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CIA Supported Rightward Shift of Labour Party

The Earl of Crumpsall | 22.01.2008 05:10 | Workers' Movements

The British American Project received funds from the CIA to help what it saw as anti-Americanism within Europe. When you look at some of the people who were involved in the project on the list, it helps explain why they have appeared more like Tories than the Tories themselves. Also, what was Mandelson really up to when he was a member of socialist organizations in his youth?

The British American Project for the Successor Generation, to give it its original, and now quietly forgotten, title, is an elite corporate/political talking and networking organisation. Its aims are to ensure that the left and liberal intelligentsia are not hostile to US foreign policy interests. The British American Project is like the Trade Union Committee for European and Transatlantic Understanding but rather less obscure. For example, it has a website.

'The Project's annual four-day conference brings together 24 exceptional people (aged between 28-40) from each side of the Atlantic to tackle a specific issue of importance to both countries. Delegates are chosen for proven leadership in their field, and are drawn from a wide range of backgrounds and views; they include senior representatives from business, government, the media, voluntary /non-profit organisations, medicine, and the armed forces.' [1]

In 2003 John Pilger noted that "Five members of Blair's first cabinet, along with his chief of staff, Jonathan Powell, were members of the British American Project for a Successor Generation, a masonry of chosen politicians and journalists, conceived by the far-right oil baron J. Howard Pew and launched by Ronald Reagan and Rupert Murdoch." [2]

It claims that 'Press coverage in the UK has suggested that the project is either a right wing conspiracy or a New Labour conspiracy. Is either of these allegations true? Sadly not. See the article on the project's history for details of its origins and the rest of this web site for its current orientation.'

It hasn't had any coverage in either of the left-leaning British broadsheets. However, the New Statesman says "But the project is only one of many schemes through which the British elite learns to love and live with America: the Kennedy scholarships, the Fulbrights and Harknesses, the International Visitor Program, together with more overtly agenda-driven institutions such as the Atlantic Council of the United Kingdom and the Trades Union Committee for European and Transatlantic Understanding. Taking all these into consideration accounts for almost every minister and adviser in the Labour Party."


The British-American Project for the Successor Generation (as it used to be known before it quietly contracted its title) was founded in 1985. Each year the project invites 24 American and 24 British delegates to take part in four days of dinners, parties and discussions (ranging from the nature of the "special relationship" to security and economic issues). Delegates enjoy comparative luxury (the class of '98 stayed at the $285-a-night Omni Royal Crescent in New Orleans). The aim, to quote the report of the 1985 conference, is "to create, at a time of growing international strains and stresses, a closer rapport between Britain and the United States among people likely to become influential decision-makers during the next two decades". Delegates are nominated by existing fellows; once they have come through the process of selection (in the UK, this is based on competitive debating sessions with other nominees), they have their travel and other expenses paid to the more or less exotic locations of the conference. Last year New Orleans, this year . . . Harrogate...

The project was first suggested in 1982 by Nick Butler, a Labour Party insider of the old right and a research fellow at the Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House). Along with many others in the US and Britain who viewed the special relationship favourably, he had become concerned about the growing tide of anti-American sentiment, particularly within his own party. This was the time of Greenham Common, CND and the battles over US deployment of cruise missiles in Europe. Vietnam and Watergate were fresh in everyone's memory.

Butler's response was to propose a series of conferences, similar in format to the annual get-together of the Anglo-German elite at Konigswinter, developing personal relationships between the participants and broadening understanding. This rapidly gained backing from Chatham House, then from other establishment bodies, such as the Royal United Services Institute and the US embassy in London. But at this stage there seemed little prospect of funding.

It was Sir Charles Villiers, the former chairman of British Steel, who overcame this obstacle by roping in two American anglophile friends of his, Lew van Dusen and Isadore Scott, who were able to secure $460,000 through the Pew Charitable Trusts, the second biggest grant-making body in the US. [3]

[edit]
Members

UK members of the British-American Project include:

* Peter Mandelson EU trade commissioner
* Jonathan Powell Tony Blair's chief of staff
* Jeremy Paxman broadcast journalist and author
* Mo Mowlam former Labour Northern Ireland secretary
* Adair Turner head of pensions commission and ex head of CBI
* Trevor Phillips chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality
* James Naughtie broadcast journalist and author
* Matthew Taylor Downing Street head of policy
* Chris Smith former Labour culture secretary
* Baroness Elizabeth Symons Foreign Office minister
* Lord George Robertson former Nato secretary-general
* Douglas Alexander Foreign Office and trade minister
* Wendy Alexander Member of the Scottish Parliament and former Scottish Executive minister
* Geoff Mulgan former head of Downing Street's policy and strategy unit
* Baroness Scotland Home Office minister
* Julia Hobsbawm public relations consultant
* Steve Hilton Conservative special adviser
* Benjamin Zephaniah poet and activist
* Colonel Bob Stewart former commander of British forces in Bosnia
* David Willetts Conservative shadow work and pensions secretary
* Alan Sked founder of Ukip
* Stephen Dorrell former Conservative Health Secretary
* Yasmin Alibhai-Brown columnist and broadcaster
* Charles Moore former editor of the Daily Telegraph
* Nick Butler BP group vice-president, strategy and policy development
* Lord Lipsey Labour peer and author

External links

* Andy Beckett 'Friends in high places' The Guardian, Saturday November 6, 2004.
* Tom Easton 'The British American Project for the Successor Generation' from: Lobster: parapolitics and state research journal  http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk [4]
* DAVID T. JOHNSON, MINISTER, US Embassy, London, Speeches & Remarks 04 November 2005 'Remarks at the British-American Project Annual Conference in Birmingham' [5]
* Duncan Parrish, "The British-American Project: right-wing conspiracy or right-on broker of the special relationship?", New Statesman, May 17, 1999.

* Official site of The British-American Project

Blogs that mention this article

* The Sideshow December 2007 Archive
* The Sideshow
* The details

Source: Technorati (view all)

The Earl of Crumpsall


Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

Is it or isn't it?

22.01.2008 15:30

Trouble is, you haven't explained whether it really is a right-wing conspiracy or not. Is it overtly anti-socialist and does it do anything to subvert or undermine people who are declared socialists? The list of members suggests it schmoozes people who are already right-wing and capitalist and maybe moves them a little further to the right.

annie citizen


conspiracy or not

22.01.2008 20:12

douglas alexander was without a doubt involved in an overtly anti-socialist, right wing plot that saw blair come into being. this in his pre-presidency scottish student union executive days.
my, reckoning, ever since I had the misfortune to meet the bastard, that one day he will be head stasi.
which he was the second time i encountered the fuqwit.
for either engratiation (like bribes of a safe-ish seat, or what ever!!!) and strong arm tactics, he was the one who collected the names grassing up scottish conference collegues and union delegates thus forcing through the first labour conference vote to ditch clause 4!
i´ve always kept one telescopic eye one our douglas have I. he sold out the miners as well.

no body in particular


Smear?

23.01.2008 08:37

What motivated the author to tack on that list of names?

Benjamin Zephaniah a CIA shill? Leave it out.

Is there any proof or is this more LaRouche bollocks?

Not impressed


look for yourselves

27.01.2008 20:20

People,

You have the internet at your finger tips. Make of the article what you prefer. I didn't tack the names on to the end of the article. There are many credible sources where you will find supporting information. Also, one of the comments reminds me of that piece of slime, Jim Murphy, the former head of the National Union of Students. I remember attending university as a mature student and being involved in a campaign to preserve grants. The grants were being abolished by the middle and upper-middle class creeps who run the Labour Party, and who had previously benefited from receiving exceptionally generous student grants in their youth. Jim Murphy, while sometimes marching with students opposed to the cuts, simultaneously went around Britain calling on students to accept the reality of grants being too expensive for the government. The rumour at the time was Murphy had been promised a safe Labour seat if he could squash rank and file student dissent. The grants are no more and Murphy got his safe Labour seat. I know some of the commentators here are not totally convinced, but really you just can't make this stuff up. Do your own research.

The earl of crumpsall


here's the source

27.01.2008 20:26

The article comes from SourceWatch: The Center for Media and Democracy. Now do you believe why we have a three ring circus of big business political parties?

 http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=British_American_Project

The Now Legendary Earl of Crumpsall


funny enough

02.02.2008 21:21

when reading the list of names, i was somewhat confused not to see jim murphy´s name amongst them. as well as believing alexander heading a new type stasi, jim murphy has always been a smarmier creep........a propagander merchant as well as arse licker.

no body in particular


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