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  • The Project For A New American Humanitarianism

    Swans, CA
    Aug 24 2008



    The Project For A New American Humanitarianism
    Olympian Ambitions from Darfur to Tibet and Beijing


    by Michael Barker


    (Swans - August 25, 2008) This essay examines the role of the Project
    for a New American Humanitarianism in the ongoing human rights
    offensive that is currently being waged against China. While there is
    some awareness, in progressive circles, of the work of antidemocratic
    think tank and neoconservative Project for a New American Century
    (PNAC) the majority of the public remain in the dark about its
    machinations. Another equally sinister, but highly visible group that
    obtains little critical coverage -- in even the alternative media --
    is a coalition that might be loosely referred to as the Project for a
    New American Humanitarianism (PNAH). (1) Both groups promote America's
    imperial interests, but their activities differ in critical
    respects. PNAC favours military domination, or militaristic
    imperialism, which has been zealously promoted by a three-part
    coalition comprised of "aggressive nationalists..., Christian Zionists
    of the religious Right, and Israel-centred neo-conservatives." In
    contrast, the loose collection of concerned activists that coalesce
    within the Project for a New American Humanitarianism help sustain
    imperialism by both providing it with "moral cover, and sanctioning
    the abandonment of the rule of law in the purported interest of human
    rights." Ironically PNAH, like PNAC, is well supported by
    neo-conservatives.

    The Project for a New American Humanitarianism's current focus on
    China's human rights abuses -- in the context of the Olympics (2) --
    centres around three primary issues, highlighting the Chinese
    government's ongoing involvement in the repression and murder of: 1)
    Falun Gong practitioners, 2) Tibetan peace activists, and 3) the
    people of Sudan. In the case of each of these three concerns a common
    rallying cry of the New Humanitarians acts to equate the Chinese
    government's actions with those of Hitler's Nazis. Thus, the vice
    president of the European Parliament observes that the "Falun Gong
    are to the Chinese what the Jews were to the Nazis. And that's an
    understatement." In 2002, Samdhong Rinpoche, accused China of
    engaging in "a kind of cultural genocide" in Tibet; while in 2004,
    Secretary Colin Powell famously noted that "genocide has been
    committed in Darfur and that the Government of Sudan and the
    Jingaweit bear responsibility -- and that genocide may still be
    occurring."

    Of course, while there are other genocides that have exceeded the
    scale of the Nazi Holocaust, (3) it is the Hitler example that is
    regularly invoked as a powerful propaganda tool to act in the service
    of so-called human rights activists. However, as Ward Churchill
    observed:

    Far less recognized is the fact that the ugly enterprise of Holocaust
    denial has a flip side -- indeed, a mirror image -- which is equally
    objectionable but which has been anything but marginalized by the
    academy, popular media, or the public at large. This is the view
    advanced by a much larger group of writers that the Nazi genocide not
    only happened, but that it 1) is the only such occurrence in all of
    human history and 2) that it somehow happened uniquely and exclusively
    to its Jewish victims. (4)

    The alleged genocide in Sudan is particularly interesting in this
    regard as the main groups spearheading the persistent calls for a
    humanitarian intervention overseas are the same Zionist organizations
    that are busy promoting ethnic cleansing of Palestinians at
    home. Likewise, Zionists have been vocal in their support of the Falun
    Gong, thus Annette Lantos, the wife of "super-Zionist Congress-person"
    the late Tom Lantos (Democrat, California) -- who posthumously
    received the misnamed National Endowment for Democracy's 2008
    Democracy Service Medal -- serves on the advisory board of the Friends
    of Falun Gong USA. Similarly with regard to Tibet, as Uri Avnery
    points out, the difference in the mainstream media's coverage of the
    plight of Tibetans and Palestinians means that "the Palestinians are
    suffering from several cruel strokes of fate," as not only are the
    "great majority" of the Palestinians Muslims, but:

    The people that oppress them claim for themselves the crown of
    ultimate victimhood. The whole world sympathizes with the Israelis
    because the Jews were the victims of the most horrific crime of the
    Western world. That creates a strange situation: the oppressor is more
    popular than the victim. Anyone who supports the Palestinians is
    automatically suspected of anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial.

    Given that the modus operandi of the Project for a New American
    Humanitarianism and PNAC are at odds, it is very significant that the
    membership of both groups' interests overlap in that they are home to
    numerous key Zionists and leading neoconservatives. Consequently, this
    essay seeks to explore these crossover relationships in an attempt to
    document the tactics employed by the new humanitarian warriors facing
    off with the Chinese government.



    Falun Gong: Only Calisthenics and Meditation?

    As noted in an earlier article, Heather Kavan provides an alternative
    narrative concerning the Falun Gong's apparently apolitical and
    harmless nature. Kavan also demonstrated how the media coverage that
    the Falun Gong have obtained in Australian and New Zealand newspapers
    is surprising positive for a religious cult. However, in response to
    my critique of the Falun Gong I received a polite e-mail from Caylan
    Ford (who identified herself as the editor for the Falun Dafa
    Information Center), who took issue with my "description of an alleged
    love affair between the Western media and Falun Gong." Ford went on to
    note that she had "recently coauthored a (yet-to-be-published) study
    of the New York Times coverage of Falun Gong, which found strong
    anti-Falun Gong biases, both quantitatively and qualitatively."
    Furthermore, she pointed out that this study also "found that Falun
    Gong has been grossly under-reported since the summer of 2001;
    coverage dropped off immediately following a meeting between NY Times
    editors and then-Chinese president Jiang Zemin." Although Ford noted
    that the aforementioned study was not yet available she attached
    another similar academic study published by fellow Falun Gong
    practitioner, Leeshai Lemish, who has recently published a series of
    articles about the Falun Gong in the New Statesman. (5) Here it is
    interesting to quote Lesshai Lemish's New Statesman article --
    published on August 20, 2008 -- which recounts how:

    For a year Ethan Gutmann (author of Losing the New China) and I have
    been travelling the world conducting interviews for his forthcoming
    book [on China]. We've received research grants from Earheart
    Foundation and Sweden's Wallenberg family, and keep our budget low by
    sleeping on floors and eating instant noodles. But we're too
    embarrassed to complain, considering the stories [of human rights
    abuses] we hear morning to night.

    While most readers will be unaware of the controversial background of
    Lemish's travelling companion, it turns out that Ethan Gutmann is a
    former visiting fellow at Project for the New American Century, and he
    presently serves as an adjunct fellow at the neoconservative
    Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (a group whose work is
    closely tied to that formerly undertaken by PNAC). In addition,
    Gutmann's 2004 book, Losing the New China, was published by the
    well-known neoconservative publisher, Encounter Books; while the
    Earhart Foundation, which is supporting the production of Lemish and
    Gutmann's collaborate book project, is an infamous neoconservative
    funding body. Lemish also mentions a seemingly innocuous funding
    connection to Sweden's Wallenberg family, which, as it turns out is no
    ordinary family, as the even the mainstream BBC has referred to the
    Wallenberg "business dynasty" as the "Royal Family of Swedish
    Business." Here it is important to point out that perhaps the most
    famous member of the Wallenberg dynasty is the late Raoul Wallenberg,
    an individual whose life was commemorated in "prominent Hollywood
    Zionist" Steven Spielberg's movie "Schindler's List." (6)

    Regardless of differences in interpretation of the Falun Gong's media
    coverage -- between scholars like Heather Kavan on the one hand, and
    Falun Gong advocates like Caylan Ford and Lesshai Lemish on the other
    -- it is significant that Falun Gong has recruited allies amongst the
    West's power elite. (7) Thus it is intriguing to note that the
    aforementioned Caylan Ford, who e-mailed me in her capacity as the
    editor for the Falun Dafa Information Center, also acts as a
    spokesperson for an elite-supported group known as the Friends of
    Falun Gong. In addition, in 2008, Ford also acted as the news
    coordinator for the Canadian edition of The Epoch Times, and as a
    spokeswoman for New Tang Dynasty Television. These latter links are
    significant because writing in 2005, Patsy Rahn noted that in the
    preceding year, "questions [had] began to arise over whether certain
    Western-based organizations, such as newspaper group The Epoch Times
    and New Tang Dynasty Television (NTDTV), [were] actually [Falun Gong]
    organizations." Rahn adds, that: "According to a report in the Far
    Eastern Economic Review, prominent FLG spokespeople serve as a
    director for NTDTV and on the board of The Epoch Times; both
    organizations give the [Falun Gong] prominent coverage. In addition,
    both organizations are staffed by volunteers, often [Falun Gong]
    followers, whose main jobs are unrelated to journalism."

    Recently Ford represented Friends of Falun Gong at a press conference
    held at the National Press Club (on July 18, 2008) that was
    co-organized by Friends of Falun Gong, the North Korea Freedom
    Coalition (see note 31), the NED-funded advocate of religious freedom,
    the China Aid Association (which has received annual NED grants since
    2004), (8) the Christian 'human rights' group Open Doors USA, (9) the
    Uyghur American Association (whose president, Rebiya Kadeer, talked at
    a 2006 conference organized by the NED-funded Laogai Research
    Foundation alongside speakers that included the president of the NED),
    and the American Tibetan Alliance. Thus given Friends of Falun Gong's
    links to various important democracy manipulators the following
    section of this article will provide the first critical examination of
    the elite behind the US branch of Friends of Falun Gong.

    Friends of Falun Gong USA describes itself as a human rights group
    that was formed in November 2000 by "Americans concerned about the
    persecution of Falun Gong," and which to date, has organized
    "large-scale rallies in Washington D.C., lawsuits against the
    architects of the persecution, and smaller, targeted projects
    counteracting the Chinese government's massive propaganda campaign."
    (10) Their Web site proudly observes how once formally established,
    the first person to join their board of directors was former US
    Ambassador Mark Palmer, an individual who went so far as to
    (over)state that the Falun Gong is "the largest nonviolent movement
    since Gandhi in India." The Friends of Falun Gong USA Web site even
    draws attention to the key role that Palmer has fulfilled for the US
    democracy manipulating establishment, by pointing out his affiliation
    to Freedom House (where he serves as vice-chair of their board) and to
    the National Endowment for Democracy (where he acts as a founder, and
    current board member).

    Although not mentioned by Friends of Falun Gong USA, Palmer's integral
    placement in the US's democracy manipulating establishment is further
    bolstered by his affiliations to the following groups, the Council for
    a Community of Democracies (vice president), the US Secretary of
    State's Advisory Committee on Democracy Promotion (member), the
    International Centre for Democratic Transition (board member), the
    Democracy Project (advisory board), and the Center for Democracy and
    Human Rights in Saudi Arabia (board member). His links to the last
    group are particularly noteworthy, as its ties to elite interests are
    not as demonstrable as those of the other organisations he is involved
    with. This is because the founder (in 2004) and executive director of
    the Center for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia, Ali Alyami,
    previously acted (from 1977 to 1983) as the Director of the
    educational peace program for the progressive American Friends Service
    Committee in San Francisco. This link would appear incongruous, yet
    since leaving the American Friends Service Committee in the early
    1980s, Alyami's work has become increasingly entwined with that
    undertaken by democracy manipulating groups. This is perhaps most
    evident from his service as the US representative for the Arab
    Organization for Human Rights (from 1990 to 1996), a group that was
    founded in 1983 by Saad Eddin Ibrahim, an individual who is presently
    a board member of the Canadian equivalent of the NED, Rights and
    Democracy, and whose work appears tied to the broader neoconservative
    democratic agenda. (11)

    Another noteworthy person serving on the seven-strong board of the
    Center for Democracy and Human Rights in Saudi Arabia is Lindsay
    Mattison, who for over a quarter of a century has served as the
    executive director of the US-based foreign policy group, International
    Action -- whose current focus is on providing humanitarian aid to
    Haiti. Before joining International Action, Mattison served as
    assistant to Admiral Gene R. La Rocque at the Center for Defense
    Information (where he acted as president), an individual who later
    went on to act as an advisor for the controversial democracy
    manipulator, the Albert Einstein Institution. More importantly,
    however, is the fact that Mattison presently serves on the advisory
    committee of the Washington Kurdish Institute.

    Other people of interest serving on the 34 person strong advisory
    committee of the Washington Kurdish Institute include Mike Amitay (who
    is a senior policy analyst for the Middle East, North Africa and
    Central Asia at George Soros's Open Society Policy Center, and
    formerly served as the Institute's executive director from its
    founding in 1996 until 2005), Project for a New American Century
    booster Morris Amitay (who is the former executive director of
    American Israel Public Affairs Committee, and is vice chair of the
    Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs), Raymond Helmick (who
    serves on the executive board of the US Interreligious Committee for
    Peace in the Middle East), Max Kampelman (who amongst various other
    "democratic" posts has served as the vice chairman of the US Institute
    of Peace), Laurie Mylroie (who is an adjunct fellow at the American
    Enterprise Institute, and a former research fellow at the
    AIPAC-affiliated think tank the Washington Institute for Near East
    Policy), and Lionel Rosenblatt (who formerly served as the president
    of Refugees International throughout the 1990s). (12) Finally, it is
    interesting that Lord Eric Avebury also serves on the Washington
    Kurdish Institute's advisory committee, as his affiliation to the
    Institute illustrates how closely the work of such "humanitarian"
    groups is linked to progressive activists. This is because Lord
    Avebury also serves as the honorary president of another group called
    the Kurdish Human Rights Project, a group whose most prominent
    progressive patrons are Noam Chomsky and Harold Pinter.

    Returning to Friends of Falun Gong USA, other than Ambassador Palmer,
    another fascinating member of their current eight person strong
    advisory board is Annette Lantos who formerly worked full-time with
    her late husband, the "super-Zionist" Congressman Tom Lantos (who also
    formerly served on the board of overseers of the Henry
    Kissinger-connected International Rescue Committee), and as executive
    director of the Congressional Human Rights Caucus.

    Another prominent advisor of Friends of Falun Gong USA whose
    background is worth exploring is former Congressman Benjamin Gilman,
    owing to his links to Israel and to various groups ostensibly
    promoting Tibetan human rights. Critically, Gilman served as chairman
    of the House International Relations Committee from 1995 until 2002,
    and is a member of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum's council. (13)
    Here it is poignant to briefly reflect upon the backgrounds of the
    three current executives of the Holocaust Museum, Fred Zeidman (the
    father of Jay Zeidman), Sara Bloomfield, and Joel Geiderman.

    ¢ Fred Zeidman is a member of AIPAC's executive committee, serves
    as the vice president of their associated think tank the Jewish
    Institute for National Security Affairs, and sits on the board of the
    Republican Jewish Coalition (a group that has been described as a "big
    money pro-Israel lobby group linking Jewish-American neoconservatives
    to the Christian Right and Israel's Likud government").

    ¢ Sara Bloomfield, who is a board member of the International
    Freedom Center, and who has worked with the NED-linked Iraq Memory
    Foundation.

    ¢ Joel Geiderman is a board member of the aforementioned Republican
    Jewish Coalition.

    The Holocaust Museum also provides a home to other key members of the
    Project for a New American Humanitarianism consortium, and their
    Committee on Conscience is chaired by none other than Tom Bernstein,
    the former president (now just board member) of Human Rights
    First. (14)

    Gilman maintains other links to key Israeli elites through serving on
    the board of the Humpty Dumpty Institute, (15) because this group's
    vice chair, Michael Sonnenfeldt is the past chair of the Israel Policy
    Forum -- a group whose executive director, David Elcott, in turn
    serves as the Director of US Interreligious Affairs for the American
    Jewish Committee. (16) Likewise, the president of the Humpty Dumpty
    Institute, Ralph Cwerman, formerly served as Director of Research at
    Israel's Permanent Mission to the United Nations, and as a senior aide
    to Ambassador Benjamin Netanyahu; while another important board member
    of the Institute is the "closet Zionist" Richard Holbrooke.

    Finally, Gilman's links to Tibetan issues derive from his being a
    member of the Committee of 100 for Tibet. This organization was
    founded in 1992 and aims to "bring the plight of the Tibetan people to
    the attention of the U.S. public." Many of the individual members of
    the Committee are linked to the democracy manipulating establishment,
    so it is not surprising that the Committee's chair, Tenzin Tethong, is
    also connected to two NED-funded groups: as he is the founder of the
    Tibet Fund, and serves on the advisory board of the International
    Campaign for Tibet. Gilman himself is also indirectly linked to the
    International Campaign for Tibet, because in 2003 he was the recipient
    of their annual Light of Truth Award. (17)

    The final noteworthy member of the advisory board of Friends of Falun
    Gong USA is Ashok Gangadean, who is the cofounding Director of the
    Global Dialogue Institute. Working alongside Gangadean at the Global
    Dialogue Institute is the other cofounding Director of this
    Institute, Leonard Swidler, who formerly served on the advisory board
    of the American Center for Democracy -- a group that was founded (in
    2003) and is currently headed by the neoconservative Zionist Rachel
    Ehrenfeld. Significantly, the well-known neoconservative Zionist
    Daniel Pipes -- who heads up the notorious right-wing Zionist think
    tank the Middle East Forum -- serves on the Global Dialogue Institute
    board of trustees: Pipes is also accompanied on the Institute's board
    by the founder of the Middle East Forum, Albert Wood. This of course
    does not mean that the Global Dialogue Institute is simply a
    neoconservative Zionist project, which it is far from the truth, but
    it does mean that at the very least it is unlikely that the Institute
    will be able to work towards fulfilling its mission of "developing
    and promoting...authentic dialogue."

    Returning to Friends of Falun Gong USA advisor, Ashok Gangadean, taken
    at face value, in contrast to his Global Dialogue Institute, it does
    appear that his other work is geared towards promoting peaceful
    cooperation by virtue of the fact that it does not include the work of
    any rabid right-wing Zionists. Indeed, Gangadean recently founded a
    Web-based project called ((Awakening Mind)), whose Web site notes that
    ((Awakening Mind)) is...

    ...intended to be an introduction to the global worldview and the idea
    that the key to our survival as a species is the discovery of a
    universal dialogue through which we can learn to understand and
    communicate with one another. This universal dialogue, or Logos, is
    comprised of the inherent threads of commonality which we all possess.

    Although this self-descriptor sounds harmless, it is easy to see how
    the search for one single "universal dialogue," if successful, would
    have tragic consequences for cultural diversity. Instead we should aim
    to celebrate difference, not merely tolerate it, and should strive to
    understand others by recognizing our unique and multidimensional
    traits along with their inherent weaknesses and strengths. This idea
    has been beautifully argued by Soenke Biermann, the project
    coordinator for the Australian-based Thinking Diversity -- Beyond
    Tolerance Project (pdf). (18)

    Calls for the creation of a single "universal dialogue" appear to mesh
    well with the demands of the totalizing homogenizing processes of
    corporate/elite forced globalization. Moreover, attempts to create
    such a one-size-fits-all dialogue are in keeping with the openly
    internationalist agenda of liberal elites. Take for example, the
    Rockefeller family, whose internationalist activities have been widely
    critiqued by conservatives (especially ultra-conservatives), (19) but
    for the most part ignored by the Left. David Rockefeller himself noted
    in his recently published memoirs how some people characterize the
    Rockefeller family "as 'internationalists' and of conspiring with
    others around the world to build a more integrated global political
    and economic structure -- one world, if you will." His response: "If
    that's the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it." (20)

    On top of his work with the Global Dialogue Institute and ((Awakening
    Mind)), Gangadean is co-convenor of the World Commission on Global
    Consciousness and Spirituality -- a group that was formed in 1998 and
    "brings eminent world leaders together in sustained deep dialogue to
    cultivate global vision and wisdom for the new millennium." The
    ambitions of the World Commission are in turn closely related to the
    work undertaken by the Club of Budapest -- an "informal international
    association [that was formed in 1993 and is] dedicated to developing
    a new way of thinking and a new ethics that will help resolve the
    social, political, economic, and ecological challenges of the 21st
    century." (21) All three co-chairs of the World Commission, Ervin
    Laszlo, Robert Muller, and Karan Singh, (22) are members of the
    latter group, with Laszlo acting as the founder and president of the
    Club of Budapest. (23) In addition, Ervin Laszlo and Karan Singh are
    both connected to the Indian-based project known as Auroville, which
    describes itself as the "world's first (pdf) and only internationally
    recognised community [composed of approximately 1,900 adults and
    children drawn from 40 different countries, including the UK, that
    has been] established for research in human unity, practically
    researching into humanity's future cultural, environmental, social
    and spiritual needs": Laszlo is a former member of their
    international advisory council, while Singh -- who is a former Indian
    Ambassador to the United States, and is the international chairman at
    the Temple of Understanding at the United Nations -- serves as the
    chair of the Auroville Foundation. This is interesting because much
    like the aforementioned ((Awakening Mind)) project, the World
    Commission, the Club of Budapest, and the Auroville Foundation appear
    to be working to attempt to promote a form of spirituality that can
    overcome all geographic and cultural divides. This work is ostensibly
    carried out in the name of peace, but as mentioned earlier, such a
    project appears well suited to other homogenizing globalizing
    tendencies, which might explain why the Auroville Foundation receives
    such strong financial support from corporate and political elites
    from all over the world.



    Zionists for Human Rights in Sudan (but please don't mention
    Palestine)

    Writing in February 2008, James Petras notes that (what he refers to
    as) the Zionist Power Configuration (ZPC) not only "directly
    influence[s] US policy against Palestine, Iraq and Iran" but has also
    "extended its campaign against 'third parties', countries like China
    which have economic relations with Sudan (a Muslim nation with an
    independent foreign policy which supports Palestinian rights)."
    Moreover, Petras adds: "To an overwhelming degree, the propaganda
    campaign behind the so-called 'Darfur genocide campaign' is the
    Israeli state and its political apparatus in the U.S., namely the
    ZPC." (24) Consequently, building upon earlier critical analyses, the
    following section of this essay will investigate the backgrounds of
    many of the New Humanitarians pushing for an intervention in Sudan.

    The leading member of the Project for a New American Humanitarianism,
    with regards to Sudan, is the Save Darfur Coalition. (25) Cofounded in
    2004 by the aforementioned US Holocaust Memorial Museum's Committee on
    Conscience and the international development organization, American
    Jewish World Service, the Coalition states that they aim to "raise
    public awareness and mobilize a massive response to the atrocities in
    Sudan's western region of Darfur." It should be noted here that the
    president of the American Jewish World Service, Ruth Messinger, in
    addition to serving on the board of the Save Darfur Coalition, had
    until recently (early 2007) served as a board member of InterAction, a
    key US-based democracy manipulator. (26) Furthermore, in 2006,
    Messinger ran for a seat in the World Zionist Congress on the
    left-liberal "Hatikva" (Progressive Zionist Coalition) ticket. Not
    surprisingly, Messinger is also linked to two other groups that are
    calling for the need for a humanitarian intervention in Sudan, as she
    sits on the advisory committee of Olympic Dream for Darfur, and is
    listed as a supporter of the work of Investors Against Genocide (for
    more on these groups see later).

    The chair of the Save Darfur Coalition, Rev. Gloria White-Hammond, is
    a particularly pertinent Coalition member owing to the numerous links
    she maintains to related "humanitarian" groups. (27) Thus
    White-Hammond is the founding co-chair of the Massachusetts Coalition
    to Save Darfur, and the cofounder of My Sister's Keeper -- "a
    women-led, women-focused, humanitarian action group" whose creation
    was catalysed after White-Hammond was invited by Christian Solidarity
    International "to travel to southern Sudan to take part in a slave
    redemption mission" (in July 2001). In addition, White-Hammond serves
    on the boards of both Christian Solidarity International and the
    American Anti-Slavery Group, and like Messinger, White-Hammond also
    sits on the advisory committee of Olympic Dream for Darfur, and is
    listed as a supporter of the work of Investors Against
    Genocide. Finally, White-Hammond serves as a board member of the
    US-based Darfur Peace and Development Organization, where she sits
    alongside Salih Mahmoud Osman (who is a director of the Sudan
    Organization Against Torture, a group that received NED-funding in
    2003, also "currently serves as a member of the Sudanese Parliament,"
    and in 2005 received the Human Rights Defender Award from Human Rights
    Watch, and in 2007 was awarded the "European Union's top human rights
    award, the Sakharov Prize"), (28) and the US talk radio host Joe
    Madison (who played a key role in the launching, in 2000, of "The
    Sudan Campaign, " an NED-linked campaign that arose "in response to
    Secretary of State Albright's challenge [to Charles Jacobs ] that
    suffering in Sudan has not been 'marketable' to the American
    people"). Joe Madison's work for The Sudan Campaign is particularly
    interesting because this group was initiated by Charles Jacobs of the
    American Anti-Slavery Group, and John Eibner, the head of Christian
    Solidarity International. (29) Notably, Jacobs, a committed Zionist,
    now heads The Sudan Campaign, and is also the founder of the Committee
    for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America and the David
    Project, and is a member of the advisory board of the neoconservative
    Foundation for the Defense of Democracies -- many of whose key
    principals were formerly associated with the Project for a New
    American Century. Jacobs's work can also be indirectly linked to the
    Falun Gong's cause, as New York attorney Carey R. D'Avino, who
    formerly represented the Falun Gong, presently serves on the board of
    American Anti-Slavery Group. (30)

    The second cofounder of The Sudan Campaign, John Eibner, similarly
    serves as a board member of the American Anti-Slavery Group, but also
    acts as an expert for the neoconservative Zionist think tank, the
    Middle East Forum, and has been the chairman and CEO of Christian
    Solidarity International (USA) since 1990 -- a group that describes
    itself as "a Christian human rights organization for religious liberty
    helping victims of religious repression, victimized children and
    victims of disaster." Given the key role played by Eibner at Christian
    Solidarity International, it is not surprising that this group should
    play a critical role as a member of the Project for a New American
    Humanitarianism.

    Christian Solidarity International is also a member of the Coalition
    for the Defense of Human Rights, a coalition whose other members
    include the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, and the Middle
    East Intelligence Bulletin -- a monthly publication jointly produced
    by the Middle East Forum and the pro-Israel US Committee for a Free
    Lebanon. The secretary-general of the Coalition for the Defense of
    Human Rights, Rev. Keith Roderick, serves as Christian Solidarity
    International's representative in Washington, D.C., and presently acts
    as the executive director of The Sudan Campaign. (31) It should be
    pointed out that the British branch of Christian Solidarity
    International, which since 1997 (when it "decided to separate from the
    founding body") has been known as Christian Solidarity Worldwide, was
    formerly headed by Baroness Cox of Queensbury (who now serves as a
    patron of the organization). As mentioned, Baroness Cox presently
    serves as a member of the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of
    Falun Gong in China, but, as her role at Christian Solidarity
    Worldwide suggests, she has also been highly active in Sudanese
    issues. Thus she serves on the board of reference of Servant's Heart,
    a group that "provides pastor training, pastoral and congregational
    support to help build up the Christian church in south Sudan." (32)

    The three other members of Servant's Heart's board of reference all
    also serve on the advisory board of The Sudan Campaign, and are
    Congressman Tom Tancredo, former NED board member Congressman Donald
    Payne, and Senator Sam Brownback (who is also a member of the
    executive committee of the neoconservative/Zionist stronghold, the
    Jerusalem Summit). Critically, Baroness Cox serves alongside Senator
    Brownback as a member of the Jerusalem Summit's five person executive
    committee, where they also sit alongside the infamous neoconservative
    Zionist Daniel Pipes. (33) Also of interest, Daniel Pipes's father,
    Richard Pipes, serves with Baroness Cox on the advisory board of the
    Andrei Sakharov Foundation, alongside Human Rights Watch president,
    Robert Bernstein, and liberal philanthropist extraordinaire George
    Soros amongst many others.

    In 1983, Jim Jacobson launched a group known as the Christian Freedom
    International as the US branch of Christian Solidarity International,
    (34) however, CSI-USA eventually decided it wanted Jacobson's group to
    be independent of Christian Solidarity International (a procedure that
    eventuated in 1998). Jacobson has noted that: "This step (pdf) was and
    is important in that it allows CFI [Christian Freedom International]
    to go to places without the permission of international treaties,
    etc." One especially significant member of Christian Freedom
    International's board is the ultra-conservative Michael Farris, who
    has been a member of the secretive Council for National Policy, and is
    the founding president of Patrick Henry College -- where he sits
    alongside fellow board member, Janet Ashcroft, who is the wife of the
    neoconservative former US Attorney-General John Ashcroft, who
    presently teaches at Pat Robertson's Regent University (Robertson is a
    well-known Christian Zionist). Furthermore, until recently, Erik
    Prince, the founder and CEO of the notorious private military
    contractor Blackwater USA, serves on the board of Christian Freedom
    International. This link is intriguing, because in June 2008, the
    Financial Times (UK) reported that Mia Farrow, a representative for
    the human rights group Dream for Darfur, had "asked Blackwater, the US
    private security company active in Iraq, for help in Darfur after
    becoming frustrated by the stalled deployment of a United Nations
    peacekeeping force." Here it is important to recall that Rev. Gloria
    White-Hammond, who is a board member of Christian Solidarity
    International, serves alongside Mia Farrow on the advisory committee
    of Olympic Dream for Darfur, and both are listed as supporters of
    Investors Against Genocide; consequently, I now introduce these two
    groups.

    Olympic Dream for Darfur, which was launched in June 2007, is "an
    initiative" of a group called Public Interest Projects -- a project
    that was established in 1983 to bring "together the work of
    philanthropic institutions, nonprofit groups and other public interest
    organizations who share a vision and commitment to creating a just
    society." The founder of this project, Donald K. Ross, presently
    serves as the chair of GreenPeace USA, and in the 1970s acted as a
    consumer attorney, and then as director of Ralph Nader's Citizen
    Action Group: however, more importantly from 1985 through 1999, he
    directed the activities of an important democracy manipulating liberal
    foundation, the Rockefeller Family Fund. (35) Jill Savitt serves as
    the executive director of the Olympic Dream for Darfur, and prior to
    taking up this position she was based at the aforementioned Human
    Rights First, where she acted as their Director of Public
    Programs. Savitt also serves as a board member of the Save Darfur
    Coalition. While at Human Rights First, Savitt supervised their HOPE
    for Darfur campaign, so it is not surprising that Nicky Lazar, who was
    the campaign manager for this campaign, went on to become the
    international director for the Olympic Dream for Darfur. (36) One
    individual serving on the 13 person strong advisory committee --
    alongside the aforementioned Mia Farrow, Rev. Gloria White Hammond,
    and Ruth Messinger -- is Gayle Smith, who "served as Special Assistant
    to the President and Senior Director for African Affairs at the
    National Security Council from 1998-2001, and as Senior Advisor to the
    Administrator and Chief of Staff of the US Agency for International
    Development from 1994-1998." Amongst her other various affiliations,
    Smith serves as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and on
    the board of the Africa-America Institute (which received NED funding
    in the early 1990s), where she sits alongside key members of the power
    elite, like Rosalind Kainyah (who is the Director of Public Affairs,
    USA, for the mining group De Beers), and George Kirkland (who is the
    vice president of the oil giant, Chevron Corporation). (37)

    Investors Against Genocide is a project of the not-for-profit
    Massachusetts Coalition to Save Darfur, and was originally publicly
    launched on January 26, 2007, (International Holocaust Remembrance
    Day) as the Fidelity Out of Sudan Campaign (referring to their efforts
    to get the Fidelity investment firm to avoid or divest holdings of the
    Chinese oil company PetroChina). The project was renamed Investors
    Against Genocide in September 2008, and although they continue to work
    against Fidelity, they extended their campaign to include the other
    major holders of PetroChina. Their mission statement notes that they
    are...

    ...a non-profit organization dedicated to convincing mutual fund and
    other investment firms to change their investing strategy so as to
    avoid complicity in genocide. In particular, we want investment firms
    to avoid or divest holdings of PetroChina (Chinese), Sinopec
    (Chinese), ONGC (Indian), and Petronas (Malaysian), the four major oil
    companies that are partnering with the Government of Sudan and helping
    to fund the genocide in Darfur.

    Investors Against Genocide was cofounded by Darfur activists Eric
    Cohen (who also serves on the advisory committee of Olympic Dream for
    Darfur), Susan Morgan, and Bill Rosenfeld. Their Web site also
    provides a list of prominent people who support their campaign, and
    these include Mia Farrow, Joe Madison, Ruth Messinger, Rev. Gloria
    White-Hammond, Sudan analyst Eric Reeves (for a critique of his work,
    see here), Charlie Clements (who is president, Unitarian Universalist
    Service Committee, and heads their Drumbeat for Darfur campaign, and
    is vice-chair and secretary of EarthRights International -- a group
    that obtains funding from the American Jewish World Service, and
    Rights and Democracy), (38) Samantha Power (whose recent book, A
    Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, was awarded the
    Council on Foreign Relations' Arthur Ross Prize for the best book in
    US foreign policy, and whose service as a New Humanitarian has been
    outlined by Edward Herman), (39) John Prendergast (former Director for
    African Affairs at the National Security Council, Clinton
    administration, former executive fellow of the US Institute of Peace,
    senior advisor to the International Crisis Group, and board member of
    the Save Darfur Coalition), US Congressman Michael Capuano
    (Democrat-Massachusetts) (who serves on the congressional advisory
    board of the Humpty Dumpty Institute), and 46 other Massachusetts
    legislators.



    Dismantling the Project for a New American Humanitarianism

    The Project for a New American Humanitarianism has sought to wage
    "humanitarian" warfare on enemy states, in this case China. (40) Given
    the imperialism-friendly outcomes of the dedicated activism undertaken
    by the New Humanitarians it is not surprising that some important
    aspects of their work intersects with neoconservatives and
    Zionists. Together these groups demonize China, the rival capitalist
    superpower, encouraging the view that China abuses the human rights of
    Falun Gong practitioners, represses Tibetan freedom activists, and
    trades with the genocidal Sudan. At the same time, the United States,
    the faltering capitalist superpower, sinks to the bottom of the New
    Humanitarians' discourse on human rights, despite regularly abusing
    the human rights of its own citizens (incarcerating many of them),
    repressing the activities of all progressive activists who seek to
    challenge US hegemonic interests, supporting genocides when it sees
    fit (e.g., Indonesia and East Timor), and supporting well known ethnic
    cleansers -- i.e., Israel.

    The connections that exist between the disparate members of the
    Project for a New American Humanitarianism, neoconservatives, and
    Zionists, are alarming. However, they should not be considered
    evidence of a secretive conspiracy. Instead these "humanitarian"
    networks should be considered akin to those that exist between the
    neoconservative movement and the Israel Lobby. On this point, John
    Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, in their seminal book, The Israel Lobby
    and U.S. Foreign Policy (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007), note that:
    "Many neoconservatives are connected to an overlapping set of
    Washington-based think tanks, committees, and publications whose
    agenda includes promoting the special relationship between the United
    States and Israel." They go on to add though, that while the...

    ...interrelated affiliations within the neoconservative movement...may
    seem to some like a shadowy conspiracy (or even a "right-wing cabal")
    [it] is anything but. On the contrary, the various think tanks,
    committees, foundations, and publications that have nurtured the
    neoconservative movement operate much as other policy networks do. Far
    from shunning publicity or engaging in hidden plots, these groups
    actively court publicity for the explicit purpose of shaping public
    and elite opinion and thereby moving U.S. foreign policy in the
    directions they favor. The neoconservative network is both undeniably
    impressive and similar to networks that have arisen in other policy
    areas, such as tax reform, the environment, or immigration. (p.131)

    Unfortunately, like most other foreign policy analysts, Mearsheimer
    and Walt fail to document the "humanitarian" ventures of the Israel
    Lobby, and so ultimately provide only a limited critique of its
    activities by focusing on militarily enforced domination, rather than
    on the Lobby's ties to the Project for a New American
    Humanitarianism. (41) These "humanitarian" networks are not a shadowy
    conspiracy, instead, as demonstrated here, the members of the Project
    for a New American Humanitarianism organize their activities openly
    and publicly, and they are highly visible.

    It is patently clear that concerned citizens need to divert more of
    their time and resources to helping other activists discard the
    rose-tinted glasses that presently obscure their vision of the
    regressive nature of many of the activities of the members of the
    Project for a New American Humanitarianism. This is a difficult task,
    and it is made harder by the Left's prevailing sympathy for, and
    involvement in, many of the human rights campaigns that have been
    waged by the groups discussed here. But as Gross reminds us in his
    prescient book Friendly Fascism: "If you can't see that you're part of
    the problems, then you're standing in the way of attacks on them."
    (42) Thus if we, the people, are to break the feel-good chains that
    imperial elites have enticed many of us into embracing, in the name of
    human rights, then it is necessary for us (as concerned individuals
    working collectively) to document and analyse the modus operandi of
    both our aggressive and "humanitarian" adversaries.





    Notes

    1. The name Project for a New American Humanitarianism was inspired
    by Edward S. Herman and David Peterson's work on The New Humanitarian
    Crusaders. (back)

    2. Despite the focus on the forthcoming Olympics little mention is
    ever made of the well documented antidemocratic nature of the
    Olympics, which facilitate human rights abuses all over the world. For
    further details see, Brian Martin, "Ten Reasons to Oppose All Olympic
    Games," Freedom, August 3, 1996. (back)

    3. Ward Churchill writes in his book, A Little Matter of Genocide:
    Holocaust and Denial in the Americas 1492 to the Present, that in
    preparing for the 1992 Columbus quincen-tenniary, then-director of the
    National Endowment for the Humanities "Lynne Cheney, in collaboration
    with the United States Senate... refuse[d] to fund any film production
    which proposed to use the word 'genocide,' even in passing, to explain
    the subsequent liquidation of America's indigenous population."
    (pp.4-5) (back)

    4. Ward Churchill goes on: "In other words, no previous attempt to
    obliterate an entire people - not Cortes's butchery of an estimated
    20,000 Mexicas (Aztecs) per day, ultimately putting to the sword more
    than 300,000 as he set his men to systematically reducing all evidence
    of their civilization to rubble; not the Spanish system of forced
    labor (encomiendo) under which entire American Indian populations were
    worked to death, not the transatlantic slave trade which cost millions
    of African lives, depopulating vast expanses of the 'Dark Continent';
    not the Virginia Colony's extermination of the Powhatans during the
    1620s nor the Puritans' campaign to utterly eradicate the Pequots in
    Massachusetts a decade later; not Lord Jeffrey Amherst's 1763
    instruction that his subordinates use smallpox to 'extirpate' the
    Ottawas nor the U.S. Army's replication of the tactic against the
    Mandans in 1836; not the 1864 orders of both civil and military
    authorities in Colorado for the total extermination of Cheyennes and
    Arapahoes nor the actual extermination of entire aboriginal
    populations in Tasmania and Newfoundland; not the 1918 Turkish
    slaughter of well over a million Armenians; not the charnel houses of
    Indonesia, Katanga, and Biafra in the 1960s nor those of Bangladesh
    and Burundi in the 1970s; not Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge nor even
    the more current horrors in East Timor, Bosnia, and Rwanda. Nothing
    qualifies as being 'truly' genocidal except the Holocaust, or Slzoah,
    as it is known in the Jewish tradition." A Little Matter of Genocide,
    p.63-4. (back)

    5. On his New Statesman blog, Conservative politician Brian Coleman
    wrote (in July 2007) a piece titled "Falun Gong is a constant reminder
    of Chinese oppression," in which he noted how the "wholesale
    persecution of Falun Gong has gone largely unreported in the West."
    Here it is noteworthy that Coleman is also a "member of Conservative
    Friends of Israel, a group whose Parliamentary Group secretary, David
    Amess, serves on the board of reference of Christian Solidarity
    Worldwide (see later). The political director of Conservative Friends
    of Israel, Robert Halfon, who was also a signatory of the Henry
    Jackson Society's statement of principles (international patrons of
    this group include many well-known neoconservative Zionists - e.g.,
    Richard Perle), and Halfon is also a board member of the Centre for
    Social Justice. The latter group was formed (in 2004) by the former
    British Conservative party leader, Iain Duncan Smith, and is currently
    headed by Philippa Stroud, who was a former staffer at a group called
    Christian Action Research and Education. The executive chair of the
    latter group, Lyndon Bowring, also happens to serve on the board of
    reference of Christian Solidarity Worldwide. Returning to Coleman, it
    is significant to note that in October 2007 "Deputy Chairman of the
    London Assembly Brian Coleman and Vice-President of the European
    Parliament, Edward McMillan-Scott" (who is also a member of the
    Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China, see
    next) were involved in lighting the Human Rights Torch as part of a
    relay that "was set up by rights groups with the mandate to show that
    it is against the principles of the Olympic charter for the Games be
    held in China whilst human rights abuses continue."

    Leeshai S. Lemish, "Falun Gong and Media Bias: Representation of Falun
    Gong-Related News in AP, Reuters, and AFP Reports," International
    Association for Intercultural Communication Studies, Chinese Culture
    University, Taipei, Taiwan, July 6-8, 2005. (back)

    6. Significantly, "Steven Spielberg resigned as artistic adviser to
    the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, in protest at China's failure to
    distance itself from genocide and human rights abuses in Darfur."

    According to Raoul Wallenberg's online biography: "Several tens of
    thousands of Jews were that way saved by Wallenberg or by the
    embassies of neutral countries inspired by Wallenberg's work."
    Wallenberg's online biography goes on to note that: "One of his
    helpers, future Congressman Tom Lantos, accompanied Raoul Wallenberg
    to the trains, where Jews were being packed together like animals for
    their journey to a certain death, and helped the Swede pull people
    off." Here it is also interesting to note that the first book
    published by Kati Marton (who is the wife of the "closet Zionist"
    Richard Holbrooke), was a biography of Raoul Wallenberg titled
    Wallenberg: Missing Hero (Random House, 1982). Marton serves on the
    national advisory board of the Raoul Wallenberg Committee of the
    United States alongside people like Elizabeth Moynihan (who is the
    widow of the former leading neoconservative Daniel Patrick Moynihan),
    Jerome Shestack (who is the founder of Human Rights First, for further
    details see note 14), and Elie Wiesel (who was the founding chairman
    of the US Holocaust Memorial Council in 1980, and amongst various
    other "humanitarian" affiliations serves on the international council
    of advisors of the International Campaign for Tibet). In a similar
    vein, the International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation, which was founded
    by Baruch Tenembaum, can also be linked to the Project for a New
    American Humanitarianism via their China representative, Xu Xin, who
    also serves on the academic committee of the Jerusalem Summit (see
    later). Finally, another related group of interest is the Raoul
    Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, which can
    be linked to various democracy manipulating groups by Lena
    Hjelm-Wallen who serves on their board of trustees. (back)

    7. In an informative radio interview conducted by KPFA Radio in
    November 2006 with Samuel Luo (who runs the website
    http://exposingthefalungong.org), and David Ewing (who is a co-chair
    of the US China Peoples Friendship Association), Ewing suggested (at
    39 min) that when relations between the US and China are problematic
    there is "more official interest on the part of the US government in
    groups like Falun Gong," but when diplomatic relations are less
    adversarial, then the coverage that the Falun Gong's cause receives
    diminishes. Ascertaining the friendliness of political relations
    between the US and China is, of course, not straight forward, as
    although many members of the Project for a New American
    Humanitarianism are busy highlighting China's human rights abuses,
    other US elites are simultaneously making huge profits from their
    rising investments in China's booming economy, particularly in China's
    repressive internal (in)security market (for further details, see
    Naomi Klein's excellent article "China's All-Seeing Eye"). Indeed,
    Israel would appear to be a prime exporter of such tools of repression
    to China, because as Klein notes in an earlier article, many of
    Israel's "most successful entrepreneurs are using Israel's status as a
    fortressed state, surrounded by furious enemies, as a kind of
    twenty-four-hour-a-day showroom -- a living example of how to enjoy
    relative safety amid constant war. And the reason Israel is now
    enjoying supergrowth ["with a roaring stock market and growth rates
    nearing China's"] is that those companies are busily exporting that
    model to the world." (back)

    8. China Aid Association is a "charter member" of Religious Liberty
    Partnership, a group whose leadership team is made up from
    representatives from Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Christian
    Solidarity International (Switzerland), World Evangelical Alliance
    Religious Liberty Commission (Finland), Open Doors International
    (Holland), and Voice of the Martyrs (Canada). The China Aid
    Association advisory board is home to many neoconservatives the most
    significant of which is former TIME Beijing Bureau Chief, Dr. David
    Aikman, who has written the biography of the Christian evangelist
    Billy Graham, was a former senior fellow at the neoconservative Ethics
    and Public Policy Center, and is a regular contributor to The Weekly
    Standard. (back)

    9. The president of Open Doors USA is Carl Moeller whose biography
    boasts that he is an "authority on religious freedom issues and has
    appeared on many radio and television shows, including Hannity &
    Colmes, [and Pat Robertson's ultra-conservative] Christian
    Broadcasting Network." His biography notes that: "Before joining Open
    Doors USA, Moeller, 45, served as a Pastor in Membership at Saddleback
    Church (Lake Forest, California)." This is significant because
    Saddleback Church was founded in 1980 by Pastor Rick Warren, one of
    whom's "most important role models, he says, [has] been Billy Graham."
    In addition, Pastor Warren was recently recruited to serve on Tony
    Blair's Faith Foundation where he sits alongside people like
    Rev. David Coffey (who serves on the board of reference of Christian
    Solidarity Worldwide), Anantanand Rambachan (who is on the advisory
    board of The Pluralism Project), Rabbi David Rosen (who formerly
    served as the Anti Defamation League's Director of Interfaith
    Relations in Israel, and serves a principal of the American Jewish
    Committee), and Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks (who is the honorary
    president of United Jewish Israel Appeal). (back)

    10. Another prominent example of a Falun Gong group that receives
    support from various elites is provided by the Coalition to
    Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China. This broad-ranging
    international group was launched in 2006, and significant members of
    the Coalition with "democratic" ties include:

    ¢ former Canadian Secretary of State David Kilgour, who is a member
    of the Committee of 100 for Tibet, and a director of the key US-based
    democracy manipulator the Council for a Community of Democracies.

    ¢ former President of the Czech Republic Vaclav Havel, who is also
    a member of the Committee of 100 for Tibet, received the NED's
    Democracy Service Medal in 2007, and serves on the international
    council of advisors for the NED-funded International Campaign for
    Tibet (for further criticism see here).

    ¢ member of the British House of Lords Baroness Caroline Cox, who
    also serves on the advisory board of the Andrei Sakharov Foundation
    alongside individuals like George Soros and the president of Human
    Rights Watch, Richard Bernstein.

    ¢ vice-president of the European Parliament Edward McMillan-Scott,
    who founded the European Democracy Initiative in 1992, and serves as
    the chairman of the European Democracy Caucus that was established in
    2005.

    The latter two British members of the Coalition to Investigate the
    Persecution of Falun Gong in China also happen to serve as members of
    the important democracy manipulating group the International Committee
    for Democracy in Cuba, a group that was founded by Vaclav Havel in
    2003. The Coalition's three US members are all Republicans:
    Congressmen Thaddeus McCotter (Michigan), Congressman Dana Rohrabacher
    (California), and Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (Florida). (back)

    11. In 2002, Freedom House created a Bette Bao Lord Prize for Writing
    in the Cause of Freedom, whose first recipient was the Egyptian
    "prodemocracy" activist Saad Eddin Ibrahim. While Ibrahim's links to
    the darker side of the democracy manipulating lobby have not played
    out in the international media, one part of his life that has been
    well covered in the media was his arrest in June 2000, and his
    subsequent imprisonment for illegally receiving foreign funding
    (European Union grants) for his democracy work at the Ibn Khaldun
    Center (which he founded in 1988 in Egypt. Interestingly, the Ibn
    Khaldun Center only received its first NED grant in 2005 to "establish
    and maintain" a new Egyptian Democracy Support Network. Ibrahim's 2000
    arrest pricked the world's attention, and the Bush administration went
    as far as withholding a "supplemental aid package for Egypt" until he
    was released from prison in August 2000. However, Ibrahim's ties to
    the democracy manipulators are longstanding, as in 1983 he founded the
    Arab Organization for Human Rights, of which the IFEX member and NED
    recipient the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights (EOHR) is a
    member. This makes it less surprising that the secretary-general of
    EOHR, Hafez Abu Saada, was arrested on similar charges to Ibrahim in
    December 1998, and was likewise released from prison as a result of
    international pressure. Ibrahim's ties to Freedom House and the NED
    hint at his neoconservative credentials, which are confirmed by his
    listing on the books of Benador Associates, a well-known
    neoconservative public relations agency." (back)

    12. George Soros is emeritus director of Refugees International, a
    group whose mission statement notes that it provides "humanitarian
    assistance and protection for displaced people around the world and
    works to end the conditions that create displacement." Other
    "democratic" emeritus directors at Refugees International include
    Trish Malloch Brown (who served as a program officer for the Soros
    Foundation in Eastern Europe from 1989 to 1992, and is married to
    "democratic" notable Mark Malloch Brown), Robert DeVecchi (who is a
    board member of the Foundation for a Civil Society), Judy Mayotte (who
    is a member of the executive committee of the International Rescue
    Committee), and Frank Wisner, Jr. (who formerly worked for the US
    Agency for International Development in Vietnam during the 1960s, and
    is a trustee of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund -- also see here).

    The current president of Refugees International is Kenneth Bacon, who
    prior to his appointment in 2001 had worked for seven years as
    assistant secretary, public affairs, at the US Department of Defense
    -- Bacon also represents Refugees International on InterAction's board
    of directors, and in 2001 took over the presidency from Lionel
    Rosenblatt, who had served as president of Refugees International for
    ten years. Refugees International's vice president for policy, Joel
    Charny, is co-chair of InterAction's Protection Working Group, and is
    also a member of the National Committee on North Korea. The chairman
    of Refugees International's board of directors is Farooq Kathwari, who
    is also a trustee of Freedom House, and has received numerous awards
    including the American Jewish Committee's National Human Relations
    Award, and the Anti-Defamation League' s Humanitarian Award. Other
    interesting directors of Refugees International are Elizabeth Bagley
    (who served as a senior advisor to secretary of state Madeline
    Albright from 1997 to 2001, and is now a director of the core NED
    grantee, the National Democratic Institute), Constance Milstein (who
    is a director of the National Democratic Institute), Richard Holbrooke
    (who a director of the NED, and is married to Kati Marton, who serves
    on the board of Human Rights Watch and the International Rescue
    Committee), and Mary Ellen Glynn (who has recently served as the
    spokeswoman for Richard Holbrooke -- for a longer discussion of his
    antidemocratic career see here). (back)

    13. The US Holocaust Memorial Museum is located on Raoul Wallenberg
    Place. (back)

    14. Human Rights First (formerly known as the Lawyers Committee for
    Human Rights) is a non-profit international human rights organization
    based in New York and Washington DC that was founded in 1977 by Jerome
    Shestack. Their website notes that to maintain their independence,
    they "accept no government funding," this however, has not prevented
    them from taking money (albeit a small amount) from the largest arms
    manufacturer in the world, Lockheed Martin. Major donors ($100,000 and
    above) of their work, however, include the likes of the Ford
    Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Open Society Institute
    (see Annual Report 2005/2006, pdf).

    Human Rights First's founder, Jerome Shestack, has recently served as
    the president of the American Bar Association (1997-8), has "chaired
    the International League for Human Rights since 1981 and is currently
    its honorary president," is a commissioner of the International
    Commission of Jurists, and a director of the Franklin and Eleanor
    Roosevelt Institute. In 2006, Michael Posner became the president of
    Human Rights First after serving 28 years as their executive
    director. Posner's most controversial previous affiliation was to the
    National Coalition for Haitian Rights (in the early 1980s) of which
    Human Rights Watch's Jocelyn McCalla is the current executive
    director. Maureen Byrnes moved into Posner's vacated position as Human
    Rights First's new executive director, having previously served at the
    Pew Charitable Trusts in Philadelphia as Director of Policy
    Initiatives.

    Human Rights First has held a Human Rights Awards Dinner annually
    since 2001, at which they honor the work of two or three human rights
    activists. This is particularly remarkable because some of these
    activists have been strongly linked to the democracy manipulating
    community. Thus in 2002, the two award winners were Saad Eddin Ibrahim
    (whose work is closely linked to the NED, see note 11) and Sima Samar
    (who is now the chair of the Afghan Independent Human Rights
    Commission -- a group that has collaborated with USAID, is listed as a
    partner organization of the International Center for Transitional
    Justice, and includes the former Afghan country director for the
    National Democratic Institute, Hossain Ramoz, on their board of
    commissioners). In 2003, Xu Wenli was one of the recipients of the
    Human Rights Award: Wenli is currently a senior fellow at the Watson
    Institute, and on May 4, 2006, he spoke at a conference organized by
    NED aid recipient the Laogai Research Foundation. The following year
    (2004) Mehrangiz Kar received the Human Rights First Award -- she
    again is 'democratically' connected as between 2001 and 2002 she was a
    Reagan-Fascell Democracy fellow at the NED, in 2002 she won the NED
    Democracy Award, between 2005 and 2006 she was a fellow at the Carr
    Center, and she is presently a program advisor for the Women's
    Learning Partnership. None of the other Human Rights First award
    recipients appear to be obviously linked to "democratic"
    organizations.

    The current chair of Human Rights First's board of directors is
    William Zabel: in 2000 (at least), Zabel was a director of Human
    Rights Watch and a legal advisor for the Soros Foundations, and he is
    presently also a director of the Winston Founation. Other
    'democratically' linked Human Rights First directors include Louis
    Henkin, Harold Hongju Koh, M. Bernard Aidinoff, Gail Furman, Scott
    Greathead (who is a founding member of Human Rights First, and a
    director of the NED-funded Human Rights in China), Juliette Kayyem
    (who is an advisor for Americans for Informed Democracy), Kerry
    Kennedy (who is an international advisor for the International
    Campaign for Tibet, and a board member of the NED-funded China
    Information Center), and Philip Lacovara (who is on the national
    advisory board of the right-wing Center for the Community Interest, an
    organization whose founder Roger Conner went on to serves as the
    executive director of Search for Common Ground between 2000 and
    2004). Two Human Rights First directors without "democratic" ties are
    still linked to Human Rights Watch, these are Steven Shapiro (who is
    the legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, and a member
    of both Human Rights Watch's U.S. Advisory Committee and Asia Advisory
    Committee), and Robert D. Joffe (who is a member of Human Rights
    Watch's Africa Advisory Committee). Finally, "democratic" Human Rights
    First's national council members include Human Rights Watch founder
    Robert L. Bernstein, Helene L. Kaplan, Abner J. Mikva (who is a member
    of the senior advisory committee of the National Democratic
    Institute), and two HRW Americas Advisory Committee members Bruce Rabb
    and Rose Styron. (back)

    15. The Humpty Dumpty Institute was created in 1998 and their website
    states that it "forges innovative public-private partnerships to find
    creative solutions to difficult humanitarian problems" -- which it
    does by working closely with various departments of the US government.
    (back)

    16. The Israel Policy Forum was formed in 1993 and is a "non-profit
    organization whose mission is to promote the Middle East peace process
    in order to strengthen Israeli security and further US foreign policy
    interests in the region." (back)

    17. Benjamin Gilman was formerly a trustee of the Meridian
    International Center -- a nonprofit that was founded in 1960, and as
    their website notes, is "dedicated to advancing international
    understanding through public diplomacy and global engagement". Major
    financial supporters of the Meridian International Center's work
    include Lockheed Martin, ExxonMobil, and General Motors. (back)

    18. Soenke Biermann, "Found in Translation: Differences, Tolerance
    and Enriching Diversity," Refereed paper presented to Activating Human
    Rights and Peace: Universal Responsibility, Byron Bay, Australia, July
    1-4, 2008. (Conference proceedings will be published online on
    December 15, 2008.) (back)

    19. Emanuel M. Josephson, Rockefeller, 'Internationalist': The Man
    Who Misrules the World (Chedney Press, 1952); Griffin, G. Edward, The
    Fearful Master: A Second Look at the United Nations (Western Islands,
    1964). (back)

    20. David Rockefeller, Memoirs (New York: Random House, 2002),
    p. 405. (back)

    21. According to their website: "The idea of the Club of Budapest was
    developed in 1978 in a discussion between Aurelio Peccei, founder and
    first president of the Club of Rome, and Ervin Laszlo, systems
    philosopher and also member of the Club of Rome at that time."
    Honorary members of the Club of Budapest include the Dalai Lama,
    Vaclav Havel and Elie Wiesel. (back)

    22. Significant members of the World Commission include Desmund Tutu,
    Robert A.F. Thurman and Rodrigo Carazo Odio: all three of whom serve
    as members of the Committee of 100 for Tibet, and on the international
    council of advisors for the NED-funded International Campaign for
    Tibet. (Desmund Tutu also acts as a member of Human Rights Watch's
    Arms Advisory Committee.) Two other World Commission members who are
    linked to the Tibetan cause are Betty Williams (who is a member of the
    Committee of 100 for Tibet), and The Dalai Lama. (back)

    23. Earlier this year, the BBC provided a sensationalist extremely
    limited critique of Auroville which only focused on the links between
    child abuse and Auroville (see related BBC article). (back)

    24. Petras points out that the Conference of the Presidents of Major
    American Jewish Organizations "has focused on the Darfur 'genocide'
    because by doing so it favors the brutal separatists in southern
    Sudan, armed and advised by Israel, as a means of depriving
    pro-Palestinian Sudan of a large oil rich region in the south of the
    country. The Darfur campaign deliberately and systematically excludes
    any mention of the Israeli Supreme Court's approval of Israel's food
    and fuel blockade and deliberate prevention of the movement of medical
    personnel in Gaza and the West Bank, its approval of Israel's practice
    of torture ('forceful interrogations'), armed assaults on the vital
    infrastructure and civilian population centers of Gaza." (back)

    25. United Jewish Communities is an organizational member of the Save
    Darfur Coalition, and a member of IsraAID -- which was founded in 2001
    and describes itself as a "coordinating body of Israeli and Jewish
    NGOs (non governmental organizations) and other interested parties
    based in Israel that are active in development and relief work and
    concerned about global issues ('Tikkun Olam')." In 2002, Henry
    Elkaslasi, the head of The Humanitarian Fund of the Kibbutz Movement,
    became chair of IsraAID. Elkaslasi presently also serves as the
    co-chair of the Israeli Coalition for the Refugees of Darfur and Sudan
    (also known as Israel for Darfur). Israel for Darfur is listed as a
    campaign of the blogging group, Darfur Awareness, which in turn is a
    project of a group called Mideast Youth. This latter group was founded
    by Esra'a Al Shafei -- who also cofounded the Middle East Interfaith
    Blogger Network -- and in June 2007, she received an award from
    free-market Atlas Economic Research Foundation for her Mideast Youth
    project. (back)

    26. According to their website, InterAction, which was formed in
    1984, is the "largest alliance of US-based international development
    and humanitarian nongovernmental organizations." In 2005, their total
    annual revenue was just over $5.4 million, of which a sizable amount
    ($1.4 million) came from the US government, and an array of liberal
    foundations like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Ford
    Foundation. Former presidents of InterAction include Julia Taft, 1992
    to 1997 (who is a former NED director, and former director of the
    Office for US Disaster Assistance at USAID), Jim Moody, 1998 to 2000
    (who now serves as a director of Relief International, and serves on
    the advisory board for the NED-funded National Iranian American
    Council), and Mary McClymont, 2001 to 2005 (who previously had worked
    for 12 years with the Ford Foundation, and is now a director of both
    Global Rights, and Physicians for Human Rights). In 2005, Mary
    McClymont was replaced by InterAction's first ever foreign-born
    president, Mohammad Akhter, who also serves as the executive director
    of the American Public Health Association. In February 2006, with no
    irony apparently intended, Dr. Akhter observed that: "The United
    States expresses its greatness in a variety of ways, but perhaps none
    is more important than the humanitarian and development assistance we
    provide overseas." (back)

    27. Other notable 'humanitarian' board members of the Save Darfur
    Coalition include Jill Savitt (who is the director of the Olympic
    Dream for Darfur), John Prendergast (who was the former Director for
    African Affairs at the National Security Council for the Clinton
    administration), and James Zogby (who is the founder and president of
    the Arab American Institute, is a member of the Council on Foreign
    Relations, serves on the Human Rights Watch Middle East Advisory
    Committee, acts as an advisor for Americans for Informed Democracy,
    and serves on the national advisory council of the US Interreligious
    Committee for Peace in the Middle East). Incidentally, given the Save
    Darfur Coalition's links to the elite-friendly Human Rights Watch
    through James Zogby, it is noteworthy that an international human
    rights group called Crisis Action (which has offices in Berlin,
    Brussels, London and Paris) coordinates the Globe for Darfur
    coalition. This is interesting because Crisis Action -- which has
    obtained support from the Save Darfur Coalition -- works in
    partnership with many New Humanitarian NGOs, and is headed by
    individuals who represent, or have represented, groups which include
    Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, the International Crisis
    Group, and Oxfam International. (back)

    28. The winner of the 2006 Sakharov Prize was Alexander Milinkevich,
    the Belarussian opposition leader; while the 2005 winners were Ladies
    in White (a "pro-democracy group in Cuba"), the key democracy
    manipulator, Reporters Without Borders, and Hauwa Ibrahim (a Nigerian
    human rights attorney). (back)

    29. In addition to Christian Solidarity International and the
    American Anti-Slavery Group, other members of The Sudan Campaign
    coalition included the American Jewish Committee (DC Branch), and the
    NED-funded Sudan Human Rights Organization (Cairo) amongst
    others. Members of the Campaigns advisory board included Freedom House
    representative Nina Shea, three Republicans: Senator Sam Brownback
    (Kansas) who serves on the board of reference of Servant's Heart, and
    is presidium of the Jerusalem Summit; Tom Tancredo (Colorado) who also
    serves on the board of reference of Servant's Heart; and Frank Wolf
    (Virginia) who is a director of Bread for the World; and three
    Democrat Congressman: Gregory Meeks (New York) who is a board member
    of the NED, and serves on the Congressional advisory board of the
    Humpty Dumpty Institute; Eleanor Holmes Norton (District of Columbia)
    who is a former board member of the Rockefeller Foundation; and Donald
    Payne (New Jersey) who serves on the board of reference of Servant's
    Heart, is a former NED board member, a board member of Bread for the
    World, serves on the Congressional advisory board of the Humpty Dumpty
    Institute, and is co-chairman of the Alexis de Tocqueville
    Institution. (back)

    30. Another significant board member of the American Anti-Slavery
    Group is Jesse Sage, who formerly served for seven years as associate
    director of the Group before joining the neoconservative American
    Islamic Congress (a group whose work is closely linked to that of the
    Foundation for the Defense of Democracies). Sage's background provides
    an indicative representation of the close ties that are maintained
    between progressive groups and the democracy manipulating community,
    as he also acts as the treasurer of the Human and Civil Rights
    Organizations of America, a group that has provided funding to the
    progressive media watchdog Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, three
    NED-funded groups (Human Rights in China, the International Campaign
    for Tibet, and the Center for Victims of Torture), and various
    pro-Israel group's like the Anti-Defamation League, the International
    Fellowship of Christians and Jews, the Jewish Fund for Justice, and
    the New Israel Fund. (back)

    31. Rev. Roderick also serves on the advisory board of the American
    Council for Kosovo, and is a member of the North Korea Freedom
    Coalition. The latter group was formed in 2003, and their executive
    committee is chaired by Christian Solidarity International board
    member, Suzanne Scholte. Thus it appears that Korea is certainly
    considered to be a major target for the New Humanitarian
    community. Fittingly Scholte is also president of the Defense Forum
    Foundation (whose board of directors include former NED board member
    and Project for a New American Century signatory, Fred Ikle), and she
    serves as the treasurer of the US Committee for Human Rights in North
    Korea (whose board is home to many Project for a New American Century
    signatories, and the NED's president, while the Committee itself is
    headed by Debra Liang-Fenton, who formerly directed the US Institute
    of Peace's Human Rights Implementation initiative, and has been a
    project officer of the International Forum for Democratic Studies at
    the NED). For further background on the democracy manipulating
    community's interest in North Korea, see Stephen Gowans,
    "Understanding North Korea," What's Left, March 3, 2007. (back)

    32. In 2003, Baroness Cox founded the British-based Humanitarian Aid
    Relief Trust, whose board of trustees includes Anthony Peel (who is
    also a trustee of Christian Solidarity Worldwide), and Nicholas Mellor
    (who is the co-founder of Medical Emergency Relief International,
    whose board of trustees is chaired by Lord Jay of Ewelme, an
    individual who "was Tony Blair's personal representative to the G8
    Summits in 2005 and 2006"). Baroness Cox also formerly served as a
    trustee of Medical Emergency Relief International. (back)

    33. For a critical review of the First Jerusalem Summit (held from
    October 12-14, 2003), see Syed Shahabuddin, "A New World Order in the
    Making: An Alliance of Israeli Zionists, Americans, Neo-Cons and World
    Jewry", The Milli Gazette, September 2004. Also see, Habib Siddiqui,
    "Jerusalem Summit: What Are The Neocons Cooking?," Media Monitors
    Network, October 29, 2005. (back)

    34. Jim Jacobson launched Christian Freedom International (CFI) after
    visiting Burma, on the prompting of Ambassador Faith Whittlesey, who
    had asked Jim to "spearhead a program to assist persecuted
    Christians." (pdf) (Whittlesey currently serves as a board member of
    CFI.) Jacobson's biography notes that before creating CFI he "served
    as a policy analyst in the Reagan White House, a political appointee
    in the George Herbert Walker Bush administration"; it also notes that,
    "At the invitation of First Lady Laura Bush, Mr. Jacobson participated
    in The Dialogue on Burma, a roundtable discussion conducted during the
    September 2006 U.N. General Assembly that allowed activists and
    government officials to speak openly about the severe humanitarian
    crisis that has plagued Burma for decades." For further details on the
    democracy manipulating communities interests in Burma, see Michael
    Barker, "People Power or Political Puppetry?", The Fanonite, January
    16, 2008. (back)

    35. For a detailed critique of the influence of liberal philanthropy
    on the evolution of the environmental movement, see Michael Barker,
    "The Liberal Foundations of Environmentalism: Revisiting the
    Rockefeller-Ford Connection," Capitalism Nature Socialism, 19, 2,
    15-42. (Part of the article is also summarized here.) (back)

    36. Nicky Lazar was also a producer on Michael Moore's two most
    recent films "SICKO" and "Fahrenheit 9/11." (back)

    37. The president of the Africa-America Institute, Mora McLean,
    formerly served as deputy director for Africa and Middle East programs
    at the Ford Foundation, and is a former board member of the NED's
    sister organization, the US Institute of Peace. (back)

    38. The co-founder and executive director of EarthRights
    International, Ka Hsaw Wa, is a member of the Karen ethnic nationality
    of Burma, and since 1995 EarthRights have "worked in Burma to monitor
    the impacts of the military regime's policies and activities on local
    populations and ecosystems." Two notable members of EarthRights
    eight-person strong board of directors include Kumi Naidoo (who is the
    secretary-general and CEO of CIVICUS: the World Alliance for Citizen
    Participation), and Rebecca Rockefeller (who is a trustee of the
    Rockefeller Family Fund). (back)

    39. Samantha Power is a board member of the International Rescue
    Committee, and the PNAC-linked US Committee for Human Rights in North
    Korea (see note 31). (back)

    Gross also highlight that "the operating rules of modern capitalist
    empire require ascending rhetoric about economic and social
    development, human rights, and the self-effacing role of transnational
    corporations in the promotion of progress and prosperity. The more
    lies are told, the more important it becomes for the liars to justify
    themselves by deep moral commitments to high-sounding objectives that
    mask the pursuit of money and power. The more a country like the
    United States imports its prosperity from the rest of the world, the
    more its leaders must dedicate themselves to the sacred ideal of
    exporting abundance, technology, and civilization to everyone
    else. The further this myth may be from reality, the more significant
    it becomes -- and the greater the need for academic notables to
    document its validity by bold assertion and self-styled statistical
    demonstration." p.5, p.205. (back)

    40. An early example of this phenomenon is provided by Richard Brown
    (1980) who described how liberal philanthropists (like the Rockefeller
    Foundation) and other missionaries under the guise of promoting
    medical technologies overseas "wrapped imperialism in cloaks of
    humanitarianism." He points out that such "humanitarians" certainly
    did not lack humanitarian feeling: "Rather, their humanitarianism was
    shaped by their ethnocentrism, their class interests, and their
    support for the imperialist objectives of their own country." Brown
    thus suggests that: "By the time their humanitarianism was expressed
    in programs, it was so intertwined with the interests of American
    capitalism as to be indistinguishable." However, he is correct to
    recognize, like Mearsheimer and Walt, that such humanitarian "programs
    were the result not of dark conspiracies, but of simple recognition
    and articulation of the [ir proponents]... class interests."
    E. Richard Brown, "Rockefeller Medicine in China: Professionalism and
    Imperialism" in Robert F. Arnove (Ed.) Philanthropy and Cultural
    Imperialism: The Foundation at Home and Abroad (Indiana University
    Press, 1981), p.139.

    Similarly Edward Berman noted how liberal philanthropists exporting
    western eductional systems to Africa have long portrayed themselves as
    "disinterested humanitarians" by "emphasi[zing] on the provision of
    acommodity which ostensibly has no political overtones and which is in
    great demand." However, as Berman demonstrated, "there was little
    humanitarianism in these foundation attempts to develop educational
    systems in Africa, despite the proclivities of random foundation
    personnel in this direction. Education was perceived as the opening
    wedge ensuring an American presence in those African nations
    considered of strategic and economic importance to the governing and
    business elite of the United States." Edward H. Berman, "The
    Foundations Role in American Foreign Policy: The Case of Africa, post
    1945," in Robert F. Arnove (Ed.) Philanthropy and Cultural
    Imperialism: The Foundation at Home and Abroad (Indiana University
    Press, 1981), p. 225. (back)

    41. With regard to charitable activities and their relation to the
    Israel Lobby, Mearsheimer and Walt note that "private donations to
    charities in most foreign countries are not tax deductible, but many
    private donations to Israel are, due to a special clause in the
    U.S.-Israel income tax treaty." (p.29) In addition, they add, "because
    Israeli charities operate beyond the reach of U.S. tax authorities,
    donations from Jewish and Christian evangelical organizations are hard
    to monitor once they are transferred to Israel. In practice,
    therefore, the U.S. government cannot easily determine the extent to
    which tax-exempt private donations are being diverted for unauthorized
    purposes." p.30 (back)

    42. Gross also highlight that "the operating rules of modern
    capitalist empire require ascending rhetoric about economic and social
    development, human rights, and the self-effacing role of transnational
    corporations in the promotion of progress and prosperity. The more
    lies are told, the more important it becomes for the liars to justify
    themselves by deep moral commitments to high-sounding objectives that
    mask the pursuit of money and power. The more a country like the
    United States imports its prosperity from the rest of the world, the
    more its leaders must dedicate themselves to the sacred ideal of
    exporting abundance, technology, and civilization to everyone
    else. The further this myth may be from reality, the more significant
    it becomes -- and the greater the need for academic notables to
    document its validity by bold assertion and self-styled statistical
    demonstration." p.5, p.205. (back)


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