The Role of Information and Communication in Disaster Response: An Overview
The Role of Information and Communication in Disaster Response: An Overview
Well, I think first of all there was a failure to have real, clear informa-
tion at our disposal. There was a real lack of situational awareness. We
didn’t have the capabilities on the ground to give us real-time, accurate
assessments of the physical condition of the city.
—Michael Chertoff
O nly recently has emphasis (at least in words if not deeds) on the
information element of power surfaced as a key contributor to
strategic success. In fact the United States is just getting around to
coming up with an acceptable term to describe the way the nation wields
information as power: Strategic Communication. The government is
still arguing about the pure definition of this term, but, in order to
establish a baseline, consider the definition from the Department of
Defense’s Quadrennial Defense Review. Strategic Communication is
defined as:
Focused United States Government (USG) processes and efforts to
understand and engage key audiences in order to create, strengthen, or
preserve conditions favorable to advance national interests and objectives
through the use of coordinated information, themes, plans, programs,
and actions synchronized with other elements of national power.
. This timeline extracted from: Think Progress, “Katrina Timeline”; available from
http://thinkprogress.org/katrina-timeline; Internet; accessed Nov. 28, 2006.
. CNN, “The Latest on Katrina’s Aftermath,” September 17, 2005 [newswire
service on-line]; available from http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/16/news.
update/index.html?eref=sitesearch; Internet; accessed November 28, 2006.
. Think Progress, “Katrina Timeline.”
182 Threats at Our Threshold
tions of others. One must consider the challenges of the current in-
formation environment on the U.S. government’s ability to shape it.
News comes from many sources, from mainstream broadcast and print
journalists, to someone on the street with a camera cell phone and text
messaging, or a blogger with a laptop and Internet service. Images and
stories (both accurate and inaccurate, rumor and innuendo) can be
transmitted inexpensively and in real-time. Where once nation-states
freely wielded information as power, now any one individual, anywhere
in the world can strategically impact a nation-state’s policies. The role
of this “new media” has become so important that it will become a
separate portfolio in a proposed reorganization within the office of the
Secretary of Defense. So Thomas Friedman was right: “The world is
flat,” and when discussing the information environment the world is
not only flat, it is shrinking…and rapidly.
The U.S. government (and its military) speaks of information superiority
in its doctrinal and policy documents, but this environment not only
precludes that superiority, but arguably only allows a government to
dominate it for a short, finite period of time. It should be reasonable to
expect, however, that the nation as a minimum manages the information
environment effectively and efficiently. To do so it must proactively
tell its story using key influencers as spokespersons and respond to mis-
and dis-information rapidly and credibly. It must be available and
respond at the beginning of a story. Failure to manage the environment
results in what can be referred to as the “genie in a bottle” syndrome.
Once the genie is out it’s difficult, if not impossible, to get her back in.
Likewise, once a story is out in the information environment, especially
accompanied by powerful images, it is difficult (but not impossible) to
counter. The period of August 29th through September 2nd, 2005,
was a critical period in which the government lost its ability to shape
perception. To be sure the government’s situational awareness based
on the significant communication architecture breakdown severely
hampered the effort but the bottom line is that the genie was out of
the bottle…and, while things would get better, the attitudes of the
. Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Soft Power (New York: Public Affairs, 2004), 2.
. Based on a discussion with the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense (Joint Communication) on October 26, 2006.
Role of Information & Communication in Disaster Response 183
American people and the world were already irrevocably impacted. The
U.S. government review spoke to the problem in its lessons learned:
Without timely, accurate information or the ability to communicate,
public affairs officers at all levels could not provide updates to the media
and to the public….federal, state, and local officials gave contradictory
messages to the public, creating confusion and feeding the perception that
government sources lacked credibility.
10. Phillip Meyer, “The Proper Role of the Media in a Democratic Society,” in
Media, Profit and Politics, ed. Joseph Harper and Thom Yantek (Kent, OH: The
Kent State University Press, 2003), 12.
11. Frances Edwards-Winslow, “Telling It Like It Is: The Role of the Media in
Terrorism Response and Recovery,” Perspectives on Preparedness, Harvard
University, No. 9 (August 2002), 2.
186 Threats at Our Threshold
The lack of strategic communication during the “gap” period had
significant impact beyond our shores. While many parts of the world
sympathized with our plight and offered significant assistance, emotive
and inaccurate media reporting without effective and timely U.S.
government response played havoc on the image of the U.S. overseas.
South Africa’s “The Star” newspaper reported: “Who would have
thought that over a million American citizens would become ‘refugees’
in their own country and flay their government for its failure to come
to their aid” quickly enough “or that in the most advanced society in
the world...the badly injured would be left for dead because of a lack
of assistance?”12 Qatar’s Ash Sharq newspaper on September 5th said
the Bush administration’s handling of Hurricane Katrina “made parts
of the U.S. appear like Mogadishu and the Congo.”13 Similar writings
could be read in the popular European press.
The initial overseas reaction of sympathy was quickly replaced by
shock. Images and reports in the mainstream press reflected what
many audiences saw as evidence of abject poverty and racism from a
government that touted democracy and freedom as the ideals for the
world writ large. The public diplomacy mechanisms could not react to
the bow wave of criticism abroad. The U.S. could not communicate
effectively domestically or overseas.14 Karen Hughes officially took
her job (as Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public
Affairs) on September 9, 2005, a post chartered to tell the American
story to foreign audiences. She noted: “We saw pictures on Thursday
of people who were waiting to be rescued and didn’t feel that we had
12. Todd Pittman, “Katrina Evokes Questions in Africa,” Associated Press (Dakar,
Senegal), September 10, 2005; available from http://eccentricstar.typepad.com/
public_diplomacy_weblog_n/hurricane_katrina_and_us_image_overseas/
index.html; Internet; accessed November 28, 2006.
13. “Review of Arab Editorials,” The Middle East Times (Cyprus), September 5, 2005;
available from http://eccentricstar.typepad.com/public_diplomacy_weblog_n/
hurricane_katrina_and_us_image_overseas/index.html; Internet: accessed
November 28, 2006.
14. Based on remarks at a meeting at the State Department by public diplomacy
officials that the author attended in September 2006.
Role of Information & Communication in Disaster Response 187
arrived quickly enough,” she said, adding that President Bush “has
acknowledged that we have to do better and we want to do better.”15
But once again, the genie was out of the bottle… The damage was
done.
In the end, you make your reputation and you have your success
based upon credibility and being able to provide people who are
really hungry for information what they want.
—Brit Hume
18. David E. Kaplan, “Hearts, Minds, and Dollars,” U.S. News and World Report,
April 25, 2005: 27-28.
19. Ibid., 30.
190 Threats at Our Threshold
Strategic Communication during disaster response directly supports
the ability of the U.S. government to establish a safe and secure
environment for its citizens. Accurate public information is critical.
Managing expectations and positively influencing perceptions is
equally important. Senior leaders must provide accurate messages in
conjunction with actions and images that instill public confidence in
an information environment that they can rarely dominate. In the
end, Strategic Communication is leader’s business and leaders must
take steps to break bureaucratic paradigms so that they can compete
and tell their story.