Coalition Information Center

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The Coalition Information Center (CIC) was the Bush administration's "'rapid response' team", "created to wage the propaganda war" against Osama bin Laden, Martha Brant reported in Newsweek, November 12, 2001.

"Soon after Sept. 11 the war of words between Coalition forces, the Taliban and Osama bin Laden filled airwaves around the world. When it became apparent that the United States and Britain were not winning the public relations battle in the Middle East, the White House established the Coalition Information Center, with offices in Washington, London and Pakistan, to react in real time to breaking news and present the American side of the conflict to Mideast viewers." --Jim Wilkinson, Washington Post, December 10, 2001.

"A little-noticed but critical component of the war on terrorism operates beneath lamp-bearing cherubs in a building next door to the White House. There, amid message boards that list upcoming events and clocks that display the time in Washington, London, Afghanistan and Pakistan, the Coalition Information Center has a mission nearly as important as winning the war: controlling the story," Judy Keen reported December 18, 2001, in USA Today.

"The public-relations operation stretches from downtown Washington to London, Islamabad and Kabul, where people are stationed to help choreograph foreign reporters' perspectives on the war. 'We've learned that you either start the news wave or you're swamped by it,' says Jim Wilkinson, a White House communications aide who runs the center," Keen wrote.

About CIC

  • Three Coalition Information Centers: Washington, DC; London; and Islamabad, Pakistan, working together to "help serve the President and coalition partners in their efforts to communicate to the world about the war on terrorism." [1]
  • Washington: Jim Wilkinson
  • London: Tucker Eskew, White House Director of Media Affairs
  • Pakiston: Greg Jenkins, White House representative
  • "The State Department works closely with Al Jazeera and other middle east media outlets. We are working to get as many US officials on these outlets to help tell our story about the war against terrorism." [2]

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