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LATE-BREAKING FOREIGN POLICY
The News Media's Influence on Peace Operations


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Only 8 copies left!
 $29.95 (Hardback)
978-1-878379-68-9


$14.95 $12.00 (Paperback)
978-1-878379-67-2


USIP Press Books
May 1997
304 pp. , 6" x 9"

While recognizing that media can have a powerful effect on process, Warren Strobel carefully and effectively debunks the 'media makes policy' myth in this book
James A. Baker, III, 61st U.S. Secretary of State

A revealing read. Strobel, himself a practitioner of daily 'newsbreak' journalism in the print medium, peels away the veneer of magic around today's global newscasting and offers a glimpse of how policymaking and instant journalism mix. Insiders in the policy and media establishments will see themselves in Late-Breaking Foreign Policy. Consumers of news and policy will never watch 'live' television journalism the same way again.
Ralph Begleiter, CNN

A useful exploration of the issues raised when CNN intersects with international diplomacy. Strobel's case studies from the post-Cold War crises in Somalia and Haiti are especially instructive. In short, an important contribution to the field.
Johanna Neuman, foreign editor of USA Today and author of Lights, Camera, War: Is Media Technology Driving International Politics?

A well-written piece of research that will completely engage readers interested in the media's place in today's culture.
Publishers Weekly (June 1997)

The very fluidity and uncertainty of our times make Warren Strobel's thoughtful, perceptive study an important book for policymakers, reporters, and students of foreign policy
Ken Bode, moderator of Washington Week in Review and the John Hughes Professor of Politics and the Media, DePauw University

The influence of the media--particularly the "CNN effect"--has dramatically changed the way foreign-policy decisions are made. But there have been few in-depth studies of how televised news reports and newspaper accounts of humanitarian tragedies abroad affect the decision to deploy U.S. forces.

This insightful book by a working journalist examines the media's influence on the deployment--or withdrawal--of U.S. peacekeeping troops to avert humanitarian disasters the world over.

Drawing on interviews with senior U.S. national security officials and the journalists who covered the humanitarian-relief operations in Bosnia, Rwanda, Somalia, Haiti, and northern Iraq, Strobel provides riveting behind-the-scenes accounts of recent peace operations. He describes the conditions in which the media has the greatest, and the least, influence, and offers recommendations to civilian and military leaders on building and maintaining public support in an age of intense media scrutiny.

 

Warren P. Strobel is White House correspondent (and was formerly State Department correspondent) for the Washington Times and is the author of articles in American Journalism Review and the Christian Science Monitor. He was a fellow at the United States Institute of Peace in 1994-95.

Contents

  • Fighting the Last War: A Brief History of Government, the Military, and the News Media
  • Driving Fast without a Road Map: The News Media and Foreign Policy Today
  • Reporting the New Story: The News Media and Peace Operations
  • The Push: The News Media and Intervention
  • The Pull: Public Opinion and Peace Operations
  • Assessing the Gap: Conclusions and Recommendations

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