Twitter diplomacy
Twitter diplomacy, or Twiplomacy, is a form of digital diplomacy, refers to the practice of conducting public diplomacy using the social media platform Twitter by heads of state and diplomats, as well as leaders of intergovernmental organizations.
Public officials use Twitter for a wide range of diplomatic communication. This includes, but is not limited to, making official announcements, sharing foreign policy updates, and communicating directly with the public. As Constance Duncombe points out, Twitter does not simply provide yet another platform for dialogue between states but "challenges traditional notions of diplomacy according to which it occurs through formal channels of communication and informal face-to-face social engagements."
Origins
The term Twiplomacy was coined in 2011 in one of the first studies of diplomacy on social networks. The report shows how world leaders use Twitter to maintain diplomatic relations with other leaders and political actors. While the use of Twitter by world leaders and diplomats was on the rise as of April 2014, Twitter diplomacy was only one aspect of the growing trend toward digital diplomacy, also known as Facebook diplomacy, by many world governments.Twitter and diplomacy
As of September 2023, Twitter had an estimated 611 million monthly active users.World leaders and their diplomats have noticed Twitter's rapid expansion and have begun using it to connect with the foreign public and their citizens. After becoming a US ambassador to Russia in 2011, Michael A. McFaul was one of the first diplomats to use Twitter for diplomacy, posting tweets in both English and Russian. According to a 2013 study done by the Twiplomacy website, 153 out of the 193 countries represented at the United Nations had established government Twitter accounts. Additionally, the same study discovered that those accounts amounted to 505 Twitter handles used by world leaders and their foreign ministers. Their collective tweets had the ability to reach a combined audience of over 106 million followers.
Former Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi commented in a 2013 publication on the subject for the Geneva-based non-profit Diplo Foundation, that "social media exposes foreign policymakers to global audiences while at the same time allowing governments to reach them instantly. Twitter has two significant positive effects on foreign policy: it fosters a beneficial exchange of ideas between policymakers and civil society and enhances diplomats' ability to gather information and to anticipate, analyze, manage, and react to events."
Controversy
In April 2014, tensions between the US State Department and the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs over the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation devolved into tweets, with both ministries using the hashtag #UnitedforUkraine to convey opposite points of view.In early 2014, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani decided to delete a controversial tweet relating to the country's nuclear energy program that received media attention.
Use by governments and intergovernmental organizations
Twiplomacy's 2013 study provided new insight into the use of Twitter by governments. Twitter registration by region included:- Africa: 71% of governments
- Asia: 75% of governments
- Europe: 100% of governments
- North America: 18 governments
- Oceania: 38% of governments
- South America: 92% of governments
By heads of state and government
Former US President Barack Obama is credited as being the first head of state to establish a Twitter account, originally affiliated with his 2008 presidential campaign, on March 5, 2007, as user number 813,286. At the time he was president, he was the most-followed head of state on Twitter. Current US president Donald Trump, whose frequent and often controversial use of Twitter during the 2016 US presidential election campaign became well known globally, has frequently engaged in Twitter diplomacy during his years in office.Other heads of state and government to pioneer the conduct of Twitter diplomacy include Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto, Belgian Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo, and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, all of whom joined Twitter in 2007.