Murdoch, Scaife and CIA
Propaganda
Special Report: The rapid expansion of
America’s right-wing media began in the
1980s as the Reagan administration
coordinated foreign policy initiatives with
conservative media executives, including
Rupert Murdoch, and then cleared away
regulatory hurdles.
By Robert Parry
December 31, 2014 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - The Reagan
administration pulled right-wing media
executives Rupert Murdoch and Richard Mellon
Scaife into a
CIA-organized “perception management”
operation which aimed Cold War-style
propaganda at the American people in the
1980s, according to declassified U.S.
government records.
Although some records
relating to Murdoch remain classified,
several documents that have been released
indicate that he and billionaire Scaife were
considered sources of financial and other
support for President Ronald Reagan’s
hard-line Central American policies,
including the CIA’s covert war in Nicaragua.
A driving force behind
creation of Reagan’s extraordinary
propaganda bureaucracy was CIA Director
William Casey who dispatched the CIA’s top
covert action specialist, Walter Raymond
Jr., to the National Security Council to
oversee the project. According to the
documents, Murdoch was brought into the
operation in 1983 – when he was still an
Australian citizen and his media empire was
much smaller than it is today.
Charles Wick, director of
the U.S. Information Agency, arranged at
least two face-to-face meetings between
Murdoch and Reagan, the first on Jan. 18,
1983, when the administration was lining up
private financing for its propaganda
campaign, according to records at the Reagan
presidential library in Simi Valley,
California. That meeting also included
lawyer and political operative Roy Cohn and
his law partner Thomas Bolan.
The Oval Office meeting
between Reagan and Murdoch came just five
days after NSC Advisor William Clark noted
in a Jan. 13, 1983 memo to Reagan the need
for non-governmental money to advance the
project. “We will develop a scenario for
obtaining private funding,” Clark wrote, as
cited in
an unpublished draft chapter of
the congressional Iran-Contra investigation.
Clark then told
the President that “Charlie Wick has offered
to take the lead. We may have to call on you
to meet with a group of potential donors.”
The documents suggest that
Murdoch was soon viewed as a source for that
funding. In an Aug. 9, 1983 memo summing up
the results of a Casey-organized meeting
with five leading ad executives regarding
how to “sell” Reagan’s aggressive policies
in Central America, Raymond referred to
Murdoch as if he already were helping out.
In a
memo to Clark, entitled “Private Sector
Support for Central American Program,”
Raymond criticized a more traditional White
House outreach program headed by Faith
Whittlesey as “preaching to the converted.”
Raymond told Clark that
the new project would involve a more
comprehensive approach aimed at persuading a
majority of Americans to back Reagan’s
Central American policies, which included
support for right-wing regimes in Guatemala
and El Salvador as well as the Contra rebels
fighting the leftist Sandinista government
of Nicaragua.
“We must move out into the
middle sector of the American public and
draw them into the ‘support’ column,”
Raymond wrote. “A second package of
proposals deal with means to market the
issue, largely considering steps utilizing
public relations specialists – or similar
professionals – to help transmit the
message.”
To improve the project’s
chances for success, Raymond wrote, “we
recommended funding via Freedom House or
some other structure that has credibility in
the political center. Wick, via Murdoch, may
be able to draw down added funds for this
effort.”
Raymond included similar
information in a separate memo to Wick in
which Raymond noted that “via Murdock [sic]
may be able to draw down added funds” to
support the initiative. (Raymond later told
me that he was referring to Rupert Murdoch.)
In a March 7, 1984 memo
about the “‘Private Funders’ Project,”
Raymond referred to Murdoch again in
discussing a request for money from longtime
CIA-connected journalist Brian Crozier, who
was “looking for private sector funding to
work on the question of ‘anti-Americanism’
overseas.”
Raymond wrote: “I am
pursuaded [sic] it is a significant long
term problem. It is also the kind of thing
that Ruppert [sic] and Jimmy might respond
positively to. Please look over the stack
[of papers from Crozier] and lets [sic]
discuss if and when there might be further
discussion with our friends.”
Crozier, who died in 2012,
had
a long history of operating in the
shadowy world of CIA propaganda. He was
director of Forum World Features,
which was set up in 1966 by the Congress for
Cultural Freedom, which received covert
funding from the CIA. Crozier also
acknowledged in his memoir keeping some of
his best stories for the CIA.
At least one other
document related to Murdoch’s work with USIA
Director Wick remains classified, according
to the National Archives. Murdoch’s News
Corp. has not responded to requests for
comment about the Reagan-era documents.
Helping Murdoch
Murdoch, who became a
naturalized citizen of the United States in
1985 to meet a regulatory requirement that
U.S. TV stations must be owned by Americans,
benefited from his close ties to both U.S.
and British officialdom.
On Monday, the UK’s
Independent reported that Ed Richards, the
retiring head of the British media
regulatory agency Ofcom,
accused British government
representatives of showing favoritism to
Murdoch’s companies.
Richards said he was
“surprised” by the informality, closeness
and frequency of contact between executives
and ministers during the failed bid by
Murdoch’s News Corp. for the satellite
network BSkyB in 2011. The deal was
abandoned when it was discovered that
journalists at Murdoch’s News of the
World tabloid had hacked the phone of
murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler and others.
“What surprised everyone
about it – not just me – was quite how close
it was and the informality of it,” Richards
said, confirming what had been widely
reported regarding Murdoch’s access to
powerful British politicians dating back at
least to the reign of Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s. The Reagan
documents suggest that Murdoch built
similarly close ties to leading U.S.
politicians in the same era.
In 1983, Murdoch’s rising
media empire was still based in Australia
with only a few U.S. properties, such as the
Star tabloid and the New York Post. But he
was eyeing expansion into the U.S. media
market. In 1984, he bought a stake in 20th
Century Fox and then six Metromedia
television stations, which would form the
nucleus of Fox Broadcasting Company, which
was founded on Oct. 9, 1986.
At the time, Murdoch and
other media moguls were lobbying for a
relaxation of regulations from the Federal
Communications Commission, a goal that
Reagan shared. Under FCC Chairman Mark
Fowler, the Reagan administration undertook
a number of steps favorable to Murdoch’s
interests, including increasing the number
of TV stations that any single entity could
own from seven in 1981 to 12 in 1985.
In 1987, the “Fairness
Doctrine,” which required political balance
in broadcasting, was eliminated, which
enabled Murdoch to pioneer a more aggressive
conservatism on his TV network. In the
mid-1990s, Murdoch expanded his political
reach by founding the neoconservative Weekly
Standard in 1995 and Fox News on cable in
1996. At Fox News, Murdoch has hired scores
of prominent politicians, mostly
Republicans, putting them on his payroll as
commentators.
Last decade, Murdoch
continued to expand his reach into U.S. mass
media, acquiring DirecTV and the financial
news giant Dow Jones, including The Wall
Street Journal, America’s leading business
news journal.
Scaife’s Role
Richard Mellon Scaife
exercised his media influence on behalf of
Reagan and the conservative cause in a
different way. While the scion of the Mellon
banking, oil and aluminum fortune did
publish a right-wing newspaper in
Pittsburgh, the Tribune Review, Scaife
mostly served as a financial benefactor for
right-wing journalists and think tanks.
Indeed, Scaife was one of
the original financiers of what emerged as a
right-wing counter-establishment in media
and academia, a longstanding goal of key
Republicans, including President Richard
Nixon who recognized the importance of
propaganda as a political weapon.
According to Nixon’s chief
of staff H.R. Haldeman, as reported in
The Haldeman Diaries, one of Nixon’s
pet ideas was to build a network of loyal
conservatives in positions of influence. The
President was “pushing again on project of
building our establishment in press,
business, education, etc.,” Haldeman wrote
in one entry on Sept. 12, 1970.
Financed by rich
conservative foundations and wealthy special
interests, Nixon’s brainchild helped tilt
politics in favor of the American Right with
Richard Mellon Scaife one of the project’s
big-money godfathers. By using family
foundations, such as Sarah Scaife and
Carthage, Scaife joined with other leading
right-wing foundations to fund think tanks,
such as the Heritage Foundation, which
Scaife helped launch in 1973.
In 1978, Nixon’s friend
and Treasury Secretary William Simon
provided more impetus to this growing
machine, declaring in his book, Time for
Truth: “Funds generated by business …
must rush by the multimillion to the aid of
liberty … to funnel desperately needed funds
to scholars, social scientists, writers and
journalists who understand the relationship
between political and economic liberty.”
With Reagan’s inauguration
in 1981 – and Casey’s selection as CIA
director – Scaife and other right-wing
ideologues were in position to merge their
private funding with U.S. Government money
in pursuit of the administration’s
geopolitical goals, including making sure
the American people would not break ranks as
many did over the Vietnam War.
Building the
Operation
On Nov. 4, 1982, Raymond,
after his transfer from CIA to the NSC staff
but while still a CIA officer,
wrote to NSC Advisor Clark about the
“Democracy Initiative and Information
Programs,” stating that “Bill Casey asked me
to pass on the following thought concerning
your meeting with Dick Scaife, Dave Abshire
[then a member of the President’s Foreign
Intelligence Advisory Board], and Co.
“Casey had lunch with them
today and discussed the need to get moving
in the general area of supporting our
friends around the world. By this definition
he is including both ‘building democracy’ …
and helping invigorate international media
programs. The DCI [Casey] is also concerned
about strengthening public information
organizations in the United States such as
Freedom House. …
“A critical piece of the
puzzle is a serious effort to raise private
funds to generate momentum. Casey’s talk
with Scaife and Co. suggests they would be
very willing to cooperate. … Suggest that
you note White House interest in private
support for the Democracy initiative.”
In subsequent years,
Freedom House emerged as a leading critic of
Nicaragua’s Sandinista government, which
Reagan and Casey were seeking to overthrow
by covertly supporting the Contra rebels.
Freedom House also became a major recipient
of money from the U.S.-funded National
Endowment for Democracy, which was founded
in 1983 under the umbrella of the
Casey-Raymond project.
The role of the CIA in
these initiatives was concealed but never
far from the surface. A
Dec. 2, 1982 note addressed to “Bud,” a
reference to senior NSC official Robert
“Bud” McFarlane, described a request from
Raymond for a brief meeting. “When he
[Raymond] returned from Langley [CIA
headquarters], he had a proposed draft
letter … re $100 M democ[racy] proj[ect],”
the note said.
While Casey pulled the
strings on this project, the CIA director
instructed White House officials to hide the
CIA’s role. “Obviously we here [at CIA]
should not get out front in the development
of such an organization, nor should we
appear to be a sponsor or advocate,” Casey
said in
one undated letter to then-White House
counselor Edwin Meese III as Casey urged
creation of a “National Endowment.”
On Jan. 21, 1983, Raymond
updated Clark about the project, which
also was reaching out to representatives
from other conservative foundations,
including Les Lenkowsky of Smith-Richardson,
Michael Joyce of Olin and Dan McMichael of
Mellon-Scaife. “This is designed to develop
a broader group of people who will support
parallel initiatives consistent with
Administration needs and desires,” Raymond
wrote.
Bashing Teresa
Heinz
One example of how
Scaife’s newspaper directly helped the
Reagan administration can be seen in clippings
from the Tribune-Review that I found in
Raymond’s files. On April 21, 1983, the
newspaper published a package of stories
suggesting illicit left-wing connections
among groups opposed to nuclear war.
The articles leave little
doubt that Scaife’s newspaper is suggesting
that these anti-war activists are communists
or communist fellow travelers. One headline
reads: “Reds Woo Some U.S. Peace Leaders.”
Another article cites an
accusation from one congressman in the
1950s, after hearings on foundation grants
“to numerous Communists and Communist-front
organizations,” that “Here lies the story of
how Communism and Socialism are financed in
the U.S. – where they get their money.” The
1983 article then asks: “Is history
repeating itself?”
Ironically, one of the
philanthropists who is singled out in these
red-baiting articles is Teresa Heinz, then
married to Sen. John Heinz, R-Pennsylvania,
who died in a 1991 plane crash. In 1995,
Teresa Heinz married Sen. John Kerry,
D-Massachusetts, who is currently Secretary
of State.
The organizational role of
Casey and Raymond in this domestic
propaganda campaign raised concerns about
the legality of having two senior CIA
officials participating in a scheme to
manage the perceptions of the American
people.
Both in internal documents
and a deposition to the congressional
Iran-Contra committee, Raymond made clear
his discomfort about the possible legal
violation from his and Casey’s roles.
Raymond formally resigned from the CIA in
April 1983, so, he said, “there would be no
question whatsoever of any contamination of
this.”
That sensitivity was also
reflected in press
guidance prepared in case a reporter
noted Raymond’s CIA background and the
problems it presented to the “public
diplomacy” effort. In case someone
challenged press reports that asserted
“there is no CIA involvement in the Public
Diplomacy Program” and then asked “isn’t
Walt Raymond, a CIA employee, involved
heavily?” – the prescribed answer was:
“Walter Raymond is a
member of the National Security Council
staff. In the past he has worked for
Defense, CIA and State. It is true that in
the formative stages of the effort, Walt
Raymond contributed many useful ideas. It is
ironic that he was one of those who was most
insistent that there be no CIA involvement
in this program in any way.
“Indeed, it is a credit to
the Agency that it has stressed throughout
that the United States ought to be
completely open about the programs it puts
in place to assist in the development of
democratic institutions and that none of
these programs should come under the aegis
of the CIA. They do not want to be involved
in managing these programs and will not be.
We have nothing to hide here.”
If a reporter pressed
regarding where Raymond last worked, the
response was to be: “He retired from CIA. He
is a permanent member of the National
Security Council.” And, if pressed about
Raymond’s duties, the scripted answer was:
“His duties there are classified.”
(Raymond’s last job at the CIA was Director
of the Covert Action Staff with a specialty
in propaganda and disinformation.)
Beyond how Raymond’s
“classified duties” contradict the assertion
that “we have nothing to hide here,” there
was a more deceptive element of the press
guidance: it didn’t mention the key role of
CIA Director Casey in both organizing and
directing the project – and it suggested
that Raymond’s role had been limited to
offering “many useful ideas” when he was the
hands-on, day-to-day manager of the
operation.
Casey’s Hidden
Hand
Casey’s secret role in the
propaganda scheme continued well into 1986,
as Raymond continued to send progress
reports to his old boss, even as Raymond
fretted in one memo about the need “to get
[Casey] out of the loop.”
The “public diplomacy”
operation was “the kind of thing which
[Casey] had a broad catholic interest in,”
Raymond shrugged during his Iran-Contra
deposition. He then offered the excuse that
Casey undertook this apparently illegal
interference in domestic politics “not so
much in his CIA hat, but in his adviser to
the president hat.”
Though the Casey-Raymond
teamwork ended with the exposure of the
Iran-Contra scandal in late 1986 and with
Casey’s death on May 6, 1987, its legacy
continued with Scaife and other rich
right-wingers funding ideological media that
protected the flanks of President Reagan,
his successor President George H.W. Bush and
other Republicans of that era.
For instance, Scaife
helped fund the work of Steven Emerson, who
played a key role in “discrediting”
investigations into whether Reagan’s 1980
campaign had sabotaged President Jimmy
Carter’s hostage negotiations with Iran to
gain an edge in that pivotal election. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Unmasking
October Surprise Debunker.”]
Scaife also helped finance
the so-called “Arkansas Project” that pushed
hyped and bogus scandals to damage the
presidency of Bill Clinton. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Starr-gate:
Cracks on the Right.”]
Walter Raymond Jr. died on
April 16, 2003. Richard Mellon Scaife died
on July 4, 2014. But Rupert Murdoch, now 83,
remains one of the most powerful media
figures on earth, continuing to wield
unparalleled influence through his control
of Fox News and his vast media empire that
stretches around the globe.
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories
for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the
1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s
Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or
as an e-book (from
Amazon
and
barnesandnoble.com).
You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on
the Bush Family and its connections to
various right-wing operatives for only $34.
The trilogy includes
America’s
Stolen Narrative.
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click here..