Karen Hughes To Leave State Department
Longtime Bush Adviser Was Undersecretary Of State Trying To Improve U.S. Image Abroad
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Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Karen Hughes, left, joined by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, right, announces her decision to leave Bush Administration, Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2007, at the State Department in Washington. (AP)
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Karen Hughes, U.S. undersecretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs, blows a kiss to Turkish children during her arrival to the Turkish Education Volunteers Foundation Education Park in Istanbul, Turkey, Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2005. (AP)
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Hughes told The Associated Press that she plans to quit her job as undersecretary of state and return to Texas, although improving the world's view of the United States is a "long-term challenge" that will outlast her.
"This will take a number of years," Hughes said in an interview Tuesday.
White House press secretary Dana Perino said Hughes told Mr. Bush - her "very, very close friend" - as far back as the summer that she would need to be back home in Texas by the end of the year. The president was sad to hear the news, but understood, Perino said.
She praised Hughes' performance, despite persistently low opinions of the United States globally, particularly in the Muslim countries where she was supposed to concentrate her efforts.
"She has done quite a great job of transforming public diplomacy at the State Department and established new initiatives and programs that will serve us well after she's gone," Perino said of Hughes. "We are making progress. I know that we have a long way to go."
Announcing Hughes' decision to leave the department in mid-December, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she had accepted the resignation "with a great deal of sadness but also a great deal of happiness for what she has achieved" and with the understanding that she would continue to work on several projects.
Rice said that Hughes had made public diplomacy "strong and central" to U.S. foreign policy and had exceeded expectations in the job.
"I knew that she would bring a great dedication and great commitment to all that we're trying to do," Rice said. "She has done just a remarkable job."
Mr. Bush and Rice had picked Hughes two years ago to retool the way the United States sells its policies, ideals and views overseas. A former television reporter and media adviser, Hughes' focus has been to change the way the United States engages and responds to criticism or misinformation in the Muslim world.
"Negative events never help," Hughes said when asked how events like last month's shooting of Iraqi civilians by private U.S. security guards in Iraq affects the way the world sees the United States.
Heading the broad category of U.S. outreach known as public diplomacy, Hughes sent Arabic speakers to do four times as many interviews with Arabic media as in previous years and set up three rapid public relations response centers overseas to monitor and respond to the news. She nearly doubled the public diplomacy budget, to nearly $900 million annually, and sent U.S. sports stars Michelle Kwan and Cal Ripken Jr. abroad as unofficial diplomats.
Polls show no improvement in the world's view of the U.S. since Hughes took over. A Pew Research Center survey earlier said the unpopular Iraq war is a persistent drag on the U.S. image and has helped push favorable opinion of the United States in Muslim Indonesia, for instance, from 75 percent in 2000 to 30 percent last year.
Hughes' performance drew mixed reviews in the Muslim world. She got credit for hard work and frequent travel but was prone to gaffes such as vastly overstating Saddam Hussein's use of poison gas against his people before he was deposed by a U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
Hughes said the Iraq war was usually the second issue that Muslims and Arabs raised with her, after the long-standing conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. Hughes said she advised Mr. Bush and Rice two years ago that U.S. help in ending the six-decade old fight over Israel would probably do more than anything else to improve the U.S. standing worldwide.
This is Hughes' second departure from the Bush administration. She was among Mr. Bush's closest confidantes during his first term before leaving the White House in 2002. She never fully left Mr. Bush's employ, serving as an offsite strategist and adviser until she returned to Washington to take the State Department job in 2005.
Hughes had been splitting her time between Texas and Washington.
She worked with Mr. Bush since the 1990s, first as director of communications while he was governor of Texas, from 1995 to 2000.
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As long as Bu$hCo is raping the planet, there is no changing world opinion.
Greed, murder and lawlessness are the hallmark of the ugly AmeriCon.
A person can only do so much with the product they''ve got to sell. I can''t seem to fault the job she was doing. When you have pond scum as a product...there''s not a big market for it.
Go home and rest, Karen...
Improving the "world view" of the US won''t even begin to happen til Bush & Co are finding our what waterboarding is.
"This will take a number of years," Hughes said in an interview Tuesday. "
Now, why is that beeeyatch?
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Yes, Ms Hughes, it certainly will outlast you. In fact, the amount of damage your buddy has done to our image may outlast all of us. I guess since you are leaving, Condi is the only woman left around there to burp and change him. Poor baby.
"This will take a number of years," Hughes said "
hahahahahaha - that''s really news, eh? It''s just heartening to hear these bushits tell us, that because of their insane policies, we''re in the ***** for the next 20 years.....
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by watcher269-2009
November 1, 2007 8:32 AM PDT
- Yeah!!! Another Closed Minded Texan - Gone!!! It can only get better - as long as they don''t replace her with another closed minded Texan!
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