Majority of US embassies tweeting for diplomacy, report says

U.S. embassy tweeting is off to a good start with 69 percent of embassies engaging in Twitter communications, according to a new study.

More than two-thirds of U.S. embassies now use Twitter to advance their e-diplomacy efforts, according to a new report by the Sunlight Foundation open government group.

Out of 175 embassies reviewed, 121 had official or semi-official Twitter accounts, while 54 had none, the May 8 study indicated. The transparency group said the figures were current as of March.

The embassies tweet a wide variety of content, including official announcements, news articles, cultural event updates, travel warnings and links to personal Twitter accounts of U.S. ambassadors. Most tweet in English, while a “fair number” also tweet in the language of their host country.

Most of the embassies are primarily broadcasting information, rather than interacting with other users of Twitter, the study said.

Sometimes, people will tweet a question to an embassy, but embassies “are not always able to answer specific questions,” Daniel Schuman, policy counsel for the Sunlight Foundation, wrote in a blog commentary about the findings. For example, the U.S. embassy in Dublin, Ireland asked a tweeter to call in instead.

One of the standout embassies for engagement is the U.S. Embassy in Egypt, which regularly engages in dialog with users on Twitter, Sunlight Foundation said in the report.

Some of the discussion is about political policy. After an Egyptian user tweeted a skeptical remark about American attitudes toward Arabs transitioning to democracy, the embassy tweeted back: “Not true. We think that democratic transition in #Egypt is good for #Egypt, region, United States, and whole world.”

The State Department only recently compiled a list of embassy Twitter accounts, and currently lists only 99 of the 121 accounts. “This incomplete list suggests that embassy adoption of Twitter is a largely an organic process, and one that has outpaced headquarters,” Schuman wrote.

The study indicated that there was no obvious answer as to why more embassies aren’t using Twitter.

One possibility is that social media use by U.S. ambassadors could be inhibiting adoption by the embassies, the report suggested.

The report cited the example of officials in Russia recently accusing newly-appointed U.S. Ambassador Michael McFaul of “promoting regime change” in their country. McFaul has used Twitter and Facebook to defend himself in both Russian and English.

“The challenges that Ambassador McFaul is facing in Russia demonstrate how U.S. embassies that participate in social media are vulnerable to backlash from their host country. However, it is clear that Twitter is has become a valuable mechanism to circumvent traditional media channels and foster a direct dialog between foreign individuals and the U.S. government,” Schuman wrote.