August 23, 2023 -
Information Clearing House -
Experts with important-sounding titles
linked to academic-sounding entities have
been shaping hearts and minds in the press,
both at home and abroad, in favor of endless
conflict in Ukraine. Guess what
deep-pocketed benefactor lurks beneath the
surface?
During the Iraq War, the Pentagon backed retired
generals to make the rounds of TV and
radio shows as ‘military analysts’ to
promote the Bush administration’s agenda in
the Persian Gulf. It was like inviting
Ronald McDonald on a program to debate and
discuss the merit of Big Macs. You could
almost see the strings attached to the
puppets, linked to the military-industrial
complex that benefited from war without an
off-ramp.
Fast forward 20 years, and the sales
tactics have drastically changed. The
generals have been replaced by various
experts with academic credentials, typically
linked to one or more ‘think tanks’. Far
from the neutral academic centers of
intellectual integrity that the names
suggest, these entities are little more than
laundromats for discreet special interests.
I should know – I used to be a director of
one.
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Every Wednesday, some of the
highest-ranking figures of the Bush
administration would come to our Washington,
DC office to deliver their main agenda
points for the week, requesting assistance
in placing and promoting them to both
grassroots activists sympathetic to the
cause and to the general public. The experts
within the think tank were hired based on
political litmus tests, no doubt to ensure
that their views aligned with the
organization’s. When they no longer do,
you’re either fired or you leave.
The donors, many of whom were well-known
millionaires and billionaires driven by a
passion for certain issues, would come
straight out and ask for bang for their buck
in exchange for the opening of their
wallets. In some cases, an entire project or
department would be mounted at the think
tank with the understanding that it would be
fully funded by a single donor. These rich,
influential folks typically had business or
investment interests that benefited from
shaping the establishment narrative in their
favor, and they wanted to do so without
leaving any footprints. What better way than
to have it all fronted by a shiny veneer of
expert credibility?
So while the generals of the Iraq War era
had all the subtlety of a sledgehammer in
representing the interests of the
military-industrial complex, the new
salesmen of endless armed conflict in
Ukraine have overwhelmingly adopted the more
subtle model. A
study published in 2020 found that the
top 50 think tanks received over a billion
dollars from the US government and its
defense contractors and manufacturers,
including some of the biggest beneficiaries
of weapons production today ‘for Ukraine’.
The top recipients of this funding include
the Atlantic Council, German Marshall Fund
of the United States, Brookings Institution,
Heritage Foundation, Center for Strategic
and International Studies, New America
Foundation, RAND Corporation, Center for a
New American Security, Council on Foreign
Relations, and the Stimson Center.
Some of these black boxes are more
ideologically-driven than others. The
Heritage Foundation, for example, leans
overwhelmingly neoconservative and
interventionist. Others, like the Atlantic
Council and German Marshall Fund, are
effectively force multipliers for NATO
talking points. But the RAND Corporation
also houses systems analysts and scientists
specializing in space and computing. The
fact that not all of these entities – or
even the people who work within some of them
– can be tossed into the same basket and
labeled mere parrots for the special
interests of their organization’s
benefactors helps to muddy the waters.
In an
analysis published in June of media
coverage related to US military involvement
in Ukraine, the Quincy Institute for
Responsible Statecraft found that, when a
think tank is cited regarding the issue, 85%
of the time it’s a think tank with
“financial backing from the defense
industry.” Taken at face value, this
risks being interpreted by the general
public as expert ‘consensus’ on the need for
US taxpayers to continue flooding Ukraine
with weapons, unaware that it’s really just
a bunch of Pentagon-backed actors agreeing
with each other about the need to pursue the
most profitable course of action on behalf
of their War Inc. sugar daddies. Just like
when climate scientists, who have parlayed
climate change into endless funding and a
perpetual justification for their existence,
aren’t going to kill their cash cow by
arguing that the climate can’t be controlled
by man and that throwing cash at the issue –
or at them – is futile.
Many of the Ukraine think tank experts
are quick to attack analysis and information
published on platforms they don’t like –
such as RT – as ‘Russian-backed’. You’d have
to be living under a rock these days to not
know that RT is linked to Russia. No
transparency issues there. But there is far
less transparency around their own
organizations’ financing. Where is their
insistence on being above board about the
use of defense industry cash to influence
not just the general public but the course
of the conflict itself? Around a third of
top foreign policy think tanks don’t
disclose this Pentagon funding, according to
the
Quincy Institute. Nor is it
unheard of for these experts to
springboard from these
establishment-friendly platforms and the
public notoriety they provide, right into
public office – where they can translate the
same agenda that they promoted into
actionable policy. Isn’t it important for
voters to consider the powerful hidden hand
who helped to get them there?
Rachel
Marsden