Tips for Think-Tank Pundits


Ten ways to drive your panel wild.

By Asia Policy Point

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In times dominated by momentous questions of war and foreign policy, a particular kind of Washingtonian is bound to thrive: the think-tank pundit. But competition is relentless. Good judgment and extensive research may help advance a career, but what really matters in Washington is an elusive quality known as “Say-sO Superiority,” or SOS. Staffers at Asia Policy Point, a Washington foreign policy research center, devised the following highly scientific measure to calculate a speaker’s SOS score (and to keep themselves awake during luncheon talks).

SENTENCE USED IN SPEECH  POINTS GIVEN

Mention of previous government employment or appointment:
“As we used to say in the Oval Office ... ”  10
“While it wasn’t the hardest peace negotiation I’ve ever led ...”  9
“After boarding the Secretary’s plane to Serbia ...” 7
“One reason my lanyard policy decisively improved embassy morale ... ” 0

Mention of recent trip to a war zone or country not recognized by the U.S.:
Sadr City  10
Fallujah  8
Tora Bora  7
The Green Zone Burger King 3
Darfur  1

Mention of recreational activity with senior U.S. official:
“When I was jogging recently with ...”
Condi  9
John Negroponte  8
Bob Gates  8
W.  4
The Vice President  0

Mention of recreational activity with foreign official or leader:
“When I was skiing recently with ...”
Prince Bandar  9
Tony Blair  7
Angela Merkel  6
Hugo Chávez  2
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  0

Mention of relationship with former U.S. president or cabinet official:
“When I was playing bridge recently with ...”
Bill Clinton  10
Colin Powell 9
Brent Scowcroft 8
Henry Kissinger  6
Jimmy Carter  0.5
John Bolton 0

Ability to offer advice to announced or potential presidential candidate:
“When I was sharing my thoughts on switchgrass recently with ...”
Barack  9
Hillary  9
Newt  6
Senator McCain 3  
Tom Vilsack  1

Mention of exclusive, invitation-only forum (add extra point if a featured participant):
Camp David  8
Davos  7
Aspen  5
Friendster  0

Mention of conversation with “ordinary” citizen of country within area of expertise:
Sunni insurgent  10
Contented Indian call-center employee  5
Idealistic Iranian student 3
Garrulous Nigerian taxi driver  1
Room service  0

Excuse for being five minutes late for speaking engagement:
Meeting with Ayatollah Sistani ran late  10
Meeting with Dick Cheney ran late 6
Meeting with Norm Mineta ran late  1
Felt barfy  0

Preparation/poise:
Jotting down speaking notes while being introduced  10
Complimenting co-panelist  8
Proposing “a new Marshall plan”  6
Wearing a brown suit  2
Screaming “Allahu akbar” 0

   

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APP is a Washington, D.C., nonprofit research center studying the U.S. policy relationship with Japan and Northeast Asia. A working version of this game, called “Inside the Green Zone,” can be found at http://www.jiaponline.org.  
 
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