway and would use what they did believe to demonize the U.S. even further.
 
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The problem is that although we have been allies since 1948, there is a trust deficit between the people, this is a Govt to Govt relationship in which people are not involved, rather, they are quite uncomfortable. There are many misconceptions in America regarding Pakistan, I was shocked to hear a grown American man ask me once "Is it true Pakistanis like eating Dogs ?" Similarly, there are gross misconceptions in Pakistan regarding America. What is needed are some confidence building measures that will help bring our relationship on track and will help us better understand each other. Americans who visit Pakistan tend to speak very highly of the people, of the hospitality, the multi-lingual culture, colourful festivals, but those who haven't are a slave to the media, which will not refrain from marketing lies that on one hand destroy a county's international image but on the other, earn the news agency a pocketful of cash, same is the case in Pakistan, the media does it's best to cash on people's ignorance and insecurities to earn an extra buck...............my two cents......

Off topic: @Marxist: Why is your signature set as goodbye defence.pk, why are you leaving ?
 
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Response of the Paranoid :P


Well I think the problem arises , when on youtube, and on national debate , Obama goes on air and states that we will strike with in Pakistani territories if needed , and if needed we will conduct operations

Also the mistrust , also arises when you see 95% of people held up at airports who happen to either be born in Pakistan or who had ties to Pakistan being stuck on airport for 3 hours for clearance yep it makes one go paranoid specially if they had done this proces 100 times

Also , when local law and security officials openly catch cars owned b US contractors riddled with explosives and other weapon yes these items reach the news as its confirmed by police

Mean while , we hear that US has offered India 125 F16 Block C/D + versions while we get offered 3 planes a month

While Pakistan feels trouble with its energy needs, yet the nuclear power plant deals are signed with India


Passing people thru the xray machines that show your naked pics is what makes people worried as , its a common known fact such actions may be normal in American society naked photos of strangers are allowed to be flimed and observed by Pakistan officials


Most of the pranoia is backed up by peronal accounts in most cases
 
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Something about my face, I'm always stopped at US airports, and quizzed for HOURS - no fabrication here. All stupid questions like what did you do in UAE, why are you in UAE, oh and the best one, why aren't you a UAE citizen yet?

This usually turns into a 24 hours stopover since in US airports domestic flights are not running 24 hours and when you miss your connecting flight after 6 hours of useless questioning you got to spend the night at the airport.

I kid you not - Travelling to the US for a Pakistani is a daring job. There are actually tips online on how to conduct yourself properly so you don't piss of a TSA guy in a bad mood that day.
 
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Case of Paranoia
 
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Something about my face, I'm always stopped at US airports, and quizzed for HOURS - no fabrication here. All stupid questions like what did you do in UAE, why are you in UAE, oh and the best one, why aren't you a UAE citizen yet?

This usually turns into a 24 hours stopover since in US airports domestic flights are not running 24 hours and when you miss your connecting flight after 6 hours of useless questioning you got to spend the night at the airport.

I kid you not - Travelling to the US for a Pakistani is a daring job. There are actually tips online on how to conduct yourself properly so you don't piss of a TSA guy in a bad mood that day.

Not your face.. it s the passport you hold, i guess.
 
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billi...Is that what happens to indians in Australia for holding "indian passport".
 
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billi...Is that what happens to indians in Australia for holding "indian passport".

what are they stopped in airports? in Australia its because of skin colour. its very different. second important point, what happened in Aus was not done by the 'authorities'.
fact is after faisal, anyone from pak or been recently to pak for a length of time, will be scrutinized and its important to take these precautions, so that you and i can fly safely.
 
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Not your face.. it s the passport you hold, i guess.

I take issue what that statement, i happen to be a holder of a Pakistani documents and not once in my three trips to the US, have i been stopped for longer than necessary. I am always travelling to random places in the world and never faced issues because of my travel documents.

My cousemate was stopped once when we were in UK, but that was because he fit the "profile" so i agree with Asim that certain skin tones and features meet their "profile".

Also what does this have to do with the topic at hand. Back to topic, believe me with operations like care and care and Cpt. Ali Zaidi, and the old mech plant in I-10 and G4 logistics, the US Special forces walking around with weapons in Khosar market etc... There is no wonder people in the Pak press are edgy.
 
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