Difference between revisions of "Henry Jackson Society"

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{{group
 
{{group
|wikipedia=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Jackson_Society
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|logo=Logo of the Henry Jackson Society.png
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|logo_width=
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|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Jackson_Society
 
|type=think tank
 
|type=think tank
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|constitutes=deep state group
 
|start=11 March 2005
 
|start=11 March 2005
|description=A British neoconservative think tank and political action committee supported by key US neocons and by two of David Cameron's closest advisers.
+
|description=A British super-spooky neocon political action committee with a lot of former intelligence bosses. Especially connected to [[Israeli intelligence]] and the [[British Conservatives]].
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|headquarters=United Kingdom
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|subgroups=Centre for the Response to Radicalisation and Terrorism
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|website=http://www.henryjacksonsociety.org
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|twitter=https://twitter.com/HJS_Org
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|motto=The Project for Democratic Geopolitics
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|powerbase=http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Henry_Jackson_Society
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|sourcewatch=http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Henry_Jackson_Society
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|historycommons=http://www.historycommons.org/entity.jsp?entity=henry_jackson_society_1
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|members=Alan Mendoza,Andrew Foxall,Michael Ancram,Gerard Baker,Paul Beaver,Lord Bew,Vernon Bogdanor,Chris Bryant,Damian Collins,Tim Collins,Paul Cornish,Stephen Crabb,Richard Dearlove,John Drewienkiewicz,Mark Etherington,Lord Gilbert,Philip Goodhart,James Stuart Gordon,Michael Gove,Jonathan Gray,Tom Gross,Robert Halfon,Fabian Hamilton,Stephen Hammond,Greg Hands,Jackie Lawrence,Andrew Lever,Stephen Pollard,Greg Pope,Charles David Powell,Andrew Roberts,David Ruffley,Jamie Shea,Clive Stafford Soley,Irwin Stelzer,Gisela Stuart,David Trimble,Edward Vaizey,David Willetts,Alan Williams,Kajol Kochar,Stanley Kalms,Denis MacShane,Catherine Perez-Shakdam,Emanuele Ottolenghi
 
}}
 
}}
The '''Henry Jackson Society Project for Democratic Geopolitics''' was founded in Cambridge, on 11 March 2005, and was launched in the Houses of Parliament, on 22 November 2005<ref> "[http://politics.guardian.co.uk/thinktanks/page/0,,1684775,00.html The Henry Jackson Society]" guardian.co.uk, accessed 6 March 2009</ref> The manifesto for the society was published by the [[Social Affairs Unit]]<ref>Henry Jackson Society Manifesto, [http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1904863159/026-2689905-3027644?v=glance&n=266239 The British Moment: The Case for Democratic Geopolitics in the Twenty-first Century], Amazon.co.uk, Accessed 27-May-2009</ref>.
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The '''Henry Jackson Society Project for Democratic Geopolitics''' (HJ) is a hard-line [[Military-industrial complex|militarist]] strategy think tank, filled with former leaders of intelligence services and [[deep state operatives]], especially connected to [[Israeli intelligence]] and the [[British Conservatives]]. According to its own statements, the HJ advocates, among other things, a strong military in Britain, the [[United States]] and the [[EU]] countries as well as other [[democratic]] countries (as defined by them). It also advocates that only "[[democracies]]" have a truly legitimate right to exist and wants a [[NATO]] 'forward strategy' including "expeditionary capabilities with a global reach", and to "assist those countries that are not yet liberal and democratic to become so". It expressly supports [[capitalism]] as the economic system<ref>http://henryjacksonsociety.org/about-the-society/statement-of-principles/</ref>.
  
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==Founded==
 +
It was founded in Cambridge on 11 March 2005, was launched in the Houses of Parliament on 22 November 2005<ref>''"[http://politics.guardian.co.uk/thinktanks/page/0,,1684775,00.html The Henry Jackson Society]"'' guardian.co.uk, accessed 6 March 2009</ref> and its manifesto was published by the [[Social Affairs Unit]]<ref>Henry Jackson Society Manifesto, ''[http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1904863159/026-2689905-3027644?v=glance&n=266239 "The British Moment: The Case for Democratic Geopolitics in the Twenty-first Century"]'', Amazon.co.uk, Accessed 27-May-2009</ref>.
 +
 +
==Structure and projects==
 +
The Society has produced a breadth of research reports and strategy papers, with a traditional British establishment view of the world.
 +
 +
Recent focus areas (2020) include the impact of [[COVID-19]] on [[civil liberties]], critiques of [[far-right extremism]] in western [[democracies]] and planning a possible legal action in an unspecified court against China for its [[COVID-19]] response<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publication/</ref>.
 +
 +
Other areas of research include finding angles on [[Islamic extremism]] & [[Islamist terrorism]], [[human rights]] and [[democracy]] as wedges for [[regime changes]], and various facets of foreign policy and their definition of defense (offensive operations,more armaments). Its current workstreams include:
 +
 +
*Asia Studies Centre. This Centre seeks to provide "an in-depth understanding of the structural shifts, regional complexities and historic tensions that exist alongside the tremendous economic and social growth that traditionally characterise the 'rise of Asia'."<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/asia-studies-centre/</ref> Publications include a paper on the possible outcomes of the negotiations with North Korea,<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/negotiating-the-peace-diplomacy-on-the-korean-peninsula/</ref> and the need to safeguard critical national infrastructure in the West from vulnerabilities which may be built in by China (as opposed to [[Edward Snowden|US ones]]).
 +
*Global Britain Programme. Focuses on "the need for an open, confident and expansive British [[geostrategic]] policy in the twenty-first century – drawing on the United Kingdom’s unique strengths not only as an advocate for [[liberalism]] and national democracy, but also as a custodian of both the European and international orders." This centre has published papers on what the European Union 'owes' the United Kingdom, as well as advocated for increased military spending by NATO members.<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/after-the-nato-summit-towards-the-normalisation-of-british-military-spending/</ref>
 +
*Russia & Eurasia Studies Centre. Researches domestic and foreign policy issues in Russia and the former Soviet states.
 +
*Centre for the New Middle East. Established following the Arab Spring, the Society describes this Centre as "dedicated to monitoring political, ideological, and military and security developments across the Middle East and providing informed assessments of their wide-ranging implications".<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/centre-for-new-middle-east/</ref> The Centre has released reports highly critical of Iran.<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/going-ballistic-responding-to-iranian-missile-advances/</ref><ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/beyond-compliance-iran-and-the-jcpoa/</ref>
 +
*Centre on Radicalisation & [[Terrorism]]. Focuses on the threat to the United Kingdom and elsewhere by Islamist terrorism (which these very spooks support to the hilt when required, including sheltering groups in the UK). Reports have ranged from analyses of the UK charitable sector<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/wolves-in-sheeps-clothing-how-islamist-extremists-exploit-the-uk-charitable-sector/</ref> to the way in which criminals utilise the [[darknet]]<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/terror-in-the-dark-how-terrorists-use-encryption-the-darknet-and-cryptocurrencies/</ref>.
 +
*Student Rights. Created in 2009 "as a reaction to increasing political extremism and marginalisation of vulnerable students on campus". This project has tracked what it describes as "extreme" speakers on British university campuses.<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/student-rights-2/</ref>
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*Centre for Social and Political Risk. In September 2018, the Society announced the creation of a new centre, which will "identify, diagnose and propose solutions to threats to governance in liberal Western democracies",<ref>https://henryjacksonsociety.org/news/hjs-welcomes-sophia-gaston-and-launch-centre-for-social-and-political-risk/</ref> focusing on [[social cohesion]] and integration; [[freedom of speech]] and [[political correctness]]; [[demographic change]]; and other issues.
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==Worthy of ridicule==
 +
On 23 November 2016, in an interview with ''[[RT]]'', [[Craig Murray]] described the HJ as "a creature of the [[CIA]]" and deemed it worthy of ridicule:
 +
:"Any organisation which embraces [[Jim Murphy]], [[Nadine Dorries]], [[Roger Scruton]] and [[Patrick Minford]] is going to have some fruitcake right wing opinions and be more worthy of ridicule than political debate.<ref>''[http://henryjacksonsociety.org/people/council-members/ "Advisory Council of the Henry Jackson Society"]''</ref> So I really couldn’t maintain a straight face when discussing the Henry Jackson Society on ''[[Russia Today]]''."<ref>''[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rM5gFjVVOeA "Craig Murray interview with RT"]''</ref>
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==Activities==
 +
In 2006, the Society worked to raise the profile of the Ahwazi Arabs of [[Iran]], who the Society was very concerned were being oppressed by the Iranian government<ref>http://www.unpo.org/article/3968</ref>, a media campaign that found outlet in among other media, [[The Telegraph]]<ref>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/12027744/This-is-what-happens-to-Arab-activists-in-Iran.html</ref>.  Work from this period was later used to recommend military interventions for [[humanitarian intervention|humanitarian]] reasons in UK Parliament as recently as 2013.
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In June 2020, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that the UK's Department for International Development is to be merged into the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.<ref>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-53062858</ref> The plan had first been proposed in a report published by the Henry Jackson Society in 2019, for which Johnson had authored the foreword.<ref>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2020/06/16/analysis-nothing-new-scrapping-dfid/</ref>
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==The Henry Jackson Initiative==
 +
The Henry Jackson Initiative, a lobby group for capitalism, was established in May [[2012]] to continue the work of a task force which published its report, ‘Towards a More Inclusive Capitalism’<ref>https://www.mckinsey.com/~/media/mckinsey%20offices/united%20kingdom/pdfs/towards_a_more_inclusive_capitalism.ashx</ref> at the same time. The theme is ultra-capitalistic, but it has several similarities with [[the Great Reset]] of 2020, where all '[[stakeholders]]' do their part - owners of capital (who are well represented in the Initiative) think long term and the ones lower down are "reasonable":
 +
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.."there comes a point in all public debates when the balance of criticism swings from constructive to destructive. We believe we may now be at such a point. Economic [[populism]] serves  a  certain  purpose,  but  it  is  at  its  best  when  tempered  by  pragmatic  and  reasonable  responses from all groups in [[society]]"....
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 +
"Today’s focus on short-term performance must be replaced by long-term thinking on everybody’s  part. Companies need not offer quarterly earnings guidance. They should seek ways to reward investors who hold their shares for the long term. Large investors should create portfolios of larger shares of fewer companies so that they can be more active owners of those companies. Directors must spend more time on strategy."
 +
 +
It offers three solutions, which should be "ethics based" not "regulatory", to the fix the confidence crisis in capitalism: Education for Employment, Nurturing Small and Medium Size Enterprises, and Reforming Management and Governance for the Long Term
 +
 +
The Initiative seems to have continued in the [[2020]] [[The Council for Inclusive Capitalism with the Vatican]].
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==Funding==
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The Henry Jackson Society is a registered charity in England and Wales and receives financial backing from private donations and grant-making organisations which support its work.<ref>https://apps.charitycommission.gov.uk/Showcharity/RegisterOfCharities/SearchResultHandler.aspx?RegisteredCharityNumber=1140489</ref>
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The income of the society increased significantly from 2009 to 2014, from £98,000 to £1.6 million per year.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/dec/30/rightwing-thinktank-pulls-funds-commons-groups-disclosure-rules</ref> It's reported that [[Edward Atkin]], the retired baby care entrepreneur, made donations through his charity totalling £375,000 between 2011 and 2013.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/dec/30/rightwing-thinktank-pulls-funds-commons-groups-disclosure-rules</ref> Similarly the [[philanthropist]] Lord [[Stanley Kalms]] has given the think tank £100,000. In July 2014 [[Lynn Forester de Rothschild|Lady de Rothschild]] claimed that she has financed the Caring Capitalism summit and that HJS and its executive director [[Alan Mendoza]] were holding £137,000 of “surplus funds” from the conference that should be returned to the couple’s investment company EL Rothschild, and so moved to civil proceedings.<ref>https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/lady-de-rothschild-sues-think-tank-over-funds-from-caring-capitalism-summit-9625722.html</ref>
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In 2017, the Society was an agent of foreign influence, when the Japanese embassy gave them a monthly fee of 10,000 pounds as to pay for an anti-China propaganda campaign the Society was running<ref>http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/rifkind-a-stooge-in-secret-pr-war-on-china-xfq2qp2br</ref>. The campaign was said to be aimed at planting Japan's concerns about China in British newspapers.<ref>http://www.thedrum.com/news/2017/01/29/british-think-tank-funded-japan-pushing-anti-china-campaign-mainstream-uk-media</ref>
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===American Friends of the Henry Jackson Society===
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<i>The American Friends of the Henry Jackson Society</i> is a body which receives funds from US donors for the Henry Jackson Society<ref>https://powerbase.info/index.php/American_Friends_of_the_Henry_Jackson_Society</ref>. [[Nina Rosenwald]], an activist who supported [[Henry M. Jackson]]'s own [[Democratic Party]] campaigns in the 1970s, is known to have donated US$10,000 through American Friends of the Henry Jackson Society.
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===Secret Corporate Donors===
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In 2009 the society became the secretariat of two all-party parliamentary groups (APPGs), for [[Transatlantic]] and International Security, chaired by [[Gisela Stuart]], and for [[Homeland Security]], chaired by [[Bernard Jenkin]]. A transparency requirement upon non-profit organisations acting as secretariat at that time was that they must reveal any corporate donors who gave £5,000 or more to the organisation. In 2014, following a query, the society refused to disclose this information and resigned its position, so as to comply with the Rules. The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, [[Kathryn Hudson]], upheld a complaint against these APPGs, but noted the society had already resigned, and its non-provision of secretariat services therefore "appears to have taken effect" as the Rules intended. The case was closed with no further action taken and the APPGs themselves dissolved with the dissolution of Parliament in March 2015. The APPG Rules were subsequently changed so only non-profit organisations providing services to APPGs of more than £12,500 in value need to declare corporate donors.
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==People==
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[[Catherine Perez-Shakdam]] a suspected Israeli spy under cover of independent journalist, revealed herself as a fellow of HJ<ref>https://twitter.com/shakdamc</ref>.
  
 
==Resources==
 
==Resources==
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==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
{{stub}}
 
[[Category:Neocons]]
 

Latest revision as of 06:20, 15 November 2024

Group.png Henry Jackson Society  
(Deep state groupPowerbase Sourcewatch Twitter WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Logo of the Henry Jackson Society.png
MottoThe Project for Democratic Geopolitics
Formation11 March 2005
HeadquartersUnited Kingdom
Type think tank
Subgroups Centre for the Response to Radicalisation and Terrorism
Interest ofHilary Aked
SubpageHenry Jackson Society/Henry Jackson Initiative
Henry Jackson Society/International Patrons
Membership•  Alan Mendoza
•  Andrew Foxall
• Michael Ancram.jpg Michael Ancram
•  Gerard Baker
•  Paul Beaver
•  Lord Bew
•  Vernon Bogdanor
•  Chris Bryant
• Damian Collins.jpg Damian Collins
•  Tim Collins
•  Paul Cornish
• Stephen Crabb.jpg Stephen Crabb
• Richard Dearlove.jpg Richard Dearlove
•  John Drewienkiewicz
•  Mark Etherington
•  Lord Gilbert
• Philip Goodhart.jpg Philip Goodhart
•  James Stuart Gordon
• Michael Gove.jpg Michael Gove
•  Jonathan Gray
•  Tom Gross
• Robert Halfon.jpg Robert Halfon
• Fabian Hamilton.jpg Fabian Hamilton
•  Stephen Hammond
• Greg Hands.jpg Greg Hands
•  Jackie Lawrence
•  Andrew Lever
• Stephen Pollard.jpg Stephen Pollard
•  Greg Pope
• Charles Powell, Baron Powell of Bayswater.jpg Charles David Powell
•  Andrew Roberts
•  David Ruffley
• Jamie Shea.jpg Jamie Shea
•  Clive Stafford Soley
•  Irwin Stelzer
•  Gisela Stuart
•  David Trimble
• Ed Vaizey.jpg Edward Vaizey
•  David Willetts
•  Alan Williams
•  Kajol Kochar
•  Stanley Kalms
• DenisMacShane.jpg Denis MacShane
• Cathrine Shakdam.png Catherine Perez-Shakdam
• EmanueleOttolenghi2008.jpg Emanuele Ottolenghi
A British super-spooky neocon political action committee with a lot of former intelligence bosses. Especially connected to Israeli intelligence and the British Conservatives.

The Henry Jackson Society Project for Democratic Geopolitics (HJ) is a hard-line militarist strategy think tank, filled with former leaders of intelligence services and deep state operatives, especially connected to Israeli intelligence and the British Conservatives. According to its own statements, the HJ advocates, among other things, a strong military in Britain, the United States and the EU countries as well as other democratic countries (as defined by them). It also advocates that only "democracies" have a truly legitimate right to exist and wants a NATO 'forward strategy' including "expeditionary capabilities with a global reach", and to "assist those countries that are not yet liberal and democratic to become so". It expressly supports capitalism as the economic system[1].

Founded

It was founded in Cambridge on 11 March 2005, was launched in the Houses of Parliament on 22 November 2005[2] and its manifesto was published by the Social Affairs Unit[3].

Structure and projects

The Society has produced a breadth of research reports and strategy papers, with a traditional British establishment view of the world.

Recent focus areas (2020) include the impact of COVID-19 on civil liberties, critiques of far-right extremism in western democracies and planning a possible legal action in an unspecified court against China for its COVID-19 response[4].

Other areas of research include finding angles on Islamic extremism & Islamist terrorism, human rights and democracy as wedges for regime changes, and various facets of foreign policy and their definition of defense (offensive operations,more armaments). Its current workstreams include:

  • Asia Studies Centre. This Centre seeks to provide "an in-depth understanding of the structural shifts, regional complexities and historic tensions that exist alongside the tremendous economic and social growth that traditionally characterise the 'rise of Asia'."[5] Publications include a paper on the possible outcomes of the negotiations with North Korea,[6] and the need to safeguard critical national infrastructure in the West from vulnerabilities which may be built in by China (as opposed to US ones).
  • Global Britain Programme. Focuses on "the need for an open, confident and expansive British geostrategic policy in the twenty-first century – drawing on the United Kingdom’s unique strengths not only as an advocate for liberalism and national democracy, but also as a custodian of both the European and international orders." This centre has published papers on what the European Union 'owes' the United Kingdom, as well as advocated for increased military spending by NATO members.[7]
  • Russia & Eurasia Studies Centre. Researches domestic and foreign policy issues in Russia and the former Soviet states.
  • Centre for the New Middle East. Established following the Arab Spring, the Society describes this Centre as "dedicated to monitoring political, ideological, and military and security developments across the Middle East and providing informed assessments of their wide-ranging implications".[8] The Centre has released reports highly critical of Iran.[9][10]
  • Centre on Radicalisation & Terrorism. Focuses on the threat to the United Kingdom and elsewhere by Islamist terrorism (which these very spooks support to the hilt when required, including sheltering groups in the UK). Reports have ranged from analyses of the UK charitable sector[11] to the way in which criminals utilise the darknet[12].
  • Student Rights. Created in 2009 "as a reaction to increasing political extremism and marginalisation of vulnerable students on campus". This project has tracked what it describes as "extreme" speakers on British university campuses.[13]
  • Centre for Social and Political Risk. In September 2018, the Society announced the creation of a new centre, which will "identify, diagnose and propose solutions to threats to governance in liberal Western democracies",[14] focusing on social cohesion and integration; freedom of speech and political correctness; demographic change; and other issues.

Worthy of ridicule

On 23 November 2016, in an interview with RT, Craig Murray described the HJ as "a creature of the CIA" and deemed it worthy of ridicule:

"Any organisation which embraces Jim Murphy, Nadine Dorries, Roger Scruton and Patrick Minford is going to have some fruitcake right wing opinions and be more worthy of ridicule than political debate.[15] So I really couldn’t maintain a straight face when discussing the Henry Jackson Society on Russia Today."[16]

Activities

In 2006, the Society worked to raise the profile of the Ahwazi Arabs of Iran, who the Society was very concerned were being oppressed by the Iranian government[17], a media campaign that found outlet in among other media, The Telegraph[18]. Work from this period was later used to recommend military interventions for humanitarian reasons in UK Parliament as recently as 2013.

In June 2020, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that the UK's Department for International Development is to be merged into the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.[19] The plan had first been proposed in a report published by the Henry Jackson Society in 2019, for which Johnson had authored the foreword.[20]

The Henry Jackson Initiative

The Henry Jackson Initiative, a lobby group for capitalism, was established in May 2012 to continue the work of a task force which published its report, ‘Towards a More Inclusive Capitalism’[21] at the same time. The theme is ultra-capitalistic, but it has several similarities with the Great Reset of 2020, where all 'stakeholders' do their part - owners of capital (who are well represented in the Initiative) think long term and the ones lower down are "reasonable":

.."there comes a point in all public debates when the balance of criticism swings from constructive to destructive. We believe we may now be at such a point. Economic populism serves a certain purpose, but it is at its best when tempered by pragmatic and reasonable responses from all groups in society"....

"Today’s focus on short-term performance must be replaced by long-term thinking on everybody’s part. Companies need not offer quarterly earnings guidance. They should seek ways to reward investors who hold their shares for the long term. Large investors should create portfolios of larger shares of fewer companies so that they can be more active owners of those companies. Directors must spend more time on strategy."

It offers three solutions, which should be "ethics based" not "regulatory", to the fix the confidence crisis in capitalism: Education for Employment, Nurturing Small and Medium Size Enterprises, and Reforming Management and Governance for the Long Term

The Initiative seems to have continued in the 2020 The Council for Inclusive Capitalism with the Vatican.

Funding

The Henry Jackson Society is a registered charity in England and Wales and receives financial backing from private donations and grant-making organisations which support its work.[22]

The income of the society increased significantly from 2009 to 2014, from £98,000 to £1.6 million per year.[23] It's reported that Edward Atkin, the retired baby care entrepreneur, made donations through his charity totalling £375,000 between 2011 and 2013.[24] Similarly the philanthropist Lord Stanley Kalms has given the think tank £100,000. In July 2014 Lady de Rothschild claimed that she has financed the Caring Capitalism summit and that HJS and its executive director Alan Mendoza were holding £137,000 of “surplus funds” from the conference that should be returned to the couple’s investment company EL Rothschild, and so moved to civil proceedings.[25]

In 2017, the Society was an agent of foreign influence, when the Japanese embassy gave them a monthly fee of 10,000 pounds as to pay for an anti-China propaganda campaign the Society was running[26]. The campaign was said to be aimed at planting Japan's concerns about China in British newspapers.[27]

American Friends of the Henry Jackson Society

The American Friends of the Henry Jackson Society is a body which receives funds from US donors for the Henry Jackson Society[28]. Nina Rosenwald, an activist who supported Henry M. Jackson's own Democratic Party campaigns in the 1970s, is known to have donated US$10,000 through American Friends of the Henry Jackson Society.

Secret Corporate Donors

In 2009 the society became the secretariat of two all-party parliamentary groups (APPGs), for Transatlantic and International Security, chaired by Gisela Stuart, and for Homeland Security, chaired by Bernard Jenkin. A transparency requirement upon non-profit organisations acting as secretariat at that time was that they must reveal any corporate donors who gave £5,000 or more to the organisation. In 2014, following a query, the society refused to disclose this information and resigned its position, so as to comply with the Rules. The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Kathryn Hudson, upheld a complaint against these APPGs, but noted the society had already resigned, and its non-provision of secretariat services therefore "appears to have taken effect" as the Rules intended. The case was closed with no further action taken and the APPGs themselves dissolved with the dissolution of Parliament in March 2015. The APPG Rules were subsequently changed so only non-profit organisations providing services to APPGs of more than £12,500 in value need to declare corporate donors.

People

Catherine Perez-Shakdam a suspected Israeli spy under cover of independent journalist, revealed herself as a fellow of HJ[29].

Resources

Neocon Europe, Henry Jackson Society Project for Democratic Geopolitics

 

An event carried out

EventLocationDescription
The Future of Hong KongHong KongThe Henry Jackson Society society strategizing on how to support their preferred people in Hong Kong

 

Employees on Wikispooks

EmployeeJobAppointedEnd
Matthew JamisonFounding Director & Associate FellowMarch 2005January 2012
Michael WeissDirector of Communications & ResearchMarch 2011December 2012

 

Known members

20 of the 45 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Michael AncramLikely took over from Norman Lamont as European chair of Le Cercle.
Chris BryantPrivate school-educated Labour MP for Rhondda
Damian CollinsIntegrity Initiative connected UK politician cum propagandist member of the Center for Countering Digital Hate
Stephen CrabbBritish Conservative politician. Parliamentary Chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel. Member of the intelligence service front group Henry Jackson Society.
Richard DearloveHead of MI6 from 1999 to 2004. Publicly announced in 2020 that he believed Covid-19 came from a laboratory.
Philip GoodhartUK deep state actor. Attended Le Cercle.
Michael GoveMinister for Intergovernmental Relations and Secretary of State in Boris Johnson's government. Reappointed by Rishi Sunak
Greg HandsUK politician who attended Le Cercle in Washington in 2018.
Denis MacShane
Alan MendozaExecutive Director of The Henry Jackson Society
Emanuele OttolenghiFoundation for Defense of Democracies, suspected US-Israeli DSF
Catherine Perez-ShakdamA suspected Israeli spy who infiltrated Iran under journalistic cover. To create a legend, she got herself hired by among others the independent media outlets MintPress News and American Herald Tribune.
Stephen Pollard
Charles PowellLe Cercle, House of Lords, Key advisor to Thatcher, on the payroll of various defence companies
Jamie SheaChatham House, spooky conference attender. As NATO spokesman during the Kosovo War he popularized the propaganda term "collateral damage".
Irwin Stelzer
Gisela StuartAttended the MSCs from 2009-2015
David Trimble
Ed VaizeyUK politician, Merton College Oxford, Henry Jackson Society, NewsGuard/Advisory Board, Notting Hill Set
David Willetts

 

Related Document

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:David Cameron's 'counter extremism' experts work with far-right Donald Trump sympathisersArticle19 December 2015Nafeez Mosaddeq AhmedThe link between the two organisations (Henry Jackson Society and Quilliam Foundation) and Donald Trump is Frank Gaffney, who was the chief inspiration for Trump’s call to ban Muslims from entering the United States
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References

  1. http://henryjacksonsociety.org/about-the-society/statement-of-principles/
  2. "The Henry Jackson Society" guardian.co.uk, accessed 6 March 2009
  3. Henry Jackson Society Manifesto, "The British Moment: The Case for Democratic Geopolitics in the Twenty-first Century", Amazon.co.uk, Accessed 27-May-2009
  4. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publication/
  5. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/asia-studies-centre/
  6. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/negotiating-the-peace-diplomacy-on-the-korean-peninsula/
  7. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/after-the-nato-summit-towards-the-normalisation-of-british-military-spending/
  8. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/centre-for-new-middle-east/
  9. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/going-ballistic-responding-to-iranian-missile-advances/
  10. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/beyond-compliance-iran-and-the-jcpoa/
  11. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/wolves-in-sheeps-clothing-how-islamist-extremists-exploit-the-uk-charitable-sector/
  12. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/publications/terror-in-the-dark-how-terrorists-use-encryption-the-darknet-and-cryptocurrencies/
  13. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/student-rights-2/
  14. https://henryjacksonsociety.org/news/hjs-welcomes-sophia-gaston-and-launch-centre-for-social-and-political-risk/
  15. "Advisory Council of the Henry Jackson Society"
  16. "Craig Murray interview with RT"
  17. http://www.unpo.org/article/3968
  18. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/12027744/This-is-what-happens-to-Arab-activists-in-Iran.html
  19. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-53062858
  20. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2020/06/16/analysis-nothing-new-scrapping-dfid/
  21. https://www.mckinsey.com/~/media/mckinsey%20offices/united%20kingdom/pdfs/towards_a_more_inclusive_capitalism.ashx
  22. https://apps.charitycommission.gov.uk/Showcharity/RegisterOfCharities/SearchResultHandler.aspx?RegisteredCharityNumber=1140489
  23. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/dec/30/rightwing-thinktank-pulls-funds-commons-groups-disclosure-rules
  24. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/dec/30/rightwing-thinktank-pulls-funds-commons-groups-disclosure-rules
  25. https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/lady-de-rothschild-sues-think-tank-over-funds-from-caring-capitalism-summit-9625722.html
  26. http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/rifkind-a-stooge-in-secret-pr-war-on-china-xfq2qp2br
  27. http://www.thedrum.com/news/2017/01/29/british-think-tank-funded-japan-pushing-anti-china-campaign-mainstream-uk-media
  28. https://powerbase.info/index.php/American_Friends_of_the_Henry_Jackson_Society
  29. https://twitter.com/shakdamc