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3934 lines
206 KiB
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Copyright (c) 1991 by Chip Berlet. All rights reserved.
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RIGHT WOOS LEFT:
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Populist Party, LaRouchian, and Other Neo-fascist Overtures To
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Progressives, And Why They Must Be Rejected
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by Chip Berlet
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Political Research Associates
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December 16, 1991
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"Fascism and Reaction inevitably attack. They have won against
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disunion. They will fail if we unite."
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(George Seldes )
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<You Can't Do That>, 1938
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Political Research Associates
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678 Massachusetts Avenue, Suite 205
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Cambridge, MA 02139
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(617) 661-9313
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------------------- Part 1 begins here ---------------------------------
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Introduction
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"...fascism is not confined to any specific era, culture or countries.
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Far from being a phenomenon limited to the European states which
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have experienced fascist regimes, movements of this type are to be
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found in practically every western country, and indeed are growing
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more strident in the leading democratic societies which have never
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experienced fascist rule--Britain and America."
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(Paul Wilkinson )
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<The New Fascists>, 1981
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Fascist political movements are experiencing a resurgence around
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the world. In Eastern Europe, racial nationalism, a key component
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of fascism, has surfaced in many new political parties. In the
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United States, the presidential campaigns of David Duke and Patrick
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Buchanan echo two different strains of historical fascism. Duke's
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neo-Nazi past resonates, in a consciously sanitized form, in his
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current formulations of white supremacist and anti-Jewish political
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theories. Buchanan's theories of isolationist nationalism and
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xenophobia hearken back to the proto-fascist ideas of the 1930's
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"America First" movement and its well-known promoters, Charles
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Lindbergh and Father Charles Coughlin. Both Duke and Buchanan blame
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our societal problems on handy scapegoats, and both feed on the
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politics of resentment, anger and fear. Most progressives vigorously
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reject Duke and Buchanan, and are not reluctant to point out fascist
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elements in both candidacies.
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But there are other strains of domestic fascism active today, and
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the siren calls of those movements may mesmerize progressives whose
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anti-government fervor blinds them to historical lessons. Since
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the early 1980's, persons from far-right and fascist political
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groups in the United States have attempted to convince progressive
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activists to join forces to oppose certain government policies.
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The fascist right has wooed the progressive left primarily around
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opposition to such issues as the use of U.S. troops in foreign
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military interventions, the CIA and covert action, and domestic
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government repression and civil liberties.
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As the far right made overtures to the left, some of the classic
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conspiracy theories of the far right began to seep into progressive,
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and even mainstream, analyses of foreign policy and domestic
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repression. An audience was created for these conspiratorial
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assertions through public speaking, radio interviews, sales of
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audiotapes and published articles. This audience elevated to
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leadership roles those persons who were willing to make the boldest
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and most critical (albeit unsubstantiated) pronouncements about
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the U.S. government and U.S. society. As a result, some progressives
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now confuse demagoguery with leadership, and undocumented conspiracism
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with serious research, and are unable to determine when an analysis
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supports or undermines the progressive goals of peace, social
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justice and economic fairness. This is primarily a problem within
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the white left, but in some Black nationalist constituencies the
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same dynamic has also popularized conspiracy theories which in some
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cases reflect anti-Jewish themes long circulated by the far right.
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While there is inevitable overlap at the edges of political movements,
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the far-right sector being discussed in this study is separate and
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distinct from traditional conservatism, the right wing of the
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Republican Party, libertarianism, anarchism, and other political
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movements sometimes characterized as right wing. The John Birch
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Society, discussed here, is a far-right reactionary political
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movement, but it attempts to distance itself from racialist and
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anti-Jewish theories. Other groups analyzed in this paper, such as
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the Populist Party, Liberty Lobby, and the LaRouchians, on the
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other hand, represent a continuation of the racialist, anti-democratic
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theories of fascism.
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The phenomenon of the right wooing the left became highly visible
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during the Gulf War. Followers of Lyndon LaRouche attended antiwar
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meetings and rallies in some thirty cities, and other right-wing
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organizers from groups such as the John Birch Society and the
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Populist Party passed out flyers at antiwar demonstrations across
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the country. While these right-wing groups undeniably opposed war
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with Iraq, they also promoted ideas that peace and social justice
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activists have historically found objectionable. Many people
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seeking to forge alliances with the left around anti-government
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and anti-interventionist policies also promote Eurocentric, anti-
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pluralist, patriarchal, or homophobic views. Some are profoundly
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anti-democratic; others support the idea that the U.S. is a Christian
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republic. A few openly promote white supremacist, anti- Jewish, or
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neo-Nazi theories.
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The John Birch Society, for instance, is highly critical of mass
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democratic movements for social change, including those that seek
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equality for women, gay men and lesbians, Blacks, Hispanics, and
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recent immigrants from Asia and Central America. The Birchers
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believe most world governments, including the U.S. and the Soviet
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Union, are secretly controlled by a handful of conspirators they
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dub "The Insiders."
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The Populist Party (and groups to which it has historically been
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related such as the Liberty Lobby and its <Spotlight> newspaper),
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created a national constituency for David Duke and other white
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supremacist political candidates. Duke was the 1988 Populist Party
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presidential candidate. These forces believe a conspiracy of rich
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and powerful Jews and their allies control banking, foreign policy,
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the CIA and the media in the United States. Like Duke, they also
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believe in an America controlled by white Christians of exclusively
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European heritage.
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The LaRouchians have supported foreign dictatorships such as the
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Marcos regime in the Philippines and the Noriega regime in Panama.
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LaRouche has written that history would not judge harshly those
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who beat homosexuals to death with baseball bats to stop the spread
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of AIDS. For LaRouchians the conspiracy consists of secret elite
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groups engaged in an epic battle between moral forces who want
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order, and sinister forces who champion chaos. LaRouche claims he
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can trace the key players in these secret conspiracies decade-by-decade
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back to Plato and Aristotle--and beyond. A remarkable number of
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the sinister conspirators turn out to be Jewish.
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This study seeks to sharpen the debate over how to handle the
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phenomenon of the right wooing the left, and is not meant to divide
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or attack the left, which is being victimized by these approaches.
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As anti-fascist author George Seldes pointed out over fifty years
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ago, "The enemy is always the Right. Fascism and Reaction inevitably
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attack. They have won against disunion. They will fail if we unite."
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There is considerable evidence to show that far-right groups are
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serious about wooing the political left and that their conspiracist
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theories have been taken seriously in some quarters. Consider the
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following, all of which will be discussed in greater detail later:
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*** Several far-right commentators affiliated with the Liberty
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Lobby and its <Spotlight> newspaper sought and obtained lengthy
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interviews on radio stations affiliated with the progressive Pacifica
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network. KPFK in Los Angeles and KPFA in San Francisco also aired
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long programs with radio personality Craig Hulet whose cynical
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views echo longstanding Birch Society conspiracy theories. Hulet
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urges progressives to join with rightists in attacking the government,
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and audiotapes of his radio interviews quickly became some of the
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Pacifica Archives' best-selling tapes. According to the program
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manager of KPFA, Hulet was one of the most requested radio
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personalities during and after the Gulf War.
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*** A catalog from Prevailing Winds Research mixes material from
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mainstream, progressive, and far-right sources. One can order
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material from the Christic Institute (a public-interest law foundation
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based in Washington, D.C.) and dozens of other left and liberal
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organizations and writers (including this author). Also available
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is material from persons affiliated with the fascist Populist Party
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or the Liberty Lobby network, and information on how to order a
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tape of a speech by Eustace Mullins, one of the world's most
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notorious anti-Jewish conspiracy theorists. Mullins envisions a
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world where Jews have been exterminated by Christians.
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*** A West Coast affiliate of the Christic Institute sells <The
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Guns and Drugs Reader>, edited by Prevailing Winds. Prominently
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featured in the publication is material by Bo Gritz, presidential
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candidate of the Populist Party, and David Duke's original
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vice-presidential running mate in 1988. Gritz, one of the most
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decorated veterans of the Vietnam war (his exploits were used in
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scripting the popular Rambo movies) has told his constituents to
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reach out to recruit from the left. Gritz himself invited Father
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Bill Davis of the Christic Institute to speak at a 1990 Las Vegas
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conference organized by Gritz's Center for Action.
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*** At the April, 1991 conference of the respected Latin American
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Studies Association in Washington, a panel on Panama included Carlos
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Wesley, the LaRouche organization's Central America operative. The
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LaRouchians have been involved in the Panamanian anti-intervention
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movement for years.
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*** More than 6 percent (49 out of a total 771) of the footnotes
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in Barbara Honneger's widely-popularized book <October Surprise>
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cite LaRouche publications such as <Executive Intelligence Review>
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and <New Solidarity> (now <New Federalist>). Honneger, a former
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White House aide, alleges in her book that officials connected to
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the Reagan Presidential campaign plotted with Iranian officials to
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delay the release of hostages in the Middle East until after the
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election. In one chapter on "Project Diplomacy," LaRouche-linked
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citations account for over 22 percent of the total number of
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footnotes. While information from the LaRouchians is sometimes
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accurate, it is often laced with unsubstantiated assertions and
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biased by the peculiar LaRouchian brand of conspiracist bigotry
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against Jews and homosexuals.
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*** The current issue of <Revisionist Letters>, a periodical
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promoting the idea that the historical account of the Holocaust is
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a hoax, contains an article urging recruitment from "a powerful
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potential source of supporters--the radical Left! Leftist
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disillusionment with Israel and Zionism is growing rapidly."
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Further confusing matters is the rebirth in Europe of the national
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socialist wing of fascism, with adherents calling themselves
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Strasserites or Third Positionists. These groups, which now operate
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in the U.S., are critical of Hitler's Nazi brand of fascism; they
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support the working class and encourage environmentalism. They
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also, however, promote racially segregated nation-states. Third
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Position groups claim to have evolved an ideology "beyond communism
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and capitalism," and actively seek to recruit from the left. One
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such group is the American Front in Portland, Oregon, which runs
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a phone hotline that in late November, 1991 featured an attack on
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critics of left/right coalitions.
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Conspiracism and demagoguery feature simplistic answers to complex
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problems. During periods of economic or social crisis, people may
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seek to alleviate anxiety by embracing simple solutions, often
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including scapegoating. This scapegoating often manifests itself
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in virulent attacks on persons of different races and cultures who
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are painted as alien conspiratorial forces undermining the coherent
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national will.
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In part, the fascist right has been able to forge ties to the left
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due to a serious lack of knowledge on the left regarding the complex
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history, different forms, and multiple tactics of fascism. Among
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those tactics are the use of scapegoating, reductionist and simplistic
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solutions, demagoguery, and a a conspiracy theory of history.
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Theories of racialist nationalism and national socialism are not
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widely known in the United States. If they were, it is unlikely
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that any serious progressive would be seduced by the right's idea
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of an alliance to smash the powerful corrupt center, based on a
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shared agenda critical of government policies. This concept has an
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unsavory historical track record. The European fascist movements
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in the 1930's flourished in a period of economic collapse, political
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turmoil, and social crisis. The German Nazi party, during its early
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national socialist phase, openly enlisted progressive support to
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smash the corrupt and elitist Weimar government. But when the
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government began to collapse, powerful industrial and banking
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interests recruited Hitler to take control the government in order
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to prevent economic chaos, which would have displaced them as power
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brokers. In return for state control, Hitler quickly liquidated
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the leadership of his national socialist allies in a murderous
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spree called the "Night of the Long Knives." Once state power had
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been consolidated, the Nazis went on to liquidate the left before
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lining up Jews, labor leaders, intellectuals, dissidents, homosexuals,
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Poles, Gypsies (the Romani), dark-skinned immigrants, the infirm,
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and others deemed undesirable.
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While conditions in the United States may only faintly echo the
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financial and social turmoil of the Weimar regime, the similarities
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cannot be dismissed lightly, nor should the catastrophic power of
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state fascism and the repression of an authoritarian government be
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confused.
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Some people who consider themselves progressive even argue that a
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fascist government could not be any worse than the Reagan and Bush
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Administrations, with their devastating effects on the poor and
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persons of color. Because current policies are nearly genocidal,
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they say they will work with any ally to smash the status quo. This
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view dangerously underestimates the murderous quality of fascism.
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Similarly, other progressives argue in favor of supporting Duke or
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Buchanan for President in order to draw votes away from Bush and
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thus elect the Democratic candidate. While Duke and Buchanan
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currently have little chance of election, any progressive support
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for their candidacies minimizes the dangers involved in supporting
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a national political movement which uses fascist themes.[f-1]
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The largest problem, however, remains the unnerving ability of
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fascist and right-wing conspiracists to attract a left audience
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through attacks on the government and its policies. There are four
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separate but related dilemmas posed by the phenomenon of the fascist
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right wooing the left:
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*** How to educate progressive forces about the history of fascism,
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so the left is not lured into a repetition of past mistakes, and
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can more readily identify anti-democratic theories.
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*** How to reject unsubstantiated conspiracy theories, demagoguery
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and scapegoating (from the right or the left), while at the same
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time promoting a vigorous critique of government repression, covert
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action, and social injustice.
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*** How progressive journalists and researchers should handle
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contacts with the political far right, and how rightists should be
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identified by journalists when they are used as sources.
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*** How progressive political coalitions should handle overtures
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by the political right which suggest tactical or strategic alliances
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around issues of common concern, and to what extent it is necessary
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for groups and individuals to distance themselves publicly from
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fascists who imply an alliance when one does not exist.
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In some cases progressive groups have begun to address the problems
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created by this courtship by the right. Radio station WBAI aired
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several hours of programming within a week of discovering that
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their broadcasts had included interviews with persons whose right-wing
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affiliations were not disclosed to the listeners. The progressive
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periodicals <Guardian> and <In These Times> have run articles and
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commentaries on the situation. KPFK and KPFA in California, however,
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waited months before their listeners even learned there was a debate
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over these issues. The Christic Institute has been especially
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reluctant to renounce publicly attempts by the fascist right to
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imply an alliance with their organization.
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Conspiratorial Roots
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While some information provided by the far right may be factual,
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other material is unsubstantiated rumor or lunatic conspiracy
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theories. Some material is bigoted. Widely publicized examples of
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right-wing conspiracism creeping into popular critiques of government
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misconduct can be found to varying degrees in the "October Surprise"
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story, the Christic Institute's "Secret Team" theory, and the late
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writer Danny Casolaro's "Octopus" theory. While some of these
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conspiracy theories are very attractive on the surface, and are
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undeniably entertaining, they ultimately serve to distract people
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from serious analysis. All of these theories share elements of
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traditional right-wing conspiracy themes in which sinister global
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elites secretly manipulate world events. The theories echo themes
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promoted by the LaRouchians, the John Birch Society and the Liberty
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Lobby and its <Spotlight> newspaper.
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Unsubstantiated conspiracy theories usually start with a basis in
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fact and relate to a legitimate issue. The current phenomenon traces
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back to the rise of counterinsurgency as an arm of U.S. foreign
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policy, and the role it played in the Vietnam War. The public debate
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over this issue expanded in 1973 with publication of <The Secret
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Team: The CIA and its Allies in Control of the United States and
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the World> by retired Air Force Colonel and intelligence specialist
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L. Fletcher Prouty. In the book, Prouty criticized the CIA's
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penchant for counterinsurgency and clandestine operations, which
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he argued prolonged the war in Vietnam and resulted in the unnecessary
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deaths of many U.S. soldiers.
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The Liberty Lobby's <Spotlight> newspaper took Prouty's thesis and
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overlaid it with a conspiracy theory regarding Jewish influence in
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U.S. foreign policy. Sometime in the 1980's, a number of right-wing
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critics of U.S. intelligence operations began to drift towards the
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<Spotlight> analysis. The "Secret Team" apparently became the
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"Secret Jewish Team" in their eyes. They began to feed information
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from their sources inside the government to publications with an
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anti-Jewish agenda.
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While the Liberty Lobby network was recruiting Fletcher Prouty, Bo
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Gritz, longtime CIA critic Victor Marchetti, and assassination
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conspiracy researchers Mark Lane and Dick Gregory, the LaRouchians
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were probing government misconduct and linking U.S. political elites
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to their global conspiracy theory.
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The LaRouchians were among the beneficiaries of the information
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flow from right-wing anti-CIA circles. LaRouche's periodicals mix
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anti-Israel views with anti-Jewish conspiracy theories, but they
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also were among the first publications in the U.S. to cover aspects
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of the covert Contra aid network, although their coverage included
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typical LaRouchian distortions. Many reporters in the mid 1980's
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were contacted by LaRouchians who offered assistance and documents
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to help research the Iran-Contra story.
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Critics of the Christic Institute say undocumented conspiracy
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theories, perhaps first circulated by the LaRouchians and the
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<Spotlight>, were inadvertently drawn into Christic's lawsuit
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against key figures in the Iran-Contra Scandal. The Christic
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Institute no longer uses the "Secret Team" slogan, which it employed
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for the first few years of its Iran-Contra lawsuit, <Avirgan v.
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Hull>. The suit, filed in 1986, is also called the La Penca case,
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after the Nicaraguan town where a 1984 bombing killed three
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journalists and at least one Contra and wounded dozens, including
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television camera operator Avirgan and the intended target, Contra
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leader Eden Pastora. The named plaintiffs in the Christic La Penca
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case were Tony Avirgan and Martha Honey. According to Avirgan,
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"There were, indeed, numerous undocumented allegations in the suit,
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particularly in Sheehan's Affidavit of Fact. As plaintiffs in the
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suit, Martha Honey and I struggled for years to try to bring the
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case down to earth."
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Dr. Diana Reynolds, an assistant professor of politics at Bradford
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College in Massachusetts, read thousands of pages of depositions
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taken during the Christic case and has concluded, "Leaving out the
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circumstances of the La Penca bombing and the specific Iran-Contra
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material, I think it is fair to say that some right- wing conspiracy
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theories were woven into the theory behind the Christic case."
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Author Jane Hunter, editor of <Israeli Foreign Affairs>, worries
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about the rise of conspiracism on the left, including some of the
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allegations made in the Christic lawsuit. "If you keep looking for
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all the connections, all you are going to see is something so
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powerful that there is no way to fight it. We have to look at the
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system that produces these covert and illegal operations, not who
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knew so and so three years ago."
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Hunter and some two-dozen other progressive researchers (including
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the author) have been discussing these issues for several years.
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The one point of agreement is that this is a problem long overdue
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for debate. As Hunter explains, "In my speaking engagements I have
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found in audience questions an alarming increase in conspiracy
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theories and anti-Semitism." She also is worried that as conditions
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for African-Americans in the U.S. have continued to deteriorate,
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there has been an increase in the scapegoating of Jews by
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African-Americans. While scapegoating and turning to conspiracy
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theories is a common phenomenon in communities experiencing financial
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or social stress, it should never be tolerated.
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It is important to differentiate between the fascist right and
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persons on the left who in a variety of ways have been lured by
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the overtures of the fascist right and its conspiracist theories,
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or who have ended up wittingly or unwittingly in coalitions with
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spokespersons for the fascist right, or who have contact with the
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fascist right as part of serious and legitimate research into
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political issues.
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Nonetheless, there is substantial evidence to suggest that the
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circulation and tolerance of unsubstantiated conspiracy theories
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by groups such as the Christic Institute and Pacifica Radio stations
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has created a large audience, especially on the West Coast, that
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gullibly accepts undocumented anti-government assertions alongside
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scrupulous documented research, with little ability to tell the
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two apart. In some cases, people who believe themselves to be
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progressive activists see no moral problem with alliances with the
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fascist right, so long as the shared enemy is the Bush Administration.
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Furthermore, rightists such as Bo Gritz and Craig Hulet continue
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to imply that they work closely with Daniel Sheehan and Father Bill
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|
Davis of the Christic Institute, while the response from the Christic
|
|
Institute has been tardy and equivocal. The most troublesome and
|
|
widespread aspects of this phenomenon have occurred in California
|
|
where some radio hosts have promoted Sheehan and Davis of Christic
|
|
along with right-wing persons in Liberty Lobby and the conspiratorial
|
|
right as jointly working together to expose the government's corrupt
|
|
maneuverings. Radio personality Craig Hulet has encouraged this
|
|
belief in interviews by warning of attempts to criticize those who
|
|
are "kicking George Bush." Hulet, in fact, specifically named
|
|
Sheehan, Davis, Marchetti, Prouty, Gritz, and himself as researchers
|
|
who needed to be defended against those who criticized coalitions
|
|
between the left and the right.
|
|
|
|
There is little agreement among progressive researchers and
|
|
journalists on how material from far-right sources should be handled.
|
|
Some progressive researchers are suspicious that government
|
|
intelligence agents and rightist researchers may leak information
|
|
to progressive journalists to achieve a right-wing political goal,
|
|
perhaps as part of a faction fight over government foreign policy
|
|
strategies.
|
|
|
|
Journalist Russ Bellant is highly critical of those who tolerate
|
|
or apologize for people who work with the LaRouchians, the Populist
|
|
Party or the Liberty Lobby network. "I think you discredit yourself
|
|
when you work with these bigoted forces," says Bellant, "and mere
|
|
association tends to lend credence to these rightist groups because
|
|
people assume the group can't be that bad if a respected person on
|
|
the left is associated with them."
|
|
|
|
This study begins with a brief overview of several paranoid conspiracy
|
|
theories prevalent in contemporary right-wing circles.
|
|
|
|
It then examines the right wing's anti-government critique and
|
|
rightist influences on Christic Institute's theories of Iran-
|
|
Contragate.
|
|
|
|
There is an extensive examination of the LaRouchians' attempts to
|
|
penetrate the progressive antiwar movement, as well as a brief look
|
|
at the activities of other far-right groups (both pro-war and
|
|
anti-interventionist) during the Gulf War. This section includes
|
|
a discussion of the surprising involvement of some formerly prominent
|
|
civil rights leaders with LaRouchian and other neo-fascist groups.
|
|
|
|
This is followed by a discussion of how prejudice, racism and
|
|
anti-Jewish theories are enmeshed in a variety of political movements
|
|
in the U.S., especially the Populist Party. The next section examines
|
|
the emergence of anti-Jewish bigotry within Black nationalist
|
|
movements.
|
|
|
|
A discussion of left/right coalition building is followed by a
|
|
preliminary attempt to establish some criteria for discussion of
|
|
these complex political issues, including sections on logical
|
|
fallacies and the pitfalls of unsubstantiated conspiracism.
|
|
|
|
Finally, there is a brief discussion of the overall dilemma and a
|
|
suggestion that further study and open discussion are needed to
|
|
sort out the complex and confusing issues raised by but, alas, not
|
|
answered by this report.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Right-Wing Critics of U.S. Intelligence Agencies and Foreign Policy
|
|
|
|
Populist Party/Liberty Lobby Recruitment of Anti-CIA Critics
|
|
|
|
It was the casualties of the Vietnam war that crystallized a
|
|
right-wing critique of U.S. foreign policy for its reliance on
|
|
covert action, counterinsurgency and political deals as tactical
|
|
alternatives to military confrontation to achieve geo-political
|
|
goals. The right-wing analysis raised questions that many citizens
|
|
were asking. If we didn't want to fight a war to win in the
|
|
traditional sense, then why did all those soldiers have to die?
|
|
What was the purpose? Where was the benefit to the U.S.? Who gained
|
|
from this process? These questions were not asked only by persons
|
|
on the right, but the answers and theories the right developed were
|
|
far different than those proposed by the left.
|
|
|
|
Fletcher Prouty's 1973 book <The Secret Team> was among the first
|
|
wave of non-left treatises to take a critical view of the U.S.
|
|
intelligence establishment's role in designing the failed
|
|
counterinsurgency policies in Vietnam.
|
|
|
|
Liberty Lobby and the <Spotlight> took the Prouty thesis and combined
|
|
it with its bigoted conspiracy theory about Jewish control of U.S.
|
|
foreign policy. Since writing the book, Prouty has drifted far to
|
|
the right, as has another CIA critic, Victor Marchetti, and both
|
|
now have allied themselves with the Liberty Lobby network. Prouty's
|
|
<The Secret Team> was recently republished by Noontide Press, the
|
|
publishing arm of the historical revisionist Institute for Historical
|
|
Review (IHR). IHR promotes the theory that the accepted history of
|
|
the Holocaust is a hoax perpetrated by Jews.
|
|
|
|
In 1974, Marchetti, a former executive assistant to the deputy
|
|
director of the CIA, co-authored <The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence>,
|
|
a well-received best-seller and the first book the CIA tried to
|
|
suppress through court action. By 1989, however, Marchetti had been
|
|
recruited into a close alliance with Carto's Liberty Lobby network.
|
|
In 1989, Marchetti presented a paper at the Ninth International
|
|
Revisionist Conference held by the Institute for Historical Review.
|
|
The title of Marchetti's paper, published in IHR's <Journal of
|
|
Historical Review>, was "Propaganda and Disinformation: How the
|
|
CIA Manufactures History." Marchetti edits the <New American View>
|
|
newsletter, which as one promotional flyer explained, was designed
|
|
to "document for patriotic Americans like yourself the excess of
|
|
pro-Israelism, which warps the news we see and hear from our media,
|
|
cows our Congress into submission, and has already cost us hundreds
|
|
of innocent, young Americans in Lebanon and elsewhere."
|
|
|
|
Marchetti describes himself as a person whose "intelligence expertise
|
|
and well-placed contacts have provided me with a unique insight
|
|
into the subversion of our democratic process and foreign policy
|
|
by those who would put the interests of Israel <above> those of
|
|
America and Americans." Marchetti is also the publisher of a
|
|
Japanese-language book <ADL and Zionism>, written by LaRouche
|
|
followers Paul Goldstein and Jeffrey Steinberg.
|
|
|
|
Marchetti was co-publisher of the <Zionist Watch> newsletter when
|
|
it was endorsed in direct mail appeals on Liberty Lobby stationery
|
|
by the now deceased Lois Petersen, who for many years was the
|
|
influential secretary of the Liberty Lobby board of directors. The
|
|
October 5, 1987 <Spotlight> reported that Mark Lane had been named
|
|
associate editor of <Zionist Watch>, which is housed in the same
|
|
small converted Capitol Hill townhouse as Liberty Lobby/<Spotlight>.
|
|
|
|
While concern over Reagan Administration participation in joint
|
|
intelligence operations with Mossad is legitimate, the use of
|
|
anti-Zionism as a cover for conspiracist anti-Jewish bigotry can
|
|
be seen in an article in the August 24, 1981 issue of <Spotlight>:
|
|
|
|
"A brazen attempt by influential "Israel-firsters" in the policy
|
|
echelons of the Reagan administration to extend their control to
|
|
the day-to-day espionage and covert-action operations of the CIA
|
|
was the hidden source of the controversy and scandals that shook
|
|
the U.S. intelligence establishment this summer. "
|
|
|
|
"The dual loyalists, whose domination over the federal executive's
|
|
high planning and strategy-making resources is now just about total,
|
|
have long wanted to grab a hand in the on-the-spot "field control"
|
|
of the CIA's worldwide clandestine services. They want this control,
|
|
not just for themselves, but on behalf of the Mossad, Israel's
|
|
terrorist secret police. "
|
|
|
|
|
|
The LaRouchian Critique
|
|
|
|
While the Carto empire was recruiting Prouty, Marchetti and other
|
|
critics of the CIA, the LaRouchians were probing government misconduct
|
|
and linking U.S. political elites to their worldview in which the
|
|
oligarchic families of Great Britain are the font of all world
|
|
evil. Over the years LaRouchian literature has maintained that
|
|
political leadership in Great Britain is really controlled by Jewish
|
|
banking families such as the Rothschilds, a standard anti-Jewish
|
|
theory that influenced such bigots as Henry Ford and Adolph Hitler.
|
|
|
|
In their book [f-2] first published in 1978, the LaRouchians assert
|
|
that the oligarchy in Great Britain is in league with Jewish bankers
|
|
to control the smuggling of drugs into the United States. Arch-rightist
|
|
and former U.S. intelligence operative, the late Mitchell WerBell
|
|
said the book was of "outstanding importance," because it told "the
|
|
history of a political strike against the United States in an
|
|
undeclared war being waged by Great Britain."
|
|
|
|
LaRouche's publications were among the first periodicals to run
|
|
articles exposing aspects of the covert Contra aid network, well
|
|
before a fateful plane crash first tipped off the mainstream press
|
|
to the full extent of the story. Right-wing coverage of government
|
|
intelligence abuse is not unique to the LaRouchians. Other far-right
|
|
groups such as Liberty Lobby and its <Spotlight> newspaper have
|
|
also circulated similar information.
|
|
|
|
Herb Quinde, an intelligence policy analyst for the LaRouchians,
|
|
says that in the 1980's the LaRouchians were contacted by a group
|
|
of disaffected former and current intelligence specialists who
|
|
Quinde referred to as "the Arabists." Both government and private
|
|
sector analysts confirm that there are persons critical of current
|
|
U.S. foreign policy reliance on Israel whose ideas are discussed
|
|
in policy meetings. These persons are sometimes referred to as
|
|
"Arabists." They represent a minority viewpoint in government
|
|
circles that needs to be factored into political equations. Most
|
|
of these persons are geo-political pragmatists who think that oil
|
|
is the key to the Middle East and so support for Israel is misguided
|
|
since Israel doesn't have oil. Others simply support a more
|
|
even-handed policy in the Middle East, especially concerning
|
|
Palestinian rights. The so-called "Arabists" are more accurately
|
|
seen as a diffuse and broad theoretical tendency rather than an
|
|
ethnic group, pro-Arab faction, or specific political organization.
|
|
|
|
Some of these persons, however, have fierce anti-Jewish views and
|
|
have sought alliances with overt bigots and persons who circulate
|
|
paranoid conspiracy theories in which Jews are believed to control
|
|
the world. Their theory at its most paranoid believes Great Britain's
|
|
intelligence services have influenced U.S. intelligence agencies
|
|
since the inception of the Office of Strategic Services, precursor
|
|
to the CIA. Great Britain's intelligence empire is seen as
|
|
predominantly Jewish, riddled with communists and homosexuals, and
|
|
with an open line to Moscow. Mossad is believed to manipulate U.S.
|
|
foreign policy and direct much of U.S. intelligence activity. The
|
|
CIA is believed to be full of moles, probably inserted by a
|
|
Anglophile/Jewish/Communist network. True patriots are urged to
|
|
try to expose this "dual loyalist" reality and push the U.S. to
|
|
ally with its real friends in the Middle East, the Arab monarchies
|
|
and familial oligarchies.
|
|
|
|
These theories have little to do with democracy, social justice or
|
|
peace in the Middle East, and they use legitimate criticisms of
|
|
Israeli policies and U.S. pro-Israel policies as a screen to cover
|
|
prejudice against Jews.
|
|
|
|
Many reporters were contacted by the LaRouchians offering assistance
|
|
and documents to help research the Iran-Contra story. LaRouche's
|
|
<Executive Intelligence Review> even gets a passing nod from author
|
|
Ben Bradlee, Jr. in his <Guts and Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver
|
|
North>. Bradlee acknowledges the help of <EIR> in decoding the
|
|
shorthand used by North in his notebooks.
|
|
|
|
Peter Dale Scott, Jonathan Marshall and other authors who researched
|
|
the Iran-Contra story say that in the mid to late 1980's, LaRouchians
|
|
such as Herb Quinde, who had researched the Oliver North network,
|
|
were involved in the traditional game of the Capitol press
|
|
corps--circulating documents and trading theories.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The LaRouchians as Anti-Interventionists
|
|
|
|
During the late 1980's the LaRouchians covertly sought to expand
|
|
their contacts with the left and attempted to link up with progressive
|
|
groups over issues such as anti-interventionism, covert action,
|
|
government domestic repression, civil liberties and Third World
|
|
debt. Many progressive researchers report that during this period
|
|
they began to receive telephone calls from LaRouchian operatives
|
|
suggesting joint work or offering documents or story ideas.
|
|
|
|
Progressive activists also were targeted. For instance, LaRouche
|
|
organizers involved themselves in an international anti-interventionist
|
|
conference held in Panama, and have worked behind the scenes around
|
|
the issue of U.S. involvement in Panamanian affairs ever since.
|
|
Although conference organizers say they tried to isolate the
|
|
LaRouchians at the conference, there is little doubt that the
|
|
LaRouchians managed to leave the impression with some activists
|
|
that they were a key component in the alliance against U.S.
|
|
intervention in Panama.
|
|
|
|
Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark has become a vocal
|
|
opponent of U.S. intervention and was a major critic of the U.S.
|
|
invasion of Panama. Clark has regularly worked in the same
|
|
anti-intervention projects as the LaRouchians, where their presence
|
|
would have been difficult not to notice. While there is no evidence
|
|
(or even a reasonable suspicion) that Clark willingly works with
|
|
the LaRouchians or shares any of their bigoted views, it is clear
|
|
the LaRouchians delight in implying that just such a relationship
|
|
exists between themselves and Clark, especially since Clark agreed
|
|
to represent the LaRouchians in filing legal appeals flowing out
|
|
of a series of federal criminal convictions of LaRouchian fundraisers
|
|
and LaRouche himself.
|
|
|
|
The ability of the LaRouchians to inject themselves into mainstream
|
|
debate around the issue of Panama is astonishing. For instance, at
|
|
the April, 1991 conference of the Latin American Studies Association
|
|
in Washington, D.C., a panel on Panama included LaRouchian expert
|
|
Carlos Wesley. Wesley was not the first choice. Two panelists from
|
|
Panama who were originally scheduled to appear did not receive
|
|
funding to attend the conference, so panel co-coordinator Donald
|
|
Bray from California State University in Los Angeles then called
|
|
a person he respected as an expert on Panama for advice on a last
|
|
minute replacement. "I called Carlos Russell, a Panamanian who now
|
|
teaches in the U.S., and who was a former Ambassador to the OAS
|
|
for a former Panamanian government," explains Bray. "He said `you
|
|
are not going to believe this, but I am going to recommend a
|
|
LaRouchite, Carlos Wesley.'" A slightly bemused Bray says he knew
|
|
Wesley from long ago and knew he was a reporter for LaRouche's
|
|
<Executive Intelligence Review>. Still, this was a recommendation
|
|
from a credible Panamanian source so with some misgivings Bray
|
|
scheduled Wesley as a panelist.
|
|
|
|
Wesley was identified as a correspondent for <Executive Intelligence
|
|
Review> (<EIR>) but, according to author Holly Sklar, who attended
|
|
the session, many in the audience were not aware that <EIR> was a
|
|
LaRouche publication. "Of course if we had identified him as a
|
|
LaRouchian, nobody would have paid any attention to what he said,"
|
|
explained Bray.
|
|
|
|
The ties between LaRouche and Panama go back several years to when
|
|
LaRouche intelligence collectors began trading tidbits of information
|
|
with Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega. Following Noriega's indictment
|
|
for conspiracy in drug deals, journalist William Branigin, writing
|
|
in the <Washington Post> of June 18, 1988, noted that among Noriega's
|
|
few supporters in the United States was "political extremist Lyndon
|
|
H. LaRouche Jr., who has praised the general as a leader in the
|
|
war on drugs."
|
|
|
|
According to a January, 1990 <Associated Press> report, LaRouche
|
|
sent Noriega a cable after his indictment, telling the dictator "I
|
|
extend to you my apologies for what the government of the United
|
|
States is doing to the Republic of Panama." LaRouche told Noriega
|
|
"I reiterate to you what I have stated publicly. That the Reagan
|
|
administration current policies towards Panama are absolutely an
|
|
offense to your nation and all of Latin America." This type of
|
|
rhetoric shows how the LaRouchians can adopt a critique of U.S.
|
|
foreign policy ostensibly similar to that of the left, while weaving
|
|
in an <apologia> converting a drug-running dictator into a
|
|
drug-fighting humanitarian. LaRouche also has high praise for other
|
|
dictators, including the late Ferdinand Marcos. The LaRouchians
|
|
claim Marcos actually won his last election.
|
|
|
|
Another example of ideological cross-fertilization involves Cecilio
|
|
Simon, a Panamanian who is an administrator at the University of
|
|
Panama. Simon spoke along with Ramsey Clark and others at the April
|
|
6, 1990 "Voices from Panama" forum held at New York City's Town
|
|
Hall auditorium. Simon later spoke at the LaRouchian "Fifth
|
|
International Martin Luther King Tribunal of the Schiller Institute,"
|
|
on June 2, 1990 in Silver Spring, Maryland. These incidents
|
|
demonstrate how the LaRouchians continue to insert themselves into
|
|
anti-interventionist work and gain credibility on the left.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rightist Influences on the Christic Institute Theories
|
|
|
|
The problem of conflating documentable facts with analysis and
|
|
conclusions and then merging them with unsubstantiated conspiracy
|
|
theories popular on the far right has plagued progressive foreign
|
|
policy critiques for several years. The Christic Institute's "Secret
|
|
Team" theory is perhaps the most widespread example of the phenomenon.
|
|
While many of the charges raised by Christic regarding the La Penca
|
|
bombing and the private pro-Contra network are documented, some of
|
|
their assertions regarding the nature and operations of a long-standing
|
|
conspiracy of high-level CIA, military, and foreign policy advisors
|
|
inside the executive branch remain undocumented, and in a few
|
|
instances, are factually inaccurate.
|
|
|
|
There are two related questions in this matter. One is whether or
|
|
not the case was handled properly with regard to the actual clients,
|
|
Martha Honey and Tony Avirgan. The other is how much unsubstantiated
|
|
conspiracism was made part of the case and its surrounding publicity.
|
|
This paper will focus on the issue of the undocumented conspiracy
|
|
theories.
|
|
|
|
It is arguable that while Christic pursued the broad conspiracy of
|
|
the "Secret Team", the bedrock portions of the case involving the
|
|
actual La Penca incidents took a back seat. A few weeks before the
|
|
case was slated for trial, the Christic Institute still had not
|
|
diagramed the elements of proof, a legal procedure where the text
|
|
of the complaint is broken down into a list of single elements that
|
|
have to be proven with either valid documentation, a sworn affidavit,
|
|
or a live witness. This had created problems for researchers and
|
|
lawyers who had no master list of what needed to be proven when
|
|
devising questions for depositions and witnesses.
|
|
|
|
When a special meeting was convened shortly before trial, it turned
|
|
out that for some of allegations concerning the alleged broad
|
|
"Secret Team" conspiracy, the only evidence in possession of the
|
|
Christic Institute was newspaper clippings and excerpts from
|
|
books--and in a few instances there was no evidence other than
|
|
uncorroborated assertions collected by researchers.
|
|
|
|
Raised at the meeting was the issue of whether or not the case had
|
|
unwittingly incorporated unsubstantiated conspiracy theories from
|
|
right-wing groups such as the LaRouchians. The staff was warned
|
|
that some defendants would likely prevail at trial due to lack of
|
|
court-quality evidence and would then likely pursue financial
|
|
penalties (called Rule 11 sanctions).[f-3]
|
|
|
|
These matters are important because Christic press statements have
|
|
fueled the idea, and many Christic Institute supporters believe,
|
|
that the dismissal of the case was just another example of a massive
|
|
government conspiracy and cover-up. It is undeniable that the
|
|
presiding judge was hostile to Christic and stretched judicial
|
|
discretion to the breaking point in dismissing the case. The
|
|
dismissal was unfair. However, according to a statement issued by
|
|
Christic client Tony Avirgan, the Institute must share at least
|
|
"partial responsibility for the dismissal of the La Penca law suit."
|
|
|
|
"It's sad that these issues have to be raised by `outsiders' such
|
|
as Berlet. But the truth is that criticism-self criticism, an
|
|
essential tool in any social movement, has never been tolerated by
|
|
the leaders of the Christic Institute. Those who criticized the
|
|
legal work of Sheehan were labelled as enemies and ignored. "
|
|
|
|
"There were, indeed, numerous undocumented allegations in the suit,
|
|
particularly in Sheehan's Affidavit of Fact. As plaintiffs in the
|
|
suit, Martha Honey and I struggled for years to try to bring the
|
|
case down to earth, to bringing it away from Sheehan's wild
|
|
allegations. Over the years, numerous staff lawyers quit over their
|
|
inability to control Sheehan. We stuck with it--and continued to
|
|
struggle--because we felt that the issues being raised were important.
|
|
But this was a law suit, not a political rally, and the hostile
|
|
judges latched on to the lack of proof and the sloppy legal work.
|
|
"
|
|
|
|
"The case, before it was inflated by Sheehan, was supposed to center
|
|
on the La Penca bombing. On this, there is a strong body of evidence
|
|
here in Costa Rica. It is enough evidence to get a reluctant Costa
|
|
Rican judiciary to indict two CIA operatives, John Hull and Felipe
|
|
Vidal, for murder and drug trafficking. Unfortunately, little of
|
|
this evidence was successfully transformed into evidence acceptable
|
|
to U.S. courts. It was either never submitted or was poorly
|
|
prepared. In large part, this was because Sheehan was concentrating
|
|
on his broad, 30-year conspiracy. "
|
|
|
|
"The exercise Berlet suggested--breaking each allegation down and
|
|
compiling evidentiary proof for it--was indeed undertaken by
|
|
competent lawyers on the Christic Institute staff. But it was an
|
|
exercise begun too late. The case had already been spiked by
|
|
Sheehan's Affidavit. "
|
|
|
|
"We feel that it is important to openly discuss these things so
|
|
that similar mistakes are avoided in the future. "
|
|
|
|
Jane Hunter of <Israeli Foreign Affairs> agrees that some of the
|
|
Christic research is problematic. "As a researcher I have over the
|
|
years found nothing in the Christic case worth citing," says Hunter.
|
|
A number of other researchers and journalists have raised similarly
|
|
harsh criticisms of some of the allegations made in the Christic
|
|
case. David Corn, for instance, wrote a stinging assessment of the
|
|
Secret Team theory for the <Nation>. Other criticisms were aired
|
|
in other Jones>.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Diana Reynolds is one of the many critics of portions of the
|
|
Christic thesis. Reynolds thinks undocumented conspiracy theories
|
|
hurt the case. She believes there is much solid evidence concerning
|
|
the actual La Penca bombing and aftermath, and some specific
|
|
Iran-Contra material, but she thinks "it is fair to say that some
|
|
right-wing conspiracy theories were woven into the theory behind
|
|
the Christic case." Reynolds read thousands of pages of depositions
|
|
taken by the Christic Institute while she was researching a story
|
|
on federal emergency planning, later published in <Covert Action
|
|
Information Bulletin>. According to Reynolds:
|
|
|
|
"It is clear to me from the depositions of Ed Wilson and Gene
|
|
Wheaton that the notion of a broad conspiracy conducted by the
|
|
so-called Enterprise, beyond the La Penca bombing and the specific
|
|
Iran-Contra scandal, has many holes. I am thoroughly convinced that
|
|
those two depositions contain the nub of the unsubstantiated
|
|
conspiracy theory, and I have said this for a very long time. When
|
|
we get into the Christic allegations regarding the Middle East and
|
|
Asia and the Camp David accords and forty years of conspiracy,
|
|
their thesis falls apart. "
|
|
|
|
Reynolds suggests it is fair to ask whether or not Christic was
|
|
manipulated by right-wing persons associated with factions in the
|
|
intelligence community. "It is curious that Wilson is a former
|
|
intelligence operative, and that Wheaton, at the same time he was
|
|
working for Christic, was also alleged by Mr. Owen in his Christic
|
|
deposition to be passing information to Neil Livingston at the
|
|
National Security Council to protect some of the people who were
|
|
implicated in the Iran-Contra scandal," says Reynolds. At least
|
|
two former Christic investigators say they warned Sheehan not to
|
|
rely on conspiratorial analysis and to be suspicious of material
|
|
from right-wing sources. Nevertheless, Sheehan was rebuked by his
|
|
own staff and others in Christic leadership for repeatedly lapsing
|
|
into an overly conspiratorial analysis in public appearances, and
|
|
for making claims that the Christic staff could not document or
|
|
otherwise support when responding to follow-up inquiries by reporters.
|
|
|
|
While the allegation that right-wing conspiracy theories were woven
|
|
into the case is hotly denied by Christic, the contacts by the
|
|
LaRouchians during the mid and late 1980's are not disputed.
|
|
According to a Christic spokesperson:
|
|
|
|
"In conducting investigations historically we have sometimes had
|
|
to get information from persons with whom one would not normally
|
|
associate. People like drug dealers, mercenaries and intelligence
|
|
agents. During our investigation, there were some meetings with
|
|
LaRouche staffers conducted by Lanny Sinkin and David MacMichael.
|
|
The information was always viewed very skeptically and none of it
|
|
found its way into our casework or courtroom materials. All those
|
|
contacts were stopped by 1989. We take seriously the view that the
|
|
LaRouche organization is an organization with whom progressives
|
|
should be very wary. "
|
|
|
|
David MacMichael and Lanny Sinkin are no longer affiliated with
|
|
the Christic Institute. Sinkin says his contact with the LaRouchians
|
|
while at Christic was limited to a few brief conversations.
|
|
MacMichael, a former CIA analyst turned agency critic who now writes
|
|
and lectures on covert action, has had a more extensive relationship
|
|
to the LaRouchians. MacMichael and Sinkin, however, were not the
|
|
only Christic investigators who received information from the
|
|
LaRouchians. Christic investigator Bill McCoy also received
|
|
information from the LaRouchians as did at least one other Christic
|
|
researcher, according to former staffers.
|
|
|
|
Sheehan was warned by his own staff in 1988 that contacts with the
|
|
research circles around LaRouche and Liberty Lobby were a problem
|
|
on both factual and moral grounds. Later Danny Sheehan appeared on
|
|
the <Undercurrents> program broadcast on WBAI-FM and other Pacifica
|
|
and progressive radio stations. Christic told the radio audience
|
|
that it was untrue that LaRouchians had supplied information to
|
|
the Christic Institute, and blasted a passing reference to this
|
|
matter in Dennis King's book, <Lyndon LaRouche and the New American
|
|
Fascism>. Shortly after Sheehan's statements, an offer to promote
|
|
King's book as a premium gift during an annual fundraising drive
|
|
for the radio station was withdrawn. King believes Sheehan's
|
|
unequivocal denial undercut the credibility of his book and was
|
|
responsible for WBAI withdrawing the original offer.
|
|
|
|
- The Right-Wing Roots of the "Secret Team" Theory -
|
|
|
|
Christic no longer uses the "Secret Team" slogan, but for the first
|
|
several years of the case, the Christic Institute used the term
|
|
"Secret Team" to describe the legal conspiracy they alleged in
|
|
court (a copy of the Prouty book sat in Sheehan's personal bookshelf
|
|
in his Christic office). There is no dispute that the "Secret Team"
|
|
theory came from the political right. The "Affidavit of Daniel P.
|
|
Sheehan" filed on December 12, 1986 and revised on January 31,
|
|
1987, refers frequently to the "Secret Team," and states explicitly
|
|
that the term came from right-wing sources.
|
|
|
|
"...I was contacted by Source #47, a right-wing para-military
|
|
specialist, former U.S. Army pilot in Vietnam and military reform
|
|
specialist in January of 1986. "
|
|
|
|
"Source #47, the Specialist, who was unaware of my investigation,
|
|
informed me that he had met--at a right-wing function--a former
|
|
U.S. military intelligence officer, Source #48...this source began
|
|
to discuss with Source #47 the existence of a "Secret Team" of
|
|
former high-ranking American CIA officials, former high-ranking
|
|
U.S. military officials and Middle Eastern arms merchants--who also
|
|
specialized in the performance of covert political assassinations
|
|
of communists and "enemies" of this "Secret Team" which carried on
|
|
its own independent, American foreign policy--regardless of the
|
|
will of Congress, the will of the President, or even the will of
|
|
the American Central Intelligence Agency. "
|
|
|
|
Critics of the Christic thesis say the "Secret Team" was not a
|
|
cabal operating against the will of the president or the CIA, but
|
|
was an illegal, secret government-sponsored operation established
|
|
by CIA director William Casey and coordinated by White House aide
|
|
Oliver North, with assistance from a network of ultra-right groups
|
|
who were determined to circumvent the will of Congress. This
|
|
"Enterprise" at times worked closely with the Mossad and carried
|
|
out clandestine counterinsurgency missions. Some of these
|
|
counterinsurgency missions were based on the same model of pacification
|
|
used by U.S. Special Forces and clandestine CIA operations in
|
|
Vietnam. It is just this emphasis on counterinsurgency and clandestine
|
|
operations rather than direct military battles that forms the basis
|
|
of criticism in Fletcher Prouty's book <Secret Team>. Prouty
|
|
criticized the CIA for promoting covert action techniques which he
|
|
traced to the influence of the British intelligence service MI5 on
|
|
the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), precursor to the CIA. Prouty
|
|
said such meddling and convoluted efforts at fighting communism
|
|
resulted in the needless deaths of American servicemen. There is
|
|
no evidence of any obvious anti-Jewish conspiracy theories in the
|
|
Prouty book.
|
|
|
|
Some of the undocumented conspiracy theories regarding the CIA and
|
|
U.S. foreign policy that were widely circulated in progressive
|
|
circles before the Iran-Contragate scandal hit the headlines seem
|
|
to have appeared first in the LaRouchian's <Executive Intelligence
|
|
Review> or <New Solidarity> (later <New Federalist>), or in the
|
|
pages of Liberty Lobby's <Spotlight> newspaper.
|
|
|
|
The <Spotlight> for instance carried the first exclusive story on
|
|
"Rex 84" by writer James Harrer. "Rex 84" was one of a long series
|
|
of readiness exercises for government military, security and police
|
|
forces. "Rex 84"--Readiness Exercise, 1984--was a drill which
|
|
postulated a scenario of massive civil unrest and the need to round
|
|
up and detain large numbers of demonstrators and dissidents. While
|
|
creating scenarios and carrying out mock exercises is common, the
|
|
potential for Constitutional abuses under the contingency plans
|
|
drawn up for "Rex 84" was, and is, very real. The legislative
|
|
authorization and Executive agency capacity for such a round-up of
|
|
dissidents remains operational.
|
|
|
|
The April 23, 1984 <Spotlight> article ran with a banner headline
|
|
"Reagan Orders Concentration Camps." The article, true to form,
|
|
took a problematic swipe at the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
|
|
B'rith along with reporting the facts of the story. The Harrer
|
|
article was based primarily on two unnamed government sources, and
|
|
follow-up confirmations. Mainstream reporters pursued the allegations
|
|
through interviews and Freedom of Information Act requests, and
|
|
ultimately the Harrer <Spotlight> article proved to be a substantially
|
|
accurate account of the readiness exercise, although <Spotlight>
|
|
did underplay the fact that this was a scenario and drill, not an
|
|
actual order to round up dissidents.
|
|
|
|
Many people believe that Christic was the first group to reveal
|
|
the "Rex 84" story. According to the 1986 Sheehan "Affidavit"
|
|
revised in 1987:
|
|
|
|
"During the second week of April of 1984, I was informed by Source
|
|
#4 that President Ronald Reagan had, on April 6, 1984, issued
|
|
National Security Decision Directive #52 authorizing the Federal
|
|
Emergency Management Agency director Louis O. Giuffrida and his
|
|
Deputy Frank Salcedo to undertake a secret nation-wide, `readiness
|
|
exercise' code-named `Rex 84....' "
|
|
|
|
The impression left is that a Christic source exclusively developed
|
|
this information and quietly handed it over to Sheehan. In fact,
|
|
the second week of April 1984, the "Rex 84" story was bannered on
|
|
the front page of the <Spotlight> and available in coin-boxes all
|
|
over Capitol Hill. <Spotlight> had previously reported extensively
|
|
on the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and other government
|
|
initiatives that threatened civil liberties.
|
|
|
|
Sheehan has told reporters that the "Rex 84" story did not come
|
|
from <Spotlight>, but would not respond to questions as to whether
|
|
or not Source #4 could document where the information came from.
|
|
This is important because in at least one other instance, previously
|
|
published research was attributed by Sheehan to Source #4. According
|
|
to the 1986 Sheehan "Affidavit" revised in 1987:
|
|
|
|
"In early May of 1984, I was supplied by Source #4 with a number
|
|
of documents describing, in some detail, a project supervised by
|
|
then Special Assistant California State Attorney General Edwin
|
|
Meese code-named "Project Cable Splicer"...part of a larger program,
|
|
code-named "Project Garden Plot"--which was a nation-wide war games
|
|
scenario...to establish a nation-wide state of martial law if
|
|
Richard Nixon's "political enemies" required him to declare a State
|
|
of National Emergency. "
|
|
|
|
While the descriptions of Cable Splicer and Garden Plot are accurate,
|
|
the source is deceptively obscured. The original story of Cable
|
|
Splicer and Garden Plot broke in the alternative press in 1975 in
|
|
an article by Ron Ridenhour with Arthur Lublow published in Arizona's
|
|
<New Times>. Garden Plot was also the cover story for the Winter
|
|
1976 issue of <CounterSpy> magazine. Dozens of pages of the unedited
|
|
official documents from Garden Plot and Cable Splicer were reprinted
|
|
in the magazine. Copies of the official documents were made available
|
|
to trial teams in several cities litigating against illegal government
|
|
intelligence abuse.
|
|
|
|
Several former Christic staffers, who asked to remain nameless,
|
|
suggest that, at the very least, a critical reevaluation of some
|
|
allegations made in the Christic case would be beneficial in light
|
|
of the possibility that material from far-right, conspiracist or
|
|
anti-Jewish sources was uncritically woven into the original "Secret
|
|
Team" Christic thesis. They say that the Christic theories need to
|
|
be reassessed with the ulterior motives and credibility of those
|
|
sources in mind.
|
|
|
|
The Christic Institute was supplied with the text of the criticisms
|
|
raised in this section of the report, as well as an extensive list
|
|
of written questions. With the exception of the quote regarding
|
|
the LaRouchians, they chose not to respond.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barbara Honneger, The October Surprise & The LaRouchians
|
|
|
|
In many way the LaRouche organization, with its slickly repackaged
|
|
conspiracy theories, serves as a nexus for a number of tendencies
|
|
on the political right, ranging from ultra-conservatives to outright
|
|
fascists and white supremacists. LaRouchian material on AIDS, for
|
|
instance, is cited by homophobic organizations such as the
|
|
fundamentalist Christian group Summit Ministries. It seems clear
|
|
that the LaRouche network reaches out to many constituencies,
|
|
including some that seem improbable on the surface, including some
|
|
on the left.
|
|
|
|
Over the past few years the LaRouchians have solicited contacts
|
|
with a number of critics of U.S. foreign policy and intelligence
|
|
agency practices, sometimes with surprising success. In many cases,
|
|
it is the LaRouchian intelligence network that serves as a broker
|
|
for information flowing between left-wing and right-wing groups.
|
|
LaRouchians appear to have first penetrated the left in recent
|
|
years when they began to trade information on covert action and
|
|
CIA misconduct. The LaRouchians were early critics of the Oliver
|
|
North network. In the early 1980's, LaRouche intelligence operatives
|
|
such as Jeffrey Steinberg maintained close ties to a faction in
|
|
the National Security Council which opposed Oliver North's activities.
|
|
At the same time the LaRouchians quietly began providing information
|
|
to mainstream and progressive reporters and researchers.
|
|
|
|
The Christic Institute and the Empowerment Project which distributes
|
|
the film "CoverUp: Behind the Iran-Contra Affair" are major
|
|
promoters of Barbara Honegger's theories regarding an alleged
|
|
"October Surprise." The October Surprise was the term used among
|
|
Reagan campaign aides to describe the possibility that the Iranian
|
|
government might arrange for the release of U.S. hostages prior to
|
|
the election which pitted incumbent Jimmy Carter against challenger
|
|
Ronald Reagan. Barbara Honneger alleges in her book <October
|
|
Surprise> that Reagan campaign aides did negotiate with representatives
|
|
of the Iranian government to delay any hostage release until after
|
|
the 1980 election. Substantial circumstantial evidence exists to
|
|
suggest such a charge might be true, but there is little incontrovertible
|
|
proof.
|
|
|
|
Honneger's research and analysis are questionable. In the 1989
|
|
edition of her book <October Surprise>, Honneger cites frequently
|
|
to LaRouche's <Executive Intelligence Review>. While some material
|
|
in EIR is factual, other material presented as fact is unsubstantiated
|
|
rumor or lunatic conspiracy theories. Some anti-fascist researchers
|
|
also assume that information in EIR occasionally represents calculated
|
|
leaks by current and former government intelligence agents and
|
|
right-wing activists to achieve a desired political goal. This
|
|
practice is a common tactic in power struggles and faction fights
|
|
over policy.
|
|
|
|
While Honneger sometimes cites to progressive periodicals such as
|
|
<In These Times> and <The Nation>,, more than six percent (49 out
|
|
of a total 771) of the footnotes in Honneger's book cite LaRouchian
|
|
publications such as <EIR, New Solidarity, >and <New Federalist>.
|
|
In one chapter on "Project Diplomacy," Honneger LaRouchian cites
|
|
account for over 22 percent of the total number of footnotes.
|
|
|
|
Honneger also makes assertions that strain credulity. She quotes
|
|
without comment the claim of Eugene Wheaton that the CIA is actually
|
|
secretly controlled by a group of retired members of the OSS.
|
|
|
|
In the July/August 1991 issue of <The Humanist>, both David MacMichael
|
|
and Barbara Trent of the Empowerment project defend Honneger and
|
|
suggest PBS refused to show "Coverup" because it contained serious
|
|
charges against the U.S. government. As Trent put it:
|
|
|
|
"It was no big surprise that there was a problem getting `Coverup'
|
|
on PBS. Programs that address U.S. foreign policy in particular
|
|
and are not in agreement with the policies of the sitting president
|
|
rarely get much of a chance on TV. "
|
|
|
|
In fact, PBS has aired on the "Frontline" series programs about
|
|
the October Surprise and CIA involvement in drug trafficking. PBS
|
|
has also aired two Bill Moyers specials on Iran-Contragate that
|
|
concluded that Reagan lied repeatedly and may have committed
|
|
impeachable offenses, and that evidence exists to suggest that
|
|
Bush's role in the Contra resupply operation was far more direct
|
|
than he has admitted. The primary difference between the shows
|
|
broadcast by PBS and "Coverup" is the reliance in "Coverup" on
|
|
Barbara Honneger and Danny Sheehan and their unsubstantiated and
|
|
undocumented charges. It would have been difficult for PBS to
|
|
justify running Honneger's assertions given her reliance on material
|
|
supplied by neo-Nazis with a history of circulating unreliable
|
|
information.
|
|
|
|
"Coverup" also promotes the Christic theme that Iran-Contragate
|
|
was caused by a long-standing conspiracy of individual agents. In
|
|
contrast to this individualistic formulation, the Moyers programs
|
|
stress a systemic failure: that the lack of congressional oversight
|
|
over foreign policy and covert action has created a Constitutional
|
|
crisis where the balance of powers between branches of government
|
|
has been skewed toward the executive branch.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Gulf War
|
|
|
|
The right's attempt to influence and recruit the left became highly
|
|
visible during the Gulf War crisis in late 1990 and early 1991. As
|
|
the movement against the war in the Middle East began to build, a
|
|
handful of far-right and anti-Jewish groups began to seek alliances
|
|
with liberal, progressive, and left antiwar coalitions. It is
|
|
important to recognize that as a whole the antiwar movement
|
|
overwhelmingly rejected these overtures by the political right,
|
|
while recognizing that the attempt reflects a larger ongoing problem.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sowing Confusion
|
|
|
|
The rightist efforts caused problems across the country, especially
|
|
attempts by followers of neo-fascist Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. to
|
|
forge ties with liberal and left antiwar coalitions. Other fascist
|
|
groups organizing against the war included the Populist Party,
|
|
Liberty Lobby, and some elements of the white supremacist movement.
|
|
Other far-right and ultra-conservative groups opposing the war
|
|
included some factions in the Libertarian movement, the John Birch
|
|
Society, and groups purveying general rightist conspiracy theories.
|
|
|
|
Most persons in the antiwar movement seemed unaware of the backgrounds
|
|
and ideology of the several rightist groups that sought alliances
|
|
during the Gulf War period, and merely were hoping to build a
|
|
broad-based alliance. Still, some activists fear that in the future,
|
|
fragile coalitions around peace and social justice issues could be
|
|
seriously damaged by the presence of bigoted ultra-right forces,
|
|
and argue that on moral grounds alone, coalitions with fascist,
|
|
racist, and anti-Jewish groups are not acceptable.
|
|
|
|
Some of the rightist and anti-Jewish groups that opposed the Gulf
|
|
War also have a racialist white supremacist ideology that not only
|
|
considers persons of Jewish and Arab heritage to be inferior, but
|
|
believes no person of color has a legitimate claim to citizenship
|
|
in the United States. Within weeks of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait,
|
|
there were reports of physical attacks on and threats against both
|
|
Arab and Jewish institutions and persons of Arab and Jewish descent.
|
|
Left groups which tolerate or apologize for persons who have allied
|
|
themselves with the racialist ultra-right send a message that such
|
|
views, which motivate acts of discrimination and assault, are an
|
|
acceptable part of political debate in our society.
|
|
|
|
Most conservatives and rightists supported the U.S. involvement in
|
|
the Gulf War. The actual attempts by the sectors of the political
|
|
right who opposed the war were varied by both locale and method.
|
|
|
|
The antiwar rightist groups generally did not seek actual coalitions
|
|
with the left, but instead passed out handbills at large antiwar
|
|
demonstrations as a recruitment mechanism. For example, the
|
|
ultra-conservative and conspiracist John Birch Society distributed
|
|
antiwar flyers at Merrimack College in Massachusetts, and at a
|
|
downtown Boston antiwar rally.
|
|
|
|
For many on the left, this was their first experience with a
|
|
courtship by the ultra-right. Author Sara Diamond urges left
|
|
activists to be suspicious of the motives of the opportunistic
|
|
right which approached the left during the Gulf War. Diamond, whose
|
|
book <Spiritual Warfare> chronicled the religious right in America,
|
|
warned, "one can only speculate that they wanted to recruit people
|
|
into their own organizations and then leave the left discredited."
|
|
She added that no matter what the motivation, however, the proposed
|
|
alliance was a bad idea.
|
|
|
|
One danger posed by the right wing's recruitment attempts is that
|
|
the widespread conspiracism in some sectors of the far right has
|
|
found fertile ground among naive or uncritical forces on the left.
|
|
The problem is exacerbated when rightists put forward their paranoid
|
|
and sometimes anti-Jewish theories in progressive circles where
|
|
conspiracist or prejudiced sentiments have been tolerated rather
|
|
than routinely confronted. Within the U.S. progressive movement,
|
|
the issue of an undercurrent of anti-Jewish bigotry among some
|
|
pro-Palestinian, Black nationalist, and left groups has been under
|
|
discussion for several years.
|
|
|
|
What the left faces is the task of carefully drawing distinctions
|
|
between views that are solely anti-Zionist or critical of the state
|
|
of Israel's policies, and views that reflect bigoted conspiracy
|
|
theories about persons of Jewish heritage. If peace and social
|
|
justice forces do not publicly reject anti-Jewish bigots, this task
|
|
becomes impossible, and the charge of anti-Semitism will taint the
|
|
entire progressive movement.
|
|
|
|
The utilization of scapegoating conspiracies is by no means limited
|
|
to the fascist right, but during the Gulf War some antiwar activists
|
|
became attracted to scurrilous conspiratorial theories of elite
|
|
control circulated by right-wing researchers. One conspiracy theorist
|
|
who gained high visibility during the Gulf War was Craig Hulet.
|
|
Another conspiracy theorist, Antony Sutton, avoids explicit
|
|
anti-Jewish rhetoric, but pursues a line promoting arcane banking
|
|
conspiracies (often involving Jewish banking families traditionally
|
|
scapegoated by bigots). Sutton also has supported racial separatism
|
|
between Blacks and whites in South Africa. Another theorist,
|
|
Eustace Mullins, is a notorious anti-Jewish bigot who focuses on
|
|
anti-Jewish conspiracy theories in which the Rothschilds and other
|
|
Jews control the world economy. Mullins' work is promoted by U.S.
|
|
white supremacist and neo-Nazi circles. Persons supporting the
|
|
neo-fascist Populist Party used Hulet's radio appearances on
|
|
progressive Pacifica network radio station KPFA in San Francisco
|
|
to organize study groups where the theories of Mullins and Sutton
|
|
were promoted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The LaRouchians and the Gulf War
|
|
|
|
The most disruptive rightist penetration of antiwar groups was by
|
|
the LaRouchians. The LaRouchians generally operate under front
|
|
groups such as Food for Peace, Schiller Institute, and <Executive
|
|
Intelligence Review>. Some local antiwar groups have worked with
|
|
the LaRouchians, while others have not. While often described merely
|
|
as conservative or extremist, the LaRouche organization and its
|
|
various front groups are a fascist political movement with echoes
|
|
of neo-Nazi ideology. The group's ultimate leader, Lyndon H.
|
|
LaRouche, Jr., is currently in jail because his fundraisers sold
|
|
unsecured securities to the elderly and because LaRouche paid no
|
|
taxes while living in a Virginia mansion. LaRouche was sentenced
|
|
in January, 1989 to fifteen years in prison after a federal court
|
|
found LaRouche and six codefendants guilty of a mail fraud conspiracy
|
|
related to fundraising. LaRouche was also convicted of tax evasion.
|
|
On appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court let the convictions stand without
|
|
comment.
|
|
|
|
LaRouche's lawyers have repeatedly sued activist critics who describe
|
|
him as a fascist, racist, sexist, homophobic, anti-Jewish bigot,
|
|
lunatic cult leader, neo-Nazi racial theorist, crook, and demagogue.
|
|
LaRouche has lost every case. One jury in Virginia found that
|
|
calling LaRouche a "small-time Hitler" was not defamatory and then
|
|
awarded damages to the news organization sued by LaRouche.
|
|
|
|
During the Gulf War the LaRouchians appeared at antiwar rallies
|
|
and meetings in thirty cities, including New York, Boston, Washington,
|
|
D.C., Richmond, Chicago, Milwaukee, Detroit, Cleveland, Ann Arbor,
|
|
St. Louis, Omaha, Seattle, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.
|
|
|
|
At the University of Ottawa in Canada, LaRouche's Schiller Institute
|
|
co-sponsored an antiwar event with an organization of Middle Eastern
|
|
students. At an October 20, 1990 antiwar demonstration in New York
|
|
City, the Schiller Institute had four people carrying a large banner
|
|
and a small group of supporters organized in a contingent. The
|
|
LaRouchians have passed out petitions at antiwar rallies, and then
|
|
called the persons who signed the petitions to solicit money for
|
|
the LaRouche organization. Other fundraising pitches are made at
|
|
antiwar rallies.
|
|
|
|
In a flyer announcing a December 15, 1990 rally, a group called
|
|
simply the "LaRouche Organization" was originally listed as a
|
|
coalition member. The presence of the LaRouchians, as well as other
|
|
anti-Jewish bigots, in the St. Louis antiwar coalition originally
|
|
caused consternation, especially among members of New Jewish Agenda,
|
|
a group which supports a democratic Israel, Palestinian rights,
|
|
and a Palestinian homeland. When coalition leaders were provided
|
|
with documentation of LaRouchian attacks on Jews, Blacks and other
|
|
minorities, including LaRouchian support for the apartheid government
|
|
of South Africa, the LaRouche supporters were booted out of the
|
|
coalition.
|
|
|
|
In Los Angeles, several LaRouchians were dismayed when the local
|
|
antiwar coalition pointed to its principles of unity, which included
|
|
a call for a sensible non-nuclear energy policy. The LaRouchians
|
|
are vocal supporters of nuclear power. In Richmond, Virginia, local
|
|
antiwar organizers simply kept shouting at the LaRouchians to "shut
|
|
up" when they began their bizarre spiels and for a time the
|
|
LaRouchians stopped coming to meetings. The LaRouchians soon
|
|
returned, but attempted to keep a low profile while persistently
|
|
circulating their literature.
|
|
|
|
During December, LaRouche's followers held vigils on a number of
|
|
campuses to build support for a touted "National Teach-In to Stop
|
|
the War" held December 15-16 in Chicago. The Chicago conference,
|
|
titled "Development is the New Name for Peace," turned out to be
|
|
the annual LaRouche-sponsored Food for Peace Conference, repackaged
|
|
to attract antiwar activists. The conference drew over 350 attendees.
|
|
Several persons active with the St. Louis African-American
|
|
Anti-War/Peace Coalition who attended the conference were later
|
|
asked to leave the Coalition for being disruptive and spreading
|
|
anti-Jewish conspiracy theories, according to several St. Louis
|
|
activists who spoke on condition of anonymity.
|
|
|
|
Only three dozen students were sprinkled among the crowd which drew
|
|
persons from California, Oregon, North and South Dakota, Maryland,
|
|
New Jersey, Virginia, Iowa, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Nebraska, and the
|
|
Canadian province of Quebec. Many in the audience were farmers.
|
|
Close to one-third of the conference attendees were African-Americans.
|
|
|
|
While the number of students was small, the emphasis on the situation
|
|
in the Middle East was not neglected. LaRouche regulars Mel Klenetsky
|
|
and Nancy Spannaus moderated the program which included a videotaped
|
|
message and live phone patch from the cultural attache for the
|
|
Iraqi embassy, Dr. Mayser Al Mallah. The LaRouche organization has
|
|
maintained ties with the Iraqi Ba'ath Party for many years, according
|
|
to several former LaRouchian intelligence gatherers who have left
|
|
the group.
|
|
|
|
Other panelists at the LaRouchian conference included the Rev.
|
|
James Bevel, an early civil rights leader now active in several
|
|
LaRouchian front groups; a representative from Minister Louis
|
|
Farrakhan's Nation of Islam, Dr. Abdul Alim Muhammad, editor of
|
|
the <Final Call>; and Gene Wheaton, a private investigator who
|
|
works with both left-wing and right-wing critics of U.S. clandestine
|
|
operations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
How The LaRouchians Exploited Antiwar Organizers
|
|
|
|
A long-time political activist who marched with the Cleveland
|
|
contingent in the January 19th antiwar demonstration in Washington,
|
|
D.C. was more than a little surprised when he noticed that people
|
|
in the contingent next to him were passing out literature from
|
|
Lyndon LaRouche's political front groups. "They were beating a drum
|
|
and chanting `George Bush, You Can't Hide, the New World Order is
|
|
Genocide,'" he reports. "There were about 100 people, many elderly,
|
|
some Black," he says, and one flyer they handed out carried a
|
|
headline scolding, "U.S. Citizens Must Recognize Their Past Mistakes
|
|
and Support LaRouche." There was a large banner and some people
|
|
carried signs that said "Free LaRouche, Jail the ADL." At the march
|
|
the LaRouchians passed out their <New Federalist> newspaper. "A
|
|
lot of people who remember <New Solidarity> don't realize its new
|
|
name is <New Federalist>," said the Cleveland activist.
|
|
|
|
According to Gavrielle Gemma, coordinator of the National Coalition
|
|
to Stop U.S. Intervention in the Middle East (the group that
|
|
sponsored the January 19th antiwar demonstration in Washington,
|
|
D.C.), the official policy of the Coalition is to reject any work
|
|
with the LaRouchians. Although the LaRouchians and their supporters
|
|
involved themselves in Coalition activities during the Gulf War,
|
|
these incidents did not reflect the official policy of the Coalition,
|
|
according to several Coalition spokespersons, but were attempts
|
|
(sometimes successful) by the LaRouchians and their allies to
|
|
portray themselves as part of the Coalition.
|
|
|
|
Specifically, in interviews with several Coalition spokespersons
|
|
the following picture of how the LaRouchians manipulated and
|
|
exploited the Coalition emerged:
|
|
|
|
*** The Rev. James Bevel had not been invited to the January 4th
|
|
Coalition press conference featuring former U.S. Attorney General
|
|
Ramsey Clark which was aired on the C-SPAN cable channel. Bevel
|
|
arrived with an invited speaker, a Black serviceman resisting
|
|
assignment to the Gulf. Although Bevel had worked with the LaRouchians
|
|
for many months prior to the press conference, it was not until
|
|
weeks after the press conference that Coalition leadership became
|
|
aware that Bevel had ties to the LaRouche organization.
|
|
|
|
*** People affiliated with the Coalition, who defended the appearance
|
|
of Bevel, were reacting to Bevel's past history as a respected
|
|
civil rights leader, and were not aware, or found it impossible to
|
|
accept, that Bevel had now aligned himself with far-right groups.
|
|
|
|
*** A contingent of LaRouchians who marched in the Coalition's
|
|
January 19th demonstration in Washington, D.C. did so against the
|
|
expressed wishes of Coalition leadership.
|
|
|
|
*** A security marshal who told demonstrators on January 19th not
|
|
to continue a chant critical of the LaRouchians was unaware of who
|
|
the LaRouchians were, and was merely trying to enforce the policy
|
|
of ensuring peaceful relations among contingents.
|
|
|
|
*** Although Ramsey Clark has chosen not to say anything critical
|
|
of the LaRouchians due to his representation of them in legal
|
|
matters, the Coalition does not hesitate to criticize roundly the
|
|
LaRouchians as fascists and anti-Semites.
|
|
|
|
*** The apparent reluctance among some persons affiliated with the
|
|
Coalition to discuss charges of LaRouchian involvement with reporters
|
|
did not reflect the views of the leadership of the Coalition, and
|
|
in some cases appears to reflect a disbelief among these persons
|
|
that the LaRouchians had managed successfully to portray themselves
|
|
as part of the Coalition.
|
|
|
|
*** December, 1990 and January, 1991 were chaotic and confusing
|
|
months and the official position of the Coalition regarding a
|
|
refusal to work with the LaRouchians was perhaps not made clear to
|
|
all persons actively organizing Coalition events around the country.
|
|
|
|
*** While the LaRouchians appear to abuse their legal relationship
|
|
to attorney Clark by using his name in their publicity and implying
|
|
his political support, it is the firm belief of the Coalition that
|
|
Clark's refusal to comment on this circumstance reflects a personal
|
|
ethical position, and in no way implies any connection between
|
|
Clark and the political work of the LaRouchians.
|
|
|
|
Leaders of the National Coalition to Stop U.S. Intervention in
|
|
the Middle East are aware that the LaRouchians continue to attempt
|
|
to penetrate their organization, and urge persons who find LaRouchians
|
|
portraying themselves as official members of the Coalition to
|
|
challenge that claim. Anyone who continues to claim the Coalition
|
|
tolerates the presence of the LaRouchians should be referred to
|
|
the national office of the Coalition for a short and clear rejection
|
|
of that contention.
|
|
|
|
"We do not work with fascists or anti-Semites," said Coalition
|
|
coordinator Gavrielle Gemma, "and that includes the LaRouchites."
|
|
Gemma says this is not only the Coalition attitude, but her own as
|
|
well, noting that she once personally threw some LaRouchians off
|
|
a picket line during the Greyhound strike.
|
|
|
|
Apparently the position of the Coalition leadership against working
|
|
with the LaRouchians, now clearly unequivocal, was slow to reach
|
|
all organizers during the chaotic months of December, 1990 and
|
|
January, 1991. This lack of clarity among rank-and-file organizers,
|
|
some of whom were inexperienced, coupled with the LaRouchians'
|
|
manipulative opportunism, the Coalition's uncertainty over Bevel's
|
|
tie to the LaRouchians, and Ramsey Clark's silence on the LaRouchians'
|
|
use of his name, created enough confusion so that some organizers
|
|
for the Coalition at first defended Bevel's appearance at the
|
|
January 4th press conference, and defended the participation of
|
|
various LaRouchian front groups in Coalition events. It also turns
|
|
out that a report issued by the LaRouchian Schiller Institute, and
|
|
cited at the January 4th press conference was in fact introduced
|
|
by a LaRouchian attending the press conference as a reporter.
|
|
|
|
Chicago antiwar organizer Alynne Romo reports the local Emergency
|
|
Coalition for Peace in the Middle East has "asked the LaRouchians
|
|
not to participate when they have appeared at our demonstrations."
|
|
According to Romo, "The LaRouche people called us several times.
|
|
They told us Margaret Thatcher was behind the situation in Iraq
|
|
and that she put George Bush up to it." Romo adds that "they also
|
|
said they were working with Ramsey Clark as a way to get us to
|
|
cooperate."
|
|
|
|
Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark is the lead legal counsel
|
|
for an appeal filed by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. and six followers
|
|
convicted of loan fraud. On October 6, 1989, Clark appeared and
|
|
gave oral arguments in the case before a three judge panel of the
|
|
Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia to argue for
|
|
the reversal of the convictions.
|
|
|
|
The right of Mr. Clark to represent the LaRouche organization is
|
|
not disputed, but when the LaRouchians use his name in a political
|
|
rather than legal context, problems arise. Based on several dozen
|
|
interviews with antiwar activists in twenty cities, it appears that
|
|
sometimes LaRouchians fundraisers and organizers mention they work
|
|
with Ramsey Clark, while other times they do not. The use by the
|
|
LaRouchians of Clark's name has been very effective at college
|
|
student government meetings where many students have never heard
|
|
of LaRouche, and tend to be sympathetic to his claims of government
|
|
harassment. After gaining an audience, the LaRouchians encourage
|
|
the student leaders to join their "coalition" and to authorize
|
|
college funding.
|
|
|
|
Sam Schwartz, a faculty member at Bronx Community College in New
|
|
York, received a phone call from a LaRouche attorney threatening
|
|
to sue Schwartz penniless unless he stopped telling students that
|
|
LaRouche was an anti-Semite and fascist. Several African-Americans
|
|
active in St. Louis who objected to the presence of the LaRouchians
|
|
in a local antiwar coalition were also threatened with lawsuits
|
|
for their critical characterization of the LaRouche movement. Clark
|
|
has not been involved in these threats of lawsuits.
|
|
|
|
Since Clark took on the LaRouche appeal, the LaRouchians have
|
|
blazoned Clark's name across a substantial amount of propaganda
|
|
used both in fundraising and in coaxing persons into consideration
|
|
of the political message of the organization. Sometimes the LaRouchian
|
|
references to Clark simply cause confusion. One antiwar activist
|
|
who was handed a LaRouchian pamphlet mentioning Clark was at first
|
|
convinced the LaRouchians were cleverly trying to smear Clark by
|
|
using his name.
|
|
|
|
The LaRouchians frequently attempt to build coalitions in a sly
|
|
manner. For instance activist Lanny Sinkin, a former attorney for
|
|
the Christic Institute, appeared at a March, 1991 post-war panel
|
|
sponsored by a Washington, D.C. group called The Time is Now. Also
|
|
on the panel were two key LaRouche operatives and a leader of The
|
|
Time is Now. According to a staff member of the Washington Peace
|
|
Center, members of The Time is Now worked closely with the LaRouchians
|
|
and thoroughly disrupted the political work of the Washington Area
|
|
Coalition to Stop U.S. Intervention in the Middle East during
|
|
January and February, 1991. When members of The Time is Now passed
|
|
out LaRouche's <Executive Intelligence Review> at a February meeting,
|
|
they were asked to leave the coalition. When criticized by the
|
|
Peace Center staffer, Sinkin defended his appearance at the conference
|
|
as legitimate outreach, according to the staffer.
|
|
|
|
Sinkin says he was unaware when invited that LaRouchians would also
|
|
be on the panel, and he vigorously denies that he has ever had any
|
|
ongoing relationship with the LaRouchians or that his actions were
|
|
improper. Sinkin says that his appearance reflected his commitment
|
|
to speaking to broad audiences. Organizers at the Washington Peace
|
|
Center counter that Sinkin's presence at the meeting lent credibility
|
|
to two groups that were disrupting their work.
|
|
|
|
The issue here is not one of implying any type of ongoing relationship
|
|
between Sinkin and the LaRouchians. No such relationship exists.
|
|
But for the Washington Peace Center, Sinkin's appearance on the
|
|
same platform with the LaRouchians served as an implicit endorsement,
|
|
suggesting by example that joint work with the LaRouchians was
|
|
acceptable at the same time that the Peace Center was telling
|
|
members of the local antiwar coalition that joint work with the
|
|
LaRouchians was unacceptable.A number of experienced antiwar
|
|
activists warn that working with the LaRouchians and other far-right
|
|
and bigoted forces will only discredit serious work towards peace
|
|
in the Middle East. Jon Hillson is a seasoned political organizer
|
|
and peace activist based in Ohio who already knew the history of
|
|
the LaRouchians. Hillson reported LaRouche organizers at events
|
|
sponsored by the Cleveland Committee Against War in the Persian
|
|
Gulf. At one meeting, "Two people went through the crowd handing
|
|
out LaRouche's <New Federalist>," says Hillson. "I was shocked,
|
|
but then I realized most students had never heard of LaRouche,"
|
|
says Hillson. "I would urge people to disavow any collaboration
|
|
with them because of their past ties to government agencies...and
|
|
their homophobic, racist, sexist, and anti-Semitic agenda." Hillson
|
|
notes that it will take patience to explain to new activists why
|
|
a broad-based coalition should exclude anyone, but that the task
|
|
of educating people that coalitions with fascists should be rejected
|
|
is not one to be ignored.
|
|
|
|
|
|
How the LaRouchians Exploit Ramsey Clark
|
|
|
|
An <Associated Press (AP)> account of Clark's Fourth Circuit oral
|
|
arguments noted that "former Attorney General Ramsey Clark, chief
|
|
attorney for LaRouche's appeal, argued that U.S. District Judge
|
|
Albert V. Bryan Jr. of Alexandria allowed only thirty-four days
|
|
from arraignment to trial and failed to adequately question jurors
|
|
on how much they knew about the defendant."
|
|
|
|
The Fourth Circuit ruled against LaRouche, saying LaRouche's original
|
|
attorneys had waited eighteen days before asking for a continuance.
|
|
An <AP> story about the decision reported that the appeals panel
|
|
"also said LaRouche's attorneys made no attempt to press potential
|
|
jurors to determine `individually anyone who had ever heard of
|
|
LaRouche,' although certain jurors who said they were familiar with
|
|
the case or who had worked in law enforcement or had accounting or
|
|
tax backgrounds were questioned individually."
|
|
|
|
On further appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court let the convictions stand
|
|
without a hearing or comment.
|
|
|
|
In fact, more than a few civil libertarians agree there was evidence
|
|
of misconduct in the government's investigation of LaRouche, and
|
|
the closing of LaRouche's newspaper <New Solidarity> in a federal
|
|
bankruptcy proceeding raised serious constitutional issues. Still,
|
|
there is no clear evidence that the alleged government misconduct
|
|
had a direct bearing on the criminal prosecution of LaRouche and
|
|
his aides.
|
|
|
|
When Clark has spoken at LaRouchian-sponsored press conferences
|
|
concerning the case, there has been extensive coverage in the
|
|
LaRouchian press. One such story featuring Clark appeared in
|
|
LaRouche's <New Federalist> on October 13, 1989. Clark was quoted
|
|
as saying that even though he had once been a political opponent
|
|
of LaRouche, he had now come to his defense because of constitutional
|
|
abuses such as a fast jury selection process, massive prejudicial
|
|
pretrial publicity, and a jury pool which contained numerous
|
|
government employees, including law enforcement agents from agencies
|
|
that had allegedly targeted LaRouche.
|
|
|
|
Ramsey Clark has steadfastly refused to disassociate his legal work
|
|
for the LaRouchians from the political work of the LaRouchians,
|
|
despite the fact that the LaRouchians imply Clark's support in
|
|
numerous newspaper and magazine articles. Most critics of Clark's
|
|
silence regarding the LaRouchians say they understand he has a duty
|
|
as an attorney to represent the LaRouchians fully and vigorously,
|
|
but feel he has not been sensitive to the ways in which the
|
|
LaRouchians are using his name in the political arena. These critics
|
|
point out that the ethical imperatives for an attorney are different
|
|
than the moral obligations of a leader of an antiwar movement. They
|
|
say Clark has a political responsibility to distance himself from
|
|
the LaRouche organization, which is separate from his role as their
|
|
attorney.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes it appears that Clark's support of the LaRouche cause
|
|
has moved beyond mere legal representation. According to the July
|
|
6, 1990 <New Federalist>, on June 19, 1990, Clark spoke at a private
|
|
meeting coordinated with the Conference on Security and Cooperation
|
|
in Europe (CSCE), a multi-governmental association and human rights
|
|
forum that solicits input from non-governmental groups. The <New
|
|
Federalist> reported that "Clark's trip was sponsored by the Schiller
|
|
Institute's Commission to Investigate Human Rights Violations, a
|
|
non-governmental organization which is urging the CSCE to take up
|
|
the case of Lyndon LaRouche, the U.S. economist and statesman who
|
|
is now America's most prominent political prisoner." The Schiller
|
|
Institute is a LaRouchian front group which once published a book
|
|
claiming British Jews helped put Hitler into power.
|
|
|
|
In his CSCE speech, Clark is reported to have said he had reviewed
|
|
a random selection of sixty-five published articles on LaRouche
|
|
appearing in the several years prior to LaRouche's prosecution.
|
|
Clark reportedly said "here you see that he's called every bad
|
|
thing you can imagine--Nazi, anti-Semitic, violence-prone, thief--over
|
|
and over again. Vilification...it was absolutely astounding."
|
|
|
|
The <New Federalist> article reported that Clark said that LaRouche
|
|
was prosecuted on "economic crimes that didn't exist, because this
|
|
was a political movement, it was not a for-profit activity and
|
|
wasn't intended to be a for-profit activity, it was a political
|
|
movement. You make three sentences for five years each to impose
|
|
a fifteen-year sentence on a man who's sixty-six years old. To
|
|
destroy a political movement. Obviously....Unless you can wrench
|
|
[the political process] free from [the] plutocracy that absolutely
|
|
controls with an iron hand that essentially one-party system, you
|
|
won't have that change. And that's what the Lyndon LaRouche case
|
|
is about: you."
|
|
|
|
At a February 28, 1991 international conference in Algeria to oppose
|
|
U.S. intervention in the Gulf, Clark shared the podium with long-time
|
|
LaRouche associate Jacques Cheminade, president of the Schiller
|
|
Institute in France.
|
|
|
|
- Clark Responds -
|
|
|
|
Clark confirmed in an interview that he had spoken about the LaRouche
|
|
case in Europe at the CSCE conference, but said he had not seen
|
|
the transcript of his speech that appeared in LaRouche's <New
|
|
Federalist>, and said his speech was not written in advance so he
|
|
had no copy. If the report of Clark's comments in <New Federalist>
|
|
are accurate--and to a large degree they reflect wording in the
|
|
appeals brief he signed--then there are serious questions as to
|
|
what he thinks of the LaRouchians. Clark seems to discount as
|
|
propaganda the charges that the LaRouchians are fascists, anti-Semites,
|
|
or neo-Nazis. Other critics question Mr. Clark's decision to appear
|
|
at the CSCE-related meeting at all, pointing out that such appearances
|
|
go beyond legal representation.
|
|
|
|
Clark said he had not seen any materials suggesting the LaRouche
|
|
people were using his name to organize students and others into
|
|
their antiwar work but he would like to see that material or any
|
|
other related information. But Clark seemed relatively unconcerned
|
|
that the LaRouchians might be using or abusing his name in their
|
|
political work. "That's a risk you always have," as a defense
|
|
counsel, said Clark.
|
|
|
|
Clark said that the somewhat glowing description of the LaRouche
|
|
political movement in the appeals brief he signed reflected the
|
|
right of any defendant to portray itself in a positive light.
|
|
|
|
According to Clark, the prosecution of LaRouche in Virginia was a
|
|
travesty of procedure and a clear violation of the Constitutional
|
|
right to a fair trial. Clark said the issue was not whether or not
|
|
the LaRouche people were guilty of crimes, but whether or not they
|
|
had received a fair trial. On the question of representation of
|
|
controversial clients on legal appeals, Clark said:
|
|
|
|
"It's a question of rights, not a question of facts. I remain
|
|
focused on the legal rights and not the nature of the person
|
|
involved. I oppose the death penalty on principle, I assume many
|
|
of the people who I represent on death penalty appeals are in fact
|
|
guilty, but that is not the point. If you have to apologize first
|
|
you have a done a disservice to the case. I resist government abuses
|
|
of people's rights. The government demonizes people...once you have
|
|
conceded the demon you have lost the principle involved in the
|
|
defense. By prefacing a defense by first saying `of course, he is
|
|
a terrible person' it disables people from considering the matter
|
|
fairly. "
|
|
|
|
Clark said the government had demonized people like Saddam Hussein
|
|
and Lyndon LaRouche and that he felt it was not appropriate to give
|
|
in to the pejorative labeling of such persons when discussing their
|
|
activities. This is the same rationale used by Clark in 1986 when
|
|
he was criticized for not distancing himself from his client Karl
|
|
Linnas, a Nazi collaborator who was eventually deported because he
|
|
had lied about his past to gain entrance to the U.S. after World
|
|
War II. Clark represented Linnas in an appeal which objected to
|
|
the procedures followed in the deportation. Critics of Clark,
|
|
including Daniel Levitas of the Center for Democratic Renewal, said
|
|
Clark was insensitive to the fact that anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi
|
|
groups were using Clark's appeal to buttress their claims that
|
|
Linnas was innocent or that the Holocaust was a hoax.[f-5]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rev. James Bevel
|
|
|
|
The Rev. James Bevel is an African-American minister from Chicago
|
|
with a long history of civil rights work but a recent reputation
|
|
as an opportunist who has swung far to the right. Rev. Bevel now
|
|
works closely with groups controlled by two neo-fascists, the Rev.
|
|
Sun Myung Moon and Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr. The Moon network supported
|
|
the war effort, while the LaRouchians did not. Bevel focused his
|
|
energy in opposing the Gulf War, primarily through an alliance with
|
|
the LaRouchians. Bevel's ties to the LaRouchians go back several
|
|
years. Bevel not only appeared as a panelist at the LaRouchian
|
|
antiwar conference in Chicago, but he also has endorsed LaRouche's
|
|
congressional candidacy, and speaks regularly at LaRouchian forums.
|
|
Bevel has served on committees created by several LaRouchian front
|
|
groups, and writes a column for the LaRouchian newspaper <New
|
|
Federalist>. Bevel has been an effective organizer for the LaRouchians,
|
|
and took a high profile in their antiwar organizing.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Manning Marable, in a 1986 column, listed Bevel among a small
|
|
group of "prominent civil rights spokesmen [who] have gone so far
|
|
as to form alliances with ultra-right groups, which might give
|
|
lipservice to blacks' traditional interests." The LaRouchians have
|
|
sought coalitions with local African-American community activists
|
|
for many years, often working through religious leaders. A recent
|
|
example was the LaRouchian support for then Washington, D.C. Mayor
|
|
Marion Barry. During Barry's trial on drug charges, the LaRouchians
|
|
and the Nation of Islam helped organize protests on behalf of Barry.
|
|
The LaRouchian representative during these protests was Bevel.
|
|
|
|
When Bevel endorsed Lyndon LaRouche's congressional candidacy (in
|
|
Virginia's 10th Congressional District), he signed a statement
|
|
which included the claim, "Lyndon LaRouche is known and respected
|
|
in every nation of the Third World as the primary opponent of the
|
|
genocide policies of the IMF and as the architect and principal
|
|
spokesman for a new and more just world economic order that guarantees
|
|
the inalienable rights of all people." The statement speaks glowingly
|
|
of LaRouche's early theorizing about the AIDS virus and his
|
|
recommendations for fighting the spread of the virus. In fact, as
|
|
mentioned before, LaRouche has written that history would not judge
|
|
harshly those persons who took to the streets and beat homosexuals
|
|
to death with baseball bats to stop the spread of AIDS.
|
|
|
|
Bevel represented the LaRouchian Schiller Institute in Omaha,
|
|
Nebraska. The <Omaha World-Herald> reported on January 6, 1991:
|
|
|
|
""Bevel was one of 10 people who came to Nebraska in October as
|
|
members of a group calling itself the Citizens Fact-Finding Commission
|
|
to Investigate Human rights Violations of Children in Nebraska.
|
|
That group was organized by the Schiller Institute of Washington,
|
|
D.C., and Wiesbaden, Germany. The institute was founded in 1984 by
|
|
Helga Zepp-LaRouche. She is the wife of Lyndon LaRouche, who is
|
|
serving a 15-year sentence for fraud and tax evasion....The Schiller
|
|
group's printed statement disputed the findings of two grand juries
|
|
in the Franklin case. A check by the <World-Herald> of some of the
|
|
`facts' in the statement turned up several apparent errors. "
|
|
|
|
While Rev. Bevel's historic role as a valued civil rights leader
|
|
is unquestioned, he has in recent years lost his constituency and
|
|
his political moorings. Dr. Manning Marable noted noted in 1986
|
|
that Bevel, had become "a Republican party leader in Chicago's
|
|
Black community, and soon earned the reputation as an extremist of
|
|
the right."
|
|
|
|
Some time after the LaRouche conviction in January 1989, Bevel
|
|
began to appear as a featured speaker at LaRouchian conferences,
|
|
and began to write a column in the LaRouchian <New Federalist>. As
|
|
Marable noted in 1986:
|
|
|
|
"The right-wing sect of Lyndon LaRouche has also initiated a campaign
|
|
to recruit black supporters. As in the case of the Unification
|
|
Church, the LaRouchians work primarily through several fronts, the
|
|
Schiller Institute and the National Democratic Policy Committee.
|
|
Again, the LaRouchians have been linked to a number of racist and
|
|
extremist groups, including the Liberty Lobby, the Klan and neo-Nazis.
|
|
Currently, the LaRouchians are vigorously opposing sanctions against
|
|
South African apartheid. "
|
|
|
|
While in Chicago, Bevel regularly broke ranks with the African-American-led
|
|
coalition behind the late Mayor Harold Washington. At the same
|
|
time, Bevel was working with Moon's front group CAUSA. In an
|
|
interview with Bevel at an Illinois CAUSA meeting, I asked him why
|
|
he would ally himself with a religious/political movement such as
|
|
that run by Rev. Moon. Bevel replied that it was a tactical coalition
|
|
based on agreement that the main danger in the world was communism.
|
|
Bevel argued that communism was a godless philosophy, and that as
|
|
a Christian, it was his obligation to fight godlessness.
|
|
|
|
Bevel's CAUSA ties garnered him some unflattering publicity.
|
|
According to the December 12, 1987 <Chicago Sun-Times>, Bevel was
|
|
one of four persons belonging to "groups created by the Rev. Sun
|
|
Myung Moon's Unification Church" who erected a creche and nativity
|
|
scene at Chicago's Daley Center Plaza. The <Chicago Sun-Times>
|
|
reported that "William J. Grutzmacher, who obtained the permit and
|
|
paid $2000 for the creche, gave a speech in October to a business
|
|
group in Merrillville, Ind., apparently so anti-Semitic that a
|
|
local newspaper ran an editorial denouncing him." The head of the
|
|
Rotary Club that had co-sponsored Grutzmacher's speech told the
|
|
reporter, "He made charges...that the Communist Party is headed by
|
|
Jews, and that the Jews were responsible for every negative thing
|
|
that has happened since World War II."
|
|
|
|
Bevel has also worked with other Moon fronts. In the October, 1990
|
|
issue of <American Freedom Journal>, Bevel is listed as serving on
|
|
the National Policy Board of the American Freedom Coalition, chaired
|
|
by the ultra-conservative Hon. Richard Ichord. The American Freedom
|
|
Coalition (AFC) is a joint project of Rev. Moon and the Rev. Robert
|
|
G. Grant of the ultra-right Christian fundamentalist group Christian
|
|
Voice. AFC fundraised for Oliver North, and Bevel sits on the AFC
|
|
National Policy Board with Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub, implicated
|
|
in the Iran-Contragate scandal; Lt. Gen. Daniel Graham of High
|
|
Frontier, the pro-Star Wars lobby; and rightist historian Dr. Cleon
|
|
Skousen. The late Dr. Ralph David Abernathy was a long-time member
|
|
of the AFC Board of Directors along with pro-interventionist
|
|
Ambassador Phillip Sanchez. On the AFC National Advisory Board sit
|
|
rightist fundraising guru Richard Viguerie, and Slava Stetsko,
|
|
president of the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations (ABN). ABN is
|
|
notorious because it is the descendant and spiritual heir of the
|
|
Committee of Subjugated Nations, formed in 1943 by Hitler's allies.
|
|
According to author Russ Bellant, "The ABN brought together fascist
|
|
forces from Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, the Ukraine, the Baltic
|
|
States, Slovenia and other nations." Slava Stetsko is the widow of
|
|
Yaroslav Stetsko, leader of the Nazi puppet government in the
|
|
Ukraine during World War II. She once wrote a glowing introduction
|
|
to a book that defined anti-Semitism as a "smear word used by
|
|
Communists against those who effectively oppose and expose them."
|
|
|
|
These are the fascist forces with which Bevel has allied himself,
|
|
and is a striking example of the opportunistic flexibility of
|
|
fascism as a political ideology, able not only to embrace
|
|
Nazi-collaborators but also to entice Black civil rights activists.
|
|
Bevel's ties to the fascist Moon circles are through a shared
|
|
loathing of communism as a godless ideology, an issue which resonates
|
|
with many Black church-based constituencies. Another congruent
|
|
theme that fascism can employ to seek alliances with African-Americans
|
|
and Hispanic-Americans is the opportunistic manipulation of the
|
|
issues of nationalism and self determination.
|
|
|
|
Other Black leaders such as Roy Innis and the late Ralph David
|
|
Abernathy have forged alliances with the fascist right. Innis has
|
|
worked in alliance with the LaRouchians. Abernathy worked with
|
|
Moon's Unification movement until his death.
|
|
|
|
Other Right-Wing Groups and the Gulf War
|
|
|
|
Conservative groups overwhelmingly supported sending U.S. troops
|
|
to the Gulf. Right-wing forces aligned with Rev. Sun Myung Moon
|
|
and those supportive of the Israeli political right forged a pro-war
|
|
coalition that placed ads in newspapers and purchased television
|
|
commercials.
|
|
|
|
Other rightists, primarily those who have politics that are more
|
|
accurately termed reactionary than conservative, staked out an
|
|
isolationist or "America First" position, and opposed sending U.S.
|
|
troops to fight the Gulf War.
|
|
|
|
The LaRouchian antiwar theories parallel many of the themes promoted
|
|
by the Liberty Lobby, the Birch Society, and author Fletcher Prouty.
|
|
According to one flyer issued by the LaRouchians, "If war is to
|
|
come, it will be the result of deliberate `geopolitical' plotting
|
|
by British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Lord Carrington, and
|
|
other London friends of Henry Kissinger."
|
|
|
|
Some white supremacists outlined a frank racist agenda in their
|
|
Gulf War publications. The Invisible Empire, Knights of the Ku Klux
|
|
Klan, in the January/February, 1991 issue of <The Klansman>, ran
|
|
a banner headline "War in the Middle East? Another Blood Sacrifice
|
|
on the Altar of International Jewry. Integrated Effeminate U.S.
|
|
Military Will Not Win!" <On Target>, published by Northpoint Tactical
|
|
Teams in North Carolina, released a forty-page special edition,
|
|
"Desert Shield and the New World Order," which ascribes the conflict
|
|
to a Jewish-Communist conspiracy involving Henry Kissinger, David
|
|
Rockefeller, George Bush, and Mikhail Gorbachev.
|
|
|
|
At the 35th Anniversary Liberty Lobby convention held in September,
|
|
1990 there was considerable antiwar sentiment expressed by speakers
|
|
who tied the U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia to pressure from Israel
|
|
and its intelligence agency, Mossad. No matter what actual political
|
|
involvement, if any, forces that support Israel may have had in
|
|
shaping the events that led to the Gulf War, the history of Liberty
|
|
Lobby is to circulate lurid anti-Jewish propaganda, not principled
|
|
factual criticisms.
|
|
|
|
At the conference Fletcher Prouty released the new Institute for
|
|
Historical Review's Noontide Press edition of his book on CIA
|
|
intrigue, <The Secret Team>. Prouty moderated a panel where
|
|
much-decorated Vietnam veteran Bo Gritz wove a conspiracy theory
|
|
which explained the U.S. confrontation with Iraq as a product of
|
|
the same "Secret Team" outlined by Prouty. Both Prouty and Gritz
|
|
serve on the advisory board of Liberty Lobby's Populist Action
|
|
Committee. <Spotlight's> coverage of Gritz featured a headline
|
|
proclaiming "Gritz Warns...Get Ready to Fight or Lose Freedom:
|
|
Links Drugs, CIA, Mossad; Slams U.S. Foreign Policy; Alerts Patriots
|
|
to Martial Law Threat."
|
|
|
|
Other conference speakers and moderators at the September 1990
|
|
Liberty Lobby convention included attorney Mark Lane, who has
|
|
drifted into alliances with Liberty Lobby that far transcend his
|
|
role as the group's lawyer, and comedian and activist Dick Gregory,
|
|
whose anti-government rhetoric finds fertile soil on the far right.
|
|
Dick Gregory also spoke in 1991 at the January 19th antiwar rally
|
|
in Washington, D.C. Organizers of the antiwar event say they were
|
|
unaware of Gregory's previous appearance at the Liberty Lobby
|
|
meeting.
|
|
|
|
Mark Lane and Dick Gregory co-authored a 1977 book on the assassination
|
|
of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., and both have circulated complex
|
|
conspiracy theories about other world events which could account
|
|
in part for their drift towards the conspiratorial Liberty Lobby
|
|
network.
|
|
|
|
The attempts by some of the rightist groups who opposed the war to
|
|
penetrate the progressive antiwar movement came during a period of
|
|
significant realignment among U.S. right-wing and conservative
|
|
political groups. In some rightist groups, long hidden racialist
|
|
theories are being dusted off and recirculated, which has caused
|
|
further splits. One of the most significant historical divisions
|
|
on the American political right is between those groups that espouse
|
|
racialist (race-based) theories--generally anti-Jewish and white
|
|
supremacist--and those that do not.
|
|
|
|
People associated with Liberty Lobby and the historically-related
|
|
Populist Party circulated antiwar and pro-isolationist literature,
|
|
including Liberty Lobby's weekly newspaper <Spotlight>, at several
|
|
antiwar rallies, including demonstrations in Boston, Washington,
|
|
D.C., Los Angeles, and West Palm Beach, Florida. <Spotlight> cheers
|
|
the activities of U.S. neo-Nazis and skinheads but masks its
|
|
anti-Jewish stance behind coded phrases such as "dual-loyalist."
|
|
According to the Center for Democratic Renewal:
|
|
|
|
"The Florida Populist Party attended [the Florida] anti-war
|
|
rally...handing out a leaflet that read in part: `The most conspicuous
|
|
foes of war have been on the left, and we in the Populist Party
|
|
support their efforts.' Don Black, a former Klan leader, had a
|
|
taped message on the Party's phone line: `Make no mistake, this is
|
|
Israel's war, and American sons and daughters are fighting it for
|
|
them.' "
|
|
|
|
In its January 7-14, 1991 edition, <Spotlight> carried an article
|
|
titled "Volunteers Flock to Iraq To Help Fight U.S., Israel." This
|
|
phenomenon was favorably compared to "the building of the Waffen
|
|
SS legions in Europe during World War II, when almost 1 million
|
|
men from all over Europe and as far away as India voluntarily
|
|
enlisted to fight communism under the leadership of the German high
|
|
command. That development was also suppressed and never mentioned
|
|
by the Anglo-American press. Allied commanders, however, knew the
|
|
Waffen SS as an extremely effective fighting force."
|
|
|
|
An advertisement in the same issue of <Spotlight> touted a book
|
|
"Israel: Our Duty...Our Dilemma" under the headline "How Will You
|
|
Respond To The Next Mid-East War?" While <Spotlight> itself usually
|
|
avoids the loaded language of this ad, the pages of <Spotlight>
|
|
are frequently used by racist, anti-Jewish, and pro-Nazi groups to
|
|
call attention to their products, publications, events, and views.
|
|
The ad copy is also significant because it encapsulates many of
|
|
the themes used by anti-Jewish bigots in criticizing Israel and
|
|
Jews:
|
|
|
|
"If you are like most Americans you will react as the pro-Zionist
|
|
media has <BI>programmed< you to react. "
|
|
|
|
"But if you have read "Israel: Our Duty...Our Dilemma" you will
|
|
see the <BI>whole< picture--how Israel's ruling elite are using
|
|
terrorism, Holocaust sympathy, twisted Bible verses--toward one
|
|
objective: Power. "
|
|
|
|
"Power in America. Power in the Middle East. Power in the world.
|
|
"
|
|
|
|
"Distilling 14 years' research in semi-secret Jewish sources,
|
|
evangelical writer Theodore Winston Pike demonstrates that through
|
|
Kabbalistic occultism, international banking, communism, liberalism,
|
|
and media control, Israel is doing exactly what the Bible prophesies:
|
|
establishing a power base in the Middle East upon which her false
|
|
messiah, AntiChrist, will someday rule. "
|
|
|
|
- The Buchanan Controversy The issue of anti-Jewish rhetoric over
|
|
the Gulf crisis first surfaced in September, 1990 as part of a long
|
|
simmering feud within the political right in the United States.
|
|
Ultra-conservative columnist Pat Buchanan fired the first salvo to
|
|
reach the mainstream media when he declared on the McLaughlin Group
|
|
roundtable television program that the two groups most favoring
|
|
war in the Middle East were "the Israeli Defense Ministry and its
|
|
amen chorus in the United States." <New York Times> columnist A.M.
|
|
Rosenthal charged that Buchanan's comments reflected anti-Semitism,
|
|
to which Buchanan retorted that Rosenthal had made a "contract hit"
|
|
on him in collusion with the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith
|
|
(ADL).
|
|
|
|
To unravel the background of the dispute takes a political scorecard.
|
|
Buchanan is allied with reactionary and hard-line rightist forces
|
|
in the U.S. who sometimes are called paleo-conservatives or
|
|
"Paleocons" due to their ties to the "Old Right" in the United
|
|
States. Racism and anti-Jewish bigotry were common themes in some
|
|
(although not all) Old Right groups. ADL is a Jewish human rights
|
|
group often allied with the "Neocons," the neo-conservative movement
|
|
in the Unites States. ADL leaders are also frequently ardent and
|
|
uncritical supporters of Israeli government policies, as are many
|
|
Neocons. ADL has produced some excellent material on bigotry and
|
|
prejudice, but its leaders have labeled as anti-Semitic statements
|
|
which are solely political criticisms of Israel or Zionism. Since
|
|
there are some high-profile Jews in the intellectual leadership of
|
|
the neo-conservative movement, some persons have concluded that
|
|
neo-conservatism is a Jewish ideology. This is as prejudiced an
|
|
assertion as the claim that communism is a Jewish ideology because
|
|
of the role played in it by some Jewish intellectuals.
|
|
|
|
Buchanan's statement in and of itself was not necessarily anti-Jewish,
|
|
but in the context of Buchanan's long record of insensitivity when
|
|
writing about Jews, the contention that Buchanan is an anti-Semite
|
|
is not without foundation. Buchanan has not only defended those
|
|
who say the Holocaust was a hoax, but implied their views have some
|
|
merit. Buchanan endorsed the work of the Rockford Institute after
|
|
other conservatives criticized it for its tolerance of apparently
|
|
anti-Jewish sentiments. In his January 25, 1990 newsletter, Buchanan
|
|
penned what was in essence an ode to fascism which celebrated the
|
|
efficiency of autocracy, and concluded with the line, "If the people
|
|
are corrupt, the more democracy, the worse the government." The
|
|
column also echoed historically racialist themes.
|
|
|
|
Actually, the Neocons for ten years quietly have tolerated more
|
|
than a little anti-democratic authoritarianism, anti-Jewish bigotry,
|
|
and racism from their tactical allies on the Paleocon right. Their
|
|
alliance was based on shared support for militant anti-communism,
|
|
celebration of unfettered free enterprise, calls for high levels
|
|
of U.S. spending on the U.S. military, and support for a militarily
|
|
strong Israel dominated by hard-line ultra-conservative political
|
|
parties that would stand as a bulwark against communism in the
|
|
Middle East.
|
|
|
|
Author Sara Diamond (who covered the Buchanan/Rosenthal feud in <Z
|
|
Magazine>) notes "the Buchanan forces explicitly rejected coalition
|
|
with the left on the issue of opposing intervention in the Gulf."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Courtship Continues
|
|
|
|
"Reactionary concepts plus revolutionary emotion result in Fascist
|
|
mentality. "
|
|
|
|
(Wilhelm Reich)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Craig Hulet's Reductionist Gulf War Critiques
|
|
|
|
One critic of government policies who draws from both left and
|
|
right sources and perspectives is Seattle-based analyst Craig B.
|
|
Hulet. During the past year, progressive radio stations including
|
|
KPFA in San Francisco and KPFK in Los Angeles aired compelling
|
|
condemnations of the Gulf War produced by Hulet, also known as K.C.
|
|
DePass. A number of study groups were formed in California following
|
|
Hulet's radio and personal appearances. Hulet claimed in an
|
|
interview that his theories have no relation to conspiracist theories
|
|
such as those circulated by the John Birch Society, and he is quick
|
|
to distance himself from the racialist and anti-Jewish theories of
|
|
far-right groups such as Liberty Lobby. Still, Hulet's analysis,
|
|
which exaggerates the role of the Al Sabah family in world affairs,
|
|
has many of the hallmarks of other oversimplified conspiracist
|
|
theories which reduce complex issues to simple equations; and it
|
|
seems to scapegoat one family of Arabs, albeit one with powerful
|
|
financial holdings, in a way that would be equally unacceptable if
|
|
their name was Rothschild rather than Al Sabah. No matter what his
|
|
actual affiliations, Hulet essentially employs a variation on the
|
|
elite financial insider conspiracy of the John Birch Society.
|
|
|
|
Hulet has a smooth style and self-confident tone, but in essence,
|
|
Hulet's analysis reflects a cynical right-wing libertarian perspective
|
|
laced with conspiratorial theories. The basic theme of his Gulf
|
|
War analysis boils down to an assertion that Kuwait's ruling Al
|
|
Sabah family dictated U.S. policy in the Gulf War in concert with
|
|
ruling financial elites in the United States. According to Hulet,
|
|
the Al Sabah family could do this because they controlled vast
|
|
financial holdings in the U.S. and they threatened to withdraw
|
|
those holdings and collapse the U.S. economy unless the U.S. pushed
|
|
Iraq out of Kuwait. Hulet also maintains that the investments of
|
|
George Bush and his father Prescott make George Bush vulnerable to
|
|
manipulation by the Al Sabah family.
|
|
|
|
A Hulet promotional brochure reveals a pattern of similar reductionist
|
|
statements and unsubstantiated conspiratorial claims. According to
|
|
the brochure:
|
|
|
|
"Hulet outlines the actual political objectives of the Bush
|
|
administration regarding the Middle East...why we gave Hussein the
|
|
green light to invade Kuwait and why Bush will disallow any
|
|
legitimate cease fire overture by Hussein....volatile...material
|
|
concerning George Bush's connections as well as those of his father,
|
|
Prescott Bush...Middle East and the New World Order discussed in
|
|
detail... "
|
|
|
|
The brochure claims that the Hulet report <Overview of Government
|
|
Corruption and Manipulation> provides "an excellent understanding
|
|
identifying the elite and how and why they control society". In a
|
|
similar vein, the brochure claims the Hulet report <The Gnomes of
|
|
Zurich> provides, "...an overview identifying the elites who manage
|
|
this country and how and why they control it's aim...."
|
|
|
|
The text of <The Gnomes of Zurich> shows a more detailed yet
|
|
consistent reliance on conspiratorial assertions:
|
|
|
|
"Keeping the left wing grass roots at the throat of the right wing
|
|
grass roots, serves the purpose, the means, and ultimately..., the
|
|
END, of these quite powerful elitists. As each side at the basic
|
|
root level; the grass roots level if you will, are both being used,
|
|
duped, and manipulated by the Elite...They are quite simply, these
|
|
sincere yet almost silly at times local people, unwittingly part
|
|
of an ingenious plan to create a <synthesis...ingenious because of
|
|
its simplicity...For you see the Elite in the Kremlin>, and the
|
|
<Elite in Washington> quite agree on the end at which they both
|
|
aim (the synthesis). <A Global Regime>. "
|
|
|
|
These are just a few examples of Hulet's conspiracist style. Most
|
|
of Hulet's work concerns conspiracies of the "elites." Actually,
|
|
much of Hulet's thesis is an echo of the book "Call it Conspiracy"
|
|
by Larry Abraham, which is itself a rewrite and expansion of the
|
|
book "None Dare Call it Conspiracy" by Gary Allen and Larry Abraham.
|
|
Allen's writings were widely popularized by the John Birch Society.
|
|
Hulet's intellectual tradition can clearly be shown to be congruent
|
|
with that of the John Birch Society.
|
|
|
|
In at least one case, Hulet moves beyond conspiracism into elevating
|
|
a satire to documentary status. Hulet labels as fact material from
|
|
the book <Report from Iron Mountain>. Hulet refers to the work as
|
|
if it were a secret government document. Actually, <Report from
|
|
Iron Mountain> is an allegorical critique of the pro-militarist
|
|
lobby and a well-known example of political satire. [f-6] While an
|
|
excellent philosophical discussion of the errors of the Cold War,
|
|
it should be noted that it was produced by Leonard C. Lewin,
|
|
described on the book jacket as a "critic and satirist" who was
|
|
editor of <A Treasury of American Political Humor>. Apparently
|
|
Hulet didn't get the joke.
|
|
|
|
Hulet also plows the ground of left/right coalition. Hulet says
|
|
that he works closely with former Christic Institute attorney Lanny
|
|
Sinkin to buttress his credibility on the left.
|
|
|
|
On one radio interview, Hulet responded to a question regarding
|
|
third parties in the U.S. by saying:
|
|
|
|
"The problem with those third parties is that they are such a tiny,
|
|
tiny minority of the intelligentsia. Many of them like the Libertarian
|
|
Party is splintered between factions. They are fighting amongst
|
|
themselves. They still see it as a left-wing right-wing dialectic
|
|
that they must oppose. And all I'm trying to make very clear to
|
|
the American people, including the ones that read all the right
|
|
books, is that the enemy is our government. The enemy is not part
|
|
of our society. It has always historically been them versus us.
|
|
The government versus the people. And the American people have to
|
|
stop fighting amongst themselves. "
|
|
|
|
Hulet recommends the research on Trilateralism of Antony C. Sutton,
|
|
a far-right theorist who publishes the <Phoenix Letter: A Report
|
|
on the Abuse of Power>, and <Future Technology Intelligence Report>.
|
|
The latter carried Sutton's sentiment that "without political
|
|
intervention cancer would have been cured decades ago." Citing
|
|
Sutton in any context is problematic given Sutton's exotic views.
|
|
Sutton, for instance, asserts that various government and political
|
|
operatives, controlled by international bankers, have suppressed
|
|
the technology to control the weather, produce free energy, and
|
|
achieve "Acoustical Levitation." Sutton also reports on "possible
|
|
advanced alien technology" including anti-gravity devices recovered
|
|
from UFOs by the U.S. government. When Hulet was asked why he would
|
|
put forward Sutton as someone to prove his thesis, he replied that
|
|
it was a choice between Sutton and Holly Sklar, and he considered
|
|
Sklar a Marxist. This says much about the political milieu from
|
|
which Hulet is emerging.
|
|
|
|
Sklar, who has written progressive critiques of the Trilateralists,
|
|
warns antiwar activists that "there is a big difference between
|
|
understanding the influence of the Trilateral Commission on world
|
|
affairs and the paranoid right-wing fantasy that the Trilateralists
|
|
and their allies are an omnipotent cabal controlling the world.
|
|
It's important for people to base their political decisions on
|
|
facts, not lazy catch-all conspiracy theories."
|
|
|
|
Journalist David Barsamian interviewed Hulet for a Boulder, Colorado
|
|
radio station and his Alternative Radio tape series which is aired
|
|
on numerous local radio stations nationwide. The <Open Magazine>
|
|
pamphlet series reproduced a transcript of Barsamian's interview
|
|
with Hulet, and sold them alongside interviews with researchers
|
|
who have a more substantial and serious track record, including
|
|
Noam Chomsky, Helen Caldicott, and John Stockwell. After selling
|
|
one thousand copies of the pamphlet--far less than the others,
|
|
<Open Magazine> did not reprint the pamphlet and it went out of
|
|
print, according to co-owner Stuart Sahulka. According to Sahulka,
|
|
the Hulet pamphlet was published because there was "such an
|
|
overpressing need for information about the war," and that except
|
|
for exaggerating the amount of Kuwaiti investment in the U.S., it
|
|
seemed accurate.
|
|
|
|
Barsamian is troubled by some of Hulet's assertions regarding the
|
|
genesis of the Gulf War, and Hulet's apparent claim that the Kuwaiti
|
|
royal families control of $300 billion in U.S. investments was
|
|
the key issue in prompting the war. (Most newspapers and financial
|
|
reporting services place the Kuwaiti/U.S. investment figure in the
|
|
range of 30-50 billion dollars, with a low of 15 and a high of 80
|
|
in current documented mainstream and alternative press accounts.)
|
|
Barsamian and other progressive researchers and journalists have
|
|
been unable to document some of Hulet's claims, which may represent
|
|
legitimate suppositions, but were presented by Hulet in numerous
|
|
radio interviews as facts. Hulet argues that the integrity of his
|
|
research should not be judged on the basis of radio interviews
|
|
where discussions are often hectic and condensed. On the other
|
|
hand, Hulet gained his influence as a Gulf War critic and his
|
|
largest audience through radio talk shows.
|
|
|
|
Barsamian warns progressives of falling for the type of "left
|
|
guruism" where sensational anti-government theories are accepted
|
|
without any independent critical analysis. He notes that during
|
|
the Gulf crisis Craig Hulet was elevated to expert status by
|
|
progressives who accepted his pronouncements as fact without
|
|
seriously examining his credentials, which he sometimes inflates.
|
|
|
|
For instance, one Hulet brochure describes him as a "Published
|
|
columnist and political cartoonist. Articles frequently appear in
|
|
national publications: <Financial Security Digest, International
|
|
Combat Arms, Seattle Times, LA Weekly, SF Examiner, Oakland Tribune>
|
|
and more." In fact, while the phrasing strongly suggests Hulet has
|
|
written for the latter four publications, Hulet admits those cites
|
|
actually refer to instances when he was quoted or his research used
|
|
in preparing the article. Most journalists and academics would
|
|
consider that a misrepresentation. In the long run, whether or not
|
|
Hulet's analysis stands up to intellectual criticism will be
|
|
determined by his ability to defend his thesis--a defense that can
|
|
only take place if his views are vigorously debated, not uncritically
|
|
accepted as gospel. That is the same critical standard to which
|
|
all researchers should be held.
|
|
|
|
An especially useful book in understanding how Hulet's conspiracy
|
|
theories of oligarchic manipulation, anti-government demagoguery,
|
|
and appeal to individualism fits into the fascist tradition is "The
|
|
Fascist Ego" by William R. Tucker.[f-7] The book is a study of
|
|
the French intellectual fascist, Robert Brasillach, whose egocentric
|
|
flirtation with fascism ended with his execution as a collaborator
|
|
at the end of WWII.
|
|
|
|
Author Tucker, as the jacket blurb explains:
|
|
|
|
"...sees in Brasillach's involvement in fascism a form of anarchic
|
|
individualism or `right-wing anarchism.' He suggests that, far from
|
|
being a form of social or moral conservatism, Brasillach's fascism
|
|
was inspired by an anti-modernism that placed the creative individuals
|
|
sensibilities and his ego at the center of things. Brasillach's
|
|
fear that the individualist prerogatives of the creative elite
|
|
would be submerged in the industrialized and rationalized society
|
|
that loomed on the horizon was important as a basis for his thoughts
|
|
and actions. "
|
|
|
|
To understand Brasillach and his soul-mates is to understand Craig
|
|
Hulet, and his followers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
How the Populist Party Uses Hulet
|
|
|
|
While Craig Hulet, featured on the California Pacifica radio
|
|
stations, is careful to distance himself from views that are racist
|
|
or anti-Jewish, not everyone who champions Hulet as an commentator
|
|
on the Gulf War or Bush's New World Order makes those distinctions.
|
|
Some persons, wittingly or not, use Hulet's theories to introduce
|
|
others to the more bigoted theorists. Hulet helped spark a political
|
|
movement in California following the Gulf War that, according to
|
|
persons attending the meetings, fed scores, perhaps hundreds, of
|
|
political activists into a far-right, racist, and anti-Jewish
|
|
political organizing drive supporting the Presidential candidacy
|
|
of Col. James Bo Gritz of the Populist Party.
|
|
|
|
The story of one person living in the Bay Area, called here Dana
|
|
Pierce, illustrates the study group phenomenon sparked by Hulet's
|
|
presentations. The story shows an organizing dynamic in action,
|
|
and is not meant to imply that Hulet is a party to the dynamic,
|
|
merely that others opportunistically use Hulet as bait.
|
|
|
|
Dana Pierce had become critical of domestic U.S. financial policies,
|
|
and attended a meeting of others who shared that view. Pierce was
|
|
invited by the leader of the group, an older man with "a pro-democracy
|
|
demeanor," to a meeting in the San Rafael area to meet someone who
|
|
might assist with a particular financial problem.
|
|
|
|
At that second meeting, the facilitator announced the group was
|
|
trying to understand George Bush and the New World Order. They were
|
|
studying history and political science, and were reading material
|
|
by Noam Chomsky. It was explained that the group had formed after
|
|
several core persons, who opposed sending U.S. troops to the Gulf,
|
|
had heard Craig Hulet's speeches in the Bay Area, primarily on
|
|
radio station KPFA, both in live interviews and on tape. Some people
|
|
had seen Hulet on videotape. They had responded to Hulet's call
|
|
for people to educate themselves by forming the group.
|
|
|
|
The group consisted of at least thirty people and had met about
|
|
four times when Pierce attended the meeting. For the main program
|
|
of the meeting, the group watched a videotape of Eustace Mullins
|
|
talking about the sinister aspects of the Federal Reserve system.
|
|
As the tape progressed, Pierce became increasingly uneasy.
|
|
|
|
"Mullins was jumping back and forth, claiming bankers supported
|
|
both the Bolshevik revolution and the Nazis, he praised the right-wing
|
|
Hunt brothers, and then began to mention the Rothschild family. He
|
|
said the CIA was part of the plot, and William F. Buckley is CIA
|
|
which was why some conservative groups dismissed his theories. All
|
|
the while I watched people smiling and nodding their heads and I
|
|
began to wonder if I was the only one to catch the reference to
|
|
the Rothschilds and wondered if I was being over-sensitive because
|
|
I was Jewish. "
|
|
|
|
After the tape, according to Pierce, "the host stood up and praised
|
|
Mullins and said he was a close associate of Ezra Pound. The host
|
|
also said that the banking system is communistic because both are
|
|
monopolistic."
|
|
|
|
Pierce went to the local library and looked up a biography of Ezra
|
|
Pound and discovered that Mullins had been associated with Pound,
|
|
and that Pound was a virulent anti-Semite. Pierce then read Hannah
|
|
Arendt's treatise on the origins of anti-Semitism, and pieces of
|
|
the puzzle began to fall into place.
|
|
|
|
Pierce had not heard Hulet before and so went to hear a July 1991
|
|
speech at the First Unitarian Church in San Francisco. Admission
|
|
was ten dollars and the audience numbered at least 100.
|
|
|
|
"He was a glib speaker, and he presents concerns all of us
|
|
have--concerns many people on the left certainly have about the
|
|
Bush administration and how there is no effective congressional
|
|
oversight. I can listen to him and agree he is focused on some real
|
|
problems in this country. What he does is bring into the open a
|
|
lot of concerns and he discusses issues succinctly and in ways that
|
|
people can follow. If I had just gone to hear him I probably would
|
|
have been quite taken with him, but in the context of the first
|
|
meeting, I listened with skepticism, and am worried. People want
|
|
so much to believe in him they don't want to hear any criticism.
|
|
I saw how people can hear Hulet and then be led to Mullins. If
|
|
you look at the origins of anti- Semitism described by Arendt, you
|
|
can see how a self-confident person who provides simple explanations
|
|
can offer comfort to people who sense that something is wrong with
|
|
our society and that they are being lied to, which is true. But
|
|
it was scary to see how easily people were then led into accepting
|
|
the scapegoating of Jews and the other conspiracy theories discussed
|
|
by Eustace Mullins on the videotape. At first I thought there was
|
|
something wrong with me, but now I think there is a serious problem
|
|
that people on the left need to talk about. "
|
|
|
|
Hulet was listed in a 1986 <Spotlight> advertisement as a speaker
|
|
at a day-long seminar with ultra-rightist Australian Eric D. Butler
|
|
and pro-apartheid writer Ivor Benson, a notorious anti-Semite. Both
|
|
men are leading theorists affiliated with Liberty Lobby. Also on
|
|
the 1986 panel was rightist newsletter editor Lawrence Patterson,
|
|
recently named to the Liberty Lobby PAC, and David Irving, an author
|
|
who claims the Holocaust was a Jewish hoax. Repeated attempts to
|
|
interview Hulet regarding this meeting and the California study
|
|
groups, including a visit to his base in a town north of Seattle,
|
|
were brushed off by his wife, Kathleen DePass Hulet, who handles
|
|
his publicity from a frame shop in downtown Everett, Washington.
|
|
Hulet has told one newspaper that he did not attend the event. The
|
|
matter is unimportant in an overall assessment of Hulet's
|
|
ideological--as opposed to organizational--allegiances.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Left/Right Critiques and Coalitions
|
|
|
|
It would be grossly unfair to suggest that all information from
|
|
the political right is inaccurate conspiracism. Right-wing groups
|
|
are quite capable of producing factual investigative material and
|
|
persuasive journalistic stories. For instance, every year "Project
|
|
Censored" runs a contest to pick the ten top stories not adequately
|
|
covered by the mainstream press. On a 1991 PBS television program
|
|
reviewing the 1990 Project Censored stories, commentator Bill Moyers
|
|
held up a copy of the <Spotlight> as an example of two such
|
|
stories--one on aspects of U.S. foreign policy in the early days
|
|
of the Gulf crisis, another highlighting repressive features of an
|
|
anti-crime bill. Not all stories surfaced by the far right are
|
|
accurate, however, and many feature convoluted and undocumented
|
|
conspiracy theories featuring a paranoid analysis.
|
|
|
|
At the same time the right has been wooing the left, right-wing
|
|
groups have been promoting a number of left resources such as books
|
|
and videos that criticize certain aspects of government policy or
|
|
ruling elites. For instance, Noam Chomsky's critiques of U.S.
|
|
foreign policy, Holly Sklar's studies of the Trilateral Commission,
|
|
and Brian Glick's manual on domestic repression are praised and
|
|
distributed by right-wing book peddlers.
|
|
|
|
These cross-ideological pollinations do not imply any ideological
|
|
connection between the left researchers and the right--any group
|
|
can distribute a book--but demonstrates that the political right
|
|
sees points of alliance with the left, especially around issues
|
|
relating to government abuses of power.
|
|
|
|
Government repression and intelligence abuse are not the only areas
|
|
of research on the left where convoluted theories are circulated.
|
|
Unsubstantiated conspiracist theories, claiming secret circles of
|
|
corporate influence in the United States, also flow between left
|
|
and right pro-environmentalists. One Massachusetts environmental
|
|
activist researches alternative energy sources, circulates materials
|
|
on elite control of energy policy, and refers interested
|
|
environmentalists to the work of Eustace Mullins who writes about
|
|
the so-called Jewish international banking conspiracy. In his
|
|
worldview, Mullins' research unraveling powerful industrial and
|
|
banking conspiracies can help explain government antagonism toward
|
|
environmental reform[f-8]
|
|
|
|
On one forum for activists on a national electronic computer based
|
|
network, excerpts from LaRouchian and Liberty Lobby publications
|
|
have been uncritically posted by persons who primarily circulate
|
|
information from left and progressive sources. This builds the
|
|
credibility of the LaRouchians and Liberty Lobby circles and implies
|
|
that they are natural allies.
|
|
|
|
An example of one left/right information alliance involves Dan
|
|
Brandt, creator of the Namebase software program, an immensely
|
|
useful computer tool which searches a huge index of CIA-related
|
|
publications and documents. Brandt has created a non-profit group
|
|
with a board of advisors composed of both left and right critics
|
|
of U.S. intelligence agencies, including LaRouche-defender Fletcher
|
|
Prouty who joined the advisory board of Liberty Lobby's Populist
|
|
Action Committee. On the other hand, Brandt is highly critical of
|
|
the LaRouchians.
|
|
|
|
|
|
True Gritz
|
|
|
|
In 1991, ultra-right political groups began organizing a nationwide
|
|
campaign to build support for Populist Party candidate Bo Gritz.
|
|
Gritz was named in 1991 to the advisory board of the Populist Action
|
|
Committee created by the quasi-Nazi Liberty Lobby, publisher of
|
|
the weekly newspaper <Spotlight>. The Populist Party organizing
|
|
drive is of interest to progressives because Gritz told a July,
|
|
1991 meeting in Palo Alto, California that they should reach out
|
|
and attempt to recruit persons from the left.
|
|
|
|
Also named to the Liberty Lobby Populist Action Committee was
|
|
retired Air Force Colonel and intelligence specialist Fletcher
|
|
Prouty, author of the 1973 book <The Secret Team>, now published
|
|
by IHR. Prouty has been appearing at conferences and on radio
|
|
programs sponsored by the Liberty Lobby.
|
|
|
|
Others named to the Liberty Lobby Populist Action Committee were
|
|
Abe Austin, described as an Illinois businessman and expert on
|
|
money; Mike Blair, <Spotlight> writer whose articles on government
|
|
repression were highlighted by Project Censored; Ken Bohnsack, an
|
|
Illinois resident called the founder of the Sovereignty movement;
|
|
Howard Carson, a <Spotlight> distributor; William Gill, president
|
|
of the protectionist American Coalition for Competitive Trade; Boyd
|
|
Godlove Jr., chairman of the Populist Party of Maryland; Martin
|
|
Larson, a contributor to <The Journal of Historical Review> which
|
|
maintains the Holocaust was a Jewish hoax; Roger Lourie, president
|
|
of Devin-Adair Publishing; Pauline Mackey, national treasurer for
|
|
the 1988 David Duke Populist Party Presidential campaign; Tom
|
|
McIntyre, national chairman of the Populist Party from 1987-1990;
|
|
John Nugent, who ran for Congress from Tennessee as a Republican
|
|
in 1990; Lawrence Patterson, publisher of the far-right
|
|
ultra-conspiratorial <Criminal Politics> newsletter; Jerry Pope,
|
|
chair of the Kentucky Populist Party; John Rakus, president of the
|
|
National Justice Foundation; Hon. John R. Rarick, former Democratic
|
|
House member now in Louisiana; Sherman Skolnick, a Chicagoan who
|
|
has peddled bizarre conspiracy theories for over a decade; Major
|
|
James H. Townsend, editor of the <National Educator> from California;
|
|
Jim Tucker, <Spotlight> contributor who specializes on covering
|
|
the Bilderberger banking group; Tom Valentine, Midwest bureau chief
|
|
for <Spotlight>; Raymond Walk, an Illinois critic of free trade;
|
|
and Robert H. Weems, founding national chairman of the Populist
|
|
Party.
|
|
|
|
The Populist Party has long been a meeting ground for segregationists,
|
|
anti-Jewish conspiracy mongers, white supremacists and former
|
|
members of the Ku Klux Klan. The formation of the Liberty Lobby
|
|
Populist Action Committee comes at a time when some right wing
|
|
groups are attempting to build bridges to the left around shared
|
|
critiques of government misconduct, a process that was accelerated
|
|
during the Gulf War.
|
|
|
|
In the June, 1991 issue of <The Populist Observer>, Gritz wrote,
|
|
"I call upon you as Republican, Democrat, Libertarian, Independent,
|
|
right, left, conservative, liberal, et.al., to UNITE AS POPULISTS
|
|
[emphasis in original] until we have our nation firmly back on her
|
|
feet." Gritz made a similar plea at a July meeting in Palo Alto,
|
|
California.
|
|
|
|
Gritz's call for the left/right coalition apparently first surfaced
|
|
publicly at his Freedom Call '90 conference held in July, 1990 in
|
|
Las Vegas. Speakers at that conference included Gritz and anti-Semite
|
|
Eustace Mullins, as well as Father Bill Davis of the Christic
|
|
Institute, ex-CIA official (now critic) John Stockwell, and author
|
|
Barbara Honneger. This fact of attendance is not meant to imply
|
|
that all these persons share the same views. It is meant to
|
|
demonstrate that Gritz is attempting to draw a broad range of
|
|
government critics into a coalition. Stockwell, Honneger, and Davis
|
|
have all said their appearance at the conference should not be
|
|
interpreted as an endorsement of Gritz's research or political
|
|
views. Gritz's Center for Action still sells a set of tapes from
|
|
the conference, including speeches by Gritz and Mullins, along with
|
|
Father Davis, Barbara Honneger, and John Stockwell. This set of
|
|
tapes is advertised in the Prevailing Winds catalog.
|
|
|
|
John Stockwell has expressed concern over the the way Prevailing
|
|
Winds has lumped his research together with research he finds
|
|
problematic. In the past, Stockwell has been highly critical of
|
|
Honneger as a reliable source of information, and has had criticisms
|
|
of some aspects of Christic research as well. Stockwell says he
|
|
"met Gritz there on stage" at the 1990 conference and "came away
|
|
greatly unimpressed," and he was quick to distance himself from
|
|
the Populist Party.
|
|
|
|
After the controversy broke in the left press, a spokesperson at
|
|
Prevailing Winds (who asked to be identified simply as Patrick)
|
|
said they were now considering at least including a warning in
|
|
their catalog about Bo Gritz's ties to the Populist Party and other
|
|
rightist and anti-Jewish groups and individuals. Patrick said their
|
|
catalog came out before Gritz accepted the Populist Party presidential
|
|
nomination, but defended the inclusion of the Gritz material, saying
|
|
that "middle America needs this kind of information" because "Bush
|
|
is basically a dope-peddling Nazi."
|
|
|
|
Patrick said the appropriateness of carrying Gritz's material,
|
|
given his ties to the anti-Jewish far right, has been discussed by
|
|
the Prevailing Winds staff, and also discussed with Bo Gritz and
|
|
with Father Davis of Christic.
|
|
|
|
According to the Prevailing Winds representative:
|
|
|
|
"Its an argument we've gone back and forth on, it's a tough question,
|
|
whether or not to make it available and to preserve it for research.
|
|
We are interested in getting the information to the people. The
|
|
good thing about it is no one else is trying to build these bridges
|
|
between groups. We need to reach a rainbow of people." "
|
|
|
|
Christic's Father Bill Davis walked out of the 1990 Gritz conference
|
|
when Mullins gave his speech. Yet over a year after the event,
|
|
Christic still had made no public statement distancing itself from
|
|
Gritz or Mullins. In the meantime, Gritz was touring the country
|
|
promoting Christic's Iran-Contra research and implying a friendly
|
|
working relationship between himself and key Christic figures,
|
|
especially Danny Sheehan. Sheehan is featured in a privately-distributed
|
|
videotape program focusing on Gritz's research which takes a critical
|
|
look at the Reagan and Bush Administrations' intelligence and drug
|
|
policies. That videotape, circulated by Gritz and his allies, also
|
|
uncritically shows a headline from the LaRouchian newspaper <New
|
|
Federalist> to illustrate a point.
|
|
|
|
Christic's national director, Sara Nelson, told <In These Times>
|
|
that Christic apologizes for the appearance of Davis at the conference
|
|
with Mullins, and no one is suggesting that Christic harbors any
|
|
racist, anti-Jewish or fascist views. But Christic has not issued
|
|
a clear and widely disseminated public statement alerting people
|
|
who may have seen the Prevailing Winds catalog or the Gritz material
|
|
and who now seem confused over who supports whom. This is not meant
|
|
to be interpreted as a blanket criticism of the Christic Institute.
|
|
Many Christic projects have been valuable. They circulated a
|
|
tremendous amount of useful information about the issue of covert
|
|
action and the Iran-Contra scandal. Especially notable in other
|
|
areas are the work of Lewis Pitts at Christic South and the project
|
|
by Andy Lang to illustrate problems with forging democracy in
|
|
eastern Europe. Yet Christic's Sheehan, Davis, and Nelson have not
|
|
taken seriously the problem of right-wing groups and individuals
|
|
linking themselves to the Christic case and recruiting Christic
|
|
supporters in a way that implies a shared agenda. While this is
|
|
not just a problem with Christic, the role that Christic could,
|
|
and should, be playing in providing leadership on this question
|
|
would be extremely useful.
|
|
|
|
In <Front Man for Fascism: Bo Gritz and the Racist Populist Party>,
|
|
a report issued by the California anti-fascist group People Against
|
|
Racist Terror, the extent to which Gritz has promoted himself on
|
|
the left is thoroughly detailed. The report urges Christic to be
|
|
more vocal:
|
|
|
|
"Christic should join the campaign to expose Bo's campaign for the
|
|
fascist vehicle it is. Christic should take the lead in condemning
|
|
the Gritz campaign, rather than demanding retractions from those
|
|
who have raised criticisms and concerns. It should share frankly
|
|
and self-critically with its followers the process of deception
|
|
and rationalization by which it was hoodwinked, so that others can
|
|
escape the same fate.
|
|
|
|
It is the failure of alternative and left critics of government
|
|
policy to take responsibility for clarifying the confusion being
|
|
intentionally sown by the far right that is the key issue. If the
|
|
problem is turned on its head, it is easier to understand why the
|
|
issue of public statements by groups such as Christic is so important.
|
|
In the course of preparing this study scores of persons were
|
|
interviewed in a dozen cities. Here is a summary of some of the
|
|
questions raised by persons who reject the criticism.
|
|
|
|
On the LaRouchians:
|
|
|
|
"Were they not victims of government repression and FBI harassment
|
|
just like CISPES? Wasn't that what James Ridgeway said in the
|
|
<Village Voice>? Didn't their views get reported by David MacMichael
|
|
in the newsletter of the former intelligence officers turned critics?
|
|
Isn't Ramsey Clark their attorney? Isn't it true that they were
|
|
reporting on the Iran-Contra affair before the mainstream media
|
|
and Congress publicized the matter? Don't several former Christic
|
|
investigators recommend their work? "
|
|
|
|
"Are they not our natural allies? "
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the Liberty Lobby/Populist network:
|
|
|
|
"Didn't <Spotlight> get mentioned by Bill Moyers on the PBS program
|
|
on the Most Censored Stories awards as an excellent source of
|
|
information? Doesn't Bill Davis appear with Bo Gritz at conferences?
|
|
Doesn't Danny Sheehan appear on the Bo Gritz videotape? Can't we
|
|
buy Gritz' writings by sending a check to the Christic Institute's
|
|
West Coast office? Wasn't that Danny Sheehan on the cover of the
|
|
Prevailing Winds catalog with Christic material along with material
|
|
from Gritz and Prouty? "
|
|
|
|
"Are they not our natural allies? "
|
|
|
|
On Craig Hulet:
|
|
|
|
"Isn't he on KPFA and KPFK? Can't we order Hulet tapes from the
|
|
Pacifica Archive? Doesn't he say he works with Lanny Sinkin who
|
|
was an attorney at Christic? Doesn't he say he isn't a right-winger?
|
|
Didn't the San Francisco Mime Troupe thank Hulet for his research?
|
|
"
|
|
|
|
"Is he not our natural ally? "
|
|
|
|
This raises a question for every progressive political leader,
|
|
journalist and attorney whose name has been used by the fascist
|
|
right to build their movement. If hundreds (perhaps thousands) of
|
|
people have come to believe there is a coalition or alliance that
|
|
involves the left and fascist right, is there not an an obligation
|
|
to speak out publicly and deny what the right is suggesting publicly?
|
|
|
|
In fact, some of the above questions clearly represent misunderstandings
|
|
and erroneous assumptions. But when the right is making the assertion,
|
|
silence implies consent, or as the button says: "Silence is the
|
|
voice of complicity."
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Fascist Response
|
|
|
|
Telephone call to 503-796-2124
|
|
|
|
November 20, 1991 10:00 PM
|
|
|
|
[Man's voice:]
|
|
|
|
"Greetings, you have reached the American Front Ministry of
|
|
Information hot line. COINTELPRO, the counter-intelligence agency
|
|
of the Jew S. of A., or ZOG [Zionist Occupational Government], is
|
|
a group of well financed government agents who have not only
|
|
infiltrated but absolutely control a great portion of the so-called
|
|
left wing in America. Their purpose is to make sure that these
|
|
self-styled progressive organizations don't actually take any action
|
|
against the true enemy of the people, the U.S. government. "
|
|
|
|
"They have been doing a very good job at keeping radical elements
|
|
of the supposed left and right fighting each other, thereby nullifying
|
|
a great deal of revolutionary activity, and keeping the fat-cat
|
|
warmonger capitalists who run this government safe from the bloody
|
|
tide of reprisal they so richly deserve. "
|
|
|
|
"No matter where you stand on the political spectrum this abhorrent
|
|
undertaking affects you. ZOG is bound and determined to make sure
|
|
the trend of increasing anti-government unity of radical factions
|
|
in Europe doesn't take effect here. "
|
|
|
|
"For local evidence of this lefty alliance with Big Brother, you
|
|
need go no further than Jonathan Mozzochi of the Coalition for
|
|
Human Dignity. He's an avid follower of renowned COINTELPRO guru
|
|
Chip Berlet. Mozzochi has even been known to plagiarize the writings
|
|
of Mr. Berlet, and as is very evident by the CHD's activity, Mozzochi
|
|
has completely dedicated himself to the government program of
|
|
keeping the radicals fighting each other instead of Big Brother.
|
|
Just because he serves you cappuccino at La Patisserie and pretends
|
|
to be a so-called progressive, the fact remains that he is nothing
|
|
but the CIA in alternative geek clothing. This further illustrates
|
|
the fact that the anti-racist movement as a whole is nothing but
|
|
a tool of the capitalist regime, designed to destroy the
|
|
self-determination of all races and keep ZOG as the ruler of all.
|
|
"
|
|
|
|
"For more information, contact American Front at P.O. Box 68333,
|
|
Portland, Oregon, 97268. White Victory. "
|
|
|
|
[Woman's voice:]
|
|
|
|
"You may start your message now. "
|
|
|
|
|
|
Anti-Jewish Scapegoating & Black Nationalism
|
|
|
|
Unraveling the overlapping tendencies of reactionary politics,
|
|
conspiracism, scapegoating, opportunism, demagoguery, nationalism,
|
|
racism, anti-Jewish theories, and fascism is a difficult but
|
|
necessary task. This section will discuss several situations and
|
|
trends where these issues are involved, focusing on the rise of
|
|
right-wing anti-Jewish theories in some nationalist sectors of the
|
|
African-American community.
|
|
|
|
Any serious discussion of these issues needs first to be grounded
|
|
on at least a working knowledge of the theories of racialism and
|
|
nationalism, as well as familiarity with the characteristics of
|
|
mass fascist political movements prior to their ascendancy to state
|
|
power. Especially useful is a study of the nationalist movements
|
|
of Europe at the beginning of this century. The nationalism of
|
|
pre-World War II Europe included movements based on racialist
|
|
theories. This racial nationalism took several forms, including
|
|
the heroic mythical racial nationalism of Italy and Spain which
|
|
glorified the organic leadership of autocratic father-figures, the
|
|
ego-centric anti-modernist intellectual fascism of France, the
|
|
religious/racial clerical fascist movements of Croatia and Rumania,
|
|
and the scapegoating demagogic movement of German Nazism with its
|
|
anti-Jewish conspiracy theories.
|
|
|
|
Nazism was a fascist movement, but not all mid-century European
|
|
fascist movements employed a master race theory. Nevertheless,
|
|
fascism as a political form is premised on racial or cultural
|
|
nationalism.
|
|
|
|
As scholar Barry Mehler, a leading researcher on the history of
|
|
racial eugenics, points out:
|
|
|
|
"Classical eugenic theories of the nineteen-twenties and thirties
|
|
emphasized that nations were biological entities and that political
|
|
ideologies emerge from racial characteristics which in turn have
|
|
developed out of evolutionary changes in racial groups. The classic
|
|
expression of these theories can be found in Madison Grant's <The
|
|
Passing of the Great Race>. This was, of course, the foundation of
|
|
both Nazi racism and American white supremacism. It is not
|
|
surprising, therefore, that white supremacist organizations continue
|
|
to reprint and sell these expressions of American racism. "
|
|
|
|
In fact, the white supremacist movement is the largest and most
|
|
significant purveyor of theories of racial nationalism in the U.S.,
|
|
and its threat to democracy and pluralism far outweighs that posed
|
|
by the misguided participants in the tragic and counterproductive
|
|
current dispute between Blacks and Jews. Further, the single greatest
|
|
impediment to racial justice in the U.S. is not the policies and
|
|
practices of any one political group or individual, but the
|
|
institutional racism in the government and business sectors that
|
|
is still so widespread yet so invisible in our society, and which
|
|
has deeply undermined the ability of African-Americans, Hispanics,
|
|
North-American Indians, and other racial groups in this country to
|
|
share in the bounty and freedoms described in school textbooks as
|
|
a birthright in our country. It is within that framework that the
|
|
following discussion must be set.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Black Nationalism and Anti-Jewish Conspiracy Theories
|
|
|
|
Some members of Black nationalist groups in the U.S. circulate
|
|
conspiracist theories about Black oppression where discredited
|
|
ultra-right theories of exaggerated Jewish power and manipulation
|
|
have found new life and a new audience. While in the past some
|
|
pro-Palestinian and even anti-Israel sentiments made by African-Americans
|
|
have been mislabeled as anti-Semitism by groups promoting pro-Israel
|
|
policies, there is still plenty of evidence that anti-Jewish
|
|
conspiracy theories are discussed openly in some segments of the
|
|
Black community
|
|
|
|
For example, in Chicago, during the late 1980's, Black activist
|
|
Steve Cokely taught classes at a Nation of Islam center where he
|
|
alleged that Jewish doctors were injecting Black children with the
|
|
AIDS virus. When Cokely was exposed, NOI leader Louis Farrakhan,
|
|
rather than rejecting Cokely's assertions as bigoted lunacy, issued
|
|
a statement saying that if Cokely could document his charges, the
|
|
Nation of Islam would provide a public forum for the discussion.
|
|
|
|
At a February 28, 1991 anti-abortion lecture by Barbara Bell,
|
|
founder of Massachusetts Blacks for Life, Bell asserted that "it
|
|
is the Jewish doctors that are the ones that are the ones trying
|
|
to wipe out the black society." The statement came in the context
|
|
of an assertion that Planned Parenthood wanted to wipe out all
|
|
minority populations.
|
|
|
|
The Detroit magazine <Alkebulanian> is dedicated to providing the
|
|
reader with "the power of African pride and dignity" and seeks to
|
|
"speak the truth and expose the falsehoods that have weakened a
|
|
precious people through the course of history." But according to
|
|
anti-eugenics scholar Barry Mehler, the magazine carries articles
|
|
that assert "the Jewish Talmud was written by `racist dogs,' that
|
|
Jews have manipulated the world into grieving over the Holocaust
|
|
as a way to make `black people forget that the it was same handful
|
|
who participated in the African Holocaust.' "
|
|
|
|
At a July, 1990 meeting in Cairo, Illinois, several Black nationalist
|
|
groups under the leadership of the All African Peoples Revolutionary
|
|
Party (AAPRP) proposed the formation of an "Afrikan Anti-Zionist
|
|
Front." Kwame Ture (formerly Stokely Carmichael) of AAPRP was
|
|
elected chairperson of the front. At the time, several spokespersons
|
|
made careful distinctions concerning their criticisms of Israel
|
|
and Zionism. For instance, a statement issued by the Front at a
|
|
planning meeting held in Tripoli, Libya included the disclaimer
|
|
that, "The founders of the Front state that the struggle against
|
|
zionism is not a struggle against Jews or Judaism but rather a
|
|
struggle against zionism as a racist and imperialist ideology and
|
|
movement."
|
|
|
|
Although extreme, and implying objection to the state of Israel
|
|
itself, the statement by the Front is not fairly characterized as
|
|
anti-Jewish. However, the careful distinctions in the Front's
|
|
statement are missing in a current educational brochure by the All
|
|
African Peoples Revolutionary Party.
|
|
|
|
The brochure starts out criticizing Zionism and Israeli politics
|
|
but soon descends into rampant anti-Jewish conspiracism. "ZIONISM
|
|
is a well organized and financed, international conspiracy which
|
|
controls the economic and political life of the United States and
|
|
Europe," says the brochure. Although accurately noting, "All Jews
|
|
are not Zionists," the brochure goes on to claim, "The international
|
|
Zionist movement exerts an almost total strangle-hold over the
|
|
economic, political, social and cultural life of the African
|
|
community." It also claims that Zionism, "controls...all of the
|
|
banks, businesses and financial institutions in our community," as
|
|
well as the mass media and the entertainment industry. According
|
|
to the brochure, the international Zionist movement controls:
|
|
|
|
"The political, social, cultural, educational and legal institutions,
|
|
agencies and organizations in the African community. Almost all of
|
|
the civil rights and political groups in our community are controlled
|
|
by zionists and Jews. They use their money, their power, the FBI,
|
|
CIA, IRS, the courts and prisons; and many other ways to control
|
|
and destroy our movements, leaders and people. "
|
|
|
|
Many of these sentiments regarding Jews are virtually identical to
|
|
charges in white supremacist publications which claim that Jews
|
|
play a similar role in oppressing white christians. One mail order
|
|
videotape lecture by a leading Christian Identity pastor is a
|
|
lengthy exposition of his theory that slavery was the result of
|
|
the usury employed by Jewish bankers in Britain when financing
|
|
colonial enterprises.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam
|
|
|
|
Although the Rev. Louis Farrakhan denies he is a bigot, and some
|
|
of his critics have themselves used racist appeals, Farrakhan has
|
|
in fact made a number of statements concerning Jews over the past
|
|
few years that reflect disdain and prejudice.
|
|
|
|
Yet the most troubling aspect of Farrakhan is not his demagogic
|
|
bigotry. Writing in the January 28, 1991 issue of <The Nation>,
|
|
professor Adolph Reed, Jr. cautions that "demonizing" Farrakhan,
|
|
or focusing merely on his prejudice, misses the main point, which
|
|
is the troubling nature of Farrakhan's reactionary political views
|
|
and anti-democratic "racial organicism." As Reed explains, Farrakhan's
|
|
use of racial organicism is found in the belief that Black leaders
|
|
"emerge organically from the population and that the objectives
|
|
and interests of those organic leaders are identical with those of
|
|
the general racial constituency." Reed notes that this theory has
|
|
been used by white majoritarian leadership to justify and manage
|
|
racial subordination by "allowing white elites to pick and choose
|
|
among pretenders to race leadership."
|
|
|
|
Equally dangerous, however, are the themes of authoritarianism and
|
|
racial nationalism which underlie racial organicism. Reed warns
|
|
that "because of his organization and ideology, however, Farrakhan
|
|
more than his predecessors throws into relief the dangerous,
|
|
fascistic presumptions inscribed at the foundation of that model."
|
|
|
|
In July, 1990 Farrakhan granted an extensive exclusive interview
|
|
to <Spotlight> where his views of separate development for the
|
|
Black and white communities was stressed. The interview was presented
|
|
in an overwhelmingly sympathetic and supportive fashion, with an
|
|
introduction by the editors where Farrakhan's movement was described
|
|
as "based on the cultivation of spiritual, education, and family
|
|
values, as well as racial separation."
|
|
|
|
The idea of racial or national organicism, that leaders emerged
|
|
from homogeneous national groupings and metaphysically expressed
|
|
the collective will of the people, was a basic tenet of fascism,
|
|
especially the form of fascism called national socialism. In the
|
|
1988 report of the small American Nazi Party in Chicago, the term
|
|
national socialism was defined as "the organized will of the race,
|
|
in its quest for racial survival, and physical, mental, and spiritual
|
|
self betterment." One modern offshoot of national socialism, called
|
|
the "Third Position," has adherents in both Europe and the United
|
|
States, and is known for its attempts to build bridges to the left,
|
|
especially around the issues of protecting the environment and
|
|
support for the working class.
|
|
|
|
Racialist nationalism, anti-Jewish bigotry, and fascist principles
|
|
have provided a basis in the past for white supremacists and
|
|
anti-Jewish bigots such as Tom Metzger to voice support for Farrakhan.
|
|
The October 12, 1985 <New York Times> reported on a Michigan meeting
|
|
of white supremacists where Metzger told his audience of neo-Nazis
|
|
and Klan members, "America is like a rotting carcass. The Jews are
|
|
living off the carcass like the parasites they are. Farrakhan
|
|
understands this." That meeting was attended by Political Research
|
|
Associates author and freelance journalist Russ Bellant who reported
|
|
the Metzger quote and incidently disclosed the attendance of another
|
|
white supremacist, Roy Frankhouser, a former Ku Klux Klan leader
|
|
from Pennsylvania who was for many years a top security consultant
|
|
to Lyndon LaRouche.
|
|
|
|
The beginning of the 1990's saw increasing joint political work
|
|
between various LaRouchian front groups and Rev. Farrakhan's Black
|
|
nationalist Nation of Islam (NOI). For instance, the NOI's newspaper
|
|
<Final Call> ran an article by Carlos Wesley on Panama in its issue
|
|
of May 31, 1990, which was credited as a reprint from the LaRouchian
|
|
magazine <Executive Intelligence Review>. The LaRouchian <New
|
|
Federalist> has run several articles praising the political work
|
|
of Dr. Abdul Alim Muhammad, editor of NOI's <Final Call>.
|
|
|
|
Another group allied with Farrakhan that promotes the idea of racial
|
|
or national organicism is the political organization run by Dr.
|
|
Fred Newman, a former protege of LaRouche. Persons who extol Newman's
|
|
idiosyncratic form of "social therapy" control a variety of political
|
|
organizations under Newman's influence, including the New Alliance
|
|
Party (NAP), Rainbow Lobby, New York's Castillo Cultural Center,
|
|
and various Centers for Short-Term Therapy. NAP promotes the
|
|
political theories of Farrakhan, the Rev. Al Sharpton, and Dr.
|
|
Lenora Fulani, presidential candidate of the New Alliance Party.
|
|
The Rainbow Lobby has forged a working coalition with the Libertarian
|
|
Party and the racialist Populist Party to challenge state laws
|
|
limiting ballot access. At the same time NAP's Lenora Fulani stood
|
|
side-by-side with Al Sharpton and other Black nationalists in the
|
|
summer of 1991 as they inflamed an already tense and tragic situation
|
|
in the Crown Heights neighborhood in Brooklyn, which has seen a
|
|
long-simmering dispute between Blacks and a sect of Orthodox Jews.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sorting out the Dilemma
|
|
|
|
We are all aware that there are shifting factions in political
|
|
groups, government bureaucracies, and intelligence agencies. Even
|
|
though there is an historic overlap of government repression and
|
|
reactionary politics, at the same time, factions of the right have
|
|
from time to time made a tactical decision to expose government
|
|
wrongdoing to smash an opposing faction on the right or derail a
|
|
bothersome government project.
|
|
|
|
Around the world the right has adopted a strategy of tension to
|
|
smash the center, and one part of that strategy is to seek temporary
|
|
tactical alliances with left groups in attacking government policies.
|
|
The left/right alliance seeks to displace the center, but historically
|
|
the right always triumphs and then smashes the left. This is
|
|
certainly one lesson of Italian fascism and German national socialism.
|
|
Do we really think a corrupt wealthy anti-labor repressive centrist
|
|
power is worse than fascist power? As the health of the American
|
|
economy declines, it will generate a move towards alternative
|
|
political viewpoints and either new political parties or realignment
|
|
of current parties. A left/right alliance under such circumstances
|
|
would be precarious and dangerous.
|
|
|
|
Serious anti-repression researchers frequently find themselves in
|
|
contact with elements of the ruling center, opposition centrist
|
|
parties, and far right in the normal course of their research.
|
|
The mere contact between left and right is not the issue, but when
|
|
left researchers become <de facto> conduits for the right's
|
|
information, and do so uncritically and without revealing their
|
|
sources at least by general description, serious ethical and
|
|
pragmatic problems arise.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Problem of Fascists as Research Sources
|
|
|
|
Herb Quinde is one of the main LaRouchian intelligence contacts
|
|
for reporters in the Washington, D.C. area. Quinde boasts that the
|
|
LaRouchians maintain ties with a network of current and former
|
|
intelligence agents and military specialists who oppose current
|
|
U.S. foreign policy and its reliance on covert action over direct
|
|
military engagement.
|
|
|
|
Quinde confirms that he and his fellow LaRouchian investigators
|
|
are in constant touch with journalists and researchers across the
|
|
political spectrum. In several interviews in 1990 and 1991 Quinde
|
|
refused to go on the record with the names of any of his regular
|
|
contacts among left political groups and critics of government
|
|
repression, although he bragged that such contacts are a regular
|
|
part of his work.
|
|
|
|
While Christic now says they no longer have any contact with the
|
|
LaRouchians, some former Christic staff seem willing to keep some
|
|
doors open. Investigators formerly connected to Christic have
|
|
maintained information ties to the LaRouchians, and advised
|
|
progressive researchers to rely on the LaRouchians as experts in
|
|
the area of government intelligence abuse. These referrals have
|
|
over a period of several years helped forge an information exchange
|
|
network that has drawn some left researchers, journalists and radio
|
|
talk show hosts further into unsubstantiated conspiracy theories
|
|
and into ongoing relationships with fascist and anti-Jewish groups
|
|
and individuals.
|
|
|
|
David MacMichael still maintains close ties to Herb Quinde, meets
|
|
with him personally, and advises researchers probing government
|
|
intelligence abuse to contact Quinde for help. MacMichael defends
|
|
his association with Quinde as legitimate, albeit sometimes
|
|
embarrassing.
|
|
|
|
Russ Bellant is the author of <Old Nazis, The New Right and the
|
|
Republican Party> and has extensively studied Nazi-linked emigre
|
|
intelligence and political networks. In the course of his research,
|
|
he has found several authors in this field who have developed a
|
|
working relationship with LaRouchians. Bellant says he raised the
|
|
ethical problems of working with the LaRouchians with these authors,
|
|
generally to no avail. To be sure, there is no consensus among
|
|
reporters, mainstream or progressive, on what is an ethical way to
|
|
deal with information from groups such as the LaRouchians.
|
|
|
|
According to Peter Dale Scott, "My own ground rules are that until
|
|
something happens where I feel someone is manipulating me or they
|
|
have <personally> done something horrible that I feel is objectionable,
|
|
I feel it is a matter of intellectual freedom to keep the lines of
|
|
communication open. As long as they deal with me as a human being
|
|
I will treat them as such." Scott, however, balked at signing a
|
|
petition about LaRouche being a victim of human rights abuse because
|
|
he felt there was "enough evidence to show the LaRouche people were
|
|
probably guilty of some criminal conduct."
|
|
|
|
Author Jonathan Marshall, now with the <San Francisco Chronicle>,
|
|
says the LaRouchians "have given me information, but given their
|
|
history, I never take it at face value." Marshall says "sometimes
|
|
they are a source of good leads, their work on Panama has been of
|
|
particular use." Marshall does not accept the LaRouchian premise
|
|
that Noriega was a humanitarian, but neither does he accept the
|
|
idea that opposition to Noriega was pure. "Here you have a case of
|
|
evil versus evil, and the enemies of someone are often a good place
|
|
to go for information." According to Marshall, he will sometimes
|
|
pursue LaRouchian leads, "and then do my own independent research."
|
|
If something turns up, he considers it his own effort, and does
|
|
not credit the LaRouchians, in part, he admits, because it would
|
|
lessen his credibility as a journalist.
|
|
|
|
"If you look across the board at cultish groups that do `research'
|
|
you find sometimes that they have found amazing documents that do
|
|
in fact check out," says Marshall. But he hastens to add that
|
|
"documents are one thing, but accepting their analysis is simply
|
|
not responsible."
|
|
|
|
In the late 1980's author Carl Ogelsby considered working with
|
|
LaRouchian Herb Quinde to unravel the story of the recruitment of
|
|
the Gehlen Nazi spy apparatus into U.S. intelligence. Ogelsby
|
|
comments:
|
|
|
|
"If Quinde had been able to provide even a single scrap of useful
|
|
information I would have turned a cartwheel in excitement, but he
|
|
never did. Everything he sent me was bullshit. He was trying to
|
|
convince me to depend on the LaRouche information network. He was
|
|
always boasting about the documents he could send me, but he never
|
|
gave me a useful thing about Gehlen or anything else about the
|
|
Nazification of U.S. intelligence. "
|
|
|
|
During the Gulf War, Quinde asked Ogelsby to speak at a LaRouchian
|
|
antiwar conference, but Ogelsby declined, "because whatever Herb's
|
|
essential charm and persuasion, I would never publicly associate
|
|
myself with them, primarily because my friends warn me it would
|
|
damage my credibility. In fact, I've never initiated a contact with
|
|
them." Putting up with an occasional phone call from Quinde is one
|
|
thing, said Ogelsby, but appearing at a conference is another.
|
|
Still, Ogelsby isn't convinced that they are really a neo-Nazi
|
|
outfit. "My advice is not to make such a big deal about this guy.
|
|
I think that he is basically comic relief." Ogelsby, however, is
|
|
suspicious of the actual purpose of the LaRouchians:
|
|
|
|
"I think it's an intelligence operation, and the only question is
|
|
what's animating it. I don't think it is, strictly speaking, an
|
|
organization representing one individual--LaRouche. I believe it
|
|
has access to sources of information that reflect official circuits,
|
|
most likely European, but I don't think he's officially CIA or FBI.
|
|
I think U.S. intelligence is a little baffled by them too, although
|
|
in the first few years of the Reagan Administration they clearly
|
|
allowed them privileged access. "
|
|
|
|
Journalists James Ridgeway and David MacMichael have defended their
|
|
contacts with the LaRouchian network as part of the standard
|
|
journalistic practice of cultivating a wide range of sources of
|
|
information. They and other journalists argue that taking information
|
|
from someone in no way implies any agreement whatsoever with the
|
|
information provider. In fact, reporters at a number of mainstream
|
|
daily newspapers admit off-the-record that they frequently receive
|
|
material from the LaRouchians, and in some cases develop stories
|
|
from the documents supplied by the LaRouchians. Ridgeway, however,
|
|
acknowledges that the LaRouchians are a "neo-Nazi or fascist
|
|
movement." and warns that journalists need to exercise extreme
|
|
caution when contacting them for information.
|
|
|
|
This is a real issue since a score of progressive researchers and
|
|
journalists report that in the past two years, operatives from the
|
|
LaRouchians and the far-right have stepped up their attempts to
|
|
forge working relationships with them over the basis of shared
|
|
criticism of the government.
|
|
|
|
A West Coast journalist, Ed Connolly, recalls an incident in the
|
|
fall of 1990:
|
|
|
|
"I was tracking a story on Air Force Intelligence and I called
|
|
everyone I could think of. Two weeks later Gene Wheaton called me,
|
|
which was odd because I hadn't called him. Wheaton tells me, "You
|
|
know the people who have very good intelligence on these things
|
|
are the LaRouche people, you should call the people that put out
|
|
<Executive Intelligence Review>, call Herb Quinde." So I did, but
|
|
they wanted more information than they were willing to give out
|
|
and I was immediately skeptical. I never talked to them again. "
|
|
|
|
Eugene Wheaton, an early adviser to the Christic Institute, accepted
|
|
an invitation to speak at the December, 1990 LaRouche antiwar
|
|
conference in Chicago.
|
|
|
|
Journalist Jim Naurekas of Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR)
|
|
bemoans the fact that LaRouchian Herb Quinde has followed him
|
|
through three jobs trying to pester him with tidbits of information.
|
|
One academic who wrote a 1990 article on government civil liberties
|
|
infringements in a left journal says she was quickly contacted by
|
|
several persons who recommended she share her material with
|
|
<Spotlight> and other far-right anti-Jewish publications.
|
|
|
|
Russ Bellant, who is critical of persons who accept material from
|
|
the LaRouchians, also warns that some of the LaRouchian documents
|
|
may be forged. "They did create a passable bogus copy of a section
|
|
of the <New York Times> blasting their enemies," he points out.
|
|
Bellant thinks the LaRouchians "don't give you anything that you
|
|
can rely on," and that by talking with them about research issues,
|
|
"you allow them to track what you are up to which lets them go back
|
|
to their Nazi friends and report on you to them."
|
|
|
|
Bellant and others say they are not troubled by intellectual
|
|
curiosity and open-mindedness that bridge ideological lines, but
|
|
they do have concerns when left and right groups and individuals
|
|
forge covert relationships. There is a big difference between
|
|
reading books by or interviewing members of far-right and racialist
|
|
groups, and working in what amounts to an ad-hoc investigative
|
|
coalition with members of these groups. There is a serious difference
|
|
of opinion among progressive researchers as to the propriety of
|
|
working with the LaRouchians or other ultra- right groups, especially
|
|
those that preach bigotry. Some say they cannot, in good conscience,
|
|
even accept unsolicited information from such groups, while others
|
|
argue they need to interview members of these groups for their
|
|
research.
|
|
|
|
Journalist Jane Hunter says she has consistently rejected overtures
|
|
from the anti-Jewish far right. Hunter is highly critical of anyone
|
|
who would covertly or overtly work with racists, anti-Jewish bigots,
|
|
or neo-Nazis. She notes that even on a pragmatic level, "Any
|
|
information that these people have is bound to show up someplace,
|
|
free for the taking, for what it's worth. Our energies need to be
|
|
spent in reaching out to people who are victims of the system--the
|
|
people with whom we share a common interest in changing it."
|
|
|
|
Not all the rightist groups seeking an alliance or information
|
|
exchange with the left are bigoted or fascist. Some are principled
|
|
conservatives or libertarians seeking an open debate. However, some
|
|
of the groups seeking to link up with the left have openly neo-fascist
|
|
or neo-Nazi agendas, including some that call themselves conservative
|
|
or libertarian. The ethical parameters on these questions for
|
|
journalists and researchers need further debate.
|
|
|
|
It is important to recognize that the moral issues for persons
|
|
building coalitions in the movement for peace and social justice
|
|
are different than those for lawyers, academics, and reporters.
|
|
For organizers the principles of unity seldom (if ever) are such
|
|
that working with fascist, racist and anti-Jewish groups is
|
|
appropriate.
|
|
|
|
Most people agree that uncritical reliance on either right-wing or
|
|
left-wing material can lead to the recirculation of misinformation
|
|
or disinformation. When working with the political right, there is
|
|
the additional possibility that the left could unintentionally end
|
|
up letting the right set its agenda. Some progressive researchers
|
|
also argue that it is unethical for progressive groups to take
|
|
information covertly from the political right and repackage and
|
|
recirculate it without disclosing the source. That issue, however,
|
|
remains unsettled, and needs to be debated openly.
|
|
|
|
A good illustration of the problem came up in an October 15, 1991
|
|
<Village Voice> article on the mysterious death of writer Danny
|
|
Casolaro by authors James Ridgeway and Doug Vaughan. Casolaro at
|
|
the time of his death was researching the legal case filed by the
|
|
Inslaw corporation alleging theft and illegal sale of its software
|
|
program, Promis. Promis is a program used to track complex litigation,
|
|
but it can also be used to track dissidents and criminal conspiracies.
|
|
Persons involved in several federal agencies are alleged to have
|
|
participated in the illegal use and distribution of Promis. Casolaro
|
|
had nicknamed the government and private conspiracies he perceived
|
|
to be surrounding the Inslaw case "The Octopus," and had circulated
|
|
a book proposal.
|
|
|
|
Ridgeway and Vaughan do report that Casolaro, in the course of his
|
|
research, would "head into Washington for a congressional hearing
|
|
or a meeting with, for example, Danny Sheehan of the Christic
|
|
Institute--whose `Secret Team' could just as easily have been called
|
|
the Octopus." They also mention that Casolaro was working with the
|
|
LaRouchians in gathering information.
|
|
|
|
Not mentioned in the article is that the LaRouchians funneled
|
|
information to the Christic Institute, Barbara Honneger, and the
|
|
<Spotlight>/Liberty Lobby crowd; or that another named source,
|
|
investigator Bill McCoy, also worked with Christic and supplied
|
|
information from the LaRouchians; or that co-author Vaughan works
|
|
at the Christic Institute.
|
|
|
|
Ridgeway and Vaughan do mention LaRouche's criminal conviction and
|
|
the LaRouchian obsession with conspiracy theories and report, "The
|
|
LaRouchies had ties to the Reagan White House and have long run a
|
|
surprisingly elaborate intelligence-gathering operation of their
|
|
own." They do not, however, characterize the LaRouchians as fascists
|
|
or anti-Semites.
|
|
|
|
In the course of the article a LaRouchian intelligence operative
|
|
is cited along with other sources. Should LaRouchian sources be
|
|
treated differently than any other journalistic source? Again,
|
|
there is no agreement even among alternative journalists. "I have
|
|
great respect for Jim Ridgeway, but to put any credence in anything
|
|
a LaRouchite has to say is a leap into faith that I can't make,"
|
|
says <Voice> columnist Nat Hentoff. Another <Voice> writer, Robert
|
|
I. Friedman says, "The LaRouchians are an anti-Semitic conspiracy
|
|
organization. It's a mistake for a journalist to use LaRouchians
|
|
as a source without describing the kind of organization it is."
|
|
Ridgeway responds that he has characterized the LaRouchians as
|
|
conspiracists, fascists, and neo-Nazis in other settings, and he
|
|
thinks most people who read his column already know who the
|
|
LaRouchians are.
|
|
|
|
|
|
LaRouche as Victim of Government Repression
|
|
|
|
Lyndon LaRouche has picked up support for his campaign to get
|
|
released from prison from a number of right-wing extremists,
|
|
including retired Air Force Colonel and intelligence specialist
|
|
Fletcher Prouty, a leading light among ultra-right researchers,
|
|
who also works with the quasi-Nazi Liberty Lobby. Prouty has issued
|
|
a statement declaring that "instrumentalities of the government
|
|
have hounded" LaRouche and "created wrongs where none existed
|
|
before." The LaRouchians, however, have picked up support for their
|
|
theory of a government conspiracy against LaRouche from a broader
|
|
spectrum than the political right.
|
|
|
|
Both James Ridgeway and David MacMichael have reported the allegations
|
|
of the LaRouchians that they are not guilty of financial crimes,
|
|
but the victims of a massive government conspiracy aimed at crushing
|
|
them politically.
|
|
|
|
Ridgeway, in the preface to his book on the U.S. white supremacist
|
|
movement, <Blood in the Face>, omits LaRouche from a discussion of
|
|
the "racist far right." Instead, Ridgeway refers to LaRouche in
|
|
the context of discussing how the collapsed rural economy in the
|
|
1980's distorted the politics of the farm belt and "the whacko
|
|
candidates of Lyndon LaRouche's party were serious contenders."
|
|
This passing reference to LaRouche (there is one other bland
|
|
paragraph in the book) places LaRouche in a discussion mentioning
|
|
serious politicians such as Jesse Jackson, George McGovern, and
|
|
James Hightower. This seems to characterize LaRouche as merely a
|
|
strange and comical player in the electoral arena. Ridgeway says
|
|
that this was not meant to imply LaRouche was not a force in farm
|
|
belt fascism, but that his publisher felt that adding the LaRouchians
|
|
into the book would have confused the issues.
|
|
|
|
Critics of Ridgeway's view of the LaRouchians, including this
|
|
author, argue that LaRouche is in fact a neo-Nazi ideologue who
|
|
should be discussed along with the Ku Klux Klan and the other white
|
|
racist groups with whom the LaRouchians have associated for years.
|
|
No one is suggesting that Ridgeway, who has a prodigious track
|
|
record of sound investigative reporting, shares any of the LaRouchian
|
|
viewpoints. But it is legitimate to ask whether or not Ridgeway's
|
|
analysis and treatment of the LaRouchians has perhaps unconsciously
|
|
been influenced by their value to him as a journalistic source of
|
|
information on government misconduct and other issues. Ridegway,
|
|
like other reporters who cover government repression, received
|
|
packets of information from the LaRouchians for many years and
|
|
sometimes relied on the material to develop a story. [f-9] This in
|
|
itself is hardly unique and not necessarily questionable--other
|
|
reporters do likewise.
|
|
|
|
In one case, however, Ridgeway appears to have relied on LaRouche
|
|
material without independently verifying the accuracy of the
|
|
material.
|
|
|
|
On May 17, 1988 James Ridgeway penned a lengthy article in the
|
|
<Village Voice> titled "Dueling Spymasters: How the Government
|
|
Bungled the Case Against Lyndon LaRouche."
|
|
|
|
Even a careful reading of the Ridgeway article leaves the impression
|
|
that when a federal judge declared a mistrial in the Boston fraud
|
|
case against LaRouche and several colleagues, it was caused by
|
|
government misconduct. This is what the LaRouchians contend--but
|
|
not what the judge said. Lyndon LaRouche and his associates were
|
|
on trial in Boston for an alleged credit card scam. The mistrial
|
|
declared by U.S. Federal District Court Judge Robert E. Keeton came
|
|
after complaints of hardship were voiced by more than one third of
|
|
the jurors who had been told the trial would end in early summer,
|
|
and then learned it could stretch through the end of the year. The
|
|
judge declared the mistrial because he feared a continuation of
|
|
the trial would be a waste of time and money due to the real
|
|
possibility that the number of jurors would fall below the legal
|
|
limit before the trial ended.
|
|
|
|
While there was substantial evidence that the Justice Department
|
|
may have improperly withheld documents relating to LaRouche in
|
|
pre-trial discovery, a lengthy hearing resulted in a ruling that
|
|
the documents had no bearing on the criminal charges. According to
|
|
Ridgeway, "the proceedings had revealed...FBI agents planting
|
|
obstruction of justice evidence on LaRouche." This is what the
|
|
LaRouche attorneys sought to prove--and given the history of the
|
|
FBI, Justice Department and other government bureaucracies, such
|
|
an allegation was not far-fetched--but no hard evidence to prove
|
|
that claim had been introduced in court at the time of the mistrial.
|
|
In fact, the prosecution was still presenting its case. Further,
|
|
the delay of the trial which caused the juror hardship was caused
|
|
not only by lengthy side hearings into the document and informant
|
|
questions, but by numerous challenges and extended cross examinations
|
|
by the phalanx of defense attorneys representing LaRouche, his
|
|
associates and their organizations.
|
|
|
|
Legal actions by both federal and local agencies against LaRouche
|
|
for questionable fundraising and financial practices commenced
|
|
years before the flap over Iran-Contragate and the well-publicized
|
|
airport assault involving LaRouche partisans and Henry Kissinger,
|
|
who was traveling with his wife. Furthermore, there is a virtual
|
|
army of persons who claim to have been swindled and victimized by
|
|
LaRouche-related organizations. Ridgeway offers no evidence the
|
|
Boston criminal case was a result of the government being out to
|
|
get LaRouche any more than it is out to get any person accused of
|
|
being a common crook.
|
|
|
|
The "seeds of the government's investigation" were not planted by
|
|
a petulant Henry Kissinger, as Ridgeway asserts, but by hundreds
|
|
of persons who claimed to have found unauthorized credit card
|
|
charges on their monthly statements at a time in 1984 when LaRouche
|
|
was buying half-hour presidential campaign spots on network
|
|
television. The grand jury which indicted LaRouche heard evidence
|
|
from angry credit card holders, not Henry Kissinger.
|
|
|
|
Yet Ridgeway is correct is asserting that there was government
|
|
misconduct against the LaRouchians which surfaced as part of the
|
|
case. That the government shut down the LaRouchian publications as
|
|
part of its probe into loan fraud and tax evasion was a civil
|
|
liberties outrage, and the action was later rightfully declared
|
|
unconstitutional. This abuse of government power, however, had no
|
|
bearing on the evidence which convicted LaRouche and his followers
|
|
of the charges in the Virginia indictments.
|
|
|
|
There is no debate that LaRouche was a little fish in the cloudy
|
|
waters trolled by U.S. intelligence agencies. But when LaRouche
|
|
hired informants and self-styled intelligence operatives such as
|
|
Ryan Quade Emerson, Mitchell WerBell, and Roy Frankhouser, he was
|
|
aware he was opening a Pandora's box filled with smoke and mirrors,
|
|
double-dealing, and betrayal. WerBell, for instance, was a former
|
|
OSS officer and international arms merchant. Frankhouser was a
|
|
well-known government informant and Ku Klux Klan organizer. While
|
|
LaRouche may have been belatedly frozen out of an active role in
|
|
Reagan Administration intelligence functions, to conclude that his
|
|
former allies turned up as government witnesses through a conspiracy
|
|
to isolate LaRouche the "Spymaster" was a fanciful but unsubstantiated
|
|
charge. A more likely explanation is that they turned up as witnesses
|
|
against LaRouche in an attempt to keep themselves out of jail.
|
|
|
|
Ridgeway also describes LaRouche without mentioning LaRouche's
|
|
notorious anti-Jewish sentiments. LaRouche, for instance, has
|
|
claimed there is no such thing as Jewish culture, and that "only"
|
|
a million and a half Jews perished at the hands of the Nazis, and
|
|
then primarily due to illness and overwork.
|
|
|
|
A letter criticizing Ridgeway for publishing LaRouchian assertions
|
|
as fact was published in the May 31, 1988 issue of the <Voice> over
|
|
the signatures of this author and journalists Russ Bellant, Joel
|
|
Bellman, Bryan Chitwood, Dennis King, Ed Kayatt, and Kalev Pehme.
|
|
|
|
David MacMichael is the editor of <Unclassified>, the newsletter
|
|
of the Association of National Security Alumni (ANSA). In the
|
|
Feb.-March, 1991 edition of <Unclassified>, MacMichael casually
|
|
cites unnamed LaRouche sources in an article about a dismissed case
|
|
involving Iran-Contragate figures Oliver North and Joseph Fernandez,
|
|
"LaRouche sources point out that Prosecutor William Burch was not
|
|
particularly diligent in arguing his case. They note that Burch
|
|
has been active in the LaRouche prosecutions."
|
|
|
|
In the October-November 1990 issue of <Unclassified>, MacMichael
|
|
presents the same story of intrigue previously reported by Ridgeway.
|
|
MacMichael also mentions the LaRouchian competition with the
|
|
"North-Secord enterprise for donations from wealthy individuals,"
|
|
implying it was connected to the LaRouche criminal prosecutions.
|
|
|
|
It is true that the Oliver North network targeted the LaRouchians
|
|
for investigation, when LaRouche fundraising, especially to rich
|
|
older conservatives, was found to be hampering private fundraising
|
|
efforts for the Contras. There is, however, no conclusive evidence
|
|
that the North/Secord political investigation of LaRouche influenced
|
|
the Boston or Virginia criminal investigations or indictments.
|
|
|
|
Numerous criminal and civil actions against illegal LaRouche
|
|
financial activities were launched as early as the late 1970's.
|
|
One such probe was initiated by the Illinois State Attorney General
|
|
on the basis of an article by this author charging irregularities
|
|
in LaRouchian financial activities. The article was based on several
|
|
boxes of original office and bank records. [f-10] In 1979 and 1980,
|
|
Dennis King published documented charges of widespread LaRouchian
|
|
financial misconduct in a series of articles in New York's <Our
|
|
Town>, a neighborhood newspaper. Several articles were based on
|
|
secret internal LaRouche memos and financial records obtained by
|
|
King from sources close to the LaRouche operation.
|
|
|
|
On December 16, 1981, Dennis King, Russ Bellant, and this author
|
|
held a press conference in Washington, D.C. charging the LaRouchians
|
|
with "a wide variety of potentially illegal activities," including:
|
|
carrying out intelligence tasks for several foreign governments,
|
|
including Iraq and South Africa; conducting a pattern of "illegal,
|
|
deceitful and fraudulent activities by non-profit corporations,
|
|
foundations and fundraising front groups controlled by Lyndon
|
|
LaRouche."
|
|
|
|
The Boston grand jury was already investigating illegal LaRouchian
|
|
fundraising practices well before conservatives and neo-conservatives
|
|
forced the Reagan Administration to stop access by LaRouchians to
|
|
the staff at the National Security Council and CIA. It is not likely
|
|
that LaRouche was the victim of a conspiracy to indict him falsely
|
|
for crimes. What is more likely is that after LaRouche was forced
|
|
out as a marginal player in Reagan intelligence circles, his immense
|
|
criminal fundraising schemes could no longer be ignored, and some
|
|
of the numerous probes into his many frauds finally were allowed
|
|
to proceed to court.Certainly both MacMichael and Ridgeway have a
|
|
right to report what they wish, and draw any conclusions they feel
|
|
are warranted by the facts. But to report the LaRouche side of the
|
|
story of the government's criminal indictments without historical
|
|
context is to give an imprimatur to the unsubstantiated--and widely
|
|
disputed--LaRouchian allegations claiming that LaRouche's conviction
|
|
was the result of a government conspiracy to deny him his political
|
|
rights. This in turn is used by the LaRouchians to gain sympathy
|
|
and worm their way into left political circles, especially among
|
|
students, where the LaRouchians' long history of fascist attacks
|
|
on left groups is unknown.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some Criteria for Discussion
|
|
|
|
Circulating information from (and in essence for) the right without
|
|
an accompanying principled criticism and analysis of intent
|
|
accomplishes several things. It:
|
|
|
|
*** Builds the left group's reputation as an independent and
|
|
resourceful information gatherer;
|
|
|
|
*** Gives information credibility as being from the left rather
|
|
than the right by laundering original sources;
|
|
|
|
*** Advances often unstated implicit rightist agendas;
|
|
|
|
*** Protects the rightist group from punitive attack by the right
|
|
or the government since information is perceived as coming from
|
|
left;
|
|
|
|
*** Results in a conscious or unconscious reluctance by the left
|
|
group to criticize the right group for fear of having information
|
|
flow cut off.
|
|
|
|
It is important both journalistically and politically to know the
|
|
source of information in order to consider the ulterior motives
|
|
and possible implications of the information being circulated.
|
|
|
|
We certainly shouldn't let the right set our research agenda through
|
|
leaks but contact with the right seems inevitable and often proper
|
|
and useful. Since persons on the left have contacts with the right
|
|
for varied and complex reasons, one blanket criticism is neither
|
|
sufficient, nor helpful. We do need to think through policies.
|
|
What then are the principled conditions for contact with the right?
|
|
Keep in mind that we all need to work in coalitions while maintaining
|
|
independent political analysis and ability to criticize freely.
|
|
|
|
Some suggested points of principle might include:
|
|
|
|
*** Do not trade potentially harmful information on left groups
|
|
with the right. Only trade information on government abuses and on
|
|
other right groups;
|
|
|
|
*** Double check and double source all stories;
|
|
|
|
*** Name the group or sector supplying the information and provide
|
|
an honest thumbnail political sketch;
|
|
|
|
*** Consider why information is being passed by the group and make
|
|
that part of the analysis or story;
|
|
|
|
*** Condemn flaws in all groups concerned;
|
|
|
|
*** Do not refer people to rightist networks without warning them
|
|
of the nature of the source, and allowing them to make a principled
|
|
moral decision whether or not to seek the information through that
|
|
group.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Flaws of Logic, Fallacies of Debate
|
|
|
|
With so much political confusion, it becomes vital to keep in mind
|
|
that there are some useful ways to evaluate the validity of political
|
|
arguments regardless of their political viewpoint.
|
|
|
|
Useful standards by which to judge the rational merits of any
|
|
statement or theory are easily found in textbooks on debate,
|
|
rhetoric, argument, and logic. These books discuss which techniques
|
|
of argumentation are not valid because they fail to follow the
|
|
rules of logic. Among the more common fallacious techniques or
|
|
inadequate proofs:
|
|
|
|
*** Raising the volume, increasing the stridency, or stressing the
|
|
emotionalism of an argument does not improve its validity. This is
|
|
called argument by exhortation.
|
|
|
|
*** Sequence does not imply causation. If Joan is elected to the
|
|
board of directors of a bank on May 1, and Raul gets a loan on July
|
|
26, further evidence is needed to prove a direct or causal connection.
|
|
|
|
*** Anecdotes alone are not conclusive evidence. Anecdotes are
|
|
used to illustrate a thesis, not to prove it.
|
|
|
|
*** Association does not imply agreement, hence the term guilt by
|
|
association has a pejorative meaning. Association proves association;
|
|
it suggests further questions are appropriate, and demonstrates
|
|
the parameters of networks, coalitions, and personal moral
|
|
distinctions, nothing more.
|
|
|
|
*** Participation in an activity, or presence at an event, does
|
|
not imply control.
|
|
|
|
*** Congruence in one or more elements does not establish congruence
|
|
in all elements. Gloria Steinem and Jeane Kirkpatrick are both
|
|
intelligent, assertive women accomplished in political rhetoric.
|
|
To assume they therefore also agree politically would be ludicrous.
|
|
If milk is white and powdered chalk is white, would you drink a
|
|
glass of powdered chalk?
|
|
|
|
*** Similarity in activity does not imply joint activity and joint
|
|
activity does not imply congruent motivation.
|
|
|
|
When a person serves in an official advisory role or acts in a
|
|
position of responsibility within a group, however, the burden of
|
|
proof shifts to favor a presumption that such a person is not a
|
|
mere member or associate, but probably embraces a considerable
|
|
portion of the sentiments expressed by the group. Still, even
|
|
members of boards of directors will distance themselves from a
|
|
particular stance adopted by a group they oversee, and therefore
|
|
it is not legitimate to assume automatically that they personally
|
|
hold a view expressed by the group or other board members. It is
|
|
legitimate to assert that they need to distance themselves publicly
|
|
from a particular organizational position if they wish to disassociate
|
|
themselves from it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Techniques of the Propagandist
|
|
|
|
In 1923 Edward L. Bernays wrote the book <Crystalizing Public
|
|
Opinion> and later, in 1928, the text <Propaganda>, considered
|
|
seminal works in the field. "There is propaganda and what I call
|
|
impropaganda," says the 98-year-old Bernays impishly. Propaganda
|
|
originally meant promoting any idea or item, but took on its current
|
|
pejorative sense following the extensive use of sinister propaganda
|
|
for malicious goals during World War I and World War II. While all
|
|
persuasion uses the techniques of traditional propaganda, what
|
|
Bernays calls "impropaganda" is "using propaganda techniques not
|
|
in accordance with good sense, good faith, or good morals...methods
|
|
not consistent with the American pattern of behavior based on
|
|
Judeo-Christian ethics." Bernays, who is called the "father of
|
|
public relations," is worried about the increased use of "impropaganda"
|
|
in political campaigns and has spoken out against it. "Politicians
|
|
who use techniques like these lose the faith of the people," says
|
|
Bernays.
|
|
|
|
In 1936 Boston merchant Edward Filene helped establish the short-
|
|
lived Institute for Propaganda Analysis which sought to educate
|
|
Americans to recognize propaganda techniques. Alfred McClung Lee,
|
|
Institute director from 1940-42, and his wife Elizabeth Briant Lee,
|
|
co-authors of <The Fine Art of Propaganda, Social Problems in
|
|
America>, recently wrote an article in the periodical <Propaganda
|
|
Review> in which they suggested educating the public about propaganda
|
|
techniques was an urgent priority. The Lees also discussed the
|
|
Institute's symbols for the seven hallmark tricks of the manipulative
|
|
propagandist:
|
|
|
|
Name Calling: hanging a bad label on an idea, symbolized by a hand
|
|
turning thumbs down;
|
|
|
|
Card Stacking: selective use of facts or outright falsehoods,
|
|
symbolized by an ace of spades, a card signifying treachery;
|
|
|
|
Band Wagon: a claim that everyone like <us> thinks this way,
|
|
symbolized by a marching bandleader's hat and baton;
|
|
|
|
Testimonial: the association of a respected or hated person with
|
|
an idea, symbolized by a seal and ribbon stamp of approval;
|
|
|
|
Plain Folks: a technique whereby the idea and its proponents are
|
|
linked to "people just like you and me," symbolized by an old shoe;
|
|
|
|
Transfer: an assertion of a connection between something valued or
|
|
hated and the idea or commodity being discussed, symbolized by a
|
|
smiling Greek theatre mask; and
|
|
|
|
Glittering Generality: an association of something with a "virtue
|
|
word" to gain approval without examining the evidence; symbolized
|
|
by a sparkling gem.
|
|
|
|
The Institute's last newsletter reflected that "in modern society
|
|
an element of propaganda is present in a large portion of human
|
|
affairs...people need to be able to recognize this element even
|
|
when it is serving `good' ends."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some Examples
|
|
|
|
Here are two examples of how the fallacies of debate and errors of
|
|
logic are employed regarding General John Singlaub, a man whose
|
|
roles in Iran-Contragate and world fascist movements are already
|
|
well documented, and need no discussion here.
|
|
|
|
General John Singlaub was involved in promoting the yellow ribbon
|
|
campaign during the Gulf War. He was one of dozens of influential
|
|
people who formed the Coalition for America at Risk. That Coalition
|
|
was one of at least ten other major national groups promoting the
|
|
yellow ribbon campaign, including veterans groups with tens of
|
|
thousands of members nationwide. Families of service personnel have
|
|
been tying yellow ribbons on trees in anticipation of the safe
|
|
return of their active duty relatives ever since this military
|
|
tradition which dates to the Civil War was revived during the
|
|
Vietnam War, in part due to a popular song. To suggest, as some
|
|
do, that Singlaub created the yellow ribbon campaign as a continuation
|
|
of his nefarious role in Contra fundraising is to stretch credulity
|
|
beyond the breaking point.
|
|
|
|
Another case involving Singlaub shows how a series of individual
|
|
facts from underlying footnotes can be strung together so that the
|
|
conclusions are not accurate because they fail the tests of deductive
|
|
logic. <The Iran Contra Connection: Secret Teams and Covert Operations
|
|
in the Reagan Era>, combines into one book chapters written by
|
|
Jonathan Marshall, Peter Dale Scott and Jane Hunter. On page 67 in
|
|
a chapter written by Peter Dale Scott it is asserted that the
|
|
LaRouche organization "previously posed as left-wing but in fact
|
|
harassed anti-nuclear and other left-wing demonstrations with the
|
|
help of the right-wing domestic intelligence group known since 1979
|
|
as Western Goals." It is documented that the LaRouchians spied on
|
|
and harassed the left, and it is documented that Western Goals
|
|
spied on and harassed the left, but it does not automatically follow
|
|
that they worked together to spy on and harass the left.
|
|
|
|
The evidence linking the two groups is this: General Singlaub, at
|
|
the time on the board of Western Goals, once lectured to a group
|
|
that included some LaRouchians at a training center run by Mitch
|
|
WerBell. Singlaub met LaRouchians from time to time when he visited
|
|
WerBell, who served as an intelligence adviser to LaRouche. The
|
|
LaRouchians in 1977 gave the New Hampshire State Police background
|
|
material on anti-nuclear activists including several pages from a
|
|
private Rees newsletter. At the time, Rees was not connected to
|
|
Western Goals. In fact, Western Goals had not as yet been founded.
|
|
|
|
That both the LaRouchians and Rees have spied on the left is both
|
|
documented and a matter of some bragging by both parties. That the
|
|
LaRouchians spied on and harassed the left with help from Western
|
|
Goals is unsubstantiated, and faces conflicting evidence. In fact,
|
|
Rees and the LaRouchians have despised each other for years, and
|
|
denounce each other regularly in print, gleefully sending nasty
|
|
information about each other to reporters, including this author.
|
|
|
|
It is common for Singlaub and other figures criticized by the left
|
|
to point to the inaccurate and unsubstantiated charges leveled
|
|
against them by their critics as a means to deflect the charges
|
|
that are well documented. The use of fallacious arguments and the
|
|
circulation of unsubstantiated conclusionary charges in an area of
|
|
research such as government repression or intelligence abuse
|
|
undermines the credibility of the whole area of research. It makes
|
|
the job all the harder for cautious progressive researchers, whose
|
|
work becomes suspect in the eyes of mainstream reporters and broad
|
|
audiences.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Harry Martin and Propaganda Techniques
|
|
|
|
Harry V. Martin is the editor of the <Napa Sentinel>. His articles
|
|
on government corruption have gained popularity on the left. An
|
|
analysis of the content and style of the Martin articles raises
|
|
questions about his credibility as a reporter. Martin uses classic
|
|
leaps of logic and propaganda techniques in his reporting. This
|
|
section will look at several articles which Martin has written
|
|
concerning the pending Inslaw court case.
|
|
|
|
Inslaw, a small computer company, developed a very sensitive computer
|
|
program, Promis, which Inslaw alleges was appropriated without
|
|
authorization by the U.S. Justice Department and other government
|
|
agencies. Promis software was an early contender in case management
|
|
software, but by no means unique. Several vendors at the time Promis
|
|
was being offered also offered similar case tracking software. It
|
|
can be argued that at the time Promis was indeed ahead of its
|
|
competitors in many key features, but today Lotus Agenda with its
|
|
case tracking overlay is just as powerful. [f-11]
|
|
|
|
Martin's Inslaw stories use the classical propaganda technique of
|
|
stringing together chronological events and implying that one causes
|
|
the other. One story, for example, which looks at the role governmental
|
|
retribution may have played in the failure to re-appoint to the
|
|
bench one judge, George Bason, whose rulings has supported Inslaw's
|
|
position. Martin's article assumes allegations it needs to establish.
|
|
He says:
|
|
|
|
"As a result of the Inslaw cases, many heads in the Justice Department
|
|
were lopped off. When Judge George Bason, a bankruptcy court judge,
|
|
refused to liquidate Inslaw, ruling instead that the Department of
|
|
Justice used deceit, trickery and fraud, he was only one of four
|
|
who were not re-appointed to their jobs. A total of 132 were
|
|
re-appointed. But to show the collusion of the Justice Department,
|
|
when it removed Judge Bason from the bench after his ruling against
|
|
them and for Inslaw, they had S. Martin Teel appointed to the bench
|
|
to replace Bason. Who was Teel? He was a Department of Justice
|
|
attorney who unsuccessfully argued the Inslaw case before Judge
|
|
Bason. "
|
|
|
|
Certainly the failure of Judge Bason to be re-appointed after ruling
|
|
in favor of Inslaw is curious. A good reporter would seek evidence
|
|
to show that there was a connection between the Inslaw case and
|
|
the failure to re-appoint Judge Bason. That one event followed the
|
|
other is not this proof. The same situation applies to Teel. The
|
|
sequence is curious but the cause and effect relationship remains
|
|
unproven.
|
|
|
|
Martin also makes extensive use of arguments by exhortation, which
|
|
are arguments based more on emotion that on reason. For example,
|
|
he claims:
|
|
|
|
"An official of the Israeli government claims [a person] sold the
|
|
Promis program to Iraqi military intelligence at a meeting in
|
|
Santiago, Chile. The software could have been used in the recent
|
|
Persian Gulf War to track U.S. and allied troop movements. Ari
|
|
Ben-Menashe, a 12 year veteran of Israeli intelligence, made the
|
|
statement in a sworn affidavit to the court. "
|
|
|
|
When Martin claims the software could have been used against the
|
|
U.S. during the Gulf War, he is using jingoistic appeals to emotion
|
|
rather than reason to garner support for his position. He is
|
|
deliberately painting a picture of the possible deaths of U.S.
|
|
soldiers as a direct result of the purported theft of the Promis
|
|
software program by U.S. government agencies. That software also
|
|
could have been used to track hamburger shipments by McDonalds, or
|
|
alternatively, troop movements could have been tracked by Lotus
|
|
AGENDA rather than Promis. It is hype, and misleading, to single
|
|
out the one possibility that suits his political ends.
|
|
|
|
There are other misleading statement in the paragraph quoted above.
|
|
For example, Ari Ben-Menashe was hardly "an official of the Israeli
|
|
government." He was at best an Israeli intelligence staffer who
|
|
became a player in the international arms trade, and even that has
|
|
been contested. Martin's inflation of Ben-Menashe's status serves
|
|
to condemn the entire Israeli government in a way that a discussion
|
|
based on Ben-Menashe's actual status would not have done. Another
|
|
example is Martin's emphasis on the fact that Ari Ben-Menashe "made
|
|
the statement in a sworn affidavit to the court." As anyone who
|
|
has worked on legal cases can attest, sworn statements carry no
|
|
guarantee that they are truthful or factual. Absent documentation
|
|
or corroborating testimony, they stand as allegations, not facts.
|
|
|
|
In the same article, Martin goes on to claim that Promis is now
|
|
being used by the CIA, the National Security Agency, the Defense
|
|
Intelligence Agency, and the U.S. Department of Justice. In fact,
|
|
these are unproven allegations that are being presented as though
|
|
they were facts. They may indeed be proven at some point, but have
|
|
not yet been proven. The technique of first presenting allegations,
|
|
then later referring to them as facts, is a classic propaganda
|
|
technique. A closer examination of Martin's presentation reveals
|
|
that the claimed use of the software by these U.S. government
|
|
agencies is actually an allegation from Ben-Menashe's affidavit,
|
|
in which Ben-Menashe claims he was told by a third party that this
|
|
was true. Legally, this is hearsay, which is typically inadmissible
|
|
in court as evidence. Nevertheless, Martin converts this hearsay
|
|
allegation into a statement of fact. But Martin is not through with
|
|
his daisy chain of proof.
|
|
|
|
Still utilizing unproven assertions, Martin goes on to expand the
|
|
cast of villains from a few corrupt officials of the Justice
|
|
Department to the entire U.S. government. He writes:
|
|
|
|
"[The] Judiciary Committee is conducting its own investigation in
|
|
what has been described as the U.S. Department of Justice's "trickery,
|
|
deceit and theft" of the software. The U.S. Government has been
|
|
connected with the illegal sale of the sensitive software to South
|
|
Korea, Libya, Iraq, Israel and Canada, as well as being pirated by
|
|
a number of U.S. agencies, including the CIA, National Security
|
|
Agency and other military units. The software is also in use by
|
|
the FBI. Only the U.S. Justice Department was licensed to use the
|
|
software... "
|
|
|
|
>From a proposition of criminal or unethical conduct by individuals
|
|
within the Justice Department, a proposition itself unproven, Martin
|
|
moves on to argue the existence of an international conspiracy,
|
|
led by the U.S. government to steal and distribute Promis software.
|
|
While such a claim could later be proven, Martin here merely presents
|
|
the allegation as though it were true, a technique known as a
|
|
"conclusionary" or "Kierkegaardian" leap.
|
|
|
|
One final example of Martin's tendency to confuse unproven allegations
|
|
with established matters of fact can be found in Martin's treatment
|
|
of Riconoscuito, a computer software technician who has submitted
|
|
a sworn affidavit in the Inslaw case. Riconoscuito has claimed that
|
|
he was threatened by a former staff member of the Justice Department
|
|
with criminal prosecution on an unrelated charge and with an
|
|
unfavorable result in a pending child custody dispute if he testified
|
|
on the Inslaw case. Riconoscuito has also claimed that he made a
|
|
tape recording of the telephoned threat, two copies of which were
|
|
confiscated when he was arrested. Although he has not produced it,
|
|
he claims a third copy exists, which is being held in a safe
|
|
location. When Martin discusses Riconoscuito, he begins with what
|
|
appears to be a statement of uncontested fact, "In February,
|
|
Riconoscuito was called by a former Justice Department official
|
|
and warned against cooperating with an investigation into the case
|
|
by the House Judiciary Committee." In fact, while some of what
|
|
Riconoscuito has alleged can be verified, much cannot. Despite the
|
|
plethora of details Martin presents, the entire content of Martin's
|
|
story on Riconoscuito is composed of Riconoscuito's own unverified
|
|
assertions or other unproven allegations made in the early stages
|
|
of a lawsuit.
|
|
|
|
Riconoscuito has also been championed as a source by the LaRouchians
|
|
who say they introduced Riconoscuito to Danny Casolaro, according
|
|
to the <Village Voice> article by Ridgeway and Vaughan. Anyone
|
|
reading that article carefully will get the idea that authors
|
|
Ridgeway and Vaughan think that some of the Riconoscuito/Casolaro
|
|
allegations are unsubstantiated and reflect undocumented conspiracy
|
|
theories.
|
|
|
|
These few examples buttress the assertion that Martin is not a
|
|
reliable source of information. A careful reading of all the Martin
|
|
Inslaw articles reveals many other instances of fallacious argument
|
|
and propaganda technique. Questions regarding Harry Martin's
|
|
judgement and political orientation are also raised by the fact
|
|
that he has allowed his articles to appear regularly in the
|
|
<Spotlight>[f-12]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
|
|
"When we destroy international Fascism we must at the same time
|
|
destroy national Fascism, we must replace the reactionary forces
|
|
at home with truly democratic forces which will represent all of
|
|
us. "
|
|
|
|
(George Seldes )
|
|
|
|
(<Facts and Fascism>, 1943 )
|
|
|
|
We suffer in the U.S. from an unfortunate reluctance to recognize
|
|
and name the resurgence of fascist ideology around the world. In
|
|
part this is because we are not taught in our schools what fascism
|
|
was or is. We hold ourselves up as a model of democracy while half
|
|
the eligible citizens rarely feel motivated to vote, and we are
|
|
bombarded with advertising that tells us that freedom is the ability
|
|
to purchase four different varieties of Coca-Cola at 7-11.
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Some have argued that the main potential threat of fascism comes
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from a bipartisan government increasingly willing to employ repressive
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and authoritarian solutions to societal problems during a time of
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economic decline. Political analyst William Pfaff is one of the
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few mainstream analysts who warns that an unconscious strain of
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American fascism is influencing national affairs. Writing in the
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<Chicago Tribune> with a Paris dateline of March, 1987, Pfaff
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concluded that the actions of the Reagan Administration during the
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Iran-Contra scandal revealed "a pattern of conduct and a state of
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mind among important people in this administration which must be
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described as an American style of fascism. I would prefer to avoid
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that term, but it is the only one in the modern political vocabulary
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that adequately describes" the situation.
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Given the upsurge of nationalism, jingoistic patriotism, militarism,
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scapegoating, and race-baiting practiced by both the Reagan and
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Bush Administrations, a discussion of the proto-fascist elements
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in U.S. domestic and foreign policy is not unwarranted. At the same
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|
time, it is hyperbole to describe the current political climate in
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the U.S. as fascist. Yet it clearly is an error to assume that
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anyone who opposes repressive aspects of U.S. policy is an
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anti-fascist, or upholds democratic principles.
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A Painful Task
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The dilemma for left activists is to sort out the various strains
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of fascist ideology circulating in the world and in the United
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States. To ignore the threat posed by critics of our government
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who represent overt fascism is a dangerous folly.
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While revealing our government's policies as corrupt, we must not
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concede the debate over foreign policy and domestic social justice
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to the demagogues on either the left or the right. If these people
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monopolize the debate, then political discourse in the U.S. will
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soon echo the themes of the fascist era in Europe where hysteria
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|
and holocaust, blood and bounty, blind patriotism and deaf obedience
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|
became synonymous with the national spirit.
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Author George Seldes reached his 100th birthday in 1990 as the
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early editions of this report were first being researched and
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written. More than half a century earlier, in 1938, Seldes wrote
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<You Can't Do That>, a book with a prophetic warning about how
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fascism comes to power as the result of a pincer movement between
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authoritarian state repression supported by corporate elites and
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|
mass movements sparked by ultra-rightist demagogues. Seldes wrote:
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"We must guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism,
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especially that patriotism which is the last refuge of scoundrels
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|
and which is so prevalent, so professional and so well paid nowadays.
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Eternal vigilance must become more than the slogan for small
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associations desperately fighting almost overwhelming cases of
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infringements on individual liberties. "
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"We must realize that those who use red-baiting to attack every
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liberal and democratic movement today, are the armed cutthroats of
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reactionary Fascism tomorrow. "
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"Two facts emerge from any study of European turmoil and the new
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class alignment in our own land. The enemy is always the Right.
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Fascism and Reaction inevitably attack. They have won against
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disunion. They will fail if we unite. "
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While the concept of broad-based peace and social justice coalitions
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remains desirable, activists and their coalitions should be very
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careful to examine the backgrounds and ideologies of those groups
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with which we seek to build coalitions.
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