Saturday, April 6, 2013
Saturday, April 6, 2013
@

Tweet about 'Daily Show' boomerangs on US Embassy

FILE - In this Oct. 18, 2012 file photo, Jon Stewart speaks during a taping of "The Daily Show with John Stewart", in New York. The U.S. Embassy in Cairo has at least temporarily shut down its Twitter feed following an unusual diplomatic incident involving "The Daily Show" host Jon Stewart and the Egyptian government. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, file)
AP
FILE - In this Oct. 18, 2012 file photo, Jon Stewart speaks during a taping of "The Daily Show with John Stewart", in New York. The U.S. Embassy in Cairo has at least temporarily shut down its Twitter feed following an unusual diplomatic incident involving "The Daily Show" host Jon Stewart and the Egyptian government. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, file)
Story Highlights
  • The U.S. Embassy in Cairo tweeted a link to a Jon Stewart monologue that mocked Egypt’s president.
  • After offending Egyptians, the embassy deleted its entire Twitter account, before restoring it without the post in question.
  • Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi's office called the tweet "inappropriate" and unbecoming of a diplomatic mission.
More coverage
  • Is reality TV worth dying for?
  • Later, Leno: Fallon to host 'Tonight' in 2014
  • TV or reality? Lines blur after death of show star
  • WASHINGTON - Yikes! It seems "The Daily Show" and diplomacy don't mix.

    That's the lesson the U.S. Embassy in Cairo is learning the hard way after being rebuked by both the Egyptian government and the State Department for causing an international incident. The embassy tweeted a link to a Jon Stewart monologue that mocked Egypt's president , offending the Egyptians , and then deleted its entire Twitter account before restoring it without the post in question, irritating Washington.

    Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi's office called the tweet "inappropriate" and unbecoming of a diplomatic mission while the State Department said the unusual affair was the result of "glitches" in the embassy's social media policies that are now being corrected.

    The imbroglio over the tweet comes at a time of rising tensions between Cairo and Washington, which has expressed deep concerns that Morsi's government is backsliding on human rights protections.

    And, it underscores the pitfalls of allowing individual American embassies to control the messages they disseminate through social media.

    The trouble began on Tuesday when the embassy posted a link to Stewart's monologue on his Comedy Central show the night before. Stewart took savage aim at Morsi for the arrest and interrogation of Egyptian comic Bassam Youssef, who has frequently criticized the president on a popular television program that has been likened to Stewart's own.

    In the clip, Stewart accused Morsi of being petty, undemocratic and ignoring more pressing problems like Egypt's economic crisis and violent crime to go after satirists who are critical of his government. He pointed out that he has made a living by poking fun at political leaders and that such activity is harmless and should be protected.

    Morsi's office responded to the embassy's post on its own Twitter feed, saying: "It's inappropriate for a diplomatic mission to engage in such negative political propaganda."

    The embassy responded on Wednesday by deleting its entire Twitter account, drawing the wrath of State Department headquarters in Washington, which was already peeved by the initial post. The account was then restored minus the Stewart tweet.

    Entertainment Today
    Stay Connected

    "Embassies and consulates and their senior leadership manage the content that is on their feeds and they are expected to use good policy judgment in doing that," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

    On Monday, Nuland had made comments similar to Stewart's, although more nuanced and couched in diplomatic terms, about Youssef's arrest.

    She declined to say if the State Department agreed with the Egyptian government's criticism of the tweet. But she suggested the embassy had erred by posting a link to a video that is already widely available on the Internet.

    "I can't speak to the decision to re-tweet Jon Stewart to start with," she said. "But Jon Stewart is a comedy show in the U.S., as you know. It is publicly available content."

    She said the "glitches" she referred to were "the fact that they obviously put up something that they later took down, that they took down the whole site, which should not probably have been the way that went, and that in the past there have been differences between the Twitter team and senior post management."

    The U.S. Embassy in Cairo last year engaged in a public spat with Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood over the breach of the embassy's walls by protesters upset over an anti-Islam film produced in the U.S. and posted on the Web.

    Steve Albani, spokesman for Comedy Central, declined to comment on the flap.

    Nuland stressed that the U.S. position on the arrest of Youssef, whom she described as Egypt's "Jon Stewart counterpart," remained unchanged since Monday when she referred to it as part of a ""disturbing trend" of growing restrictions on freedom of expression in Egypt.

    "There does not seem to be an evenhanded application of justice here," she said, adding that the Egyptian government has been slow to investigate police brutality or attacks on anti-Morsi protesters and journalists.

    On Tuesday, the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party denounced Nuland's comments as "blatant interference" in Egypt's internal affairs.

    Hours later, Secretary of State John Kerry jumped into the fray saying that Washington has "real concerns about the direction Egypt appears to be moving in," adding that the country is at a "tipping point."

    MATTHEW LEE The Associated Press
    email
    Comments  (4)
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:20 PM, 04/03/2013
      What do you expect when you have clowns like Kerry and Hagel running the show? This administration is turning into a joke more and more every day. You didn't have things like this when W was President.
      theodotius
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:29 PM, 04/03/2013
      So true. With only 8 more years of that inspired leadership everyone might have made a fresh start - living in caves and trying to harness fire again.
      Porthos
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:59 PM, 04/03/2013
      Stewart took " .... SAVAGE AIM" - by satire. This level of commentary continues to protect the ultra intolerant thin-skinned nature of the offended individuals in question.
      zen
    • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:16 AM, 04/04/2013
      It's time to put monkeys, actual monkeys, in charge of government at this point. (And no, this is not some anti-Obama racist thing.) Next we'll see the State Department putting up the Scientology and Mohammad South Park episodes on its website.
      verve