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A2100 spacecraft
Direct broadcasting satellites may provide the best means for the US government to get its message across in troubled regions of the globe. (credit: Lockheed Martin)

A satellite bouquet for Karen Hughes

In America we call them options, but in France they call them bouquets, which sound much nicer. They are the collection of channels one buys when one signs up for cable or satellite TV service. Deciding which bouquet to offer and what it includes is a critical decision in the cable and satellite TV business. Inevitably it has become an affair of state. When Hezbollah TV was banned from the bouquets offered on French cable channels and the same channel’s access to the US was cut off (although people who really want it can probably see it over the Internet), we see an indication of what the future may look like.

Just as advertisers fight for pairs of eyeballs, so governments and terror organizations do the same. The emotional power of images cannot be underestimated. No nation on earth pays as little attention to the image it presents to the rest of the world as does America. As usual, the US State Department is on a steep learning curve. About a decade ago the United States Information Agency (USIA) was transferred to State Department’s control; since then no one can claim that America’s public diplomacy has improved.

At the same time direct broadcast satellite (DBS) technology has improved by leaps and bounds. Last year US industry sold more DBS spacecraft than traditional communications satellites. In fact, if it was not for the demand for these spacecraft, the US civil space industry might simply go out of business.

In fact, if it was not for the demand for DBS spacecraft, the US civil space industry might simply go out of business.

A modern DBS satellite such as EchoStar 7, based on a Lockheed Martin A2100 bus, can handle more than 500 channels of video, data, or radio programming. The US government’s full bouquet of services might fill up a third or less that capability. For the purposes of public diplomacy Voice of America TV probably does not use more than a dozen channels on any one DBS satellite, if that. They do lease transponders on at least six different satellites, such as Eutelsat’s Hot Bird 3 and Asiasat 2, to give them worldwide coverage.

A middle-class family in, say, Tunisia, with a satellite dish and a slightly above average level of curiosity, will probably be able to tune into a single US government satellite TV channel which, no matter how interesting or well produced, will still be easily identified as US government propaganda and will thus be discounted, as all government-produced TV is in the developing world. People in these countries are highly distrustful of all outsiders and outside sources of information, and in most cases rightly so.

Karen Hughes has gone to work in the State Department with the job of improving America’s public diplomacy. If this is not a real-life “Mission Impossible”, it is close to one. In what Francis Fukuyama called “Low Trust Societies”, breaking through the thick crust of suspicion is incredibly difficult. Normally in these societies when the government or a political movement wants to make an impression, they have to hammer it home with the most violent and aggressive message possible.

The US has, so far, not been able to take full advantage of the advanced DBS satellite capabilities. If it did, it might be able to broadcast a new kind of public information into the Middle East: an Arab C-SPAN or several similar channels. After all, neither the US nor any western TV station can compete with Aljazeera or Hezbollah TV in terms of emotional impact, so why not go to the other extreme?

C-SPAN may sometimes be as exciting as watching the grass grow, but it has become an essential part of our democracy, allowing ordinary Americans to watch the Congress and the political class in action. It has become another way for citizens to keep an eye on the politicians, who, after all, need all the watching they can get. According to reports, Iraqis have been fascinated when they get the chance to see their new government trying to get itself up and running. Like Americans, they certainly know that there is a lot going on that they cannot see, but what they do see is enough to demystify their new leaders and that in itself is an accomplishment.

C-SPAN may sometimes be as exciting as watching the grass grow, but it has become an essential part of our democracy, allowing ordinary Americans to watch the Congress and the political class in action.

Using DBS satellites this principle could be extended all over the Middle East. Just as during the Cold War, when the US-sponsored Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty as substitutes for the independent local broadcasters that the peoples of Central and Eastern Europe did not have, a new set of C-SPAN-like channels, one for each nation, could substitute for the access that the peoples of these states now lack.

Getting programming and cameras into the right places to provide content will be difficult, but if the alternative is to show hours on end of dissident organizational meetings in London or elsewhere, governments in the area might be persuadable. Coverage of demonstrations might also be useful. A few years ago C-SPAN showed four or five hours of a Hamas demonstration somewhere on the West Bank. The excruciating tedium of the event showed that terror groups can be thoroughly boring.

The technology is available at bargain rates. If it wanted to the US government could build and launch their own satellite; alternatively, they could lease channels on existing spacecraft. Why should the US limit itself to one or two channels when it could deliver dozens? Political violence may be exciting on TV, but people who are sick of war might prefer to be bored.


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