Difference between revisions of "Fairfield Foundation"
(import from Sourcewatch) |
m (sponsors Harvard/International Seminar) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
|num_staff= | |num_staff= | ||
|members= | |members= | ||
+ | |sponsors=Harvard/International Seminar | ||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Farfield Foundation''', a now defunct [[CIA]] front, acted as a philanthropic foundation. The CIA used it as a vehicle for their [[Covert operations|covert funding]] of groups and persons that were believed to be effective weapons in a [[culture war]] against the [[Soviet Union]] during the [[Cold War]]. | The '''Farfield Foundation''', a now defunct [[CIA]] front, acted as a philanthropic foundation. The CIA used it as a vehicle for their [[Covert operations|covert funding]] of groups and persons that were believed to be effective weapons in a [[culture war]] against the [[Soviet Union]] during the [[Cold War]]. | ||
==CIA's Direction of Cultural Warfare== | ==CIA's Direction of Cultural Warfare== | ||
− | CIA employee Tom Braden, who had been the MoMA's managing director from 1947 to 1949 before he began working for the CIA, was initially in charge of the CIA section that oversaw the culure cold war. The section was called the [[International Organisations Division]] (IOD). The IOD indirectly, via their fronts and agreeable Foundations, funded prestigous journals, organized conferences, music competitions and art exhibitions. | + | CIA employee [[Tom Braden]], who had been the MoMA's managing director from [[1947]] to [[1949]] before he began working for the CIA, was initially in charge of the CIA section that oversaw the culure cold war. The section was called the [[International Organisations Division]] (IOD). The IOD indirectly, via their fronts and agreeable Foundations, funded prestigous journals, organized conferences, music competitions and art exhibitions. |
The rationale behind this covert philanthropy was that American avant-garde culture that was both [[leftism|leftist]] and [[Soviet communism|anti-communist]] could be an effective foil against Stalinist Communism's rise in Western Europe, post [[World War II]]. It was not just the CIA that directed the flow of money, it was also some very influential and wealthy Americans with names that included [[Nelson A. Rockefeller|Rockefeller]], [[Henry Ford|Ford]], and [[Grace Hoadley Dodge|Dodge]]. Although they were not CIA fronts, many other foundations have been implicated as having received CIA monies. | The rationale behind this covert philanthropy was that American avant-garde culture that was both [[leftism|leftist]] and [[Soviet communism|anti-communist]] could be an effective foil against Stalinist Communism's rise in Western Europe, post [[World War II]]. It was not just the CIA that directed the flow of money, it was also some very influential and wealthy Americans with names that included [[Nelson A. Rockefeller|Rockefeller]], [[Henry Ford|Ford]], and [[Grace Hoadley Dodge|Dodge]]. Although they were not CIA fronts, many other foundations have been implicated as having received CIA monies. |
Revision as of 11:50, 2 September 2022
Fairfield Foundation (CIA cutout, Philanthropic foundation) | |
---|---|
Sponsor of | Harvard/International Seminar |
A now defunct CIA front that acted as a philanthropic foundation |
The Farfield Foundation, a now defunct CIA front, acted as a philanthropic foundation. The CIA used it as a vehicle for their covert funding of groups and persons that were believed to be effective weapons in a culture war against the Soviet Union during the Cold War.
Contents
CIA's Direction of Cultural Warfare
CIA employee Tom Braden, who had been the MoMA's managing director from 1947 to 1949 before he began working for the CIA, was initially in charge of the CIA section that oversaw the culure cold war. The section was called the International Organisations Division (IOD). The IOD indirectly, via their fronts and agreeable Foundations, funded prestigous journals, organized conferences, music competitions and art exhibitions.
The rationale behind this covert philanthropy was that American avant-garde culture that was both leftist and anti-communist could be an effective foil against Stalinist Communism's rise in Western Europe, post World War II. It was not just the CIA that directed the flow of money, it was also some very influential and wealthy Americans with names that included Rockefeller, Ford, and Dodge. Although they were not CIA fronts, many other foundations have been implicated as having received CIA monies.
The primary beneficiary of the Farfield Foundation's philanthropy was another CIA front, the Congress for Cultural Freedom, and its US Chapter, the American Committee for Cultural Freedom, which in turn funded groups and individuals through themselves. Even early neoconservative thinkers received funding from covert CIA sources for journals and freelance authorship.
The need for secrecy was as much for domestic reasons as foreign. The McCarthy-era federal politicians distrusted modern culture and viewed it as destructive of American Ideals; it is highly unlikely that Norman Rockwell paintings and evangelical-styled Christian missionaries would have been successful in holding Communism's cultural allure at bay in Post-WWII Western Europe.
What's wrong with the CIA covertly funding the export of American Expressionism? It is a true art form. It is a product of America that many have felt an affinity to. Artists have usually required patrons supporting both their physical sustenance, and their psychological well being in a positive recognition of their creative worth. Historically, artists' sponsorship has often been government or religious officials. Communism's spread was viewed as a positive force, or in muted fatalism, an inevitability, amongst many of Western Europe's Post WWII cultural elite. The unbridled individualism of expressionism offered an effective contrast, as well as viable alternative to the stark bleakness of Soviet Realism's portrayal of grayscaled existence within the Stalinist sphere of influence. The Soviet Government had their own arsenal of covert actions too. It would be a great stretch of logic to view the funding of musicians who were virtuosi of Jazz's improvisional spontaneity in the 50's on working trips to Europe as the acts of an evil empire. There is an aura of comical irony swirling about an effective usage of the frequently apolitical lords of American Abstract Art and the drop out Icons of the Beat Generation as the USA's secret Cold War arsenal in cultural warfare. Both American politicians and their Soviet analogs viewed them as part of an American degeneracy that was infecting their country, and causing a decline in domestic morality. Soviet politicians perceived it as an effect of capitalism's excesses, while American politicians viewed it as a creeping red menace.
What is condemnable isn't the act of funding artists in an ideological cultural war, it is the unseen hands of manipulative elitists, who believe they are acting for the greater common good, secretly affecting the World's societies. The overuse of and dependence upon a methodology of opaque actions, and an unyielding faith in the propriety of the use of stealth within an open democratic society is where the malevolence lies. The same mechanisms used for covertly funding and secretly manipulating culture to fight communism were also used to covertly aid undemocratic-but-anti-communist regimes around the world. Instead of just listening to Coltrane, Byrd, Gillespie or Brubeck, while contemplating the artworks of Motherwell, Pollock, Rothko or Kline; reflect also upon "Papa Doc" and "Baby Doc" Duvalier of Haiti, Anastasios Somoza of Nicuragua, Augusto Pinochet of Chile, General Suharto of Indonesia, Hugo Banzer of Bolivia, Jonas Savimbi of South Africa, Lon Nol of Cambodia, Manuel Noriega of Panama, Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire, Raoul Cedras of the Raboteau massacre, Reza Shah Pahlavi of Iran, Roberto D'Aubuisson of El Salvador, and do not forget Saddam Hussein. Secrecy surrounding government's foreign policy is all too often used to obfuscate foreign policy that is a destructive force on the receiving end. The target country's citizenry ends up taking the brunt of the force, and the seeds of their democratic will are sown into the wind. Covert action is also used to hide governmental practices that would be viewed negatively by the majority of American citizens if it were not kept secret. It ends up being an antidemocratic government action, ostensibly engaged upon for protecting and expanding liberty and democracy world-wide. This hypocrisy causes the onset of anti-Americanism, leads to blowback, as well as being a primary cause for the disbelieving naiveté Americans often express when confronted with the storm of antagonism resultant from the hidden actions, having awakened just in time to reap its whirlwind.
CIA Funded Foundations
(abridged list alphabetized by first letter in name)
- Aaron E. Norman Fund, Inc.
- American Society of African Culture
- Appalachian Fund
- Asia Foundation
- Beacon Fund
- Borden Trust
- Catherwood Foundation
- Cleveland H. Dodge Foundation
- Committee of Correspondence
- Congress for Cultural Freedom
- David, Josephine and Winfield Baird Foundation, Inc.
- Edsel Fund
- Edward John Noble Foundation
- Farfield Foundation
- Ford Foundation
- Foundation for Youth and Student Affairs of New York City
- Free Europe Committee
- Independence Foundation
- Independent Research Service
- International Development Foundation
- J. Frederick Brown Foundation
- J.M. Kaplan Fund, Inc.
- Kentfield Fund
- Lucius N. Littauer Foundation
- Museum of Modern Art
- Operations and Policy Research Incorporated
- Price Fund
- Rockefeller Foundation
- Rubicon Foundation
- San Jacinto Foundation
- Sidney and Esther Rabb Charitable Foundation of Boston
- Tower Fund
- W. Alton Jones Foundation
- William Benton Foundation
External Sources
Books
- Frances Stonor Saunders, "Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War ", Hardcover, Granta Books, 1999, ISBN 1862070296, Paperback, Granta Books, 2000, ISBN 1862073279.
- London Review of Books (LRB), letters to the editor.
- William Phillips, PR and its Funding, LRB, March 2, 2000. Phillips, an editor of The Partisan Review complains of Saunders' depiction of him and the Partisan Review in her book.
- Frances Stonor Saunders, PR and Its Funding, LRB, April 27, 2000; Saunders' reply to Phillips.
- London Review of Books (LRB), letters to the editor.
- Michael Dirda, "The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters by Frances Stonor Saunders", (book review), Washington Post, April 2, 2000.
- Lenni Brenner, "The Emperor's New Art: The CIA as Art Patron", Counterpunch, January 11, 2003; review of "Who Paid the Piper?"
- Jeff Sharlet, "Tinker, Writer, Artist, Spy: Intellectuals During the Cold War", The Chronicle of Higher Learning, March 31, 2000; review of "Who Paid the Piper?"
- Alan Johnson, "The Cultural Cold War: Faust Not the Pied Piper", New Politics Issue 31, Summer 2001; review of "Who Paid the Piper?"
- G. William Domhoff, "The Higher Circles", Random House, 1970, ISBN 039471671X
- Serge Guibault, "How New York stole the idea of modern art", The University of Chicago Press. 1983 , ISBN 0226310388
- Terry Cooney, "The rise of the New York Intellectuals, Partisan Review and its circle", University of Wisconsion press, ISBN 0299107108
- C. W. E. Bigsby, The Cambridge Companion to Modern American Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
Journals and Organization Studies
- Harald Fricke, "The Rise of Abstract Art and the Cold War era", Deutsche Bank Art Magazine, March, 2004; (auf Deutsch: "Mythos MoMA: Abstrakte Kunst und Kalter Krieg").
- John Playford, "Political scientists and the C.I.A.", Australian Left Review, April-May 1968 (Agitprop reprint).
- James Petras, "The Ford Foundation and the CIA: A documented case of philanthropic collaboration with the Secret Police", Rebelión, December 15, 2001.
- Manfred J. Holler, "The Artist as a Secret Agent: Liberalism Against Populism"-(pdf file), German Institute for Economic Research (Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung), December 12, 2003. (Artists, Secrets, and CIA’s Cultural Policy)
- John Laughland, "An invisible government", Sanders Research Associates, January 26, 2004.
- Denis Boneau, "Cold War to dominate thinking: The New York Intellectuals and the invention of neoconservatism", Voltaire Network, January 20, 2005; (the Voltaire Network may have credibility issues; use a grain of salt).
Articles & Commentary
- Nick Mamatas, "jackson pollock: cia stooge?", Disinfo, July 28, 2002.
- Bob Feldman, "Alternative Media Censorship: Sponsored by CIA's Ford Foundation?" Part 3: "The Nation Institute / Radio Nation / The Nation Magazine," March 2003.
- Richard Cummings, "Swine Before Perle - 'The National Review' Attack on LRC", Lew Rockwell dot com, March 24, 2003.
60's Periodicals
- Richard Dudman, “The Mongers Return”, The Nation, January 23,1967
- Sol Stern, “NSA and the CIA”, Ramparts, March 1967
- Todd Gitlin and Bob Ross, “The CIA at College: Into Twilight and Back”, The Village Voice, July 6, 1967
- Michael Holcomb, "Student Exchanges Serve U.S. Policy", The Guardian, January 20, 1968
- Michael Holcomb, "The Pass-Through: How the CIA Bankrolled Private Projects", Newsweek, March 6, 1967
- Thomas Braden, "I'm Glad the CIA Is 'Immoral'" Saturday Evening Post, May 20, 1967
- Jason Epstein, "The CIA and the Intellectuals", The New York Review of Books, April 30, 1967
- Stuart H. Loory, "How CIA Became Involved in NSA", San Francisco Chronicle, February 28, 1967
Intelligence Bibliographical Database
- J. Ransom Clark-Editor, "The Literature of Intelligence: A Bibliography of Materials, with Essays, Reviews, and Comments, Clark is a long term former CIA employee, a former political science professor and currently Vice President for Administration, Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio
CIA on Campus
The online reference: The CIA on Campus, a project of Public Information Research, Inc., offers a wealth of information. The following links are from a data-scrape (7-2005) of the site arranged semi-chronologically:
- Scholars perfect psychological warfare techniques (1945-1955)
- CIA and the American Anthropological Association (1951)
- How to start a war (1954)
- Gloria Steinem spies on students for the CIA (1961)
- The Ramparts article that started the controversy (1966)
- Another Ramparts scoop: NSA is funded by the CIA (1967)
- Research by the student strikers (1968)
- CIA document on how to co-opt academia (1968)
- Columbia University and the U.S. Intelligence Community (1968)
- Spooky funding started this entire field (Ramparts, 1969)
- MIT, Berkeley, Harvard, Cornell, Syracuse, U.Kentucky help Ford/CIA overthrow Sukarno (1970)
- Operation CHAOS: Spying on the student movement (1975)
- Excerpts from the Church Committee on the CIA in academia (1976)
- Scholars target Africa for the CIA (1976)
- MKULTRA and such: CIA's behavior caper (1977)
- A leaflet on the career of USC trustee John McCone (1977)
- CIA skips Church -- Harvard and all the rest can go to hell (1979)
- Dulles papers reveal CIA consulting network (1980)
- By the way, class, that term paper you did was for the CIA (1984)
- Students counter spies (1985)
- Arrested protesters put CIA on trial - and win! (1987)
- Another general overview of CIA on campus (1989)
- Brown-nosing the spooks (1990)
- "The Agency has a wide range of contacts with academics..." (1991)
- Harvard in service to the national security state (1991)
- CIA destabilizes Ramparts, plus more on the NSA scandal (1991)
- Is RIT a CIA subsidiary? (1991)
- UCLA asks CIA for affirmative action funds (1992)
- CIA cold warrior woos UTSA students (1994)
- An article from Lingua Franca on the state of the CIA-on-campus issue in year 2000
- Officer-in-Residence Program (2001)
- Los Angeles Times op-ed, January 2001: "Academics and Spies: The Silence that Roars"
- CounterPunch, 2003-04-07: "The CIA is Back on Campus"
- A short list of history scholars who worked for the OSS
- From Project Camelot to the coup in Chile: An unbroken thread
- Doug Henwood reviews Robin Winks' Cloak and Gown
References
Sourcewatch is not affiliated with Wikispooks. Original page source here