Kiley touches down in CNN Abu Dhabi hub

Veteran foreign reporter Sam Kiley is moving from Sky to a new job with CNN in Abu Dhabi. (Photo courtesy of CNN)
Updated 28 November 2017
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Kiley touches down in CNN Abu Dhabi hub

LONDON: The death of traditional news media may have been greatly exaggerated, believes CNN’s newest hire Sam Kiley.
The longtime foreign correspondent, who will transition from his current post as the London-based foreign affairs editor for Sky News to a new job with CNN in Abu Dhabi, said the job of professional journalists has never been more needed.
“People have worked out that in democracies you really do need credible sources of information,” Kiley told Arab News.
After years spent panicking that social media spelled the demise of journalism, the public has once again discovered its appetite for name-brand news on global issues.
Companies such as CNN are doubling down on their international coverage, Kiley said, and are expanding operations to do so.
“A bunch of fat, middle-aged men running these organizations were completely baffled by the notions of citizens’ journalism and social journalism and talked themselves out of their own jobs — almost,” he said.
“Now when democracies are under attack from outside powers … there is huge need and desire for truth tellers,” he said.
Seeking to avoid fake news stories, global audiences are returning to the sources they know and trust.
“In an age of social media there is more importance on and diet for news that has been gathered by professionals who tell the truth and whose job it is to filter out the crap,” said Kiley.
Filtering, highlighting and headlining stories from across the globe is exactly what Kiley will do at his new post as a senior international correspondent for CNN.
Based at the US company’s newly revamped hub in Abu Dhabi, Kiley will lend his expertise gleaned from nearly 30 years as a roving frontline correspondent to CNN’s international news coverage.
“I’m kind of ancient,” Kiley laughed. “I think a lot of my role will be to hop on a plane and reinforce our existing correspondents in Africa, the Middle East, Pakistan, India or wherever.”
Kiley will work with fellow Brit Becky Anderson, the managing editor of CNN Abu Dhabi’s operations and the host of the flagship program “Connect the World.”
Over the past three decades, Kiley has reported extensively from across the Middle East, covering the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and served as The Times’ Middle East bureau chief in Jerusalem.
While his focus will not be on the Gulf per se, Kiley said that he looks forward to being based in a region experiencing so much dynamic chance.
“I don’t know where Saudi will be in 2030. I don’t know what the relationship between the Gulf and the Iranians just across the water will be in the next three years. But these are all big, strategic issues that affect the entire planet,” he said.
While he did not reveal details about the length of his contract, Kiley made clear that Abu Dhabi would be his home for the foreseeable future.
“CNN is not investing in this bureau for anything other than long-term, sound strategic news reasons. It’s not a PR stunt,” he said.
Having just touched down in Abu Dhabi where he is laying the groundwork before officially starting with CNN in January 2018, Kiley said he is learning the ropes. “Weirdly I know a great deal more about the UAE’s international role than I do about where to go and buy some jam,” he said.


How media reshapes the rules of diplomacy

Updated 03 February 2026
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How media reshapes the rules of diplomacy

  • International envoys discuss influence diplomacy, misinformation, and the growing need for credible storytelling
  • Dya-Eddine Said Bamakhrama: The Saudi Media Forum itself is a tool of influence diplomacy, projecting the Kingdom’s image and soft power to the world

RIYADH: As dialogue surrounding the media’s influence across all sectors continues at the fifth edition of the Saudi Media Forum, some of the Kingdom’s ambassadors took to the stage to discuss diplomacy in an age of greater transparency.

A major topic on the panelists’ minds was “influence diplomacy,” an evolution of traditional diplomacy shaped by modern realities, said Ambassador of Djibouti to the Kingdom and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps Dya-Eddine Said Bamakhrama.

Influence diplomacy draws on soft power, he said. It uses tools such as arts and culture, sports, education, and humanitarian work to serve political interests and enhance credibility.

According to Bamakhrama, Saudi Arabia harnesses that influence through international forums, cultural initiatives, and a growing global sports presence.

“The Saudi Media Forum itself is a tool of influence diplomacy, projecting the Kingdom’s image and soft power to the world,” he said. “When a child in Africa or Latin America wears the jersey of a Saudi football club, that is influence diplomacy reaching far beyond borders.”

South African Ambassador to the Kingdom Mogobo David Magabe added that every country seeks to project an image that accurately reflects its culture, values, and identity to the world through food, music, cinema, civil society engagement, and cultural exchange.

However, Magabe warned that influence diplomacy must respect legal frameworks, avoid interfering in internal affairs, and operate transparently and ethically.

Spain’s Ambassador to the Kingdom Javier Carbajosa Sanchez echoed those remarks in saying that influence diplomacy can be a positive tool when it is ethical, disciplined, and grounded in facts.

Media has historically played a generally positive role in shaping public opinion, he said. But the rise of digital platforms requires a more responsible hand.

Diplomatic communication must follow rules, training, and ethical limits. “Propaganda may work temporarily, but credibility is what endures,” Sanchez said.

The ambassadors also highlighted that media today, particularly digital media, was a key actor in diplomacy, not just an observer.

While credibility depends on truthful and consistent narratives, digital platforms also enable the rapid spread — and exposure — of falsehoods.

“In today’s connected world, lies are exposed faster than ever,” Bamakhrama added.

Propaganda-based diplomacy no longer survives in the age of digital transparency. Instead, an effective diplomatic narrative relies on diplomats and policymakers’ understanding of the audience’s mindset, honest and clear communication of facts, and giving the necessary context for events.

Truth, he said, does not always require full disclosure, but it does not tolerate deception.

And the truth is especially paramount during times of crisis. The ambassadors agreed that false narratives collapse during conflict, and unchecked narratives can escalate crises beyond control.

“During conflict, responsibility must be shared between governments and media institutions,” Sanchez said.

Misinformation, the speed of news cycles, and the pressure to respond instantly were cited by the South African ambassador as the biggest challenges facing influence diplomacy today.

Accurate storytelling weighed heavily on speakers’ minds in the forum, especially in an era when messages can diverge between digital and traditional media.

Many of the same concerns surfaced in “Television and Streaming Platforms: Conflict or Opportunity?”, a panel focused on journalism and broadcasting, where media leaders examined how misinformation and competition are reshaping television.

Tareq Al-Ibrahim, director of MBC 1 and MBC Drama Channels and chief content officer at MBC Shahid platform, said that social media is both a bridge and competitor to television.

“It allows us to reach wider and more diverse audiences, but it also competes for people’s time,” he said.

In addition to audiences being larger, more fragmented, and more demanding, news organizations must now not only compete with other newsrooms, but with every other form of content on social platforms.

Despite this, professional journalism still holds great value and reaches wide audiences — if it adapts.

Al-Ibrahim added that competition was essential, not just for platforms, but for the entire value chain: “From writers to cameramen to directors, competition raises everyone’s standards.”

He also pointed to the evolution of Arabic content over the last decade as driven by competition from Netflix, Shahid, and other regional and global platforms.

Amjad Samhan, head of social media at Al Arabiya news network, described what the network’s transition was like from television to social media.

The challenge, he said, was figuring out how to deliver news to people who are not actively looking for news.

One solution was to transform long-form TV content into fast, digital formats. “We built a parallel digital newsroom with the same standards and principles,” Samhan shared.

When the question of social media influencers was brought up, Samhan argued: “The real competition is not with influencers. It’s with low-quality content. Credibility is what distinguishes news institutions from content creators.”

Journalism is built on trust, resources, and responsibility while influencers often lack verification and accountability, he said.

Reflecting on what the rise of digital platforms means for television, Al-Ibrahim said they are not alternatives, but complementary partners.

“Television creates shared moments; platforms create personalized experiences,” and the average consumer could greatly benefit from both.