The Role of the Media in International Relations: From the CNN Effect to the Al –Jazeere Effect

 Abstract

International networks foster solidarity within an information audience by creating

virtual communities. Namely CNN, BBC and Al-Jazeera are increasing people’s

awareness in their religion, culture and place in the world. In addition, faster and

easily accessible information within global media had triggered the information wars

among the states which have changed power politics. This article argues that the

involvement of the media in international relations signifies interdependence and

mutual exploitation between the media and politics. In this context, with a specific

emphasise on the concept of ‘the CNN effect’ and ‘the Al-Jazeere effect’, it shows

how the media have become integral parts of the world politics, how they have

transformed international power struggle and have enabled the rise of the rest against

the Western hegemony

Keywords: media; international politics; CNN effect; Al-Jazeere Effect

Introduction

Despite media’s unquestioned importance in the conduct of international

affairs, it seems that the Studies of International Relations (IR) still fail to address the

issue adequately and comprehensively, in addition, less has been done to overcome

absence of understanding the communication dimension of international relations. It

can be argued that three factors might have played a role to the lack of attention given

to the function of media in international relations (Le 2006): a) insufficient abilities to

work in several languages; b) the definition of the international media echo whose

narrowness can make it difficult to collect a large enough corpus; c) and the

international relations approach in which media is considered.

1Assistant Professor Dr., Department of International Relations, Canakkale Onsekiz Mart

University. filizzcoban@gmail.com.

46 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

The first two factors underline the importance of knowing more than one

language to reach different national media reporting on each other’s society, in other

words, ‘the international media echo’, the report in one’s national media of what is

said in another’s national media. The third factor suggests that the dominance of

realism in traditional International Relations approach has contributed the lack of an

improved explanation and understanding of the role of communication and mass

media in world affairs. In the classical realist tradition of international politics analysis,

the state is considered as the main actor in international arena. Foreign policy should

be made by politicians, attuned to the national interest, and free of the influence of

extraneous domestic factors such as the news media (Mermin 1999:147). In this realist

tradition, which was developed in the 1940s, communication and mass media were

not regarded as part of state power, but these were considered as the propaganda

‘tools’ that states used towards ‘others’ in interstate conflicts in the international arena.

In the 1970s and 1980s, there were new actors, non-state actors and forces,

such as multinational groups and corporations in the international arena, particularly

in deal with increasing importance of international political economy. Raising

transnational’s and interdependence theories argued that these multinational actors

changed the traditional balance of power politics by losing state’s dominant position

in international relations (Brown and Ainley 2009). The latter part of the 1980s, the

entry of postmodernism into IR encouraged strengthening the non-state centric

discourses, meanwhile civil society organization and individual citizens were

recognized as new international actors who expanded their influences across borders

to the international level by using the power of new communication technologies and

mass media. Thus, a recently growing amount of literature has emerged in

International Relations approach in which the role of media is considered in

international policy making.

According to the literature of media and politics, the political importance of

media can be evaluated in a variety of ways. First, global media has created a ‘global

village’ that we can point to changes in the way citizens of states view themselves and

others. The media supply information, and at the same time shape people’s learning

process about the world, thus mass media have correspondingly large influence on

individuals’ picture of the world. In this context, the media become important tools

for defining ‘in-group’ identity against ‘out-group’ identity based on representing a

series of contrasts and oppositions.

Filiz Coban 47

By this end, the points of view of others are vital in international relations in

terms of construction of allies and enemies of the state. In other words, the media

help to construct the reality of international politics.

Second, the political importance of media can be identified by the shifts in the

way the state's power configuration. Media are pluralizing forces which work against

power’s ability to influence and control. Essentially, local, national and international

news agencies circulate information and images between countries and form

relationships between people from the local level to the international level (Boyd-

Barrett and Rantanen 2001: 127).

Third, global media have integrated its audiences to wars, peace and

diplomacy process. The global media’s efforts to attract public attention bring the

crises and conflicts to the top of the agenda to persuade its audiences to pressure and

influence government policies. At the same time, governments can also use the media

platforms to set their own war agenda to make their views known to the public for

their own purposes. The concept of ‘the CNN Effect’ has referred to this paradigm

since the 1990s. In addition to this, the new paradigm of the 2000s which is the

internet and all other networked information technologies’ influence on the global

politics, including democratization and terrorism is called ‘the Al-Jazeera Effect’ (Seib

2008).

According to these three points, it can be argued that the media’s power is

discussed divisively in the literature of Media and Politics, particularly in terms of their

effects in domestic politics, foreign policy decision-making and distribution of the

images of political actors and building a global civil society, public sphere and political

activism (De Jong et al. 2005). With a departure from this literature, this article aims

to observe the evolution of media’s rising role in international politics with a specific

focus on the concept of ‘the CNN effect’ and ‘the Al-Jazeera effect’.

This observation serves to find out how the media flow from the U.S. to the

rest of the world, so-called CNN effect, constituted a soft power and made the U.S. a

global hegemonic power in the 1990s. In the 2000s, the broader range of information

technology frames and new networks have been taking place in the form of contraflows

against American hegemony.

48 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

In this study, the Al-Jazeera effect is used for conceptualizing this new trend

of counter-hegemony. This effect has contributed to constitute a milestone in

thinking about world history and international affairs. Thus, the point which is

highlighted in this study assumes that new media have pluralized powers in the

international politics and carried the wars to a different level by igniting information

wars. The media are influencing the world politics by creating a powerful arena for

non-Western narratives, arguments and assumptions against the dominant Western

viewpoints in news. In a nutshell, they are accelerating the rise of the rest in

international politics which can be described as the emergence of ‘the post-American

world’ (Zakaria 2008).

The Media’s Power in the Domestic Politics: The Watchdogs?

Without an understanding of the media’s political functions and their

influences on the nations, it is not possible to provide a comprehensive picture of

their impacts on the states and international relations. Thus, this section is devoted to

explain five political functions of the media (Kuhn 2007:21), which include

information provision, agenda setting, public watchdog, political mobilization and

regime legitimating.

In the first function, the roles of media in expressing, reproducing and

spreading information, ideologies and values to wider social and international

structures constitute a crucial relationship between society and the media (Richardson

2007:114). These roles make them ideological instruments that produce meanings and

naturalise power relations; they become the means to realise domination. The

politicians would want to influence the information with the aim of maximizing their

voters in order to promote desirable situations and definitions. Thus, the role of

media discourse is crucial in the expression of ideas regarding how people think about

themselves and other nations. The media select, organize and emphasize particularly

news in order to decide what a significant subject for public discussion is. The media

cannot force us what to think; but they certainly influence what we think about and

how we think about it by their function of agenda building. Sometimes the media act as

a window on the political affairs or as megaphones for the messages of politicians. In

this case, intensive visibility of an issue in the news is an outcome of shaping the

media agenda can be used to persuade or manipulate the public.

Filiz Coban 49

According to Nye (2004:53), increased information flows through the media

have caused the loss of government’s traditional control over information in relation

to politics. The speed in moving information has created a system in which power

over information is much more widely distributed, which means decentralisation and

less official control of government agendas. In that spirit, the media are not just the

means of reproduction of power relations, but also pluralizing forces which work

against the government’s ability to influence and control. The media’s acting as the

public watchdog works out a check on elite behaviour, thus it can help make political

actors accountable to the public, assisting in the empowerment of the latter as citizens

and voters.

Furthermore, the media can be used for political mobilization by political parties

and pressure groups for the purposes of membership recruitment, calling for a public

meeting, local party canvassing, protesting, campaigning or a demonstration. The final

political function of the media, regime legitimation helps to socialize citizens into

acceptance of prevalent social norms and the institutions that embody them; by this

way they contribute to the legitimating of the political system. On the other hand the

media can trigger to increase levels of political cynicism and voter apathy which can

result demobilizing effect or delegitimizing effect at least for some of their audiences

(Kuhn 2007:30).

It can be argued that the media’s potential2 is based on to what extent there is

political control in the hands of politicians in policy making process in the linkage of

media-source balance. The key question in this context is who determines what can be

addressed and what cannot. This question is answered in various ways in different

theories, in particular in political communication and political economy (Herman and

Chomsky 2002). The first one focuses on the power of the words, sounds and images

in the media which might have influences on policy. Contradictory, political economy

approach uses the power and ownership relations that determine the structural

constraints and communication to analysis the 'influence' on the decision making

process.

2 Robinson (2004:31) suggests that there are four types in the policy-media interaction: a

supportive media, an uncritical role for official policy; non-influential and non-supporter of

any side of the debate; critical media, having limited influence to change policy; and side taker

media, effective in policy outcomes.

50 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

According to this approach, privately owned media within a liberal state with

legal protection of free speech is different from the press which is owned and

operated by the political parties or state. For instance, pluralist and democratic

governments face more competition in shaping the news than nondemocratic

governments. The media would be used for justifying policy decisions of elites and

having popular support for it (Roselle 2006:9). In democratic regimes, leaders’ powers

rely on the public for votes. Thus, they use media to explain and legitimize policies,

which means media are the fourth estate acting as a protector against unrestrained

power, in other words they are independent watchdogs of the system.

In addition to democracy, unlimited freedom of the news market does not

guarantee the ideal of freedom of communication (Keohane 1991). Marketing justifies

privileging of corporate speech and of more choice to investors than to citizens. Here,

the most important point is the empowerment of citizens and not just the satisfaction

of citizens as consumers. In this context, a third way can be purposed: ‘heterarchy’

(ibid: 150) of communication media which are controlled neither by the state nor

commercial market. Functioning of healthy public sphere can be improved in publicly

founded, non profit and legally guaranteed media institution of civil society.

The rise in non-state actors offers competing views, information, and foreign

policies to government views, information, and foreign policy that may undermine

states’ ability to influence media coverage of foreign policy. The development of a

plurality of non-state media of communication which both functions as permanent

thorns in the side of political power and serves the primary means of communication

for citizens’ living, working, loving, quarrelling and tolerating others within a

genuinely pluralist society. In a nutshell, what is spoken and known in a society

depend on the role of the television, freedom of expression, accession to media and

news values in the society.

In addition, it should be highlighted that there is a media-politicians

relationships into a co-evaluation. Media are not just used by politicians for tactical

purposes and interests, but also media have their own motivation and interests which

they have them into a more complex relationships and interactions with individuals

and institutions.

Filiz Coban 51

The Media’s Power in International Politics: the CNN Effect

The domestic and global public opinion have become key factors in the

formulation of foreign policy in the age of mediation. Before this period, international

politics were carried out mostly behind closed doors in secrecy and covert

manoeuvrings (Mcnair 1998: 177). Throughout the twentieth century, the media have

been used by governments to influence public opinion on foreign policies of states in

their favour. By an examination of the British Foreign Office, Cohen (1986) found

that at the level of policy implementation, government departments, individual

officials and ministers use mass media as direct channels to foreign societies in the

purpose of explaining policy to overseas publics to advance or conceal policy

opinions. Cohen (ibid: 52) noted that politicians use mass media in international

negotiations in order to manipulate international public sphere and other

governments. It can be described as an indirect media impact that mainly depend on

pressure from the government’s supporters and interest groups that can result to

policy change at the planning stage of a decision in foreign policy

Specifically, during the Cold War the United States had used the media in

getting its ideological message out in the rest of the world. Together with its hard

power and economical means, the media had contributed to the empowerment of US

hegemony. The media flows from the US to the other countries worked to spread its

anti-communist propaganda and to provide reassurance to its alliances that the

transatlantic perspective was valid against the Soviet threat. Tactical disinformation

about opposing forces undermined the Soviet attempts and manipulated international

public opinion.

Regarding this, Mcnair (1998:178) worked on the examples from the East-

West relations in the Cold war period and claimed that the nature of ‘the enemy’

changed because of manipulating symbols and images in the media. His work

illustrated that the media made an important contribution to international relations as

the tools of distribution of political actors’ images.

CNN began in the 1980s with a goal of the 24 hour span of international

news available with the local reporters from the different parts of the world. During

China’s Tiananmen Square uprising in 1989, CNN deserved respect through its 24-

hour report.

52 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

As another remarkable success, in 1991 CNN could broadcast from the front

lines of the war zone during the Persian Gulf War. CNN’s coverage helped the

international society to figure out what was happening in Iraq. It began to take

attention to conflict areas and change people’s minds. For instance, it is known that

the pictures of starving children in the Somalia crisis pushed President Bush toward

action.3

CNN International still remains influential as it broadcasts to a global

audience on TV and via internet. In Taylor’s (1997:58-59) summary of the historical

development of the media and international political relationships, the television

station CNN is presented as being a direct channel of diplomacy among politicians,

the public and the rest of the world:

“Much has already been written by historians about that increasing role, from the Anglo-

German press ‘wars’ in the build-up to the First World War to the role of newspapers, the cinema

and radio in the program of ‘moral rearmament’ prior to the Second World War. A growing amount

of literature also now exists about how the media came to be deployed as a psychological weapon, at

home and abroad, first between 1939 and 1945 and then subsequently during the Cold War.

Today, however, if a statesman wants to make a public statement or send a message across the world,

he has the option of doing so on CNN rather than through traditional diplomatic channels.”

As Taylor noted, government departments, individual officials and ministers

use mass media as direct channels to societies with the purpose of explaining policy to

their nation and overseas publics to advance or conceal policy opinions. Therefore,

the media seems to enable the evaluation of international society by distributing

information that builds bridges between groups and individuals around the world.

This makes the media an integral part of international relations. With a

departure from Taylor’s this summary of the historical development of media-politics

relationship, in the following section the role of mass media is indicated in two fields

of international relations: the studies of war and peace.

3See also: Babak Bahador, the CNN effect in Action: How the News Media Pushed the West toward

War in Kosovo, New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007.

Filiz Coban 53

The CNN Effect: The Media at War and Peace

Since the 1990s, the dominant debate on the media-politics relationships has

centred on the so-called “CNN effect”. Three different approaches of the CNN

effect are defined by Steve Livingston (1997: 4-6). He suggests that the media would

act as a pitfall agenda setting agent in related to the choice and selection for the sake of

national interests. They would become an accelerant in shortening response time for

decision and policy making or they would move as an impediment actor that operates

through the impact of public opinion.

As an agenda setting agent, the news media have an important job in defining

issues, primarily to help the public understand the newest array of priorities and

alliances. In this context, the news coverage can be useful for justifying state actions

by shaping what people around the world think of it. For instance, in 2003 the U.S.

war against Iraq was defined as a war of liberation by the White House and produced

a media campaign to support that idea. In this case, modern media acted as

considerable allies in selling the war and sustaining public support for it.

When the media become an accelerant, they influence the strategies and

behaviour of those in power by creating sense of urgency, increasing public awareness

and anxiety, leading to pressure to “do something”. But media coverage alone does

not guarantee a particular effect on foreign policy, regardless of how or whether the

media may exert a direct effect on policy-making elites both at home and abroad. The

media coverage does not guarantee a policy response. For example, despite the media

coverage of Bosnian atrocities and the genocide in Rwanda, none of the major

Western powers intervened for years.

As the third approach of the CNN effect, when the media act as an

impediment actor, they help to spread multiple frames, bring third parties into conflict

and help to shape public opinion which in turn affect policymakers’ decisions on

political conflicts. The opposition to government’s foreign policy can be an outcome

of the media coverage which is sourced by the domestic political division. In this

circumstance, the media’s power to distribute the reaction against official policy in

public, pressure and interest groups can led the change of balance of power due to

administration fail into control the process of the crises management (Wolfsfeld

2004:69).

54 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

For an illustration, it can be argued that the collapse of America’s will to fight

in Vietnam resulted from the media’s reporting of foreign policy. In this case, the

media coverage was affected by the domestic political divisions and spread a

demoralisation of involving in an unsuccessful limited war. The media caused the

Johnson administration’s failure to explain to the American public and Congress why

the U.S. troops were fighting in Vietnam; thus the strong public reaction occurred

against the government's foreign policy.

It can be argued that in the linkage between the media and foreign policy,

public opinion is the key component in the media’s effectiveness on a certain foreign

policy decision. The media’s contribution in conduct of policy is its power to create a

favourable climate for the officials in decision making by the coverage of certain

issues which can attract large audience attention to gain public support. This

proposition is however rejected by some scholars who argue media influence on the

public is not adequately clarified by a theory.4

As it is given with the examples, “the CNN effect” concerns mainly situations

of media influence on international interventions. In addition to these, the news

media can serve as a forum for peace building in which a wide and representative

proponent and opponent set of voices are encouraged to express their views in an

open and democratic public debate involves the perspectives of leaders, activists, and

citizens. Therefore, the media’s impact on creating an environment that is conducive

to compromise and reconciliation is important for the political atmosphere

surrounding the peace process (Wolfsfeld 2004:12).

Otherwise, the media can also serve as destructive agents in the peace process.

They can emphasize the risks and dangers associated with compromise, raise the

legitimacy of those opposed to concessions, and reinforce negative stereotypes of the

enemy. In addition, the media can influence peace process in a negative way. This

would be by decreasing public support for key peace objectives, by decreasing the

secrecy needed for delicate foreign policy initiatives, or being a tool of carrying out

war or genocide.

4See also: Ien Ang(1996) Living-room Wars: Rethinking Audiences for a Postmodern World. London:

Routledge; Catherine Murray and Kim Schroder (2003) Researching Audiences: A Practical Guide

to Methods in Media Audience Analysis, Bloomsbury Academic; John L. Sullivan (2012) Media

Audiences: Effects, Users, Institutions, and Power, London: SAGE Publications.

Filiz Coban 55

Thus, giving too much access to the news media can reduce the chances for

success of resolution. It should not be forgotten that the media are not the neutral

communication channels due to they have their own motivations which define the

frame through which they present the coverage of an issue.

Hammond (2007:11) contributed a remarkable point by noticing the changing

character of war since the Cold War. He argues that the politics of fear and 'risk

society' have provoked the new understanding of war. Particularly, the 9/11 terror

and the images of the planes hitting the World Trade Centre towers and their

collapse, were mediated repeatedly by the mass media and the media coverage of this

traumatic event increased the feeling of insecurity and war hysteria (Kellner 2003:

144).

In the academic literature the role of American media in the Bush

administration’s “the war on terror” and how the national media constructed a link

with the events and Saddam regime in Iraq were indicated in the various attempts

(Bennett et al. 2007; Rampton and Stauber 2003). Washington’s surge morality tale

(King and Wells 2009: 158) offered all the components of a complete and substantive

frame to gain the public support for the Iraq war. The era of post- 9/11 has provided

Western leaders a preventative measure to pre-empt possible risks and threats which

has produced rationale new forms of humanitarian and human rights based

intervention. In doing so, they hoped to recapture a sense of purpose and meaning

for themselves and their society. Therefore, it can be argued that the staging war or

acts of terrorism as the media events feed the change in the character of war. This

fundamental shift in the politics of Western societies has given rise to importance of

media coverage by intensive emphasis on image, spectacle and media presentation.

The New Media’s Power in International Relations: The Al –Jazeere Effect

As a fact of the 21st century, the evaluation of power is dependent on

information, which is supplied through communication and mass media. Whilst the

dependency of the international system on developing information and

communication technologies is regularly and rapidly increasing, the army, politicians,

state officials, international institutions, NGOs and other international actors are

making use of communication as a power source.

56 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

In the new millennium, the statesmen are aware of performance in

international politics can change the image of state in the eyes of global audiences and

even their voters. The success in foreign policy can affect the popularity of the leaders

and their re-election chance in domestic politics. On this literature framework, this

study highlights that beside the military and economical power, the media are vital to

gain power and influence over other states in international relations. More

importantly, by focusing on the concept of “Al Jazeere effect”, this section argues that

the United States’ global hegemony has been challenged in the power struggle on

information.

First of all, Seib (2008) used the concept of the Al Jazeere effect in reference

to its impacts on the Arab world. In particular, the trend of empowering the silenced

or marginalized nations and groups is called as Al Jazeere effect. Subsequently, this

notion has been used to indicate the effects of new transnational networks and

internet-based news media on international relations (Seib 2012).

In 1996 Al Jazeere was founded by the emir of Qatar in order to spread

uncensored and critical coverage of news in the Middle East with the slogan of ‘the

opinion and the other opinion’. It aimed to break the hegemony of the pro-western

international news gathering of CNN and BBC World. By offering a counterhegemonic

resource and power, it claimed to provide a new perspective to the world

reached beyond the lens of the West. In 2003 Al Jazeere became accessible through

its website for English speakers in order to reach greater audience and greater

influence.

Al Jazeere has played a major role providing a platform for discussing the

problems of Arab societies and has trigged the demands of democratic change which

means it has a power to impact policy and public opinion. Moreover, it has challenged

American perspectives and actions around the world with extensive local news

networks as it was seen during the Iraq War. The non-Western journalists and

networks brought the Iraqi perspective to the discussion; hereby the world simply

could see what was going there from different viewpoints. Broadcasting the events

internationally broke the monopoly of Western media on reporting and defining the

war. In 2012 Al Jazeere America began to broadcast to American audiences in New

York to secure access to cable and satellite distribution in the US.

Filiz Coban 57

Despite the fact that all these are the aspects of a new post-American world’s

reality, Zakaria (2008:74-78) notes that the West still offers a role model for

advancement and modernity which the rest of world have admired and emulated. For

instance, Al Jazeere English follows a CNN model with its political talk shows,

anchors, on-air experts and debates. The rest of the world is challenging the US

hegemony in a Western-looking way.

Not just Qatar’s Al Jazeere English, but also China Central Television (CCTV)

and Russia Today’s (RT) English broadcasting distribute different views on global

views which serve to reduce the West’s monopoly on information and in particular

the hegemony of the U.S. (Xie and Boyd-Barret 2015: 71-73).CCTV, the state

network in China started to work as the mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party

in 1958. But, it enjoyed rapid development toward an ambitious global expansion with

its Chinese Mandarin, English, Spanish, French, Arabic and Russian languages

services. In addition, CCTV officially launched to its service of CCTV America

headquartered in Washington DC, and CCTV Africa based in Nairobi, Kenya in 2012.

Today’s CCTV reflects Beijing’s policy preference for non-interventionism and

inoffensiveness. Unlike CCTV, RT has provided international news from a critical

perspective to the U.S. economy and politics since it came out at the end of 2005 to

supply a Russia-friendly view point in English. Furthermore, Kremlin fund to

establish the Arabic language channel Rusyia Al-Yaum in 2007, the Spanish language

channel RT Actualidad in 2009 and RT America in 2010.

This plurality of sources reveals the information war among international

broadcasters and countries. Beyond the cable and satellite carriers, Al Jazeere English

and all other new international networks actively use the advantages of broadband,

social media and mobile applications to reach wider audiences. They have remarkable

popularity both on Facebook and YouTube. This is to say that new media has taken

the information war to another level by Al Jazeere effect.

It is clear that the new system of communication has impacts on politics

(Street 2011). The citizens are no longer just consumers of communication, thanks to

the internet they also create their own coverage of politics and create new aspects of

political activism and leadership by using social network sites. It can be said that one

of the crucial areas in which the internet’s impact has been felt is that to be enabling

new forms of social and political activism (ibid: 263).

58 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

Another area where the impact of new media is seen in journalism by the rise

of the blog and so-called blogosphere where enable every citizen to act as journalist,

interpret and distribute news reports.Also, the network communications and

organizations empower the ways of text messaging, micro-blogging and blogging for

the campaign and propaganda has emerged the impact in the conduct of politics. As

another considerable area in which the new media impact on politics is that using

internet technologies are configuring the state-citizen relationship. Internet is

changing the operation of government in delivering services, distributing information

and consulting citizens and implementing policy. However, it enables the authorities

monitor and control to ever more effectively act as an Orwellian ‘Big Brother’ (ibid:

264).

According to Nye (2004: 53) increased information flows through new media

cause the loss of government’s traditional control over information in related with

politics. The speed of internet and the speed of information create a system in which

power over information is much more widely distributed that means decentralizing

and less official control of government’s agenda. The private armies or arm industry

too evoke the decentralization. The information revolution has enhanced the role of

markets in the means of to accelerate the diffusion of power away from governments

to private actors (ibid: 51). Nye describes power relations today as a three-dimensional

chess game, comprising from the top down, the military board, the economic board

and, at the bottom, the ‘soft power’ of information.

The new communication and mass media revolution are increasing the

importance of soft power, namely the ability to achieve desired outcomes in

international affairs through attraction by convincing others rather than coercion.

Thus, it can be argued that in the 21st century world politics, the new communication

and mass media, so-called Al Jazeere effect, are significant channels for the

empowerment of states and citizens in setting the political agenda in politics,

distributing a particular discourse and convincing people to improve cultural, political

and economic cooperation among nations.

Conclusion

In a summary, the media’s CNN effect function as the channels of

communication can be used to give a response to foreign affairs by politicians or they

can be used to gain public support for policy as well.

Filiz Coban 59

The exchange of information occurs between the sides of politicians, public

and media. It is therefore media’s power to influence the political process depends on

their relations to and impacts on the public’s perception of foreign affairs. On the

other hand, the governments need the media for the achievement of publicity. The

aspects of this relationship tie the media with politicians and public in reporting of

political issues. This serves to provide a particular understanding of the media's profile

as a player in the shaping of foreign policy.

If we are to discuss the impact of media coverage on policy, we should ask

whether a particular decision would have been made if media coverage had been

different. What is more, argumentation of media caused making a particular decision

is to claim that it was one of the necessary factors (not only one) in multiple factors in

the process. It cannot be said that all policy is driven by the media, however, the

question that it may affect it. How the public opinion can affect governmental policy

making provides a crucial place to look in order to find out whether it has happened

for analyzing the influence of media.

In the 21stcentrury, the internet is changing sovereignty while transnational

communication is opened to many millions of cyber communities. Moreover, national

security is changing, states are facing a growing list of threats and attackers may be

states, groups, individuals or some combinations. Some states are weaker than the

private forces within them. The private organizations, the NGOs, industry and unions

can compete for the attention of media from major countries in a transnational

struggle over the agenda of world politics.

In this context, this research highlighted that beside Al-Jazeere, Russia’s RT

and China’s CCTV have challenged with CNN International’s hegemony in

international news coverage. Both this trend of information struggle between the

states and the new media’s impacts in international relations is called as the Al Jazeere

effect. With a departure from these aspects, it is argued that the media and its soft

power in the world politics have been displaced the American hegemony in the last

decade which can be characterized by the notion of post-American world. In a

nutshell, it revealed how the new media have been contributed to change power

relations in the 21st century.

60 Journal of International Relations and Foreign Policy, Vol. 4(2), December 2016

References

Boyt-Barret and Rantanen, T. (2001), “News Agency Foreign Correspondents” in

Tunstall, J. (ed.) Media Occupations and Professions, Oxford University Press

Brown, C., and Ainley, K. (2009) Understanding International Relations, New York:

Palgrave Macmillan

Cohen, B. (1986) The Press and Foreign Policy, Princeton: Princeton

University Press.

De Jong, W. et al (2005) Global Activism, Global Media, London: Pluto Press.

Hammond, P. (2007) Media, War and Postmodernity, New York: Routledge

Herman, E.S. and Chomsky, N. (2002) Manufacturing Consent: The Political

Economy of the Mass Media, US: Pantheon

King, E. and Wells, R. (2009) Framing the Iraq War Endgame: War's Denouement in

an Age of Terror, NY: Palgrave Macmillan

Kuhn, R. (2007) Politics and the Media in Britain, Palgrave Macmillan

Le, E. (2006) The Spiral of ‘Anti-Other Rhetoric’: Discourses of Identity and the

International Media Echo, Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Livingstone, S. (1997), Clarifying the CNN Effect: An Examination of Media Effects

According to Type of Military Intervention, Research Paper R 18, Joan

Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, John F. Kennedy

School of Government, Harvard University.

Mcnair, B. (1998) the Sociology of Jounalism, London: Arnold.

Mermin, J. (1999) Debating War and Peace: media coverage of U.S. intervention in

the post-Vietnam era, USA: Princeton University Press

Miller, D. (2007) Media Pressure on Foreign Policy: The Evolving Theoretical

Framework, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Miller, D. (ed.) (2003) Tell Me Lies: Propaganda and Media Distortion in the Attack

on Iraq, London: Pluto Press

Nye, J. (2004) Soft Power: Means to Success in World Politics, USA: Public Affairs

Rampton, S. and Stauber, J. (2003) Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of

Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq, NY: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin Books

Richardson, J. E. (2007) Analysing Newspapers: An Approach From Critical

Discourse Analysis, New York: Palgrave Macmillan

Robinson, P. (2002) The CNN Effect: The Myth of News, Foreign Policy and

Intervention, London: Routledge

Filiz Coban 61

Roselle, L. (2006) Media and the Politics of Failure: Great Powers, Communication

Strategies, and Military Defeats, Palgrave Macmillan

Seib, P. (ed.) (2012) Al Jazeera English: Global News in a Changing World, NY:

Palgrave Macmillan

Seib, P. (2008) The Al Jazeera Effect: How the New Global Media Are Reshaping

World Politics, Potomac Books Inc.

Street, J. (2011), Mass Media, Politics, and Democracy, New York: Palgrave

Macmillan

Taylor, P. M. (1997) Global Communications, International Affairs and the Media

since 1945, New York: Routledge.

Wolfsfeld, G. (2004), Media and the Path to Peace, Cambridge University Press

Xie, S. and Boyd-Barret, O. (2015) ‘External-National TV News Networks’ Way to

America: Is the United States Losing the Global “Information War”?’, the

International Journal of Communication 9.

Zakaria, F. (2008), The Post-American World, Penguin Book.

*

إرسال تعليق (0)
أحدث أقدم