
Washington, D.C., May 23, 2011 — From Egypt to Tunisia to Iran, the world has borne witness to the power of the Internet and new digital tools used to communicate across borders, organize protests, topple some dictators and possibly strengthen others – actions that all affect U.S. foreign policy. A new CNAS report released today Internet Freedom: A Foreign Policy Imperative in the Digital Age, examines Internet freedom through the lens of American foreign policy and explores two central questions: What does access to an open Internet mean for U.S. foreign policy, and what should the United States do about it?
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Internet
Freedom: A Foreign Policy Imperative in the Digital Age.
In Internet Freedom,
authors Richard Fontaine and Will Rogers define “Internet freedom,”
distinguishing between freedom of
the Internet and freedom via
the Internet; explore the U.S. foreign policy interest in preserving an open
Internet; and argue that the United States should actively promote Internet
freedom, in light of its potential to aid those seeking democratic political
change and because doing so accords with America’s deepest values. The authors
propose a comprehensive set of principles and policy recommendations that
should comprise a robust Internet freedom strategy, one that balances competing
foreign policy, economic and national security priorities and that leverages
the potential of the private sector.
“We live in a time when an application like Facebook, designed in 2004 for
American university students to share information has, in 2011, helped topple a
dictator in Egypt,” write the authors. “Though the debate [surrounding Internet
freedom] is complicated, the longstanding American commitment to basic human
rights and freedoms should remain clear. And on that basis, the United States
has a responsibility to promote Internet freedom, which is key to ensuring a
greater degree of human liberty in an ever-more contested space.”
Co-author Richard Fontaine will discuss this report and take questions via
Twitter @CNASdc during the
CNAS Fifth Annual Conference on June 2. Watch the conference live at www.cnas.org/live.
The Center for a New American Security would like to thank the John Templeton
Foundation and the Markle Foundation for their support of its study of Internet
freedom and American foreign policy.
Shannon O'Reilly
Director of External Relations
Email: soreilly@cnas.org
Ph: (202) 457-9408
Ashley Hoffman
Deputy Director of External Relations
Email: ahoffman@cnas.org
Ph: (202) 457-9414