[WSIS CS-Plenary] Re: Condi letter
David Allen
David_Allen_AB63 at post.harvard.edu
Wed Dec 7 16:09:35 GMT 2005
With all due regard for Milton's:
>There was a great deal of concern among the relevant [US + ...]
>business and governmental interests.
recalling that Adam wrote:
>My first thought on reading the register article was "hoax". But
>accepting it as real I am inclined to agree with Milton's clever
>dismissal.
>However.
>Why would the US Secretary of State write to the UK Foreign Minister
>and President of EU about this, was there as any other WSIS issue
>that caused the US to contact any other govt at this level? I
>imagine Condi and Jack usually discuss stuff involving billions of
>dollars, pain, suffering and combinations of same. ICANN just
>doesn't seem up there as an issue for these two to worry about. So
>while I like to think Milton's right, I also wonder if we might be
>missing something.
Seems to me Adam's observation is 'not small.'
By no means did the Rice letter 'win a war.' But in that it was
deemed worthy the effort to write and transmit, we see the [dramatic]
effect that the EU turn on this subject did have. Many on these
lists had taken the entrenched behemoth to be blowing us off,
completely - instead there really was something in play. What was
that?
I will suggest: Elevating to inspection, then offering change for,
the pictures carried around in the heads of those who will shape the
policy process - 'consciousness-raising.' The EU was only the most
recent, prominent case. There were numerous other evolutions, in
policy-maker conceptual frame, if not so prominently publicized. The
Rice letter only confirms: even the behemoth sees that process
underway.
And this of course just follows on Willie's (sorry, not sure I get
the name spelling right ...)
>What was interesting in WSIS Tunis was that the USG could not close
>down the space entirely around internet governance just as the
>Tunisian government could not entirely close down criticism of its
>human rights record. This is something that bears thinking about.
Indeed. The thing did move ahead - and the 'how' is the crucial
learning to apply for the future.
That is our, and everyone's, challenge for the Forum.
David
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