‘Independent’
report claiming Uyghur genocide brought to you by
sham university and neocon ideologues lobbying
to ‘punish’ China
By Ajit Sing
March 20, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - -
"Gray
Zone" -
Throughout
March, headlines in corporate media outlets from
CNN to The Guardian blared about the
release of the “first independent report” to
authoritatively determine that the Chinese
government has violated “each and every act” of
the United Nations convention against genocide,
and therefore “bears State responsibility for
committing genocide against the Uyghurs.”
The report, published on March 8 by the Newlines
Institute for Strategy and Policy, in collaboration
with the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights,
follows a last-minute accusation
made in January by the outgoing Trump administration,
along with similar declarations by the Dutch
and Canadian Parliaments. It was published
shortly after the release of a remarkably similar
report on Feb. 8 that was commissioned
by the U.S. government-backed World Uyghur Congress,
and which alleged that there is a “credible case”
against the Chinese government for genocide.
CNN, The
Guardian, AFP,
and the CBC
hailed the March 8 Newlines report as an
“independent analysis” and a “landmark legal report”
that involved “dozens of international experts.”
Samantha Power, the Biden administration’s nominee
to direct the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID), also promoted it: “This report
shows how this [genocide] is precisely what China is
doing with the Uighurs,” the notorious humanitarian
interventionist stated.
The report’s authors
have insisted that they are “impartial” and are “not
advocating any course of action whatsoever.” But a
closer look at the report and the institutions
behind it reveals its authors’ claims of
“independence” and “expertise” to be a blatant
deception.
Indeed, the report’s
principal author, Yonah Diamond, recently called
on the Biden administration to
unilaterally “confront,” and “punish” China for
supposedly committing genocide, and expand sanctions
against the country. Meanwhile, the think tanks
behind the report have advocated fervently for the
West to “combat” and sanction China, and have
promoted U.S. regime change policies targeting
Syria, Venezuela, Iran, and Russia.
A majority of the
report’s “expert” signatories are members of the
Newlines Institute and the Wallenberg Centre. Others
are members of the hawkish Inter-Parliamentary
Alliance on China, former U.S. State Department
officials, and ardent supporters of U.S. military
interventionism.
The report relies most
substantially on the “expertise” of Adrian Zenz,
the far-right
evangelical ideologue,
whose “scholarship” on China has been demonstrated
to be flawed,
riddled with falsehoods and dishonest statistical
manipulation.
The reliance on the
voluminous but demonstrably fraudulent work of Zenz
is not surprising, given that the report was
financed by the Newlines Institute’s parent
organization, the Fairfax University of America
(FXUA). FXUA is a disgraced institution that
Virginia state regulators moved to
shut down in
2019 after finding that its “teachers weren’t
qualified to teach their assigned courses”, academic
quality was “patently deficient,” and plagiarism was
“rampant” and ignored.
Just days before the
Newlines Institute published its “expert” report
accusing China of genocide, an advisory board to the
U.S. Department of Education recommended
terminating
recognition of FXUA’s accreditor, placing its
license in jeopardy.
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Discredited ‘Evidence’
The Newlines report
presents no new material on the condition of Uyghur
Muslims in China. Instead, it claims to have
reviewed all of “the available evidence” and applied
“international law to the evidence of the facts on
the ground.”
Rather than conducting
a thorough and comprehensive review of “the
available evidence,” the report restricted its
survey to a narrow range of flawed
pseudo-scholarship along with reports by U.S.
government-backed lobbying fronts for the exiled
Uyghur separatist movement. It was upon this faulty
foundation that the report applies legal analysis
related to the UN Genocide Convention.
Newlines’ report relies
primarily on the dubious studies of Zenz,
the U.S. government propaganda outlet, Radio Free
Asia, and
claims made by the
U.S.-funded separatist network, the World Uyghur
Congress. These
three sources comprise more than one-third of the
references used to construct the factual basis of
the document, with Zenz as the most heavily relied
upon source – cited on more than 50 occasions.
Many of the remaining
references cite the work of members of Newlines
Institute’s “Uyghur Scholars Working Group,”
of which Zenz is a founding member and which is made
up of a small group of academics who collaborate
with him and support his conclusions.
As The Grayzone
has reported, Zenz is a far-right
Christian fundamentalist who has said he is “led by
God” against China’s government,
deplores homosexuality and gender equality, and has
taught exclusively in evangelical theological
institutions.
A careful review of Zenz’s research shows
that his assertion of genocide is concocted through
fraudulent statistical manipulation, cherry-picking
of source material and propagandistic
misrepresentations.
His widely-cited
reports were not published in peer-reviewed journals
overseen by academic institutions, but rather, by a
D.C.-based CIA cut-out called the
Jamestown Foundation and
“The Journal of Political Risk,” a publication headed
by former
NATO and U.S. national security state operatives.
As his academic
malpractice comes to light, Zenz has faced
increasing scrutiny and embarrassment, as evidenced
by his threat
to take legal action against his scholarly critics.
In order to shore up
the report’s credibility, and to deflect from its
essential reliance on Zenz’s reports, its authors
have emphasized their supposed “independence” and
“impartiality.”
“This [is] not an
advocacy document, we’re not advocating any course
of action whatsoever,”, stated Azeem Ibrahim,
director of special initiatives at Newlines
Institute. “There were no campaigners involved in
this report, it was purely done by legal experts,
area experts and China ethnic experts.”
However, just weeks
before the publication of the report, its principal
author, Yonah Diamond, penned
a bellicose call for
the Biden administration to eschew the UN (which
Diamond deems to be “beholden to the Chinese
government”) and unilaterally confront China.
Following the Trump administration’s declaration
that China was committing genocide in Xinjiang,
Diamond argued that the U.S. is legally obliged to
“punish” China and that “the Biden administration
must now take concrete action to that end together
with U.S. allies”.
The report attempts to
construct an appearance of broad expert consensus
supporting its conclusions, including a list of 33
“independent expert” signatories. Unsurprisingly,
this list consists of individuals pushing for a New
Cold War and confrontation with China, and who
support separatist efforts to transform the
mineral-rich, geopolitically important region of
Xinjiang into a NATO-oriented ethno-state:
Irwin Cotler
and Helena Kennedy — co-chairs, along with
Marco Rubio, of the hawkish Inter-Parliamentary
Alliance on China (IPAC). Composed almost
exclusively of white Western lawmakers, IPAC formed
in 2020 in order to mount a “common defence” against
the “rise of the People’s Republic of China.”
Members of the World Uyghur Congress executive,
Erkin Ekrem and Rahima Mahmut, sit on IPAC’s
advisory board and secretariat; Zenz also sits on
the advisory board.
David Scheffer,
Beth von Schaack and Gregory H. Stanton —
Scheffer and Schaack are both former U.S. State
Department ambassadors-at-large, while Stanton is a
former U.S. State Department official.
Lloyd Axworthy
and Allan Rock — the former Canadian
minister of foreign affairs and former Canadian UN
ambassador, respectively.
Adrian Zenz —
founding member of Newlines Institute’s “Uyghur
Scholars Working Group.”
Rather than consult a
wide range of authorities and academic experts, or
subject its study to peer review, Newlines relied
entirely on a narrowly focused community of
like-minded ideologues. A majority of the
signatories are members of the two think tanks
behind the report, the Newlines Institute and the
Wallenberg Centre. Far from “independent,” these
organizations are partisan, self-described
“campaigners” that align closely with U.S. and
Western foreign policy goals, advocating for
sanctions and intervention against China and other
non-aligned nations across the Global South.
Newlines Institute
The supposedly
independent report accusing China of genocide was
published by the Newlines Institute for Strategy and
Policy based in Washington, D.C., and known formerly
as the Center for Global Policy. Founded in 2019, the
think tank’s stated aim is
“to enhance US foreign policy” with a
“specialization in Muslim states and societies.”
With extensive ties to
the U.S. regime-change establishment, the Newlines
Institute is a reliable repository of anti-China
material. For example, it has featured the
ramblings of Robert Spalding,
the former senior director for strategy to President
Donald Trump and one of the architects of the Trump
administration’s 2018 national security doctrine,
which formally reoriented U.S. foreign policy from a
focus on the so-called global war on terror towards
great power competition with China and Russia.
The leadership of
Newlines Institute includes former U.S. State
Department officials, U.S. military advisors,
intelligence professionals who previously worked for
the “shadow
CIA” private spying firm, Stratfor,
and a collection of interventionist ideologues. Its
contributors represent a who’s who of Syria regime
changers who cheer-led for U.S. military
interventionism while intimidating and bullying any
prominent figure that dared present a critical
perspective on the proxy war.
Hassan Hassan, director;
founder and editor-in-chief of Newlines Magazine —
Ardent supporter of U.S. imperialism, including wars
on Iraq, Libya, Yemen and
especially Syria. Along with Newlines contributor
Michael Weiss, Hassan called
for the U.S. military to balkanize Syria,
permanently occupy its oil-rich Jazira region and
turn the country into “an American security
protectorate.”
Azeem Ibrahim, director —
Adjunct research professor at the Strategic Studies
Institute, U.S. Army War College. Ibrahim is a
co-author of the Newlines report.
Kamran Bokhari, director —
Previously served as the Central Asia Studies Course
Coordinator at U.S. Department of State’s Foreign
Service Institute
Faysal Itani, deputy
director — Former resident senior fellow at the U.S.
State Department-funded Atlantic Council, which functions
as the semi-official think tank of NATO in
Washington, D.C.
Michael Weiss, senior editor – A veteran
Israel lobbyist, neoconservative activist and
anti-Muslim agitator-turned advocate of Islamist
insurgents in Syria, Weiss has branded himself as an
expert on Russia despite having never visited the
country and speaking no Russian.
Muhammad Idrees Ahmad, senior
editor – In 2016, Ahmad phoned Grayzone
Editor Max Blumenthal unsolicited before Blumenthal
published a two-part
investigative exposé on the Syrian White
Helmets, threatening him with severe consequences if
he went ahead. (Listen to a recording of Ahmad’s
threatening call here).
A lecturer on digital journalism at Stirling
University in the U.K., Ahmad recently attacked
Democracy Now! for hosting scholar Vijay
Prashad for a discussion on the danger of a new Cold
War with China.
Rasha Al Aqeedi, senior analyst —
Iraq-born pundit who formerly worked as a research
fellow at the neoconservative Foreign Policy
Research Institute (FPRI), a neoconservative think
tank originally founded by white
supremacists and Cold War hardliners that has
honored Iraq war advocates John Bolton and James
Mattis. Like her colleague Ahmad, Aqeedi dedicates a
significant portion of her time to smearing anti-war
figures on social media.
Elizabeth Tsurkov, non-resident
fellow — Previously worked for a number of
neoconservative and establishment think tanks,
including the Atlantic Council, Foreign Policy
Research Institute and Freedom House. Tsurkov served
in the Israeli military, during Israel’s 2006 war on
Lebanon. Throughout the Syrian proxy war, Tsurkov maintained
friendly contacts with members of the
Saudi-backed jihadist militia, Jaish al-Islam, and boasted about
links both she and Israel’s military-intelligence
apparatus maintained with Syria’s armed opposition.
Nicholas A. Heras, senior
analyst — Previously a research associate at the
U.S. Department of Defense’s National Defense
University, Heras is also a fellow at the arms
industry-funded Center for New American Security.
There, he proposed
using “wheat [as] a weapon of great power…to apply
pressure on the Assad regime.” In other words,
Heras advocated for the mass starvation of Syrian
civilians by occupying their wheat fields, a U.S.
policy that is currently underway in the country’s
northeastern region.
Caroline Rose, senior analyst —
Previously served as an analyst at Geopolitical
Futures, headed by Stratfor founder, George
Friedman. Stratfor is a private spying and
intelligence firm commonly referred to as a “Shadow
CIA.” It has contracted
extensively with the U.S. government, and has trained
the radical wing of Venezuela’s opposition and
advised them on destabilization tactics.
Robin Blackburn, managing editor —
For 12 years, Blackburn served as a writer and
editor with Stratfor.
Robert Inks, editor —
Previously served as director of the Writers Group
and special projects editor at Stratfor.
Daryl Johnson, non-resident
fellow — Served in the U.S. Army and previously
worked as a senior analyst at the Department of
Homeland Security. He is the founder of DT
Analytics, a private consulting firm for police and
law enforcement.
Eugene Chausovsky, non-resident
fellow — Lectures on the “geopolitics of Central
Asia” at the U.S. State Department’s Foreign Service
Institute. Previously worked as Senior Eurasia
Analyst at Stratfor for over a decade.
Imtiaz Ali, non-resident fellow —
Previously worked as a curriculum specialist at the
U.S. State Department’s Foreign Service Institute.
Ahmed Alwani is the founder and president of the
Newlines Institute. Alwani previously served on the
advisory board for the U.S. military’s Africa
Command (AFRICOM) and is the vice president of the
International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT);
his father, Taha Jabir Al-Alwani was one of IIIT’s
founders.
Newlines Institute recently took steps to counter rumors
of IIIT’s connections to the Muslim Brotherhood.
In an internal email obtained by The Grayzone,
dated Nov. 17, 2020, Newlines Director Hassan Hassan
addressed the “accusation” against the then-Center
for Global Policy. Hassan wrote that while a
different “older entity” was funded by IIIT, “[t]he
current one has no relation to IIIT.” Hassan
attempted to assuage concerns by downplaying
Alwani’s connection to IIIT, claiming that Alwani
“inherited the International Institute for Islamic
Thought as Vice President as a sort of legacy”
following his father’s death in 2018.
Overseen by Sham University
Newlines Institute is a branch of a disgraced
educational institution that has repeatedly violated
state educational standards, raising further
questions about the quality of the think tank’s
work.
Newlines Institute’s parent institution is Fairfax
University of America (FXUA), a school also founded
and led by Alwani, and formerly known as Virginia
International University. FXUA is a private
university in Fairfax, Virginia. Founded in 1998,
FXUA’s short track record has been riddled with
numerous academic scandals and efforts by state
regulators to shut the institution down.
In 2019, the State Council of Higher Education for
Virginia initiated
proceedings to revoke FXUA’s (then known as
Virginia International University) certificate to
operate. The move came after state regulators found
widespread noncompliance with state educational
standards.
According to the Richmond Times-Dispatch,
auditors determined that “teachers weren’t qualified
to teach their assigned courses,” the academic
quality and content of classes were “patently
deficient” and student work was characterized by
“rampant plagiarism” that went unpunished.
“Unqualified students regularly submit plagiarized
or inferior work; faculty turn a blind eye and lower
grading standards (perhaps to avoid failing an
entire class); and administrators do not effectively
monitor the quality of online education being
provided,” the audit said.
“That such substandard coursework could continue
with no complaints from students, faculty or
administrators raises concerns about the purpose of
education at VIU [Virginia International
University].”
Indeed, signs point to FXUA/VIU serving as a “visa
mill” rather than a legitimate educational
institution. As
Inside Higher Ed explains, the term
“visa mill” refers to a sham operation where an
institution “offers little by way of educational
value,” but instead lures international students
through its ability to offer access to student and
work visas, while exploiting them by charging
exorbitant tuition costs. FXUA/VIU’s accreditor, the
Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and
Schools (ACICS), has
long faced accusations of certifying such
institutions.
In 2019, Inside
Higher Ed reported that FXUA/VIU’s “appears
to exist primarily to enroll international
students,” finding that over the previous five
years, “the percentage of students from North
America varied between 1 and 3 percent.” Auditors
found that the student body
was largely comprised of international students with
an “abysmally poor command” of the English language.
The students
were charged $2,178 per graduate class and
$1,266 per undergraduate class to receive their
“patently deficient” education.
Although Virginia International University reached
an agreement with state regulators that allowed it
to continue operating and has rebranded itself as
Fairfax University of America, significant concerns
remain about the university, along with its
subsidiary Newlines Institute.
Just days before Newlines Institute’s report on
China was released, its FXUA’s accreditation was
once again in potential jeopardy. On March 5, an
advisory board to the U.S. Department of Education recommended
terminating recognition for ACICS. The National
Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and
Integrity voted 11-to-1 to recommend that ACICS lose
the federal recognition it needs to operate.
The advisory committee made the same recommendation
in 2016, leading to the ACICS’s recognition being
revoked under the Obama administration, before
recognition was restored to the troubled accreditor
in 2018 by Trump’s secretary of education, the
infamous privatization activist and oligarch Betsy
Devos.
The Wallenberg Centre
Newlines Institute published its report in
collaboration with The Raoul Wallenberg Centre for
Human Rights. The report’s principal author, Yonah
Diamond, is legal counsel for The Wallenberg Center,
and many of the report’s signatories hold
affiliations with the organization.
Based in Montreal, The Wallenberg Centre was founded
by Irwin Cotler, former minister of justice and
attorney general of Canada. While often touted as a
“human rights champion,” Cotler is, in fact, a
champion of the “responsibility to protect” and
“humanitarian intervention” doctrines, regularly
invoked by Western states in order to justify
imperial interventions in the global south.
Cotler routinely levels propagandistic accusations
of human rights abuses, atrocities, and genocide in
service to Western imperialism, including
interventions in
Libya, Syria, Iran
and Venezuela,
where Cotler served
as legal counsel for far-right,
U.S.-backed Venezuelan coup leader Leopoldo López.
Lopez’s wife, Lilian Tintori, holds an advisory
position at The Wallenberg Centre.
Cotler is also active in Haiti,
serving as the minister of justice in the Canadian
administration that worked with the U.S. and France
to help overthrow former Haitian President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 2004. In 2014, Cotler
invited Maryam Rajavi, leader of the exiled
Iranian MEK cult, to speak on Canada’s parliament
hill. Four years later, he nominated
U.S. and U.K.-funded Syrian White Helmets for the
Nobel Peace Prize.
Cotler is an ardent supporter
of Israeli apartheid
and longtime advisor to Moshe Ya’alon, former
Israeli defense minister and chief of staff of the
Israeli military. Cotler has played a significant
role in the Canadian government’s efforts to equate
criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism and smear
the nonviolent boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS)
movement for
Palestinian rights.
Cotler has long
harbored hostile sentiments towards China. For a
number of years, Cotler served on the international
legal team for Chinese anti-government dissident Liu
Xiaobo, a
right-wing ideologue who
called for the privatization and “Westernization” of
China, ardently supported former President George W.
Bush, and cheered on U.S. wars on Vietnam,
Afghanistan, and Iraq.
More recently, during
the coronavirus pandemic, Cotler echoed calls of
right-wing U.S. lawmakers for international
legal action and sanctions to
punish China for supposedly causing the coronavirus
pandemic.
In its mission
statement, the Wallenberg Centre outlines its
right-wing, Western imperial outlook in detail,
explicitly identifying China, Venezuela, Iran, and
Russia as countries that it is pushing to “combat”
with sanctions.
The Wallenberg Centre
has become a haven for anti-China hawks, including
Senior Fellow David Kilgour and David Matas, senior
legal counsel for B’nai Brith Canada, a right-wing
organization that describes itself as dedicated
to “Israel advocacy.”
Kilgour and Matas have
extensive ties to the far-right,
anti-China religious cult Falun Gong.
Both men are regularly contributors to the group’s
propaganda arm, The Epoch Times, a media
network that The
New York Times has described as
an “anti-China, pro-Trump media empire” and “leading
purveyor of right-wing misinformation.” In 2019, an NBC
News exposé found
that The Epoch Times spent over $1.5
million on approximately 11,000 pro-Trump
advertisements in just six months, “more than any
organization outside of the Trump campaign itself,
and more than most Democratic presidential
candidates have spent on their own campaigns.”
In 2006, Kilgour and
Matas were commissioned
by Falun Gong to
author a report which made sensational accusations
that the Chinese government was secretly conducting
a mass campaign of live organ harvesting Falun Gong
disciples. In 2017, an investigation
by The Washington Post determined
that the claims made by Kilgour and Matas were
unfounded, with experts commenting that their
allegations were “not plausible” and “unthinkable.”
As Washington advances
its new Cold War strategy, it has amplified
accusations of genocide and other atrocities against
the Chinese government, all focused on Beijing’s
policy in Xinjiang. To broaden support for the
dubious narrative, the U.S. government has turned to
a series of pseudo-academic institutions and faux
experts to generate seemingly serious and
independent studies.
Any critical probe of
the reams of reports on Xinjiang and the hawkish
institutions that publish them will quickly reveal a
shabby propaganda campaign dressed up as academic
inquiry. Western media’s refusal to look beneath the
surface of Washington’s information war against
China only highlights its central role in the
operation.
Ajit Singh is a
lawyer and journalist. He is a contributing author
to Keywords in Radical Philosophy and
Education: Common Concepts for Contemporary
Movements (Brill: 2019). He tweets at @ajitxsingh.
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