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Old article on free press as CIA press


From:"...@hotmail.com"
Subject:Old article on free press as CIA press
Date:Tue, 18 Dec 2007 04:25:36 -0800 (PST)
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article3700.htm

---------------------

Neoconservatism: a CIA Front?
This article first appeared in 1997 in The Rothbard-Rockwell Report.

Not long after the Central Intelligence Agency was founded in 1947,
the American public and the world were subjected to an unprecedented
level of propaganda in the service of US foreign policy objectives in
the Cold War. The propaganda offensive of the government centered
around its obsession with securing the emerging US-dominated world
order in the wake of the Second World War. It was a time when Europe
lay in ruins and when subservience to US planners, in government and
business, was the order of the day.

Although it is now widely conceded that there was never any serious
threat of a Soviet invasion of Western Europe, let alone of the United
States, the menace of the Soviet Union was the pretext underlying
discussion of foreign policy. To pay for the Cold War, Harry Truman
set out, as Arthur Vandenberg advised, to "Scare the Hell out of the
American people." A daunting task, considering the years of pro-Soviet
accolades that had been previously flowing from the executive branch.

Nonetheless, the Soviet threat served as a useful chimera to keep the
masses in line. What were the targets singled out for demonization in
the Cold War propaganda campaign? One of the chief aims of the
government was to discredit dangerously parochial attitudes about the
desirability of peace. It was also thought necessary to inoculate the
public, particularly in Europe, against the virus of "neutralism."

Further, since the American government had successfully entrenched the
military industrial complex as a permanent feature of American life,
US planners were eager to discredit the idea of "disarmament," which
meant not only a rejection of the techniques of mass murder developed
and perfected by the Allied powers in the Second World War, but also a
return to the pre-war days when the union of government and business
was more tenuous, government-connected profits were fleeting, and
market discipline provided a check on consolidation.

The degree to which the press participated as a partner in the
rhetoric of the Cold War was no accident. Media penetration was a
major facet of CIA activities in both the foreign and domestic
context. At its peak, the CIA allocated 29 percent of its budget to
"media and propaganda." The extent of its efforts are difficult to
measure, but some information has slipped through the shroud of
secrecy.

One report notes that the media organizations funded by the CIA in
Europe included: the West German News agency DENA (later the DPA), the
writers association PEN in Paris, a number of French newspapers, the
International Forum of Journalists, and Forum World Features. The
London-based Forum World Features provided stories to "140 newspapers
around the world, including about 30 in the United States, amongst
which were the Washington Post and four other major dailies."

The US Senate's Church committee reported that the Post was aware that
the service was "CIA-controlled." German media tycoon Axel Springer
had received the then-substantial sum of more than $7 million from the
Agency to build his press empire. His relationship with the CIA was
reported to have extended through the 1970s. The New York Times
reported that the CIA owned or subsidized more than 50 newspapers,
news services, radio stations, and periodicals. The paper reported
that at least another dozen were infiltrated by the CIA; more than
1,000 books either written directly or subsidized by the Agency were
published during this period.

The penetration of CIA propaganda into the American press was far more
extensive than an occasional distorted report from Europe. By the
early 70s, it had been revealed that the head of the Hearst bureau in
London was a CIA agent. Some suspicion was aroused among those editors
not on the Company payroll, and inquiring minds among them wanted to
know if CIA men were currently in their employ. Soon thereafter the
Washington Star-News published a report claiming that some three-dozen
journalists were on the payroll of the Agency. One agent was
identified in the story as a member of the Star-News' own staff. When
the paper went belly up in 1981, the "journalist" in question went
directly to work for the Reagan administration. Later, he joined the
staff of the Washington Times.

Though pressured, the CIA refused for some time to release information
on its tentacles in the "free press." There's little wonder why. When
George Bush assumed the role of CIA director, he agreed to a single
paragraph summary of each of its journalists for the Church committee.
When it submitted the last of its data, the CIA had provided
information on more than 400 journalists. The final Church report was
a disappointment, having been audited by the CIA. A subsequent House
investigation was suppressed, though a leak it was published in the
Village Voice. The House report indicated that Reuters news service
was frequently used for CIA disinformation, and that media
manipulation may have been the "largest single category of covert
action projects taken by the CIA." According to the watchdog group
Public Information Resource, propaganda expenses in the 70s may have
exceeded $285 million a year. This was more than "the combined budgets
of Reuters, United Press International, and the Associated Press."

By the late seventies, reports emerged that the publishing house
Copley Press had for three decades served as a CIA front. Its
subsidiary, Copley News Service, provided the CIA a mouthpiece in
Latin America. Propaganda in Latin America was more or less constant,
as the CIA influenced elections, organized the torture and murder of
dissidents, including priests, and backed brutal, but pro-American
patsies throughout the region.

The efforts in manipulation of opinion in Latin America were reflected
in similar campaigns at home. For instance: pro-contra public
relations specialist Edgar Chamorro served as a conduit of
disinformation from 1982 to 1984, manipulating journalists and
Congressmen at the behest of the CIA. Though domestic propaganda is a
violation of the law, it was a standard Agency tactic.

The Carter administration, in an effort to soften public interest in
the CIA's involvement with the press, issued an executive order touted
in the media as a ban on the manipulation of the American media.
Belatedly, as another PIR report notes, the Society of Professional
Journalists had this to say--"An executive order during the Carter
administration was thought to have banned the practice [of recruitment
of journalists by the CIA]. After a Council on Foreign Relations task
force recommended that the ban be reconsidered, it was revealed that a
'loophole' existed allowing the CIA director or his deputy to grant a
waiver." As a follow-up, the Reagan administration signed a law
banning media disclosure of covert operations as a felony.

If reporters were often led to compromise their integrity at the
behest of the warfare state, it was an example set at the highest
levels of power in the American media. Press ownership, already
concentrated to a ludicrous degree, shared a cozy relationship with
the CIA from its start. Those chummy with the Company included Time-
Life magnate Henry Luce, former Post owner Philip Graham and assorted
New York Times owners in the Sulzberger family. Top editors of the
Post and Newsweek have also served as agents, while the Post's
intelligence reporter was on the take from the CIA in the 60s.
Katherine Graham, for decades owner of the Washington Post, had this
to say to top CIA officials as the Berlin Wall was starting to crack.
"There are some things the general public does not need to know and
shouldn't. I believe democracy flourishes when the government can take
legitimate steps to keep its secrets and when the press can decide
whether to print what it knows."

The conservative movement that culminated in the elevation of Ronald
Reagan to the presidency was a product of those turbulent Cold War
years, and perhaps more so a product of domestic intervention by the
security state than many of its participants would care to admit. The
armchair warriors in the neoconservative camp and the inveterate
interventionists at National Review can both trace their roots
straight back to the propaganda efforts of the CIA.

After the Hitler-Stalin pact, the neoconservatives moved from
cafeteria Trotskyites to apologists for the US warfare state without
missing a beat, as Justin Raimondo shows in his 1993 Reclaiming the
American Right. The CIA's role in establishing the influence of the
neocons came out in the late 60s, though the revelations were obscured
by the primary actors' denials of knowledge of the covert funding. The
premiere organization of the anti-Stalinist left, the Congress for
Cultural Freedom, provided a base of operations to launch a left-
intellectual crusade against the Soviet Union. The revelation that the
Congress was a CIA front destroyed the organization's credibility, and
it went belly up despite the best efforts of the Ford Foundation to
keep it afloat. The Congress disappeared, but as Raimondo notes, "the
core group later came to be known as the neoconservatives."

The Congress for Cultural Freedom was perhaps the Agency's most
ambitious attempt at control and influence of intellectual life
throughout Europe and the world. Affiliates were established in
America, Europe, Australia, Japan, Latin America, India, and Africa,
although its appeal was limited in the Third World for obvious
reasons. It combined concerts, conferences, and publishing efforts,
promoting the State Department line on the Cold War. Magazines
affiliated with the Congress included, among others, the China
Quarterly, the New Leader and, of course, Encounter.

The funding of the Congress and similar fronts was organized through
dozens of charitable trusts and nonprofit foundations, some of which
were invented by the CIA. The money was made available through
seemingly legitimate means to the Congress, as well as to political
parties (including the German Social Democrats), unions and labor
organizations, journalists' unions, student groups, and any number of
other organizations that could be counted on to support US hegemony in
Europe and the world.

The most complete story of the CIA and the Congress for Cultural
Freedom is found in Peter Coleman's apologetic book, The Liberal
Conspiracy. Coleman, a former Australian barrister and editor of the
Congress magazine, the Quadrant, lets slip quite a bit of revelatory
information in his analysis of the Congress's activities and its
relationship to the CIA. The common targets of Congress literature, as
Coleman notes, are familiar: the literature was anti-Communist, social
democratic, and anti-neutralist. Other aims promoted by the Congress
were cataloged by William Blum: "a strong, well-armed, and united
Western Europe, allied to the United States....support for the Common
Market and NATO and...skepticism of disarmament [and] pacifism.
Criticism of US foreign policy took place within the framework of cold
war assumptions; for example that a particular American intervention
was not the most effective way of combating communism, not that there
was anything wrong with intervention per se...." F.A. Hayek commented
that the Congress' strategic agenda was "not to plan the future of
freedom, but to write its obituary."

Among those involved with the Congress were James Burnham, Irving
Kristol, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Daniel Bell, Arthur Schlesinger, Lionel
Trilling, and the self-described "life-long Menshevik" Sidney Hook.
After World War Two, Kristol worked as the editor for the American
Jewish Committee's Commentary magazine, then served as editor of
Encounter from 1953 to 1958.

The Congress was organized by Kristol's boss and CIA man Michael
Josselson, who maintained a tight grip on the activities of the
Congress as well as the content of its publications. According to
Coleman, Josselson's criteria for his editors was simple: they had to
be reliable on the State Department line. Later, Kristol was to deny
he knew the organization was a front. This seems unlikely for several
reasons. For one, Sidney Hook stated that "like almost everyone else,"
he had heard that "the CIA was making some contribution to the
financing of the Congress." More to the point, as Tom Braden, then
head of the CIA's International Organizations division, wrote in a
Saturday Evening Post article, a CIA agent always served as editor of
Encounter. Today, Kristol is a kind of svengali in the modern
conservative world.

Neoconservative prominence and influence owes quite a bit to the
covert activities of this government, something they forget only
rarely, as with the case of neocon Richard Perle who was caught
funneling information to one of our "reliable allies" while in the
Reagan administration.

While waging the CIA's battle, the neocons were not yet billing
themselves as conservatives. But the National Review was another
matter, a journal aimed specifically at the American right wing. The
official line holds that National Review was founded in an
intellectual vacuum, and, for all intents and purposes, created
conservatism in America. But events, as are most often the case, were
not that simple. The idea for National Review originated with Willi
Schlamm, a hard-line interventionist and feature editor with the Old
Right Freeman. At odds with the isolationism of the right, Schlamm was
well-known for his belligerence, having demanded that the United
States go to war over Formosa.

One person in a position to know more details about the founding of NR
was the late classicist and right-winger Revilo Oliver. Although late
in life Oliver was associated most closely with extremist racialism,
in the 50s, he was an influential member of the Buckley inner circle,
a regular contributor to National Review and a member of Bill
Buckley's wedding party. Later, he went on to serve as a founding
board member of the John Birch Society, until his break with the
Society's founder Robert Welch.

In his autobiography, Oliver explains that the National Review was
conceived as a way to put the isolationist Freeman out of business. A
surreptitious deal was cut with one of the Freeman editors (presumably
Schlamm) to turn the magazine over to Buckley; a last-ditch effort
saved the magazine, and control was assumed by Leonard E. Read,
president of the Foundation for Economic Education. Unfortunately,
Read balked at "politics," i.e., analyzing and criticizing government
actions, and the magazine quickly slipped into irrelevance.

It's hard to blame the editors of the Freeman for failing to see
Buckley's treachery coming. As late as 1954, Buckley was denouncing
the US military as incompatible with a free society. Soldiers emerging
from the armed forces, Buckley argued, were brainwashed with
militaristic platitudes. In his essay, Buckley proposed a debriefing
regime for all military men "solely based on the great libertarian
documents of our civilization" and study of the lives of the world's
"great individualists." But, as they say, the times, they were a
changin'.

Buckley's decision to launch the National Review was a watershed event
on the right by any measure. As Buckley's admiring social-democratic
biographer John Judis notes, "Except for Chodorov, who was a Buckley
family friend, none of the right-wing isolationists were included on
National Review's masthead. While this point of view had been welcome
in the Freeman, it would not be welcome, even as a dissenting view, in
National Review."

As Judis notes, Schlamm, who envisioned himself as the guiding light
behind NR, was not even a conservative. He "had more in common with
Dwight MacDonald or Daniel Bell than with Robert McCormick; Buckley
was turning his back on much of the isolationist...Old Right that had
applauded his earlier books and that his father had been politically
close to."

Buckley, by 1955, had already been in deep cover for the CIA. While
there is some confusion as to the actual duration of Buckley's service
as an agent, Judis notes that he served under E. Howard Hunt of
Watergate fame in Mexico City in 1951. Buckley was directed to the CIA
by Yale Professor Wilmoore Kendall, who passed Buckley along to James
Burnham, then a consultant to the Office Of Policy Coordination, the
CIA's covert-action wing.

Buckley apparently had a knack for spying: before his stint with the
Agency, he had served as an on-campus informant for the FBI, feeding
God only knows what to Hoover's political police. In any case, it is
known that Buckley continued to participate at least indirectly in CIA
covert activities through the 60s.

The founding circle of National Review was composed largely of former
agents or men otherwise in the pay of the CIA, including Buckley,
Kendall, and Burnham. Wall Street lawyer William Casey, rooted in OSS
activities and later to be named director of the CIA, drew up the
legal documents for the new magazine. (He also helped transfer Human
Events from isolationist to interventionist hands.)

NR required nearly half a million to get off the ground; the only
substantial contribution known was from Will Buckley, Senior:
$100,000. It's long been rumored that CIA black funds were used to
start the magazine, but no hard evidence exists to establish it. It
may also be relevant that the National Review was organized as a
nonprofit venture, as covert funding was typically channeled through
foundations.

By the 70s, it was known that Buckley had been an agent. More
imaginative right-wingers accused Buckley of complicity in everything
from the assassination of JFK to the Watergate break-in, undoubtedly
owing to his relationship with the mysterious Hunt.

But sober minds also believed that something was suspicious about the
National Review. In a syndicated column, Gary Wills wondered, "Was
National Review, with four ex-agents of the CIA on its staff, a CIA
operation? If so, the CIA was stingy, and I doubt it - but even some
on the editorial board raised the question. And the magazine supported
Buckley's old CIA boss, Howard Hunt, and publicized a fund drive for
him." In reply, Buckley denounced Wills for being a classicist. But
others close to the founding circle of National Review nurtured
similar suspicions. Libertarian "fusionist" Frank Meyer, for example,
confided privately that he believed that the National Review was a CIA
front.

If it was, then it was the federal government that finally broke the
back of the populist and isolationist right, the mass-based movement
with its roots in the America First anti-war movement. What FDR tried
and failed to do when he sought to shut down the Chicago Tribune, when
his attorney general held mass sedition trials of his critics on the
right, and when he orchestrated one of the worst smear campaigns in US
history against his conservative opponents, the CIA accomplished. That
in itself ought to lead conservatives to oppose the existence of
executive agencies engaged in covert operations.

Today, the war-mongering right is self-sustaining. Money flows like
milk and honey to neoconservative activists from the major
conservative foundations. Irving's son Bill Kristol has his sugar
daddy in the form of media tycoon and alien Rupert Murdoch. National
Review is boring, but in no danger of going under financially.

But the cozy relationship with the federal government is the same.
Neocons Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan now insist on massive extensions
of the warfare state. The Weekly Standard demands a ground war to
topple the head of a foreign government unfriendly to Israel, while
denouncing right-wing isolationism, libertarianism, and Murray
Rothbard.

This time, the right-wing War Hawks face a potentially insurmountable
challenge. The pro-war propaganda directed at the domestic population
is failing badly. It is ineffective for two principle reasons:
mounting intellectual opposition to the warfare state and the return
of grassroots isolationism. Both trends have come to the fore. And not
only with the collapse of communism. Widespread public disillusionment
exists over the Gulf War of 1991. Sold to the public as a high-tech
"virtual" war, the consequences have been harder to hide than the
execution of the attack. With over a million Iraqis dead, Hussein
still in power, US soldiers apparently poisoned by their own
government and a not so far-fetched feeling that the public was duped
into supporting an unjust slaughter, people are starting to regard the
Gulf War as an outrage. And they are right.

At the height of the Cold War, opposition to interventionism was
largely isolated to the anti-war Left. While marshaling an impressive
analytic literature on the evils of US imperialism, particularly in
the context of Viet Nam, the Left was suspect for its support of
socialism and its sometimes overt sympathies for totalitarian regimes.
On the right, things were different. Except for a noble band of
libertarians lead by Murray Rothbard, conservatives and many
libertarians were front and center in support of the security state
and its nefarious activities. Now, virtually the entire right is
opposed to interventionism. Traditionalists and even nationalist right-
wingers are generally opposed to foreign military actions. The
dominant anti-war force on the right is the growing number of
explicitly isolationist libertarians, who want no truck with the
warfare state on principle. The Weekly Standard acknowledged as much
and identified Murray Rothbard as the guiding spirit behind today's
antistatist, antiwar movement. And the nonliberal left, lead by long-
time noninterventionists like Noam Chomsky, remains opposed to US
global hegemony. The neocons and their corporate liberal cronies are
the only spokesman for militarism.

The grassroots are hated by the neocons for precisely that reason. The
man on the street, the movement conservative, the Perot voter, the
Libertarian Party man - they all want the troops brought home and the
tyranny of the US empire brought to a halt. When the leaders of the
empire try to talk down to normal people, they are jeered off the
stage. The RRR position - no more war - is more and more the position
of the American people. That's a strike for peace and a strike for
liberty.

Copyright (c) 1997 by the Center for Libertarian, Studies, Inc.

From:rst0wxyz <...@yahoo.com>
Subject:Re: Old article on free press as CIA press
Date:Tue, 18 Dec 2007 14:19:43 -0800 (PST)
This article is way too old to be of any use.

On Dec 18, 4:25 am, "ltl...@hotmail.com" <ltl...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article3700.htm
>
> ---------------------
>
> Neoconservatism: a CIA Front?
> This article first appeared in 1997 in The Rothbard-Rockwell Report.
>
> Not long after the Central Intelligence Agency was founded in 1947,
> the American public and the world were subjected to an unprecedented
> level of propaganda in the service of US foreign policy objectives in
> the Cold War. The propaganda offensive of the government centered
> around its obsession with securing the emerging US-dominated world
> order in the wake of the Second World War. It was a time when Europe
> lay in ruins and when subservience to US planners, in government and
> business, was the order of the day.
>
> Although it is now widely conceded that there was never any serious
> threat of a Soviet invasion of Western Europe, let alone of the United
> States, the menace of the Soviet Union was the pretext underlying
> discussion of foreign policy. To pay for the Cold War, Harry Truman
> set out, as Arthur Vandenberg advised, to "Scare the Hell out of the
> American people." A daunting task, considering the years of pro-Soviet
> accolades that had been previously flowing from the executive branch.
>
> Nonetheless, the Soviet threat served as a useful chimera to keep the
> masses in line. What were the targets singled out for demonization in
> the Cold War propaganda campaign? One of the chief aims of the
> government was to discredit dangerously parochial attitudes about the
> desirability of peace. It was also thought necessary to inoculate the
> public, particularly in Europe, against the virus of "neutralism."
>
> Further, since the American government had successfully entrenched the
> military industrial complex as a permanent feature of American life,
> US planners were eager to discredit the idea of "disarmament," which
> meant not only a rejection of the techniques of mass murder developed
> and perfected by the Allied powers in the Second World War, but also a
> return to the pre-war days when the union of government and business
> was more tenuous, government-connected profits were fleeting, and
> market discipline provided a check on consolidation.
>
> The degree to which the press participated as a partner in the
> rhetoric of the Cold War was no accident. Media penetration was a
> major facet of CIA activities in both the foreign and domestic
> context. At its peak, the CIA allocated 29 percent of its budget to
> "media and propaganda." The extent of its efforts are difficult to
> measure, but some information has slipped through the shroud of
> secrecy.
>
> One report notes that the media organizations funded by the CIA in
> Europe included: the West German News agency DENA (later the DPA), the
> writers association PEN in Paris, a number of French newspapers, the
> International Forum of Journalists, and Forum World Features. The
> London-based Forum World Features provided stories to "140 newspapers
> around the world, including about 30 in the United States, amongst
> which were the Washington Post and four other major dailies."
>
> The US Senate's Church committee reported that the Post was aware that
> the service was "CIA-controlled." German media tycoon Axel Springer
> had received the then-substantial sum of more than $7 million from the
> Agency to build his press empire. His relationship with the CIA was
> reported to have extended through the 1970s. The New York Times
> reported that the CIA owned or subsidized more than 50 newspapers,
> news services, radio stations, and periodicals. The paper reported
> that at least another dozen were infiltrated by the CIA; more than
> 1,000 books either written directly or subsidized by the Agency were
> published during this period.
>
> The penetration of CIA propaganda into the American press was far more
> extensive than an occasional distorted report from Europe. By the
> early 70s, it had been revealed that the head of the Hearst bureau in
> London was a CIA agent. Some suspicion was aroused among those editors
> not on the Company payroll, and inquiring minds among them wanted to
> know if CIA men were currently in their employ. Soon thereafter the
> Washington Star-News published a report claiming that some three-dozen
> journalists were on the payroll of the Agency. One agent was
> identified in the story as a member of the Star-News' own staff. When
> the paper went belly up in 1981, the "journalist" in question went
> directly to work for the Reagan administration. Later, he joined the
> staff of the Washington Times.
>
> Though pressured, the CIA refused for some time to release information
> on its tentacles in the "free press." There's little wonder why. When
> George Bush assumed the role of CIA director, he agreed to a single
> paragraph summary of each of its journalists for the Church committee.
> When it submitted the last of its data, the CIA had provided
> information on more than 400 journalists. The final Church report was
> a disappointment, having been audited by the CIA. A subsequent House
> investigation was suppressed, though a leak it was published in the
> Village Voice. The House report indicated that Reuters news service
> was frequently used for CIA disinformation, and that media
> manipulation may have been the "largest single category of covert
> action projects taken by the CIA." According to the watchdog group
> Public Information Resource, propaganda expenses in the 70s may have
> exceeded $285 million a year. This was more than "the combined budgets
> of Reuters, United Press International, and the Associated Press."
>
> By the late seventies, reports emerged that the publishing house
> Copley Press had for three decades served as a CIA front. Its
> subsidiary, Copley News Service, provided the CIA a mouthpiece in
> Latin America. Propaganda in Latin America was more or less constant,
> as the CIA influenced elections, organized the torture and murder of
> dissidents, including priests, and backed brutal, but pro-American
> patsies throughout the region.
>
> The efforts in manipulation of opinion in Latin America were reflected
> in similar campaigns at home. For instance: pro-contra public
> relations specialist Edgar Chamorro served as a conduit of
> disinformation from 1982 to 1984, manipulating journalists and
> Congressmen at the behest of the CIA. Though domestic propaganda is a
> violation of the law, it was a standard Agency tactic.
>
> The Carter administration, in an effort to soften public interest in
> the CIA's involvement with the press, issued an executive order touted
> in the media as a ban on the manipulation of the American media.
> Belatedly, as another PIR report notes, the Society of Professional
> Journalists had this to say--"An executive order during the Carter
> administration was thought to have banned the practice [of recruitment
> of journalists by the CIA]. After a Council on Foreign Relations task
> force recommended that the ban be reconsidered, it was revealed that a
> 'loophole' existed allowing the CIA director or his deputy to grant a
> waiver." As a follow-up, the Reagan administration signed a law
> banning media disclosure of covert operations as a felony.
>
> If reporters were often led to compromise their integrity at the
> behest of the warfare state, it was an example set at the highest
> levels of power in the American media. Press ownership, already
> concentrated to a ludicrous degree, shared a cozy relationship with
> the CIA from its start. Those chummy with the Company included Time-
> Life magnate Henry Luce, former Post owner Philip Graham and assorted
> New York Times owners in the Sulzberger family. Top editors of the
> Post and Newsweek have also served as agents, while the Post's
> intelligence reporter was on the take from the CIA in the 60s.
> Katherine Graham, for decades owner of the Washington Post, had this
> to say to top CIA officials as the Berlin Wall was starting to crack.
> "There are some things the general public does not need to know and
> shouldn't. I believe democracy flourishes when the government can take
> legitimate steps to keep its secrets and when the press can decide
> whether to print what it knows."
>
> The conservative movement that culminated in the elevation of Ronald
> Reagan to the presidency was a product of those turbulent Cold War
> years, and perhaps more so a product of domestic intervention by the
> security state than many of its participants would care to admit. The
> armchair warriors in the neoconservative camp and the inveterate
> interventionists at National Review can both trace their roots
> straight back to the propaganda efforts of the CIA.
>
> After the Hitler-Stalin pact, the neoconservatives moved from
> cafeteria Trotskyites to apologists for the US warfare state without
> missing a beat, as Justin Raimondo shows in his 1993 Reclaiming the
> American Right. The CIA's role in establishing the influence of the
> neocons came out in the late 60s, though the revelations were obscured
> by the primary actors' denials of knowledge of the covert funding. The
> premiere organization of the anti-Stalinist left, the Congress for
> Cultural Freedom, provided a base of operations to launch a left-
> intellectual crusade against the Soviet Union. The revelation that the
> Congress was a CIA front destroyed the organization's credibility, and
> it went belly up despite the best efforts of the Ford Foundation to
> keep it afloat. The Congress disappeared, but as Raimondo notes, "the
> core group later came to be known as the neoconservatives."
>
> The Congress for Cultural Freedom was perhaps the Agency's most
> ambitious attempt at control and influence of intellectual life
> throughout Europe and the world. Affiliates were established in
> America, Europe, Australia, Japan, Latin America, India, and Africa,
> although its appeal was limited in the Third World for obvious
> reasons. It combined concerts, conferences, and publishing efforts,
> promoting the State Department line on the Cold War. Magazines
> affiliated with the Congress included, among others, the China
> Quarterly, the New Leader and, of course, Encounter.
>
> The funding of the Congress and similar fronts was organized through
> dozens of charitable trusts and nonprofit foundations, some of which
> were invented by the CIA. The money was made available through
> seemingly legitimate means to the Congress, as well as to political
> parties (including the German Social Democrats), unions and labor
> organizations, journalists' unions, student groups, and any number of
> other organizations that could be counted on to support US hegemony in
> Europe and the world.
>
> The most complete story of the CIA and the Congress for Cultural
> Freedom is found in Peter Coleman's apologetic book, The Liberal
> Conspiracy. Coleman, a former Australian barrister and editor of the
> Congress magazine, the Quadrant, lets slip quite a bit of revelatory
> information in his analysis of the Congress's activities and its
> relationship to the CIA. The common targets of Congress literature, as
> Coleman notes, are familiar: the literature was anti-Communist, social
> democratic, and anti-neutralist. Other aims promoted by the Congress
> were cataloged by William Blum: "a strong, well-armed, and united
> Western Europe, allied to the United States....support for the Common
> Market and NATO and...skepticism of disarmament [and] pacifism.
> Criticism of US foreign policy took place within the framework of cold
> war assumptions; for example that a particular American intervention
> was not the most effective way of combating communism, not that there
> was anything wrong with intervention per se...." F.A. Hayek commented
> that the Congress' strategic agenda was "not to plan the future of
> freedom, but to write its obituary."
>
> Among those involved with the Congress were James Burnham, Irving
> Kristol, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Daniel Bell, Arthur Schlesinger, Lionel
> Trilling, and the self-described "life-long Menshevik" Sidney Hook.
> After World War Two, Kristol worked as the editor for the American
> Jewish Committee's Commentary magazine, then served as editor of
> Encounter from 1953 to 1958.
>
> The Congress was organized by Kristol's boss and CIA man Michael
> Josselson, who maintained a tight grip on the activities of the
> Congress as well as the content of its publications. According to
> Coleman, Josselson's criteria for his editors was simple: they had to
> be reliable on the State Department line. Later, Kristol was to deny
> he knew the organization was a front. This seems unlikely for several
> reasons. For one, Sidney Hook stated that "like almost everyone else,"
> he had heard that "the CIA was making some contribution to the
> financing of the Congress." More to the point, as Tom Braden, then
> head of the CIA's International Organizations division, wrote in a
> Saturday Evening Post article, a CIA agent always served as editor of
> Encounter. Today, Kristol is a kind of svengali in the modern
> conservative world.
>
> Neoconservative prominence and influence owes quite a bit to the
> covert activities of this government, something they forget only
> rarely, as with the case of neocon Richard Perle who was caught
> funneling information to one of our "reliable allies" while in the
> Reagan administration.
>
> While waging the CIA's battle, the neocons were not yet billing
> themselves as conservatives. But the National Review was another
> matter, a journal aimed specifically at the American right wing. The
> official line holds that National Review was founded in an
> intellectual vacuum, and, for all intents and purposes, created
> conservatism in America. But events, as are most often the case, were
> not that simple. The idea for National Review originated with Willi
> Schlamm, a hard-line interventionist and feature editor with the Old
> Right Freeman. At odds with the isolationism of the right, Schlamm was
> well-known for his belligerence, having demanded that the United
> States go to war over Formosa.
>
> One person in a position to know more details about the founding of NR
> was the late classicist and right-winger Revilo Oliver. Although late
> in life Oliver was associated most closely with extremist racialism,
> in the 50s, he was an influential member of the Buckley inner circle,
> a regular contributor to National Review and a member of Bill
> Buckley's wedding party. Later, he went on to serve as a founding
> board member of the John Birch Society, until his break with the
> Society's founder Robert Welch.
>
> In his autobiography, Oliver explains that the National Review was
> conceived as a way to put the isolationist Freeman out of business. A
> surreptitious deal was cut with one of the Freeman editors (presumably
> Schlamm) to turn the magazine over to Buckley; a last-ditch effort
> saved the magazine, and control was assumed by Leonard E. Read,
> president of the Foundation for Economic Education. Unfortunately,
> Read balked at "politics," i.e., analyzing and criticizing government
> actions, and the magazine quickly slipped into irrelevance.
>
> It's hard to blame the editors of the Freeman for failing to see
> Buckley's treachery coming. As late as 1954, Buckley was denouncing
> the US military as incompatible with a free society. Soldiers emerging
> from the armed forces, Buckley argued, were brainwashed with
> militaristic platitudes. In his essay, Buckley proposed a debriefing
> regime for all military men "solely based on the great libertarian
> documents of our civilization" and study of the lives of the world's
> "great individualists." But, as they say, the times, they were a
> changin'.
>
> Buckley's decision to launch the National Review was a watershed event
> on the right by any measure. As Buckley's admiring social-democratic
> biographer John Judis notes, "Except for Chodorov, who was a Buckley
> family friend, none of the right-wing isolationists were included on
> National Review's masthead. While this point of view had been welcome
> in the Freeman, it would not be welcome, even as a dissenting view, in
> National Review."
>
> As Judis notes, Schlamm, who envisioned himself as the guiding light
> behind NR, was not even a conservative. He "had more in common with
> Dwight MacDonald or Daniel Bell than with Robert McCormick; Buckley
> was turning his back on much of the isolationist...Old Right that had
> applauded his earlier books and that his father had been politically
> close to."
>
> Buckley, by 1955, had already been in deep cover for the CIA. While
> there is some confusion as to the actual duration of Buckley's service
> as an agent, Judis notes that he served under E. Howard Hunt of
> Watergate fame in Mexico City in 1951. Buckley was directed to the CIA
> by Yale Professor Wilmoore Kendall, who passed Buckley along to James
> Burnham, then a consultant to the Office Of Policy Coordination, the
> CIA's covert-action wing.
>
> Buckley apparently had a knack for spying: before his stint with the
> Agency, he had served as an on-campus informant for the FBI, feeding
> God only knows what to Hoover's political police. In any case, it is
> known that Buckley continued to participate at least indirectly in CIA
> covert activities through the 60s.
>
> The founding circle of National Review was composed largely of former
> agents or men otherwise in the pay of the CIA, including Buckley,
> Kendall, and Burnham. Wall Street lawyer William Casey, rooted in OSS
> activities and later to be named director of the CIA, drew up the
> legal documents for the new magazine. (He also helped transfer Human
> Events from isolationist to interventionist hands.)
>
> NR required nearly half a million to get off the ground; the only
> substantial contribution known was from Will Buckley, Senior:
> $100,000. It's long been rumored that CIA black funds were used to
> start the magazine, but no hard evidence exists to establish it. It
> may also be relevant that the National Review was organized as a
> nonprofit venture, as covert funding was typically channeled through
> foundations.
>
> By the 70s, it was known that Buckley had been an agent. More
> imaginative right-wingers accused Buckley of complicity in everything
> from the assassination of JFK to the Watergate break-in, undoubtedly
> owing to his relationship with the mysterious Hunt.
>
> But sober minds also believed that something was suspicious about the
> National Review. In a syndicated column, Gary Wills wondered, "Was
> National Review, with four ex-agents of the CIA on its staff, a CIA
> operation? If so, the CIA was stingy, and I doubt it - but even some
> on the editorial board raised the question. And the magazine supported
> Buckley's old CIA boss, Howard Hunt, and publicized a fund drive for
> him." In reply, Buckley denounced Wills for being a classicist. But
> others close to the founding circle of National Review nurtured
> similar suspicions. Libertarian "fusionist" Frank Meyer, for example,
> confided privately that he believed that the National Review was a CIA
> front.
>
> If it was, then it was the federal government that finally broke the
> back of the populist and isolationist right, the mass-based movement
> with its roots in the America First anti-war movement. What FDR tried
> and failed to do when he sought to shut down the Chicago Tribune, when
> his attorney general held mass sedition trials of his critics on the
> right, and when he orchestrated one of the worst smear campaigns in US
> history against his conservative opponents, the CIA accomplished. That
> in itself ought to lead conservatives to oppose the existence of
> executive agencies engaged in covert operations.
>
> Today, the war-mongering right is self-sustaining. Money flows like
> milk and honey to neoconservative activists from the major
> conservative foundations. Irving's son Bill Kristol has his sugar
> daddy in the form of media tycoon and alien Rupert Murdoch. National
> Review is boring, but in no danger of going under financially.
>
> But the cozy relationship with the federal government is the same.
> Neocons Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan now insist on massive extensions
> of the warfare state. The Weekly Standard demands a ground war to
> topple the head of a foreign government unfriendly to Israel, while
> denouncing right-wing isolationism, libertarianism, and Murray
> Rothbard.
>
> This time, the right-wing War Hawks face a potentially insurmountable
> challenge. The pro-war propaganda directed at the domestic population
> is failing badly. It is ineffective for two principle reasons:
> mounting intellectual opposition to the warfare state and the return
> of grassroots isolationism. Both trends have come to the fore. And not
> only with the collapse of communism. Widespread public disillusionment
> exists over the Gulf War of 1991. Sold to the public as a high-tech
> "virtual" war, the consequences have been harder to hide than the
> execution of the attack. With over a million Iraqis dead, Hussein
> still in power, US soldiers apparently poisoned by their own
> government and a not so far-fetched feeling that the public was duped
> into supporting an unjust slaughter, people are starting to regard the
> Gulf War as an outrage. And they are right.
>
> At the height of the Cold War, opposition to interventionism was
> largely isolated to the anti-war Left. While marshaling an impressive
> analytic literature on the evils of US imperialism, particularly in
> the context of Viet Nam, the Left was suspect for its support of
> socialism and its sometimes overt sympathies for totalitarian regimes.
> On the right, things were different. Except for a noble band of
> libertarians lead by Murray Rothbard, conservatives and many
> libertarians were front and center in support of the security state
> and its nefarious activities. Now, virtually the entire right is
> opposed to interventionism. Traditionalists and even nationalist right-
> wingers are generally opposed to foreign military actions. The
> dominant anti-war force on the right is the growing number of
> explicitly isolationist libertarians, who want no truck with the
> warfare state on principle. The Weekly Standard acknowledged as much
> and identified Murray Rothbard as the guiding spirit behind today's
> antistatist, antiwar movement. And the nonliberal left, lead by long-
> time noninterventionists like Noam Chomsky, remains opposed to US
> global hegemony. The neocons and their corporate liberal cronies are
> the only spokesman for militarism.
>
> The grassroots are hated by the neocons for precisely that reason. The
> man on the street, the movement conservative, the Perot voter, the
> Libertarian Party man - they all want the troops brought home and the
> tyranny of the US empire brought to a halt. When the leaders of the
> empire try to talk down to normal people, they are jeered off the
> stage. The RRR position - no more war - is more and more the position
> of the American people. That's a strike for peace and a strike for
> liberty.
>
> Copyright (c) 1997 by the Center for Libertarian, Studies, Inc.

From:ernie1241 <...@gmail.com>
Subject:Re: Old article on free press as CIA press
Date:Wed, 19 Dec 2007 08:19:26 -0800 (PST)
What is the basis for the following claim made in this article???

"One person in a position to know more details about the founding of
NR
was the late classicist and right-winger Revilo Oliver. Although late
in life Oliver was associated most closely with extremist racialism,
in the 50s, he was an influential member of the Buckley inner circle,
a regular contributor to National Review and a member of Bill
Buckley's wedding party."

Many things posted on internet are complete FALSEHOODS but few people
have the time, inclination or resources to perform the arduous
research required to establish whether or not such assertions are
accurate or truthful.

Revilo Oliver was NOT "an influential member of the Buckley inner
circle".

Furthermore, many of the claims which Oliver made about himself with
respect to his wartime service in the Army Signal Corps are also
falsehoods. See my comments (as "ernie1241") in Wikipedia's
"discussion" page in their article about Oliver:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Revilo_P._Oliver

In addition, Oliver made many assertions during his anti-communist
career which were utter falsehoods.

Oliver's FBI file is also quite revealing because it documents many
falsehoods which he disseminated. For example, his outright lie when
he claimed that former FBI informant Herbert Philbrick was his source
for the accusation that the Department of Health, Education and
Welfare was riddled with Communists. Philbrick was interviewed by the
FBI and not only denied Oliver's accusation but Philbrick described
Oliver as virulently anti-semitic --- which later became manifestly
self-evident when Oliver associated himself with George Dietz's neo-
nazi publication, Liberty Bell. Incidentally, Oliver was a devout
atheist who wrote vicious anti-Christian commentaries.

So why would anybody cite Oliver as a reliable and trustworthy
reference?


On Dec 18, 4:25=EF=BF=BDam, "ltl...@hotmail.com" <ltl...@hotmail.com> wrote:=

> http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article3700.htm
>
> ---------------------
>
> Neoconservatism: a CIA Front?
> This article first appeared in 1997 in The Rothbard-Rockwell Report.
>
> Not long after the Central Intelligence Agency was founded in 1947,
> the American public and the world were subjected to an unprecedented
> level of propaganda in the service of US foreign policy objectives in
> the Cold War. The propaganda offensive of the government centered
> around its obsession with securing the emerging US-dominated world
> order in the wake of the Second World War. It was a time when Europe
> lay in ruins and when subservience to US planners, in government and
> business, was the order of the day.
>
> Although it is now widely conceded that there was never any serious
> threat of a Soviet invasion of Western Europe, let alone of the United
> States, the menace of the Soviet Union was the pretext underlying
> discussion of foreign policy. To pay for the Cold War, Harry Truman
> set out, as Arthur Vandenberg advised, to "Scare the Hell out of the
> American people." A daunting task, considering the years of pro-Soviet
> accolades that had been previously flowing from the executive branch.
>
> Nonetheless, the Soviet threat served as a useful chimera to keep the
> masses in line. What were the targets singled out for demonization in
> the Cold War propaganda campaign? One of the chief aims of the
> government was to discredit dangerously parochial attitudes about the
> desirability of peace. It was also thought necessary to inoculate the
> public, particularly in Europe, against the virus of "neutralism."
>
> Further, since the American government had successfully entrenched the
> military industrial complex as a permanent feature of American life,
> US planners were eager to discredit the idea of "disarmament," which
> meant not only a rejection of the techniques of mass murder developed
> and perfected by the Allied powers in the Second World War, but also a
> return to the pre-war days when the union of government and business
> was more tenuous, government-connected profits were fleeting, and
> market discipline provided a check on consolidation.
>
> The degree to which the press participated as a partner in the
> rhetoric of the Cold War was no accident. Media penetration was a
> major facet of CIA activities in both the foreign and domestic
> context. At its peak, the CIA allocated 29 percent of its budget to
> "media and propaganda." The extent of its efforts are difficult to
> measure, but some information has slipped through the shroud of
> secrecy.
>
> One report notes that the media organizations funded by the CIA in
> Europe included: the West German News agency DENA (later the DPA), the
> writers association PEN in Paris, a number of French newspapers, the
> International Forum of Journalists, and Forum World Features. The
> London-based Forum World Features provided stories to "140 newspapers
> around the world, including about 30 in the United States, amongst
> which were the Washington Post and four other major dailies."
>
> The US Senate's Church committee reported that the Post was aware that
> the service was "CIA-controlled." German media tycoon Axel Springer
> had received the then-substantial sum of more than $7 million from the
> Agency to build his press empire. His relationship with the CIA was
> reported to have extended through the 1970s. The New York Times
> reported that the CIA owned or subsidized more than 50 newspapers,
> news services, radio stations, and periodicals. The paper reported
> that at least another dozen were infiltrated by the CIA; more than
> 1,000 books either written directly or subsidized by the Agency were
> published during this period.
>
> The penetration of CIA propaganda into the American press was far more
> extensive than an occasional distorted report from Europe. By the
> early 70s, it had been revealed that the head of the Hearst bureau in
> London was a CIA agent. Some suspicion was aroused among those editors
> not on the Company payroll, and inquiring minds among them wanted to
> know if CIA men were currently in their employ. Soon thereafter the
> Washington Star-News published a report claiming that some three-dozen
> journalists were on the payroll of the Agency. One agent was
> identified in the story as a member of the Star-News' own staff. When
> the paper went belly up in 1981, the "journalist" in question went
> directly to work for the Reagan administration. Later, he joined the
> staff of the Washington Times.
>
> Though pressured, the CIA refused for some time to release information
> on its tentacles in the "free press." There's little wonder why. When
> George Bush assumed the role of CIA director, he agreed to a single
> paragraph summary of each of its journalists for the Church committee.
> When it submitted the last of its data, the CIA had provided
> information on more than 400 journalists. The final Church report was
> a disappointment, having been audited by the CIA. A subsequent House
> investigation was suppressed, though a leak it was published in the
> Village Voice. The House report indicated that Reuters news service
> was frequently used for CIA disinformation, and that media
> manipulation may have been the "largest single category of covert
> action projects taken by the CIA." According to the watchdog group
> Public Information Resource, propaganda expenses in the 70s may have
> exceeded $285 million a year. This was more than "the combined budgets
> of Reuters, United Press International, and the Associated Press."
>
> By the late seventies, reports emerged that the publishing house
> Copley Press had for three decades served as a CIA front. Its
> subsidiary, Copley News Service, provided the CIA a mouthpiece in
> Latin America. Propaganda in Latin America was more or less constant,
> as the CIA influenced elections, organized the torture and murder of
> dissidents, including priests, and backed brutal, but pro-American
> patsies throughout the region.
>
> The efforts in manipulation of opinion in Latin America were reflected
> in similar campaigns at home. For instance: pro-contra public
> relations specialist Edgar Chamorro served as a conduit of
> disinformation from 1982 to 1984, manipulating journalists and
> Congressmen at the behest of the CIA. Though domestic propaganda is a
> violation of the law, it was a standard Agency tactic.
>
> The Carter administration, in an effort to soften public interest in
> the CIA's involvement with the press, issued an executive order touted
> in the media as a ban on the manipulation of the American media.
> Belatedly, as another PIR report notes, theSocietyof Professional
> Journalists had this to say--"An executive order during the Carter
> administration was thought to have banned the practice [of recruitment
> of journalists by the CIA]. After a Council on Foreign Relations task
> force recommended that the ban be reconsidered, it was revealed that a
> 'loophole' existed allowing the CIA director or his deputy to grant a
> waiver." As a follow-up, the Reagan administration signed a law
> banning media disclosure of covert operations as a felony.
>
> If reporters were often led to compromise their integrity at the
> behest of the warfare state, it was an example set at the highest
> levels of power in the American media. Press ownership, already
> concentrated to a ludicrous degree, shared a cozy relationship with
> the CIA from its start. Those chummy with the Company included Time-
> Life magnate Henry Luce, former Post owner Philip Graham and assorted
> New York Times owners in the Sulzberger family. Top editors of the
> Post and Newsweek have also served as agents, while the Post's
> intelligence reporter was on the take from the CIA in the 60s.
> Katherine Graham, for decades owner of the Washington Post, had this
> to say to top CIA officials as the Berlin Wall was starting to crack.
> "There are some things the general public does not need to know and
> shouldn't. I believe democracy flourishes when the government can take
> legitimate steps to keep its secrets and when the press can decide
> whether to print what it knows."
>
> The conservative movement that culminated in the elevation of Ronald
> Reagan to the presidency was a product of those turbulent Cold War
> years, and perhaps more so a product of domestic intervention by the
> security state than many of its participants would care to admit. The
> armchair warriors in the neoconservative camp and the inveterate
> interventionists at National Review can both trace their roots
> straight back to the propaganda efforts of the CIA.
>
> After the Hitler-Stalin pact, the neoconservatives moved from
> cafeteria Trotskyites to apologists for the US warfare state without
> missing a beat, as Justin Raimondo shows in his 1993 Reclaiming the
> American Right. The CIA's role in establishing the influence of the
> neocons came out in the late 60s, though the revelations were obscured
> by the primary actors' denials of knowledge of the covert funding. The
> premiere organization of the anti-Stalinist left, the Congress for
> Cultural Freedom, provided a base of operations to launch a left-
> intellectual crusade against the Soviet Union. The revelation that the
> Congress was a CIA front destroyed the organization's credibility, and
> it went belly up despite the best efforts of the Ford Foundation to
> keep it afloat. The Congress disappeared, but as Raimondo notes, "the
> core group later came to be known as the neoconservatives."
>
> The Congress for Cultural Freedom was perhaps the Agency's most
> ambitious attempt at control and influence of intellectual life
> throughout Europe and the world. Affiliates were established in
> America, Europe, Australia, Japan, Latin America, India, and Africa,
> although its appeal was limited in the Third World for obvious
> reasons. It combined concerts, conferences, and publishing efforts,
> promoting the State Department line on the Cold War. Magazines
> affiliated with the Congress included, among others, the China
> Quarterly, the New Leader and, of course, Encounter.
>
> The funding of the Congress and similar fronts was organized through
> dozens of charitable trusts and nonprofit foundations, some of which
> were invented by the CIA. The money was made available through
> seemingly legitimate means to the Congress, as well as to political
> parties (including the German Social Democrats), unions and labor
> organizations, journalists' unions, student groups, and any number of
> other organizations that could be counted on to support US hegemony in
> Europe and the world.
>
> The most complete story of the CIA and the Congress for Cultural
> Freedom is found in Peter Coleman's apologetic book, The Liberal
> Conspiracy. Coleman, a former Australian barrister and editor of the
> Congress magazine, the Quadrant, lets slip quite a bit of revelatory
> information in his analysis of the Congress's activities and its
> relationship to the CIA. The common targets of Congress literature, as
> Coleman notes, are familiar: the literature was anti-Communist, social
> democratic, and anti-neutralist. Other aims promoted by the Congress
> were cataloged by William Blum: "a strong, well-armed, and united
> Western Europe, allied to the United States....support for the Common
> Market and NATO and...skepticism of disarmament [and] pacifism.
> Criticism of US foreign policy took place within the framework of cold
> war assumptions; for example that a particular American intervention
> was not the most effective way of combating communism, not that there
> was anything wrong with intervention per se...." F.A. Hayek commented
> that the Congress' strategic agenda was "not to plan the future of
> freedom, but to write its obituary."
>
> Among those involved with the Congress were James Burnham, Irving
> Kristol, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Daniel Bell, Arthur Schlesinger, Lionel
> Trilling, and the self-described "life-long Menshevik" Sidney Hook.
> After World War Two, Kristol worked as the editor for the American
> Jewish Committee's Commentary magazine, then served as editor of
> Encounter from 1953 to 1958.
>
> The Congress was organized by Kristol's boss and CIA man Michael
> Josselson, who maintained a tight grip on the activities of the
> Congress as well as the content of its publications. According to
> Coleman, Josselson's criteria for his editors was simple: they had to
> be reliable on the State Department line. Later, Kristol was to deny
> he knew the organization was a front. This seems unlikely for several
> reasons. For one, Sidney Hook stated that "like almost everyone else,"
> he had heard that "the CIA was making some contribution to the
> financing of the Congress." More to the point, as Tom Braden, then
> head of the CIA's International Organizations division, wrote in a
> Saturday Evening Post article, a CIA agent always served as editor of
> Encounter. Today, Kristol is a kind of svengali in the modern
> conservative world.
>
> Neoconservative prominence and influence owes quite a bit to the
> covert activities of this government, something they forget only
> rarely, as with the case of neocon Richard Perle who was caught
> funneling information to one of our "reliable allies" while in the
> Reagan administration.
>
> While waging the CIA's battle, the neocons were not yet billing
> themselves as conservatives. But the National Review was another
> matter, a journal aimed specifically at the American right wing. The
> official line holds that National Review was founded in an
> intellectual vacuum, and, for all intents and purposes, created
> conservatism in America. But events, as are most often the case, were
> not that simple. The idea for National Review originated with Willi
> Schlamm, a hard-line interventionist and feature editor with the Old
> Right Freeman. At odds with the isolationism of the right, Schlamm was
> well-known for his belligerence, having demanded that the United
> States go to war over Formosa.
>
> One person in a position to know more details about the founding of NR
> was the late classicist and right-winger Revilo Oliver. Although late
> in life Oliver was associated most closely with extremist racialism,
> in the 50s, he was an influential member of the Buckley inner circle,
> a regular contributor to National Review and a member of Bill
> Buckley's wedding party. Later, he went on to serve as a founding
> board member of the JohnBirchSociety, until his break with theSociety'sfou=
nder Robert Welch.
>
> In his autobiography, Oliver explains that the National Review was
> conceived as a way to put the isolationist Freeman out of business. A
> surreptitious deal was cut with one of the Freeman editors (presumably
> Schlamm) to turn the magazine over to Buckley; a last-ditch effort
> saved the magazine, and control was assumed by Leonard E. Read,
> president of the Foundation for Economic Education. Unfortunately,
> Read balked at "politics," i.e., analyzing and criticizing government
> actions, and the magazine quickly slipped into irrelevance.
>
> It's hard to blame the editors of the Freeman for failing to see
> Buckley's treachery coming. As late as 1954, Buckley was denouncing
> the US military as incompatible with a freesociety. Soldiers emerging
> from the armed forces, Buckley argued, were brainwashed with
> militaristic platitudes. In his essay, Buckley proposed a debriefing
> regime for all military men "solely based on the great libertarian
> documents of our civilization" and study of the lives of the world's
> "great individualists." But, as they say, the times, they were a
> changin'.
>
> Buckley's decision to launch the National Review was a watershed event
> on the right by any measure. As Buckley's admiring social-democratic
> biographer John Judis notes, "Except for Chodorov, who was a Buckley
> family friend, none of the right-wing isolationists were included on
> National Review's masthead. While this point of view had been welcome
> in the Freeman, it would not be welcome, even as a dissenting view, in
> National Review."
>
> As Judis notes, Schlamm, who envisioned himself as the guiding light
> behind NR, was not even a conservative. He "had more in common with
> Dwight MacDonald or Daniel Bell than with Robert McCormick; Buckley
> was turning his back on much of the isolationist...Old Right that had
> applauded his earlier books and that his father had been politically
> close to."
>
> Buckley, by 1955, had already been in deep cover for the CIA. While
> there is some confusion as to the actual duration of Buckley's service
> as an agent, Judis notes that he served under E. Howard Hunt of
> Watergate fame in Mexico City in 1951. Buckley was directed to the CIA
> by Yale Professor Wilmoore Kendall, who passed Buckley along to James
> Burnham, then a consultant to the Office Of Policy Coordination, the
> CIA's covert-action wing.
>
> Buckley apparently had a knack for spying: before his stint with the
> Agency, he had served as an on-campus informant for the FBI, feeding
> God only knows what to Hoover's political police. In any case, it is
> known that Buckley continued to participate at least indirectly in CIA
> covert activities through the 60s.
>
> The founding circle of National Review was composed largely of former
> agents or men otherwise in the pay of the CIA, including Buckley,
> Kendall, and Burnham. Wall Street lawyer William Casey, rooted in OSS
> activities and later to be named director of the CIA, drew up the
> legal documents for the new magazine. (He also helped transfer Human
> Events from isolationist to interventionist hands.)
>
> NR required nearly half a million to get off the ground; the only
> substantial contribution known was from Will Buckley, Senior:
> $100,000. It's long been rumored that CIA black funds were used to
> start the magazine, but no hard evidence exists to establish it. It
> may also be relevant that the National Review was organized as a
> nonprofit venture, as covert funding was typically channeled through
> foundations.
>
> By the 70s, it was known that Buckley had been an agent. More
> imaginative right-wingers accused Buckley of complicity in everything
> from the assassination of JFK to the Watergate break-in, undoubtedly
> owing to his relationship with the mysterious Hunt.
>
> But sober minds also believed that something was suspicious about the
> National Review. In a syndicated column, Gary Wills wondered, "Was
> National Review, with four ex-agents of the CIA on its staff, a CIA
> operation? If so, the CIA was stingy, and I doubt it - but even some
> on the editorial board raised the question. And the magazine supported
> Buckley's old CIA boss, Howard Hunt, and publicized a fund drive for
> him." In reply, Buckley denounced Wills for being a classicist. But
> others close to the founding circle of National Review nurtured
> similar suspicions. Libertarian "fusionist" Frank Meyer, for example,
> confided privately that he believed that the National Review was a CIA
> front.
>
> If it was, then it was the federal government that finally broke the
> back of the populist and isolationist right, the mass-based movement
> with its roots in the America First anti-war movement. What FDR tried
> and failed to do when he sought to shut down the Chicago Tribune, when
> his attorney general held mass sedition trials of his critics on the
> right, and when he orchestrated one of the worst smear campaigns in US
> history against his conservative opponents, the CIA accomplished. That
> in itself ought to lead conservatives to oppose the existence of
> executive agencies engaged in covert operations.
>
> Today, the war-mongering right is self-sustaining. Money flows like
> milk and honey to neoconservative activists from the major
> conservative foundations. Irving's son Bill Kristol has his sugar
> daddy in the form of media tycoon and alien Rupert Murdoch. National
> Review is boring, but in no danger of going under financially.
>
> But the cozy relationship with the federal government is the same.
> Neocons Bill Kristol and Robert Kagan now insist on massive extensions
> of the warfare state. The Weekly Standard demands a ground war to
> topple the head of a foreign government unfriendly to Israel, while
> denouncing right-wing isolationism, libertarianism, and Murray
> Rothbard.
>
> This time, the right-wing War Hawks face a potentially insurmountable
> challenge. The pro-war propaganda directed at the domestic population
> is failing badly. It is ineffective for two principle reasons:
> mounting intellectual opposition to the warfare state and the return
> of grassroots isolationism. Both trends have come to the fore. And not
> only with the collapse of communism. Widespread public disillusionment
> exists over the Gulf War of 1991. Sold to the public as a high-tech
> "virtual" war, the consequences have been harder to hide than the
> execution of the attack. With over a million Iraqis dead, Hussein
> still in power, US soldiers apparently poisoned by their own
> government and a not so far-fetched feeling that the public was duped
> into supporting an unjust slaughter, people are starting to regard the
> Gulf War as an outrage. And they are right.
>
> At the height of the Cold War, opposition to interventionism was
> largely isolated to the anti-war Left. While marshaling an impressive
> analytic literature on the evils of US imperialism, particularly in
> the context of Viet Nam, the Left was suspect for its support of
> socialism and its sometimes overt sympathies for totalitarian regimes.
> On the right, things were different. Except for a noble band of
> libertarians lead by Murray Rothbard, conservatives and many
> libertarians were front and center in support of the security state
> and its nefarious activities. Now, virtually the entire right is
> opposed to interventionism. Traditionalists and even nationalist right-
> wingers are generally opposed to foreign military actions. The
> dominant anti-war force on the right is the growing number of
> explicitly isolationist libertarians, who want no truck with the
> warfare state on principle. The Weekly Standard acknowledged as much
> and identified Murray Rothbard as the guiding spirit behind today's
> antistatist, antiwar movement. And the nonliberal left, lead by long-
> time noninterventionists like Noam Chomsky, remains opposed to US
> global hegemony. The neocons and their corporate liberal cronies are
> the only spokesman for militarism.
>
> The grassroots are hated by the neocons for precisely that reason. The
> man on the street, the movement conservative, the Perot voter, the
> Libertarian Party man - they all want the troops brought home and the
> tyranny of the US empire brought to a halt. When the leaders of the
> empire try to talk down to normal people, they are jeered off the
> stage. The RRR position - no more war - is more and more the position
> of the American people. That's a strike for peace and a strike for
> liberty.
>
> Copyright (c) 1997 by the Center for Libertarian, Studies, Inc.

From:"...@hotmail.com"
Subject:Re: Old article on free press as CIA press
Date:Wed, 19 Dec 2007 10:50:03 -0800 (PST)
On Dec 19, 11:19=C2=A0am, ernie1241 <ernie1...@gmail.com> wrote:
> What is the basis for the following claim made in this article???
>
> "One person in a position to know more details about the founding of
> NR
> was the late classicist and right-winger Revilo Oliver. Although late
> in life Oliver was associated most closely with extremist racialism,
> in the 50s, he was an influential member of the Buckley inner circle,
> a regular contributor to National Review and a member of Bill
> Buckley's wedding party."
>
> Many things posted on internet are complete FALSEHOODS but few people
> have the time, inclination or resources to perform the arduous
> research required to establish whether or not such assertions are
> accurate or truthful.

Your criticism is well taken. As a matter of fact, I don't know much
about neo-conservatism. This is why I used a different heading to
highlight the penetration
of CIA propaganda into the press rather than original title of
"Neoconservatism:
a CIA Front."

My interest in the CIA penetration is in turn triggered by the recent
Senate committee hearing concerning a reproter Shi Tao being jailed by
the PRC government for pasing state secret. What I find disconcerting
is this. Lantos
et al seem to take the stance that since Shi Tao is a reporter, he
must be innocent. Given that CIA and/or other intelligence agencies
are known to
penetrat the western press, how can one assum all reporters are
innocent?

Of course, whether reporters are working with spies and to what
degree
they are part of the spy establishment could not be readily confirmed
or
refuted. I was positng the article under the assumption that the
author of the article had done "enough" homework. Of course, there are
other publicaitons pointing to the collaboration. One example is
provided by NYTimes's Nicholas Kristof.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/06/opinion/06KRIS.html
-------------------
"I remember one spy who would call me up periodically for lunch when
I
lived in China. He would pass on amazing inside tidbits about China's
top leaders =E2=80=94 and then ask for copies of classified Chinese
documents I had obtained.

I kept putting him off because I wasn't going to share my documents
=E2=80=94 but I did want his scoops. Unfortunately, I could never confirm
them,
so they were unusable. Finally, it dawned on me that he was simply
fabricating juicy tidbits so he would have something to trade."

-------------------




>
> Revilo Oliver was NOT "an influential member of the Buckley inner
> circle".
>
> Furthermore, many of the claims which Oliver made about himself with
> respect to his wartime service in the Army Signal Corps are also
> falsehoods. =C2=A0See my comments (as "ernie1241") =C2=A0in Wikipedia's
> "discussion" page in their article about Oliver:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Revilo_P._Oliver
>
> In addition, Oliver made many assertions during his anti-communist
> career which were utter falsehoods.
>
> Oliver's FBI file is also quite revealing because it documents many
> falsehoods which he disseminated. =C2=A0For example, his outright lie when=

> he claimed that former FBI informant Herbert Philbrick was his source
> for the accusation that the Department of Health, Education and
> Welfare was riddled with Communists. =C2=A0Philbrick was interviewed by th=
e
> FBI and not only denied Oliver's accusation but Philbrick described
> Oliver as virulently anti-semitic --- which later became manifestly
> self-evident when Oliver associated himself with George Dietz's neo-
> nazi publication, Liberty Bell. =C2=A0Incidentally, Oliver was a devout
> atheist who wrote vicious anti-Christian commentaries.
>
> So why would anybody cite Oliver as a reliable and trustworthy
> reference?
>
> On Dec 18, 4:25=EF=BF=BDam, "ltl...@hotmail.com" <ltl...@hotmail.com> wrot=
e:
>
>
>
> >http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article3700.htm
>
> > ---------------------
>
> > Neoconservatism: a CIA Front?
> > This article first appeared in 1997 in The Rothbard-Rockwell Report.
>
> > Not long after the Central Intelligence Agency was founded in 1947,
> > the American public and the world were subjected to an unprecedented
> > level of propaganda in the service of US foreign policy objectives in
> > the Cold War. The propaganda offensive of the government centered
> > around its obsession with securing the emerging US-dominated world
> > order in the wake of the Second World War. It was a time when Europe
> > lay in ruins and when subservience to US planners, in government and
> > business, was the order of the day.
>
> > Although it is now widely conceded that there was never any serious
> > threat of a Soviet invasion of Western Europe, let alone of the United
> > States, the menace of the Soviet Union was the pretext underlying
> > discussion of foreign policy. To pay for the Cold War, Harry Truman
> > set out, as Arthur Vandenberg advised, to "Scare the Hell out of the
> > American people." A daunting task, considering the years of pro-Soviet
> > accolades that had been previously flowing from the executive branch.
>
> > Nonetheless, the Soviet threat served as a useful chimera to keep the
> > masses in line. What were the targets singled out for demonization in
> > the Cold War propaganda campaign? One of the chief aims of the
> > government was to discredit dangerously parochial attitudes about the
> > desirability of peace. It was also thought necessary to inoculate the
> > public, particularly in Europe, against the virus of "neutralism."
>
> > Further, since the American government had successfully entrenched the
> > military industrial complex as a permanent feature of American life,
> > US planners were eager to discredit the idea of "disarmament," which
> > meant not only a rejection of the techniques of mass murder developed
> > and perfected by the Allied powers in the Second World War, but also a
> > return to the pre-war days when the union of government and business
> > was more tenuous, government-connected profits were fleeting, and
> > market discipline provided a check on consolidation.
>
> > The degree to which the press participated as a partner in the
> > rhetoric of the Cold War was no accident. Media penetration was a
> > major facet of CIA activities in both the foreign and domestic
> > context. At its peak, the CIA allocated 29 percent of its budget to
> > "media and propaganda." The extent of its efforts are difficult to
> > measure, but some information has slipped through the shroud of
> > secrecy.
>
> > One report notes that the media organizations funded by the CIA in
> > Europe included: the West German News agency DENA (later the DPA), the
> > writers association PEN in Paris, a number of French newspapers, the
> > International Forum of Journalists, and Forum World Features. The
> > London-based Forum World Features provided stories to "140 newspapers
> > around the world, including about 30 in the United States, amongst
> > which were the Washington Post and four other major dailies."
>
> > The US Senate's Church committee reported that the Post was aware that
> > the service was "CIA-controlled." German media tycoon Axel Springer
> > had received the then-substantial sum of more than $7 million from the
> > Agency to build his press empire. His relationship with the CIA was
> > reported to have extended through the 1970s. The New York Times
> > reported that the CIA owned or subsidized more than 50 newspapers,
> > news services, radio stations, and periodicals. The paper reported
> > that at least another dozen were infiltrated by the CIA; more than
> > 1,000 books either written directly or subsidized by the Agency were
> > published during this period.
>
> > The penetration of CIA propaganda into the American press was far more
> > extensive than an occasional distorted report from Europe. By the
> > early 70s, it had been revealed that the head of the Hearst bureau in
> > London was a CIA agent. Some suspicion was aroused among those editors
> > not on the Company payroll, and inquiring minds among them wanted to
> > know if CIA men were currently in their employ. Soon thereafter the
> > Washington Star-News published a report claiming that some three-dozen
> > journalists were on the payroll of the Agency. One agent was
> > identified in the story as a member of the Star-News' own staff. When
> > the paper went belly up in 1981, the "journalist" in question went
> > directly to work for the Reagan administration. Later, he joined the
> > staff of the Washington Times.
>
> > Though pressured, the CIA refused for some time to release information
> > on its tentacles in the "free press." There's little wonder why. When
> > George Bush assumed the role of CIA director, he agreed to a single
> > paragraph summary of each of its journalists for the Church committee.
> > When it submitted the last of its data, the CIA had provided
> > information on more than 400 journalists. The final Church report was
> > a disappointment, having been audited by the CIA. A subsequent House
> > investigation was suppressed, though a leak it was published in the
> > Village Voice. The House report indicated that Reuters news service
> > was frequently used for CIA disinformation, and that media
> > manipulation may have been the "largest single category of covert
> > action projects taken by the CIA." According to the watchdog group
> > Public Information Resource, propaganda expenses in the 70s may have
> > exceeded $285 million a year. This was more than "the combined budgets
> > of Reuters, United Press International, and the Associated Press."
>
> > By the late seventies, reports emerged that the publishing house
> > Copley Press had for three decades served as a CIA front. Its
> > subsidiary, Copley News Service, provided the CIA a mouthpiece in
> > Latin America. Propaganda in Latin America was more or less constant,
> > as the CIA influenced elections, organized the torture and murder of
> > dissidents, including priests, and backed brutal, but pro-American
> > patsies throughout the region.
>
> > The efforts in manipulation of opinion in Latin America were reflected
> > in similar campaigns at home. For instance: pro-contra public
> > relations specialist Edgar Chamorro served as a conduit of
> > disinformation from 1982 to 1984, manipulating journalists and
> > Congressmen at the behest of the CIA. Though domestic propaganda is a
> > violation of the law, it was a standard Agency tactic.
>
> > The Carter administration, in an effort to soften public interest in
> > the CIA's involvement with the press, issued an executive order touted
> > in the media as a ban on the manipulation of the American media.
> > Belatedly, as another PIR report notes, theSocietyof Professional
> > Journalists had this to say--"An executive order during the Carter
> > administration was thought to have banned the practice [of recruitment
> > of journalists by the CIA]. After a Council on Foreign Relations task
> > force recommended that the ban be reconsidered, it was revealed that a
> > 'loophole' existed allowing the CIA director or his deputy to grant a
> > waiver." As a follow-up, the Reagan administration signed a law
> > banning media disclosure of covert operations as a felony.
>
> > If reporters were often led to compromise their integrity at the
> > behest of the warfare state, it was an example set at the highest
> > levels of power in the American media. Press ownership, already
> > concentrated to a ludicrous degree, shared a cozy relationship with
> > the CIA from its start. Those chummy with the Company included Time-
> > Life magnate Henry Luce, former Post owner Philip Graham and assorted
> > New York Times owners in the Sulzberger family. Top editors of the
> > Post and Newsweek have also served as agents, while the Post's
> > intelligence reporter was on the take from the CIA in the 60s.
> > Katherine Graham, for decades owner of the Washington Post, had this
> > to say to top CIA officials as the Berlin Wall was starting to crack.
> > "There are some things the general public does not
>
> ...
>
> read more =C2=BB- Hide quoted text -
>
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