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Selling Kurdistan via California By Bill
Berkowitz
OAKLAND, California - As chaos
continues across much of Iraq, the governing
authority is coming to yet another crossroads.
Inside the Green Zone - the location of
the US Embassy and major Iraqi government offices
- officials are struggling to forge an acceptable
constitution by the mid-August deadline. Outside
the relative safety of that enclave, the
insurgency continues apace as demonstrated by
daily suicide bombings and civilian casualties.
While the Shi'ite leaders of the
government are negotiating deals and solidifying
ties with Iran, and the Sunnis remain mostly
disaffected from the political process, the Kurds
appear to have mastered a dual strategy of
participating in government decisions while at the
same time taking matters regarding their future
into their own hands.
The generally
efficient, if questionable, electoral process in
January not only turned out large numbers of
voters, but it also allowed Kurdish leader, Jalal
Talabani, to be selected as the country's
president, ensuring close participation by the
Kurds in all important government deliberations.
In a parallel strategic track, however,
the Kurdish Regional Government appears to be
keeping its options open, recently hiring Russo
Marsh & Rogers (RM&R) - a Sacramento,
California-based public relations firm with close
ties to the Republican Party - to promote its
interests.
Many political observers
believe that the future of Iraq may see a
full-blown civil war or possible partition.
Investigative reporter Seymour Hersh recently
wrote in The New Yorker magazine that a United
Nations official involved in the elections told
him: "The election was not an election but a
referendum on ethnic and religious identity. For
the Kurds, voting was about self-determination."
RM&R's Joe Wierzbicki said, "Our job
with the Kurds is to carry out a public relations
campaign that will thank the American people for
supporting the war in Iraq and encourage Americans
to visit and invest in the Kurdish region."
The project has not yet begun and it is
unclear how long the contract will actually run.
"It's a short-term thing because they don't know
how long the public relations campaign might go,"
Wierzbicki said.
RM&R took on this
work, he said, because "of all the different
groups in Iraq that have a vision for the future,
the vision of the Kurds is closest to ours. It's
important to recognize that the Kurds are not
hostile to the West. Their vision, belief system
and values - they've had a democratic system in
place for a while - parallel ours.
"It's a
very messy situation over there and the country is
trying to figure out its future. The Kurds would
like the rest of country to look at the Kurdish
region and see it as a model for the rest of the
country."
Wierzbicki quickly added that
they are definitely "not advocating an independent
Kurdistan" and was circumspect about exactly what
issues his firm would be handling.
But
according to O'Dwyer's PR Daily, one of the chief
goals of Kurdish leaders is "the return of
Kirkuk", an oil-rich northern Iraqi city populated
by Kurdish and Turkmen people. The struggle over
Kirkuk could precipitate a major conflict within
Iraq.
The public relations campaign's
launch date could come as soon as later this
summer or could be put off until the fall,
Wierzbicki said, and the campaign would likely
feature television and print advertisements.
The "war on terror" has been good to
RM&R. Shortly after September 11, it supported
a brief but nasty and failed campaign to unseat
California Democrat Representative Barbara Lee,
after she had cast the lone Congressional vote
against giving President George W Bush a blank
check to pursue his war on international
terrorism.
Lee, who received numerous
death threats and received special condemnatory
attention from David Horowitz's Center for the
Study of Popular Culture, was challenged by former
Green Party state assemblywoman Audie Bock.
With the support of RM&R, Bock came
out of the box with the campaign slogan, "It's OK
to Love America." Completely misjudging the
electorate in the Ninth District, a district that
was represented by Ron Dellums, the longtime voice
for anti-militarism and social justice, Bock's
campaign came to a crashing halt in short order.
Before RM&R finalized the deal with
the Kurds, it had other business in Iraq to attend
to: handling the publicity for the "Truth Tour", a
seven-day carefully calibrated trip to Iraq by a
group of conservative radio talk-show hosts that
was intended to spread the "good news" about what
is happening on the ground.
The tour was
organized by Move America Forward (MAF), an
organization that, according to the Washington
Post, owes much of its existence to the good
offices of RM&R. The Office of Media Outreach,
a taxpayer-funded publicity arm of the Department
of Defense, also sponsored the tour.
MAF
describes itself as "a non-profit, non-partisan
organization dedicated to preserving our American
heritage of freedom and liberty".
Its
website pointed out that the purpose of the "Truth
Tour" was "to report the good news on Operation
Iraqi Freedom you're not hearing from the old line
news media ... to get the news straight from our
troops serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom,
including the positive developments and successes
they are achieving".
Wierzbicki said that
from the very beginning, MAF was the project of
Howard Kaloogian, a former California state
assemblyman, and Melanie Morgan, the co-host of a
morning show on KSFO-AM in San Francisco, and that
Sal Russo, the founder of RM&R, "helped set it
in motion".
Wierzbicki allowed that
RM&R has done "all of the [group's] public
relations stuff, press releases, and radio and
television ads that have been aired to date".
MAF is currently soliciting contributions
to run an advertising campaign called "Tortured
Words", a commercial aimed at countering Illinois
Democratic Senator Dick Durbin's recent criticism
of the conditions at the Guantanamo Bay prison
camp in Cuba. MAF intends to run the ads on major
broadcast affiliates such as NBC, ABC, CBS, Fox
throughout Durbin's home state of Illinois.
In June 2004, eager to discredit Michael
Moore's award-winning documentary Fahrenheit
9/11 before it hit the movie theaters,
RM&R collaborated with MAF to lead a campaign
that urged its supporters to stop Michael Moore
"by taking action against the release of his
anti-American movie Fahrenheit 9/11".
RM&R's web site claims that when it
comes to winning elections, few firms can match
its success.
By its own accounts, its
record is impressive. It maintains that it devised
the campaign strategy that allowed George Pataki,
"a little known state Senator" from Peekskill, New
York to defeat New York's Governor Mario Cuomo.
RM&R also "was hired by the California
Republican Party to help salvage a sagging
campaign to pass Proposition 209, the California
Civil Rights Initiative (also known as the
anti-affirmative action initiative) (and) in the
weeks leading up to election say (it) produced an
advertising campaign which saved the initiative".
Bill Berkowitz is a longtime
observer of the conservative movement. His
WorkingForChange column "Conservative Watch"
documents the strategies, players, institutions,
victories and defeats of the US Right.
(Inter Press
Service) |