Prime Minister’s Office recruiting students to wage online hasbara battles 14Aug13 August 14, 2013
Haaretz   -   13 August 2013
The Prime Minister’s Office is planning to form, in collaboration with the National Union of Israeli Students, “covert units” within Israel’s seven universities that will engage in online public diplomacy (hasbara).Â
The students participating in the project, who would post on social media networks such as Facebook and Twitter on Israelâs behalf, will be part of the public diplomacy arm of the PMO, but would not identify themselves as official government representatives.
About a week ago, the outgoing deputy-director general of the Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs Ministry, Daniel Seaman, sent a document to the government tender committee seeking to exempt the national student union from being chosen as the partner in the project through a public bidding process.
The PMO is looking to invest close to NIS 3 million to recruit, organize and fund the activities of hundreds of university students, as part of the countryâs public diplomacy effort.
The Public Diplomacy Ministry is being closed and its staff are being integrated into the national public diplomacy unit in the Prime Ministerâs Office. Seaman, who previously served as head of the Government Press Office and also ran as a candidate in the Likud party primaries, is expected to assume a new position shortly – that of head of an office with the very official sounding name of âthe interactive media unit.â In practice, this is the entity that is expected to coordinate the public diplomacy efforts of the Prime Ministerâs Office on the Internet and social networks.
Seaman informed the public tender committee that the Prime Ministerâs Office was interested in having the student union recruit up to 550 students with knowledge of foreign languages from Israelâs seven universities. The student union is to publicize the project among tens of thousands of students and be responsible for the screening process, which will include submission of resumes, submitting answers to questionnaires, providing translation samples and participating in individual interviews. It is also the student union that is to provide computers and work space for a project headquarters on each campus.
Seaman informed the committee that the diplomacy units at each university would take direction from staff at the Prime Ministerâs Office, but its public face would be one of an independent student entity. âThe entire idea of the setup is based on activity of students and by students,â Seaman wrote to the committee. âThe idea requires that the stateâs role not be highlighted and therefore it is necessary to insist on major involvement by the students themselves without any political link [or] affiliation.â
It is apparent from Seamanâs document that a diplomacy group will be set up at each university and structured in a semi-military fashion. The head of the unit will be a student âsenior coordinator,â who will receive a full scholarship from the Prime Ministerâs Office. Working under the senior coordinator will be three other student coordinators, each of whom will head one of three desks, responsible for languages, graphics and research. These coordinators will get smaller scholarships. A group of student activists, who will receive nominal student stipends, will work under each coordinator. The Prime Ministerâs Office will fund a total of NIS 2.78 million in scholarships for the program in the upcoming academic year.
âIn light of the success in the battle for awareness during the Pillar of Defense Operation [the Israeli military operation against the Gaza Strip in November of last year] and the experience gained in activating a large number of situation rooms on university campuses and work with students in general, it was decided to establish a permanent structure of activity on the Internet through the students at academic institutions in the country,â Seaman wrote. âThe students are an organized population that is familiar with, and active on, the Internet on an ongoing basis, trained in use of the field, [who] live and speak the language of the [medium].â
The Prime Ministerâs Office said in response that the project is designed to strengthen Israelâs public diplomacy and adapt it to changes in how information is being consumed. âThe national public diplomacy unit in the Prime Ministerâs Office places an emphasis on social network activity,â the office stated. âAs part of this, a new pro-Israel public diplomacy infrastructure of students on Israeli campuses is being established that will assist in advancing and disseminating content on the social networks, particularly to international audiences.â
Sources in the Prime Ministerâs Office said the main subjects that the campus-based units will deal with are diplomatic- and security-related issues, efforts to combat the boycott of Israel and anti-Semitism and the delegitimization of Israel. The students will emphasize Israelâs democratic values, freedom of religion, pluralism and âother subjects that give expression to the Israeli governmentâs public diplomacy policy.â The Prime Ministerâs Office added that similar efforts with students were successful in recent years. âThis model significantly advances Israelâs public diplomacy capabilities so that concurrent with messages conveyed by the countryâs official spokespeople, content will also be conveyed that has been developed and disseminated by the students that is adapted to social media.â
âWe believe that this involves an essential tool to strengthen Israeli public diplomacy and addresses the major importance that we attach to advancing public diplomacy of the State of Israel on the social networks.â
Hagar Yisraeli, a spokeswoman for the Union of Israeli Students, added: âIsrael is dealing with an extreme, ongoing delegitimization campaign that is being conducted against it on the social networks. The student population is a talented, educated group of people with independent and diverse views and speaks [a variety of] languages and can therefore assist in dealing with such an [anti-Israel] campaign⌠The students are an integral part of the Israeli reality and it is therefore appropriate, in our view, that they take an active part in dealing with the delegitimization. It is accepted in the world that students are integrated and take part in various diplomatic activities. The student union is not a political organization and is not identified politically [with one school of thought]. The members of the union hold a range of views from across the Israeli political spectrum, and it is our intention to preserve that.â
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