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INF, the Media, and the New Soviet Image-Makers


Article # : 13970 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 2 / 1988  1,909 Words
Author : Harry Zubkoff and Stephen Aubin
Harry Zubkoff is editor in chief of Defense Media Review. Before retiring, Zubkoff was chief of the Pentagon's Current News and served every secretary of defense from Louis Johnson through Caspar Weinberger. Stephen Aubin is executive director of Potomac Strategies, Inc., and a managing editor of Defense Media Review. Previously, Aubin worked as a writer in the immediate Office of the Secretary of Defense.

       As the 1987 Reagan Gorbachev summit came to a close, both President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev hailed the signing of the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty as a historic accomplishment.
       
        History may indeed record that moment as a significant one. But history should also recognize an even more memorable scene: the world's two master image-makers standing side by side skillfully making their case for the newly signed accord to a captive audience.
       
        While the tendency to "go public" among soviet officials is nothing new, the skill with which the Gorbachev team has applied the principles of public relations is.
       
        In July 1987, an unusual public exchange took place between the two key negotiators in Geneva, Yuli M. Vorontsov, deputy foreign minister of the Soviet Union, and Max M. Kampelman, head of he U.S. delegation on nuclear and space weapons. The forum: the op-ed pages of the New York Times. Kampelman's article, titled "A Reply to Moscow on I.N.F. Talks," came a week after Vorontsov took Moscow's case to the American public. What were the top Soviet and American negotiators doing as they wrangled over "the remaining obstacles" to an INF accord on the pages of an American newspaper? Were they putting forth serious positions or simply engaging in public relations?
       
        Amid the willingness of both sides to make their cases publicly, one aspect of the increased public jockeying through the media tends to be overlooked: the unequal access enjoyed by Soviet ... (1946 of 11190 Characters)
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