Tarrel wrote:A couple of years back, I remember a politician defending the Overseas Development and Aid budgets as a way of projecting "soft power". Can't remember who it was.
There was a whole House of Lords Committee looking into that very subject last year:
http://www.parliament.uk/business/commi ... influence/
Now disbanded, the reports (March 2014) are at the above link.
The 'evidence' section gives little insights into how these peoples minds operate:
The EU’s eastward expansion is one of the examples that are held up as a great soft power success. It was not just access to a large single market; it was former Communist countries signing up to western values of a capitalist market and western political institutions. It is a good recent example of soft power versus hard power. Moldova and Ukraine are just concluding association agreements and free trade agreements with the European Union, and they are doing this against some pretty hard threats from Russia, which is trying to create a Russian-driven Eurasian customs union. This is a really great example of soft power triumphing over hard power, over coercion.
Er... yeah. Just 'great'.
Now here's a weird thing... The US press seems to be full of 'Russian Artillery invading Ukraine' today, yet there appears to be nothing at all about it on the BBC or anywhere else.
Russian Artillery Units Are Firing at Ukrainian Soldiers, NATO Says
The move marks an escalation in a conflict over a region embroiled in war between Ukraine's central government and pro-Russian separatists
Updated 5:57 p.m. on Aug. 22
Artillery units being operated by Russian soldiers have crossed into Ukraine and are firing on Ukrainian forces, Western officials said Friday, in an apparent escalation of the ongoing conflict along the border.
“We have seen the use of Russian artillery in Ukraine in the past days,” U.S. Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes told reporters Friday, calling it part of “a pattern whereby we’ve seen firing from within Russia into Ukraine, and we’ve seen a disturbing movement of Russian artillery and military equipment into Ukraine as well.”
Rhodes also called on Russia to remove a convoy of trucks that recently entered Ukraine, which Moscow says are bringing aid but whose arrival was not coordinated with the International Committee of the Red Cross. Ukraine has called the entry of the trucks a “direct invasion.”
“Russia should take the opportunity to remove this convoy from within Ukraine,” Rhodes said. “If they don’t, they will face additional costs and consequences from the United States and our partners in the international community.”
"Move those trucks (that you're already moving) or I'll give you a parking ticket!"
What a strange article. You'd have thought that a Russian military invasion would be a major news item, yet at time of posting there's still
nothing on the BBC or other UK news sites.
I guess I'll just go and listen to that
fantastically informative and funny Dmitry Orlov interview again.