Difference between revisions of "Institute for Statecraft/Cover up"

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|constitutes=Cover up
 
|constitutes=Cover up
 
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}}'''The cover-up of the [[Institute for Statecraft]]''' has proved problematic since [[Institute for Statecraft/Exposure|its exposure]], through the [[Integrity Initiative leak]] was so sudden. As a multi-million pound organisation with a multiplicity of staff members and ongoing prior commitments it was not easy to flush down the [[memory hole]].
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}}'''The cover-up of the [[Institute for Statecraft]]''' has proved problematic since [[Institute for Statecraft/Exposure|its exposure]], through the [[Integrity Initiative leak]] was so sudden. As a multi-million pound organisation with a multiplicity of staff members and ongoing prior commitments it was not easy to flush down the [[memory hole]]. The group was officially closed on 15 August 2023.  
  
 
==Initial efforts==
 
==Initial efforts==
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A partial explanation of why corporate media treated the subject as a [[third rail]] topic may be provided by the existence of the IfS/II's "[[clusters]]", which extended internationally, and included [[journalists]].
 
A partial explanation of why corporate media treated the subject as a [[third rail]] topic may be provided by the existence of the IfS/II's "[[clusters]]", which extended internationally, and included [[journalists]].
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==Events==
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The IfS continued to run events in 2019 in its own name<ref>[[Strengthening Europe's 'soft' and 'hard' defence]]</ref> However, the [[Reframing Russia‎]], which has at least 3 mentions in the [[Integrity Initiative Leak]] documents, announced itself as "an Arts and Humanities Research Council funded collaboration between The [[University of Manchester]] and The [[Open University]]."
  
 
==Wikipedia==
 
==Wikipedia==
 
By January 2020, Wikipedia had just 3 sentences about the [[Integrity Initiative Leak]].
 
By January 2020, Wikipedia had just 3 sentences about the [[Integrity Initiative Leak]].
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
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==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Latest revision as of 18:21, 5 April 2024

Concept.png Institute for Statecraft/Cover up
(Cover up)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Chris Williamson Institute for Statecraft door slam.jpg
Labour MP Chris Williamson on 19 December 2018, after Dan Lafayeedney slammed the door to the Institute for Statecraft in his face. (Williamson was suspended from the UK Labour party in February 2019 over claims of "antisemitism").
https://www.thecanary.co/uk/analysis/2018/12/20/institute-for-statecraft-slams-door-in-labour-mps-face/

The cover-up of the Institute for Statecraft has proved problematic since its exposure, through the Integrity Initiative leak was so sudden. As a multi-million pound organisation with a multiplicity of staff members and ongoing prior commitments it was not easy to flush down the memory hole. The group was officially closed on 15 August 2023.

Initial efforts

After the initial Integrity Initiative leak, Chris Williamson visited the Institute for Statecraft HQ at Temple on the morning of 19 December 2018 with a delegation from The Canary. On learning their intentions, Daniel Lafayeedney reportedly "slammed the door in his face, without saying anything".[1]

Website

Removal of names

Comparison of two snapshots of the Institute for Statecraft website, 22 November 2018 and 10 January 2019 shows that six names were removed from the list of fellows: Jack Agazarian‎‎ (Senior Fellow), William Bortrick‎ (Senior Associate Fellow), Robert Dover‎ (Senior Associate Fellow), Martin Edmonds (Senior Associate Fellow), Ben Nimmo‎ (Senior Fellow), Malik Niazi‎ (Senior Fellow).

Complete takedown

On 22 January 2019, the Integrity Initiative "temporarily" deleted the entire contents of their website.[2] The Institute for Statecraft followed suit shortly afterwards.

Corporate media reponse

A rare exception to Western media's refusal to mention the Integrity Initiative Leak

Western commercially-controlled media has had, for the most part, little to say about the Institute for Statecraft. The BBC diplomat correspondent, James Landale published a story in 10 December 2018 entitled Russia-linked hack 'bid to discredit' UK anti-disinformation campaign - Foreign Office. Writing that (unnamed) "Western officials believe the group involved in the hack is linked to the Russian state", he highlighted the claims of an (unname) FCO spokesman. The two captions in the story were: 'No systemic bias' & 'No party-political stance' (single quotes in original).[3]

A partial explanation of why corporate media treated the subject as a third rail topic may be provided by the existence of the IfS/II's "clusters", which extended internationally, and included journalists.

Events

The IfS continued to run events in 2019 in its own name[4] However, the Reframing Russia‎, which has at least 3 mentions in the Integrity Initiative Leak documents, announced itself as "an Arts and Humanities Research Council funded collaboration between The University of Manchester and The Open University."

Wikipedia

By January 2020, Wikipedia had just 3 sentences about the Integrity Initiative Leak.

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References