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hangin' about
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Look, I don't give a rat's ass if the right or the left-wingers are behind this ... this is purely a propaganda machine lying in wait. What happened to liberating the Iraqis and getting the hell out??? Give it 25 years, max, and the US will have the entire Mid-East by the balls.

 
Jim Rutenberg/NYT
Wednesday, December 17, 2003

TV network in Arabic faces skepticism
SPRINGFIELD, Virginia

The United States' next great hope for winning Arab hearts and minds hides in a squat two-story building in a generic industrial park here, just off highway I-95. The only hint of what may lie within is the black-tape lettering on the front door that reads "News."

Inside, construction crews are working seven days a week to complete studios for the most ambitious U.S. government-sponsored international media project since the Voice of America began broadcasting in 1942.

It is to be called Al Hurra, a slickly produced Arab-language news and entertainment network that will be beamed by satellite from this Washington suburb to the Middle East. The name translates to English as "The Free One."

Al Hurra is meant to be America's "fair and balanced" pan-Arab answer to outlets like Al Jazeera, the Qatar-based satellite network that White House officials accuse of fanning anti-Americanism in the Gulf region.

The network may start broadcasting next month. But it already faces skepticism, even from an outside Middle East expert appointed by Secretary of State Colin Powell to review U.S. public relations efforts in the Arab world.

Many Middle East scholars have questioned whether its target audience, suspicious of all things American, would ever accept it, especially when its main hub is in Virginia. Even if it does gain acceptance, some scholars said they doubted that a single television network could have enough impact to justify $62 million in first-year costs.

The team behind Al Hurra, an odd mix of American media executives and longtime Arab journalists, said it would be editorially independent, like Voice of America and Radio Free Europe.

Acknowledging the challenges, they say that it will exemplify the best values of American journalism and present the best chance so far to deepen understanding of America in the region.

"We're contending with a media environment that includes hate speak in radio and TV," said Norman Pattiz, who heads the Middle East committee of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, the U.S. agency that is financing and overseeing the project. "It's in that environment that the Arab street gets its impression of our policies, our culture, our society," Pattiz said. "We simply cannot ignore the indigenous media."

Al Hurra will be available everywhere in the Middle East that Al Jazeera is, said Pattiz. By midwinter, he said, the network will have a separate outlet and studios in Iraq, paid for by a $40 million appropriation included in President George W. Bush's $87 billion financial aid package for Iraq and Afghanistan. It will have other bureaus throughout the Middle East.

The network, along with an Arabic-language radio venture that began nearly two years ago, Radio Sawa, was put on the fast track after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, when U.S. officials recognized a need to address anti-American sentiment in the Arab media.

Officials behind Al Hurra hope it will have an Arab sensibility, delivered by its Lebanese-born news director, Mouafac Harb, a former Washington bureau chief for the London-based Arabic daily Al Hayat. Harb is hiring a largely Arab staff of more than 200 people.

Bert Kleinman, the network president, said people in Egypt and Bahrain who had taken part in focus groups had reacted positively to a description of Al Hurra - "fair and balanced," "empowering," "tolerant." But he acknowledged, "When we asked if a fair and balanced channel like this could be American, some said, 'Absolutely not.'"

With that sort of data in mind Edward Djerejian, director of the James A. Baker Public Policy Institute of Rice University, said, "We're skeptical that it will be able to jump over this barrier, this obstacle of credibility, in terms of being a state-run media outlet."

Djerejian, named by Powell to study U.S. public relations efforts in Muslim countries, reported back those concerns. But M.C. Andrews, acting director of the White House Office of Global Communications, said the administration fully supported the network.

Executives of the broadcasting board said they were heartened that Radio Sawa, a youth-oriented radio station that mixes Western and Eastern pop and also was supposedly doomed, had built an audience of at least 15 million throughout the Middle East.

And, they said, some members of focus groups criticized Al Jazeera for being overheated and said they would give Al Hurra a chance if it was credible.

Establishing credibility falls to Harb, 36, a Muslim whose parents live in Beirut. Harb said he had come up with the idea to name the network Al Hurra instead of the more Western sounding "Middle East Television Network."

"This is a very Arabic name, 'The Free One,'" he said. "Not 'The Freedom Network.' That would sound militant. This says, 'I am free, and if you want to be free, come and watch me.'"

Harb and other officials say the channel will not pull its punches when it comes to the United States. For instance, Pattiz said the channel might feature a translated version of the BBC documentary "Blair's War," which extensively aired the views of critics of the Iraq war.

Al Jazeera officials said Arab viewers would see the network for what it was, a tool of the American government.

Kenneth Tomlinson, chairman of the Broadcasting Board, said he would shield the network from external pressure, though he said he did not expect any. "The people aren't stupid," he said. "If we're slanting the news, they'll figure it out. If we establish long-term credibility, people will begin to ask questions. What went wrong? What retarded a civilization that was once far ahead of the West? And we'll be there to answer them."

The New York Times
 

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Looks like a waste of time, but a few people will make a lot of money out of it.

The Voice of America was dire, to put it politely.
At least the Radio Moscow english broadcast stuff was entertaining, especially those weird ersatz american accents.

When Saigon crumpled it was the BBC world service that people tuned in to, quality counts, especially in a crisis.
 

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