-Caveat Lector- www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/ctrl@listserv.aol.com/ <A HREF="">ctrl</A> ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

--- Begin Message ---
-Caveat Lector-

http://politics.guardian.co.uk/foreignaffairs/story/0,,1343704,00.html

Friends in high places

You won't have heard of the British-American Project, but its members
include some of the most powerful men and women in the UK. Officially it
exists to promote the 'special relationship', but it has been described as a
Trojan horse for US foreign policy. Even its supporters joke that it's
funded by the CIA. Should we be worried? Andy Beckett reports

Saturday November 6, 2004
The Guardian 

In the summer of 1997, a few weeks after New Labour won power, a striking
article about the election appeared in a privately circulated newsletter.
Under the cryptic headline Big Swing To BAP, the article began, "No less
than four British-American Project fellows and one advisory board member
have been appointed to ministerial posts in the new Labour government." A
list of the names of these five people and of other New Labour appointees
who were members of BAP followed: "Mo Mowlam ... Chris Smith ... Peter
Mandelson ... Baroness Symons ... George Robertson ... Jonathan Powell ...
Geoff Mulgan ... Matthew Taylor ..." The article ended with a
self-congratulatory flourish and the names of two more notable BAP members:
"James Naughtie and Jeremy Paxman gave them all a hard time on BBC radio and
television. Other fellows, too numerous to list, popped up throughout the
national media commenting, criticising and celebrating."

The British-American Project for the Successor Generation, to give it its
full title, was founded in 1985 "to perpetuate the close relationship
between the United States and Britain" in the words of BAP's slim official
history, through "transatlantic friendships and professional contacts". It
has a membership of "600 leaders and opinion formers", drawn equally from
both countries. It holds an annual conference (the next starts this Friday
in Chicago) to which journalists are not invited and at which everything
said is, officially at least, not to be repeated to outsiders. It rarely
features in the mainstream media - instead, it makes tantalisingly vague and
fleeting appearances in those corners of the internet where conspiracy
aficionados gather.

Here, BAP is portrayed as a Trojan horse for American foreign policy,
recruiting Britons of liberal or left-of-centre inclinations and political
talent and connections when they are young, indoctrinating them with
propaganda about the virtues of American capitalism and America's role in
the world, and then watching them approvingly as they steer British politics
in an ever more pro-Washington direction. According to this analysis, the
project's greatest success has been New Labour.

Besides the names mentioned in BAP's 1997 newsletter, the organisation
numbers among its members Douglas Alexander, the precocious Foreign Office
and trade minister; Baroness Scotland, the politically favoured criminal
justice minister; Julia Hobsbawm, the prominent public relations executive
and New Labour associate; and Adair Turner, one of the government's most
senior business allies and author of the recent official report on the
future of pensions.

In the years immediately before the founding of BAP, the early 1980s heyday
of Tony Benn and CND, the Labour party was sceptical about America. Now it
will seemingly swallow almost anything the US does, and the idea that BAP
made the difference has some authoritative backers. The leftwing journalist
John Pilger, who has been uncovering American manipulation of other
countries' politics for decades, has described BAP as a "casual freemasonry"
and "by far the most influential transatlantic network of politicians,
journalists and academics". The historian Frances Stonor Saunders, who has
written extensively about the American use of earlier, similar networks to
influence western opinion during the cold war, sees close parallels with
BAP: "All that's changed is that BAP are much more sophisticated."

In December 2001, in response to a parliamentary question from the Liberal
Democrat MP Norman Baker, Tony Blair said that the organisation "arranges
meetings, including with ministers, for young leaders from the business,
economic, professional, cultural, artistic, governmental, academic,
scientific, medical, military and social life of the two countries". Beyond
New Labour, the BAP membership includes the Conservative election strategist
Steve Hilton, the shadow work and pensions minister and Tory intellectual
David Willetts, the former Conservative minister Stephen Dorrell, the
founder of the UK Independence Party Alan Sked, and Charles Moore, the
former editor of the Daily Telegraph.

Until now, BAP's public response to allegations of political influence has
been to ignore or dismiss them. A postscript to its official history calls
the idea of the project as a vehicle for the American government a "myth"
and "a curious reinvention of BAP history". But what, then, does BAP do
exactly? Since 1985, it has received sponsorship from, among other
companies, Coca-Cola, Unilever, Monsanto, Saatchi & Saatchi, Philip Morris,
Coopers & Lybrand, American Express, Apple, British Airways, BP, Cadbury
Schweppes and Camelot. Busy politicians and other public figures have
crossed the Atlantic, some of them repeatedly, to attend BAP conferences,
which can last for five days. One member describes proceedings as "a
quasi-religious experience for some people", but what else has kept the
whole enterprise going for almost 20 years? What has BAP achieved?

The author of both the project's official history and the article in its
newsletter about New Labour is a British journalist called Martin Vander
Weyer. He has been a BAP member since 1994, and until last year was chairman
of its British operation.

Meeting him, at first, is something of a disappointment. He is disarmingly
jolly: amused eyes, a raspy, confiding voice, swept-back grey hair rebelling
behind his ears. He is wearing an ostentatiously traditional but slightly
unkempt suit of the kind favoured by middle-aged Tory journalists, and has
just come back from a lunch at the Spectator, where he is an associate
editor. He suggests a cafe, and strides off, talking freely, through the
London rush hour. He does not look much like a New Labour conspirator.

Vander Weyer depicts BAP in altogether more relaxed terms. "It's both a
fantastic social opportunity and an amazing professional networking
opportunity." At the conferences, he says, "Everyone is on equal terms, and
you take the handbrake off ..." He grins. "There's quite big late-night
drinking. Requires a lot of stamina. Every year you can see the astonishment
of the church-going Americans. You see them jogging around the hotel
whenever you open your curtains in the morning."

To see anything sinister in all this, he continues cheerily, is "bonkers
conspiracy stuff". But what about his newsletter article? Vander Weyer
clasps his forehead in mock-regret. "I wrote the headline. I thought it was
quite snappy. It was a great mistake. Probably my greatest mistake."

But then he begins to choose his words more carefully. "The British
membership is quite a concentrated elite," he admits. "There was a stage
where ... a lot of the people who emerged as part of the New Labour
leadership group happened - and I say happened, because it is partly chance
- to be members of BAP ... The American side is more spread out: Americans
who just enjoy contact with Brits. We have Republicans, Democrats, people
who work on Capitol Hill."

He explains how BAP members are selected. Each existing member can nominate
up to three people aged between 28 and 40. These nominees are then
interviewed and tested: there are competitive debates, "management games"
and personal presentations. "We sift the nominees according to their
willingness to listen to other people," says Vander Weyer. "Whether we think
they'd fit with the group."

Do they ever pick people who are anti-American? "Oh yes. There are lots and
lots of members who are anti-American." He mentions the journalist Yasmin
Alibhai-Brown. Then he grins again. "I've never found myself in such a
leftwing group as this." If BAP has a political diversity problem, he says,
it is rather different from the one its critics allege: "Some of the drier
Conservatives who've come to conferences over the years have found ... too
much of a bleeding heart."

The circular nature of the nomination process narrows the BAP membership in
other ways. A member recalls, "I was nominated by the man who subsequently
became my husband, who was nominated by a friend of his, who was nominated
by someone he knew." Vander Weyer says BAP is trying to compensate for this.
"We try to find people outside our network." He cites "a cinema manager and
a fire officer from Newcastle" who have become members. He gives a rare
serious look. "We want to counter any sense that this is a self-perpetuating
elite." 

The only problem is, BAP was founded to be exactly that. At the start of the
1980s, the idea of a "successor generation" began to stir on the dusty pages
of British and American foreign policy journals. Kenneth P Adler, an
academic employed by the US government to watch western European political
trends, defined it as "the segment of the general public that is most likely
to succeed to positions of power and influence in the near future". This
group, he and other observers predicted, would either follow the broadly
pro-American path of "the founder generation" of postwar western European
political leaders, or take a more independent, even hostile stance. With
Ronald Reagan in the White House and the cold war he was helping to
orchestrate in one of its least appealing, most attritional phases, it was
by no means certain "the successor generation" would stay loyal to
Washington. "Ideologically, if a consensus exists across Europe," wrote
Adler, "it would be somewhere on the left ... a middle way between Sweden
and Yugoslavia ... distancing [itself] from 'the superpowers'."

The US government was particularly worried about Britain. Despite all the
official talk of a "special relationship" between the two countries since
the second world war, there had been surprisingly regular periods of British
public disenchantment with Washington: over Suez and Vietnam and,
particularly, over the deployment in Britain of US nuclear weapons. In
November 1981, three weeks after CND had held its biggest ever protest in
London, Reagan made a speech in Washington warning that "some young people
do not understand ... why we need nuclear weapons [or] Nato's roots in
defending freedom." With Margaret Thatcher a deeply unpopular prime
minister, and the Labour opposition influenced by an anti-Washington party
membership, a new British official attitude to America looked quite likely.
"It is possible to argue that had a Labour government been formed," the
historian Peter Jones wrote of the early 1980s in his book America And The
British Labour Party, "it would almost certainly have led to the complete
collapse of the 'special relationship'."

A 27-year-old British economist called Nick Butler decided to intervene. For
someone of his age and profession, he already had unusually useful and
diverse connections: he worked for BP, but he was also treasurer of the
influential left-leaning pressure group the Fabian Society and a promising
junior player in the Labour party. He also loved America. "The UK was in a
bad state," he says. "America seemed much more dynamic, full of ideas,
open." For years, he had been reading Tom Wolfe and Joan Didion, and books
about US politics. He was always wanting to visit America, more than his
work permitted. At the same time, he felt the Labour party needed fresh
ideas from abroad. "My perspective then was that my generation - I would
have been described as 'rightwing' in the 1982 Labour party - were totally
stifled here. No prospect of being in power."

That spring, Butler wrote a memo proposing "some form of regular contact for
Britons and Americans", to reduce "hostility to all things American" and
promote "mutual understanding over a wide range of policies ... how cities
are regenerated, how market forces worked, and so on." For the membership of
what was to become BAP, he had a specific transatlantic group in mind:
"Bright people, in many different fields, who were likely to influence
outcomes in those fields. People who were interesting. Interested in change.
In doing things. In progress."

Butler says this with a straight face and takes a sip of wine. Sitting in
the half-darkness of his London club, wearing an immaculate suit and barely
opening his mouth as he talks, he explains the philosophy and workings of
BAP with less of Vander Weyer's cheery evasiveness. "I don't think networks
are inevitable," Butler says with emphasis. "They are absolutely desirable.
I think networks are a great phenomenon. The Fabians are a network, BP's
another network - that is civil society."

Since the 1980s, Butler has maintained and extended his political and
commercial connections like a model member of the "successor generation". He
is close to Mandelson and other senior New Labour figures. Thanks in part to
Butler, BP - where he is now group vice-president, strategy and policy
development - has become known as "Blair Petroleum" for the warmth of its
relations with Downing Street.

Butler's gifts for alliance-building and persuasion turned BAP from a paper
proposal into an international organisation in less than three years.
Between 1982 and its first conference in 1985, he recruited a shrewdly broad
range of supporters, co-founders and financial backers: Sir Charles
Villiers, a liberal Tory businessman with a long personal attachment to
America; the US embassy in London, which gave Butler a grant to go to
Washington to test reactions to the BAP idea; and the Pew Charitable Trusts,
a very large and wealthy American foundation.

These days, Pew supports diverse causes, from public health to the
environment. But the foundation's origins are more controversial. The Pew
family made their money in oil, and for much of the 20th century the
dominant personality in their business and philanthropic activities was J
Howard Pew, a man of particular political convictions. "To me free
enterprise is a very noble thing," an official Pew history from 1984 quotes
him saying. During the 1950s, he established the J Howard Pew Freedom Trust
to, in the words of its charter, "acquaint the American people with the
evils of bureaucracy ... the false promises of socialism ... the paralysing
effects of government controls". Since his death in 1971, the official
history continues, the Freedom Trust "has supported those projects and
groups that reflect the founder's philosophy". BAP, it appears, was one of
them: according its own official history, it received "grants totalling
$460,000, which funded the first three BAP conferences".

Butler says that the Pew organisation "never interfered. Never told us what
to do. I never met them." He sounds convincing. Yet, if you read the reports
from these and subsequent BAP conferences, written by and circulated to BAP
members, and talk to some of those who attended, a process of political
education can be discerned of which J Howard Pew would have approved.

Every autumn, BAP hires a hotel, or a large part of one, for a long weekend,
alternating between British and American venues. Conference rooms are
reserved, boardroom-style tables arranged, themes chosen for discussion. A
purposeful timetable of seminars and larger gatherings, dinners and group
excursions is drawn up. Lighter interludes are scheduled for drinking and
bonding and organised fun - Vander Weyer has been known to host a
closing-night revue as a rightwing caricature called Professor Whiplash -
but the overall atmosphere remains somewhere between an international summit
and a corporate retreat for young executives. Even at the more intimate
seminars, there are papers and water jugs on the tables, and some of the men
like to keep their ties on.

"I've been on weekends organised by other networks - Anglo-French,
Anglo-Spanish, Anglo-German - but I've never been on such a grand one," says
Alibhai-Brown. "The amount of drink, the way you were treated, the dinners
with everyone who was anyone ... Jonathan Powell [Tony Blair's chief of
staff] used to come a lot. I remember having many an argument with him
beside swimming pools in white towelling dressing gowns ... It was money
that I'd never seen at any conference before. We [the participants] used to
joke, 'This is obviously funded by the CIA.'"

Any such connection to Washington is denied by BAP, but a more subtle
subordination to America was there from the beginning. There was the fact
that BAP started as a British initiative, not an American one. And there was
the way the American members set the tone of the conferences. "I vividly
remember the first: we were all stunned by how much more money they all
had," says Butler. "They'd run their own businesses. They ran charities.
They were in a different league in terms of what they'd achieved. I remember
Jeremy Paxman saying that to me, and Mo Mowlam. We were all struck by that."

This sense of American superiority framed and coloured the discussions. As
people leaned forward on the conference tables and made bright-eyed
presentations and asked each other penetrating questions, European notions
such as socialism, the welfare state and high levels of government spending
were judged, in the slightly sweeping way of clever young thinkers, to be in
difficulties. American notions such as less regulated capitalism, a smaller
"enabling state" and a world kept safe by the Pentagon came to be regarded
as sensible, inevitable. "Five years before I joined BAP, I thought wealth
creation and progressive politics were completely incompatible," says Trevor
Phillips, now chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality. "BAP was one
of the things that made me think that was absurd."

For the American participants, the political epiphanies were less dramatic.
"Americans who might have thought that the Labour party was off the radar
screen had their minds opened," says George R Packard, a prominent American
international relations academic and BAP supporter from the beginning.
Another American member says simply, "You learn a lot about how many
perspectives there can be." In Phillips's experience, the traffic in
specific ideas was mostly one-way: "I didn't detect that the Americans had
learned a great amount [from us] about what they could and should do in the
US." 

Besides the advantages of the American way, the other big political
preoccupation of BAP conferences during the 1980s and early 1990s was the
condition and prospects of the Labour party. The Conservatives may have been
in government, but the conference reports mention them surprisingly rarely.
Instead, there are involved discussions about the Labour attitude to nuclear
weapons, about the strengths and weaknesses of the party's general election
campaigning, about whether, as BAP members saw it in 1987, Labour "had more
interest in remaining a party, with policies and an ideology, than in
achieving power". 

It is too conspiratorial to see in these debates the creation, in secret, of
New Labour. The remade party was the product of countless gatherings and
discussions, and too many of its architects - Blair and Gordon Brown, to
name two - were not BAP members. But, in retrospect at least, there was a
whiff of something new in the analyses of Labour's problems presented at BAP
conferences. "Most of us held broadly New Labour views - before Tony, you
could say," says Lord Lipsey, the journalist, Labour peer and BAP member.
"BAP was one of a number of streams that came together in New Labour."

Of course, not everyone in BAP is a politician, just as not every conference
seminar is about politics. "For any 10 politicians who happen to be
members," says Vander Weyer, "you could name 10 artists, writers ..." He
pauses, and then a gleam comes into his eye: "Benjamin Zephaniah [the
radical black British poet] is a member. Although not a regular attender."

Another element of the BAP membership is less surprising. "Many BAP alumni
are directly involved with US and UK military and defence establishments,"
noted the 2002 conference report. An account followed of a conference
excursion to the Pentagon: "Our BAP group was welcomed as 'old friends'."
Butler is equally frank about the link. "The military are quite important,
quite influential. We had a great guy who was a Polaris submarine commander.
And he was a leftwinger ... loosely leftwing. [Colonel] Bob Stewart, of
Bosnia fame - a lovely guy - gave a great break-out talk. These weren't
people pumping out a military line. These people were talking about their
direct experience."

The encounters and contacts that BAP makes possible are often cited
enthusiastically by members. An American mentions meeting an astronaut at a
conference. "We kept in touch ... then he told me he was giving a lecture at
West Point [the US military academy]. I took the train up and we had dinner.
It was a blast! Completely out of my normal world."

Packard says that at the conferences he is "astounded at how quickly the
bonding takes place". In BAP's official literature, the former Labour
minister Chris Smith describes attending one as "four intoxicating days of
thought and discussion".Critics of BAP say that is precisely the point.
"Propaganda that really works," says Saunders, "is when you get people to
move in directions you want them to for reasons they think are their own."

Yet not everyone joins BAP with their guard down. "I did make some inquiries
privately before joining," says the British writer and foreign policy
analyst Anatol Lieven. He cites the infamous British liberal journal
secretly funded by the CIA during the cold war: "After the whole Encounter
experience, one does have to be a little careful." But Lieven's inquiries
about BAP left him reassured: "It is genuinely pluralist. The discussions
are very frank. In 2002, they asked me to give a talk on Bush's strategy in
which I was very, very tough."

Other critics of Washington join BAP in order, they say, to know their
enemy. Alibhai-Brown found her first conference in 1988 "a miserable
experience ... but really useful. There were hardly any women, and
unspeakable people - so rightwing - on both the British and American sides.
But I wanted to know about this very powerful axis, to learn to talk to them
without poking them in the eye." She was still attending BAP conferences 15
years later. 

A certain number of internal dissidents are good for the project's image:
they make BAP, and the Anglo-American relationship, seem open to criticism
but too important to ignore. And they keep the conferences interesting. But,
reassuringly, not every rebel is successfully co-opted. Zephaniah recalls
his one and only conference: "It was in this hotel in California, in
Oakland, the Claremont. I remember them [the BAP members] all as men in
suits or power-dressed women. Oil people, a couple of people from minority
groups. I remember loads of trust games. The men were told, 'Now take off
your tie, and relax, and do some yoga exercises, and go off into a group,
and talk about empowerment.'"

Zephaniah started skipping the discussion groups by telling each one that he
was going to the other. But after a while he had had enough. One evening, "I
escaped. I got out of the hotel. I went down to Berkeley [the neighbouring
city], hung out with some homeless people, went to see a friend of mine."
How did BAP treat him after that? "Every year, they kept sending me the
report of the last conference. I had a whole shelf of them. Last year, I put
them in the bin." 

Sitting in his London club, in his immaculate suit, Butler smiles. We have
been talking for perhaps 20 minutes, and we are already on to the second
glass of wine. The founder of BAP, like many of its members, is good at
being convivial. "BAP is not a terribly serious venture," he says. "It's an
interesting venture." He says he feels "quite proud" of what it has
achieved. "A lot of people have learned a lot from American experience in a
lot of fields." 

He says he hopes that the British members of BAP can exert a moderating
influence on America in return. Perhaps. The more liberal American members
of BAP also hope so. But, as with the special relationship itself, the power
and uniqueness of BAP can be overstated. There are other Anglo-American
networks for the young and ambitious: Rhodes scholars, Fulbright scholars,
Kennedy scholars. And there are other American networks. Packard mentions
one in passing: "In 2000, I started an exact clone of BAP: the US-Japan
leadership project."

Behind the confidence of the BAP conferences, according to Vander Weyer,
lies a skeletal organisation: no British office, a "cubicle office" in the
US, a tiny staff working from home. "From time to time we receive a small
amount of money from the foreign and commonwealth office, the US embassy,"
he says. After getting their first conference for free, members pay up to
£500 each to attend.

And every year, BAP needs new members. As he gets up to go at the end of our
interview, Vander Weyer gestures expansively across the cafe table.
"Depending on how this goes," he says, "I'd be very happy to nominate you."

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
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 Symons Foreign Office minister
Lord Robertson former Nato secretary-general
Douglas Alexander Foreign Office and trade 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




www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/ctrl@listserv.aol.com/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/ctrl@listserv.aol.com/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to