Karen Hughes: Diplomat
Bush Confidante Wraps Up Tour Of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey
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Play CBS Video Video Hughes On Middle East Trip After her tour in the Middle East, U.S. Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy Karen Hughes described her new role as an outreach coordinator to change Islamic perceptions about America.
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As a longtime Bush confidante, Karen Hughes was able to meet with many officials above her rank. She also found time to meet with women's rights activists and students (above, in Ankara, Turkey). (AP)
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Some of the meetings she had were public, others private. Time and again she heard some version of 'We like Americans, but we don't like America's policies in the region.'
Hughes asked one woman in Ankara if she was satisfied with the answer given to a question about why Mr. Bush decided to go to war in Iraq and was told "No, when the war is over I'll be satisfied." The woman, Hidayet Sefkatli Tuksal, representing the Capital City Women's Platform, also said " this war is really, really bringing all your positive efforts to zero."
Hughes regularly tried to involve Dina Powell, her chief aide and also a former White House official, into her discussions. Powell, who was born in Egypt, often spoke Arabic to various groups, but it was Hughes who carried the administration's message. In Jeddah, Hughes' appearance at Dar al-Hekma, a college for women, broke new ground. Senior State department officials traveling with Hughes said the fact that men and women were allowed to sit together in an auditorium to see and hear the exchange between the visiting American officials and several hundred young Saudi women was a first for the kingdom. Normally, the men would have sat in an adjoining room and watched the proceeding s on closed circuit television. One American diplomat posted there called the fact that it happened "shocking."
Hughes used a question and answer session with the students to encourage change and more freedoms for women, touching on such politically sensitive subjects as voting and driving, which women in Saudi Arabia are not now allowed to do.
Showing an interest in local culture was also part of the agenda. Hughes visited Bab Zweila, an archeological site in Cairo restored with the help of U S AID funds. As she looked out from the ramparts Hughes said "It's magical. A thousand minarets and thousands of satellite dishes." In Istanbul Hughes toured the Topkapi Palace and was followed closely by a small horde of reporters and still photographers. Tourists wanted to know who she was. Hughes also went to a school and presented kids with books written in English.
If there was an odd subtext to Hughes' trip it was her "I'm a mom" riff. At virtually every stop, in some form or other, Hughes said "I'm a mom" or "I'm a working mom" or "As a mother." Speaking to students at the American University Cairo she began speaking to several dozen students by saying "I'm really a working mom." Then the questions turned to Bush administration policy on Iraq, the Israeli-Palestinian issue, human rights and democracy.
Shibley Telhami, a Middle East analyst at the University of Maryland and the Brookings Institution, speaking before Hughes' trip, said part of the problem for her would be a lack of expertise in the region. He cautioned that "some people would tell her what she wanted to hear, to curry favor with the administration; and some people will criticize, no matter what. The trick is to find people in between."
"I think I did the best I could. I hope I'm an effective communicator," Hughes said on the way back to Washington. She knows changing minds is a long term proposition but she seemed content with the fact that she "opened the door to a conversation." The unanswered question is whether or not she found "the people in between."
Charles M. Wolfson ©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved
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