The Men From JINSA and CSP
Publication: The Nation
August 15, 2002
by Jason Vest
Almost thirty years ago, a prominent group of neoconservative
hawks found an effective vehicle for advocating their views
via the Committee on the Present Danger, a group that fervently
believed the United States was a hair away from being militarily
surpassed by the Soviet Union, and whose raison d'être
was strident advocacy of bigger military budgets, near-fanatical
opposition to any form of arms control and zealous championing
of a Likudnik Israel. Considered a marginal group in its
nascent days during the Carter Administration, with the
election of Ronald Reagan in 1980 CPD went from the margins
to the center of power.
Just as the right-wing defense intellectuals made CPD a
cornerstone of a shadow defense establishment during the
Carter Administration, so, too, did the right during the
Clinton years, in part through two organizations: the Jewish
Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA) and the
Center for Security Policy (CSP). And just as was the case
two decades ago, dozens of their members have ascended to
powerful government posts, where their advocacy in support
of the same agenda continues, abetted by the out-of-government
adjuncts from which they came. Industrious and persistent,
they've managed to weave a number of issues--support for
national missile defense, opposition to arms control treaties,
championing of wasteful weapons systems, arms aid to Turkey
and American unilateralism in general--into a hard line,
with support for the Israeli right at its core.
On no issue is the JINSA/CSP hard line more evident than
in its relentless campaign for war--not just with Iraq,
but "total war," as Michael Ledeen, one of the
most influential JINSAns in Washington, put it last year.
For this crew, "regime change" by any means necessary
in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia and the Palestinian Authority
is an urgent imperative. Anyone who dissents--be it Colin
Powell's State Department, the CIA or career military officers--is
committing heresy against articles of faith that effectively
hold there is no difference between US and Israeli national
security interests, and that the only way to assure continued
safety and prosperity for both countries is through hegemony
in the Middle East--a hegemony achieved with the traditional
cold war recipe of feints, force, clientism and covert action.
For example, the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board--chaired
by JINSA/CSP adviser and former Reagan Administration Defense
Department official Richard Perle, and stacked with advisers
from both groups--recently made news by listening to a briefing
that cast Saudi Arabia as an enemy to be brought to heel
through a number of potential mechanisms, many of which
mirror JINSA's recommendations, and which reflect the JINSA/CSP
crowd's preoccupation with Egypt. (The final slide of the
Defense Policy Board presentation proposed that "Grand
Strategy for the Middle East" should concentrate on
"Iraq as the tactical pivot, Saudi Arabia as the strategic
pivot [and] Egypt as the prize.") Ledeen has been leading
the charge for regime change in Iran, while old comrades
like Andrew Marshall and Harold Rhode in the Pentagon's
Office of Net Assessment actively tinker with ways to re-engineer
both the Iranian and Saudi governments. JINSA is also cheering
the US military on as it tries to secure basing rights in
the strategic Red Sea country of Eritrea, happily failing
to mention that the once-promising secular regime of President
Isaiais Afewerki continues to slide into the kind of repressive
authoritarianism practiced by the "axis of evil"
and its adjuncts.
Indeed, there are some in military and intelligence circles
who have taken to using "axis of evil" in reference
to JINSA and CSP, along with venerable repositories of hawkish
thinking like the American Enterprise Institute and the
Hudson Institute, as well as defense contractors, conservative
foundations and public relations entities underwritten by
far-right American Zionists (all of which help to underwrite
JINSA and CSP). It's a milieu where ideology and money seamlessly
blend: "Whenever you see someone identified in print
or on TV as being with the Center for Security Policy or
JINSA championing a position on the grounds of ideology
or principle--which they are unquestionably doing with conviction--you
are, nonetheless, not informed that they're also providing
a sort of cover for other ideologues who just happen to
stand to profit from hewing to the Likudnik and Pax Americana
lines," says a veteran intelligence officer. He notes
that while the United States has begun a phaseout of civilian
aid to Israel that will end by 2007, government policy is
to increase military aid by half the amount of civilian
aid that's cut each year--which is not only a boon to both
the US and Israeli weapons industries but is also crucial
to realizing the far right's vision for missile defense
and the Middle East.
Founded in 1976 by neoconservatives concerned that the United
States might not be able to provide Israel with adequate
military supplies in the event of another Arab-Israeli war,
over the past twenty-five years JINSA has gone from a loose-knit
proto-group to a $1.4-million-a-year operation with a formidable
array of Washington power players on its rolls. Until the
beginning of the current Bush Administration, JINSA's board
of advisers included such heavy hitters as Dick Cheney,
John Bolton (now Under Secretary of State for Arms Control)
and Douglas Feith, the third-highest-ranking executive in
the Pentagon. Both Perle and former Director of Central
Intelligence James Woolsey, two of the loudest voices in
the attack-Iraq chorus, are still on the board, as are such
Reagan-era relics as Jeane Kirkpatrick, Eugene Rostow and
Ledeen--Oliver North's Iran/contra liaison with the Israelis.
According to its website, JINSA exists to "educate
the American public about the importance of an effective
US defense capability so that our vital interests as Americans
can be safeguarded" and to "inform the American
defense and foreign affairs community about the important
role Israel can and does play in bolstering democratic interests
in the Mediterranean and the Middle East." In practice,
this translates into its members producing a steady stream
of op-eds and reports that have been good indicators of
what the Pentagon's civilian leadership is thinking.
JINSA relishes denouncing virtually any type of contact
between the US government and Syria and finding new ways
to demonize the Palestinians. To give but one example (and
one that kills two birds with one stone): According to JINSA,
not only is Yasir Arafat in control of all violence in the
occupied territories, but he orchestrates the violence solely
"to protect Saddam.... Saddam is at the moment Arafat's
only real financial supporter.... [Arafat] has no incentive
to stop the violence against Israel and allow the West to
turn its attention to his mentor and paymaster." And
if there's a way to advance other aspects of the far-right
agenda by intertwining them with Israeli interests, JINSA
doesn't hesitate there, either. A recent report contends
that the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge must be tapped
because "the Arab oil-producing states" are countries
"with interests inimical to ours," but Israel
"stand[s] with us when we need [Israel]," and
a US policy of tapping oil under ANWR will "limit [the
Arabs'] ability to do damage to either of us."
The bulk of JINSA's modest annual budget is spent on taking
a bevy of retired US generals and admirals to Israel, where
JINSA facilitates meetings between Israeli officials and
the still-influential US flag officers, who, upon their
return to the States, happily write op-eds and sign letters
and advertisements championing the Likudnik line. (Sowing
seeds for the future, JINSA also takes US service academy
cadets to Israel each summer and sponsors a lecture series
at the Army, Navy and Air Force academies.) In one such
statement, issued soon after the outbreak of the latest
intifada, twenty-six JINSAns of retired flag rank, including
many from the advisory board, struck a moralizing tone,
characterizing Palestinian violence as a "perversion
of military ethics" and holding that "America's
role as facilitator in this process should never yield to
America's responsibility as a friend to Israel," as
"friends don't leave friends on the battlefield."
However high-minded this might sound, the postservice associations
of the letter's signatories--which are almost always left
off the organization's website and communiqués--ought
to require that the phrase be amended to say "friends
don't leave friends on the battlefield, especially when
there's business to be done and bucks to be made."
Almost every retired officer who sits on JINSA's board of
advisers or has participated in its Israel trips or signed
a JINSA letter works or has worked with military contractors
who do business with the Pentagon and Israel. While some
keep a low profile as self-employed "consultants"
and avoid mention of their clients, others are less shy
about their associations, including with the private mercenary
firm Military Professional Resources International, weapons
broker and military consultancy Cypress International and
SY Technology, whose main clients include the Pentagon's
Missile Defense Agency, which oversees several ongoing joint
projects with Israel.
The behemoths of military contracting are also well represented
in JINSA's ranks. For example, JINSA advisory board members
Adm. Leon Edney, Adm. David Jeremiah and Lieut. Gen. Charles
May, all retired, have served Northrop Grumman or its subsidiaries
as either consultants or board members. Northrop Grumman
has built ships for the Israeli Navy and sold F-16 avionics
and E-2C Hawkeye planes to the Israeli Air Force (as well
as the Longbow radar system to the Israeli army for use
in its attack helicopters). It also works with Tamam, a
subsidiary of Israeli Aircraft Industries, to produce an
unmanned aerial vehicle. Lockheed Martin has sold more than
$2 billion worth of F-16s to Israel since 1999, as well
as flight simulators, multiple-launch rocket systems and
Seahawk heavyweight torpedoes. At one time or another, General
May, retired Lieut. Gen. Paul Cerjan and retired Adm. Carlisle
Trost have labored in LockMart's vineyards. Trost has also
sat on the board of General Dynamics, whose Gulfstream subsidiary
has a $206 million contract to supply planes to Israel to
be used for "special electronics missions."
By far the most profitably diversified of the JINSAns is
retired Adm. David Jeremiah. President and partner of Technology
Strategies & Alliances Corporation (described as a "strategic
advisory firm and investment banking firm engaged primarily
in the aerospace, defense, telecommunications and electronics
industries"), Jeremiah also sits on the boards of Northrop
Grumman's Litton subsidiary and of defense giant Alliant
Techsystems, which--in partnership with Israel's TAAS--does
a brisk business in rubber bullets. And he has a seat on
the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board, chaired by Perle.
About the only major defense contractor without a presence
on JINSA's advisory board is Boeing, which has had a relationship
with Israeli Aircraft Industries for thirty years. (Boeing
also sells F-15s to Israel and, in partnership with Lockheed
Martin, Apache attack helicopters, a ubiquitous weapon in
the occupied territories.) But take a look at JINSA's kindred
spirit in things pro-Likud and pro-Star Wars, the Center
for Security Policy, and there on its national security
advisory council are Stanley Ebner, a former Boeing executive;
Andrew Ellis, vice president for government relations; and
Carl Smith, a former staff director of the Senate Armed
Services Committee who, as a lawyer in private practice,
has counted Boeing among his clients. "JINSA and CSP,"
says a veteran Pentagon analyst, "may as well be one
and the same."
Not a hard sell: There's always been considerable overlap
beween the JINSA and CSP rosters--JINSA advisers Jeane Kirkpatrick,
Richard Perle and Phyllis Kaminsky also serve on CSP's advisory
council; current JINSA advisory board chairman David Steinmann
sits on CSP's board of directors; and before returning to
the Pentagon Douglas Feith served as the board's chair.
At this writing, twenty-two CSP advisers--including additional
Reagan-era remnants like Elliott Abrams, Ken deGraffenreid,
Paula Dobriansky, Sven Kraemer, Robert Joseph, Robert Andrews
and J.D. Crouch--have reoccupied key positions in the national
security establishment, as have other true believers of
more recent vintage.
While CSP boasts an impressive advisory list of hawkish
luminaries, its star is Frank Gaffney, its founder, president
and CEO. A protégé of Perle going back to
their days as staffers for the late Senator Henry "Scoop"
Jackson (a k a the Senator from Boeing, and the Senate's
most zealous champion of Israel in his day), Gaffney later
joined Perle at the Pentagon, only to be shown the door
by Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci in 1987, not long after
Perle left. Gaffney then reconstituted the latest incarnation
of the Committee on the Present Danger. Beyond compiling
an A-list of influential conservative hawks, Gaffney has
been prolific over the past fifteen years, churning out
a constant stream of reports (as well as regular columns
for the Washington Times) making the case that the gravest
threats to US national security are China, Iraq, still-undeveloped
ballistic missiles launched by rogue states, and the passage
of or adherence to virtually any form of arms control treaty.
Gaffney and CSP's prescriptions for national security have
been fairly simple: Gut all arms control treaties, push
ahead with weapons systems virtually everyone agrees should
be killed (such as the V-22 Osprey), give no quarter to
the Palestinians and, most important, go full steam ahead
on just about every national missile defense program. (CSP
was heavily represented on the late-1990s Commission to
Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States,
which was instrumental in keeping the program alive during
the Clinton years.)
Looking at the center's affiliates, it's not hard to see
why: Not only are makers of the Osprey (Boeing) well represented
on the CSP's board of advisers but so too is Lockheed Martin
(by vice president for space and strategic missiles Charles
Kupperman and director of defense systems Douglas Graham).
Former TRW executive Amoretta Hoeber is also a CSP adviser,
as is former Congressman and Raytheon lobbyist Robert Livingston.
Ball Aerospace & Technologies--a major manufacturer
of NASA and Pentagon satellites--is represented by former
Navy Secretary John Lehman, while missile-defense computer
systems maker Hewlett-Packard is represented by George Keyworth,
who is on its board of directors. And the Congressional
Missile Defense Caucus and Osprey (or "tilt rotor")
caucus are represented by Representative Curt Weldon and
Senator Jon Kyl.
CSP was instrumental in developing the arguments against
the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. Largely ignored or derided
at the time, a 1995 CSP memo co-written by Douglas Feith
holding that the United States should withdraw from the
ABM treaty has essentially become policy, as have other
CSP reports opposing the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty,
the Chemical Weapons Convention and the International Criminal
Court. But perhaps the most insightful window on the JINSA/CSP
policy worldview comes in the form of a paper Perle and
Feith collaborated on in 1996 with six others under the
auspices of the Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political
Studies. Essentially an advice letter to ascendant Israeli
politician Benjamin Netanyahu, "A Clean Break: A New
Strategy for Securing the Realm" makes for insightful
reading as a kind of US-Israeli neoconservative manifesto.
The paper's first prescription was for an Israeli rightward
economic shift, with tax cuts and a selloff of public lands
and enterprises--moves that would also engender support
from a "broad bipartisan spectrum of key pro-Israeli
Congressional leaders." But beyond economics, the paper
essentially reads like a blueprint for a mini-cold war in
the Middle East, advocating the use of proxy armies for
regime changes, destabilization and containment. Indeed,
it even goes so far as to articulate a way to advance right-wing
Zionism by melding it with missile-defense advocacy. "Mr.
Netanyahu can highlight his desire to cooperate more closely
with the United States on anti-missile defense in order
to remove the threat of blackmail which even a weak and
distant army can pose to either state," it reads. "Not
only would such cooperation on missile defense counter a
tangible physical threat to Israel's survival, but it would
broaden Israel's base of support among many in the United
States Congress who may know little about Israel, but care
very much about missile defense"--something that has
the added benefit of being "helpful in the effort to
move the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem."
Recent months in Washington have shown just how influential
the notions propagated by JINSA and CSP are--and how disturbingly
zealous their advocates are. In early March Feith vainly
attempted to get the CIA to keep former intelligence officers
Milt Bearden and Frank Anderson from accepting an invitation
to an Afghanistan-related meeting with Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld at the Pentagon--not because of what the two might
say about Afghanistan, according to sources familiar with
the incident, but likely out of fear that Anderson, a veteran
Arabist and former chief of the CIA's Near East division,
would proffer his views on Iraq (opposed to invading) and
Israel-Palestine (a fan of neither Arafat nor Sharon). In
late June, after United Press International reported on
a US Muslim civil liberties group's lambasting of Gaffney
for his attacks on the American Muslim Council, Gaffney,
according to a fellow traveler, "went berserk,"
launching a stream of invective about the UPI scribe who
reported the item.
It's incidents like this, say knowledgeable observers and
participants, that highlight an interesting dynamic among
right-wing hawks at the moment. Though the general agenda
put forth by JINSA and CSP continues to be reflected in
councils of war, even some of the hawks (including Rumsfeld
deputy Paul Wolfowitz) are growing increasingly leery of
Israel's settlements policy and Gaffney's relentless support
for it. Indeed, his personal stock in Bush Administration
circles is low. "Gaffney has worn out his welcome by
being an overbearing gadfly rather than a serious contributor
to policy," says a senior Pentagon political official.
Since earlier this year, White House political adviser Karl
Rove has been casting about for someone to start a new,
more mainstream defense group that would counter the influence
of CSP. According to those who have communicated with Rove
on the matter, his quiet efforts are in response to complaints
from many conservative activists who feel let down by Gaffney,
or feel he's too hard on President Bush. "A lot of
us have taken [Gaffney] at face value over the years,"
one influential conservative says. "Yet we now know
he's pushed for some of the most flawed missile defense
and conventional systems. He considered Cuba a 'classic
asymmetric threat' but not Al Qaeda. And since 9/11, he's
been less concerned with the threat to America than to Israel."
Gaffney's operation has always been a small one, about
$1 million annually--funded largely by a series of grants
from the conservative Olin, Bradley and various Scaife foundations,
as well as some defense contractor money--but he's recently
been able to underwrite a TV and print ad campaign holding
that the Palestinians should be Enemy Number One in the
War on Terror, still obsessed with the destruction of Israel.
It's here that one sees the influence not of defense contractor
money but of far-right Zionist dollars, including some from
Irving Moskowitz, the California bingo magnate. A donor
to both CSP and JINSA (as well as a JINSA director), Moskowitz
not only sends millions of dollars a year to far-right Israeli
settler groups like Ateret Cohanim but he has also funded
the construction of settlements, having bought land for
development in key Arab areas around Jerusalem. Moskowitz
ponied up the money that enabled the 1996 reopening of a
tunnel under the Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif, which resulted
in seventy deaths due to rioting.
Also financing Gaffney's efforts is New York investment
banker Lawrence Kadish. A valued and valuable patron of
both the Republican National Committee and George W. Bush,
Kadish helps underwrite CSP as well as Americans for Victory
Over Terrorism, an offshoot of conservative activist William
Bennett's Empower America, on which he and Gaffney serve
as "senior advisers" in the service of identifying
"external" and "internal" post-9/11
threats to America. (The "internal" threats, as
articulated by AVOT, include former President Jimmy Carter,
Harper's editor Lewis Lapham and Representative Maxine Waters.)
Another of Gaffney's backers is Poju Zabludowicz, heir to
a formidable diversified international empire that includes
arms manufacturer Soltam--which once employed Perle--and
benefactor of the recently established Britain Israel Communication
and Research Centre, a London-based group that appears to
equate reportage or commentary uncomplimentary to Zionism
with anti-Semitism.
While a small but growing number of conservatives are voicing
concerns about various aspects of foreign and defense policy--ranging
from fear of overreach to lack of Congressional debate--the
hawks seem to be ruling the roost. Beginning in October,
hard-line American Enterprise Institute scholar Michael
Rubin (to Rubin, outgoing UN human rights chief Mary Robinson
is an abettor of terrorism) arrives at the Pentagon to take
over the Defense Department's Iran-Iraq account, adding
another voice to the Pentagon section of Ledeen's "total
war" chorus. Colin Powell's State Department continues
to take a beating from outside and inside--including Bolton
and his special assistant David Wurmser. (An AEI scholar
and far-right Zionist who's married to Meyrav Wurmser of
the Middle East Media Research Institute--recently the subject
of a critical investigation by London Guardian Middle East
editor Brian Whitaker--Wurmser played a key role in crafting
the "Arafat must go" policy that many career specialists
see as a problematic sop to Ariel Sharon.)
As for Rumsfeld, based on comments made at a Pentagon "town
hall" meeting on August 6, there seems to be little
doubt as to whose comments are resonating most with him--and
not just on missile defense and overseas adventures: After
fielding a question about Israeli-Palestinian issues, he
repeatedly referred to the "so-called occupied territories"
and casually characterized the Israeli policy of building
Jewish-only enclaves on Palestinian land as "mak[ing]
some settlement in various parts of the so-called occupied
area," with which Israel can do whatever it wants,
as it has "won" all its wars with various Arab
entities--essentially an echo of JINSA's stated position
that "there is no Israeli occupation." Ominously,
Rumsfeld's riff gave a ranking Administration official something
of a chill: "I realized at that point," he said,
"that on settlements--where there are cleavages on
the right--Wolfowitz may be to the left of Rumsfeld."
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