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  • ..., a group of right-wing intellectuals who were highly critical of the post-war consensus around government intervention in the economy. He was advised by ...ional strength to have a large minority with such divided loyalties during war.<ref>Anthony Brown, [http://www.civitas.org.uk/pdf/cs23.pdf ''Do We Need Ma
    37 KB (5,383 words) - 10:09, 30 January 2023
  • ...umps and rubella (MMR) controversy reveals some of the key features of the cultural climate affecting matters of health and illness in contemporary society. A ...risk is exaggerated<ref>Who study, debate, and publish reports on various cultural, social and economic issues, with an 'emphasis on the value of personal res
    119 KB (16,177 words) - 08:21, 6 November 2021
  • ...1-56584-664-8. [Aka, ''Who Paid the Piper?: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War'' 1999, Granta (UK edition)].
    8 KB (1,121 words) - 09:19, 28 February 2014
  • ==Links to US cold warriors== ...d by the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] from the early days of the Cold War. <ref>Tom Easton, [http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/articles/l31whowh.htm
    6 KB (948 words) - 15:22, 3 March 2015
  • The IRD... played a major role in Western news and cultural media from 1948-1977. It financed a publishing house ‘Ampersand’ and at ...that of a “civil department”.<ref>Sources: Britain's Secret Propaganda War By Paul Lashmar and James Oliver, Sutton Publishing, 1998; MI6: Fifty Years
    24 KB (3,564 words) - 17:08, 19 November 2017
  • ...ected groups which covertly influenced the political landscape of the post-war UK including the [[Economic League]], The [[Council on Foreign Relations]], World War 1 produced the modern British state - the Cabinet Office etc. - and mobilis
    178 KB (28,232 words) - 12:30, 7 September 2022
  • ...rown evoked the spirit of the [[Cultural Cold War]] as a precedent for the War on Terror. ::When Britain and America set out to win the Cold War, we realised victory lay both in our military power and in persuading peopl
    13 KB (2,025 words) - 12:19, 24 December 2016
  • ...March 2009</ref> The book notes on his Autobiography state that 'After the war, he reported firsthand on the founding of Israel and the bloody siege of Je ...s. Laqueur writes that he 'visited the headquarters of the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] in Paris for the first time in May 1953.' According to Laqueur, h
    21 KB (3,074 words) - 10:25, 7 April 2009
  • ...or ''[[National Review]]''. Crozier was a Distinguished Visiting Fellow on War, Revolution, and Peace of [[Stanford University]]'s [[Hoover Institution]]. ..., however, turned down this offer but later did a study for [[Congress for Cultural Freedom|CCF]], investigating its South American network.
    29 KB (4,431 words) - 15:36, 23 November 2021
  • ...ture of Socialism and one-time consultant to the CIA-funded [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]]. Crosland became Lipsey's mentor, hiring him as adviser at the D ...liance, Future Challenges', was very relevant to a world in which the Cold War was moving into a new phase with the crumbling of the former Soviet empire.
    26 KB (4,066 words) - 21:14, 18 February 2011
  • ...olis, these 'experts' represent an ideology that has its roots in the cold war and in Israeli conservatism', ''New Statesman'' June 14. 2004.</ref> ...ngton in 1984, reappear as neoconservatives in the run-up to the 2003 Iraq war. They include [[Jeane Kirkpatrick]], [[Charles Krauthammer]], [[Michael Led
    8 KB (1,118 words) - 15:28, 8 September 2014
  • ...roup, and it was subsequently renamed the '''International Association for Cultural Freedom''' (IACF). At its height, the CCF/IACF was active in some thirty-fi ...d government policy.<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, Granta Books, 2000, pp98-99.</ref>
    10 KB (1,489 words) - 15:35, 20 February 2020
  • ...can interests...CIA money can be traced flowing through the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] to such magazines as [[Encounter]] which have given Labour politi ...tern in its heyday. One of its targets in the years since the Second World War has been the British Labour Party.
    30 KB (4,873 words) - 13:18, 23 May 2009
  • Russian refusal to join ERP marked the start of the Cold War and historians will continue to argue which side was to blame. Certainly Co ...£40,000 that this cost-a huge amount for Europe still recovering from the war-the Congress could not have been held.
    6 KB (943 words) - 13:16, 27 February 2011
  • ...and collaborators to the U.S. public as democratic freedom fighters in the war against communism {{note|2}} Some became leaders in the Republican Party's ...ressional hearings exposed a network of ostensibly private labor, student, cultural media and other organizations that were funded by the CIA, using conduit fo
    43 KB (6,368 words) - 12:00, 29 March 2013
  • *'The Cultural Cold War; Faust not the Pied Piper', New Politics: A Journal of Socialist Thought, V ...why we need a solidarity campaign with the Iraqi people not an &ldquo;anti-war&rdquo; movement&rdquo;'
    7 KB (901 words) - 15:03, 8 October 2006
  • ...ant to a film production company and a member of an EU High Level Group in Cultural Diversity in the Audiovisual Sector. She was recently appointed to serve on ...orces in the post-Cold War era. After working in intelligence during World War II, he served as a personal assistant to [[Gladwyn Jebb]], who established
    14 KB (2,048 words) - 11:32, 20 August 2010
  • ...construction of a cultural disaster: New Labour’s Millennium Experience, Cultural Studies, Vol. 17, No. 5: p. 669 - 90.</ref> ...r (2003) [http://www.amcham.hu/businesshungary/17-04/articles/17-04_04.asp WAR IN IRAQ], Business Hungary, vol.17. No.4. </ref>
    11 KB (1,584 words) - 12:28, 2 November 2008
  • ...azon.co.uk/Cultural-Difference-Media-Memories-Anglo-American/dp/0304701114 Cultural Difference, Media Memories: Anglo-American Images of Japan]", Continuum, 19 ...a in post-Cold War conflicts. He is on the editorial board of the ''Media, War and Conflict'' journal.<ref>South Bank University [http://myweb.lsbu.ac.uk/
    2 KB (295 words) - 15:17, 6 October 2013
  • ...o an Indian anti-communist politician, Minoo Misani, who in the early post-war years, founded the Democratic Research Service and published a magazine cal pre-war member of the [[Imperial Policy Group]].(88)
    18 KB (2,761 words) - 06:51, 14 May 2010
  • ...e pseudonym "[[Ronald Franks]]".<ref>Brian Crozier, Free Agent: The Unseen War 1941-1991, Harper Collins, 1993, pp.51-52.</ref> ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.377.</ref>
    3 KB (394 words) - 14:45, 23 December 2011
  • ...owing the murder of John Lennon in December 1980. Setting the tone for the cultural and political backlash that would soon dominate U.S. politics, Abrams compl ...ndustrial complex. Through Jackson, Abrams became involved with a group of Cold Warriors called the [[Coalition for a Democratic Majority]], which was asso
    32 KB (4,953 words) - 18:06, 25 July 2010
  • .../20000818060108/http://www.informinc.co.uk/LM/LM117/LM117_Iraq.html 'Iraq: war without end'], ''LM 117'', p. 20, February 1999. ...], [http://www.spiked-online.com/site/article/11191/ 'More to it than anti-war'], ''Spiked'', 11 October 2001.
    342 KB (38,083 words) - 02:02, 24 January 2018
  • ...evan]] from the Labour Party . <ref>The CIA, The British Left and the Cold War: Calling The Tune? by Hugh Wilford, Frank Cass, 2003, pp176-181</ref> ...cists in the 1980s and very much the currency for dealing with the alleged war against 'islamofascism' in the contemporary period.
    65 KB (9,862 words) - 08:59, 16 September 2014
  • ...government, foundations and labour unions carried out throughout the cold war - is held quite widely in the US'. ...hly funded, celebrity-studded cold war organisations as the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]]. The Chelsea house where she had hoped to locate her operation fe
    12 KB (1,764 words) - 01:05, 17 July 2010
  • ...sergeant in the armored infantry in [[Europe]] in World War II. After the war, he was stationed in Marseilles for a year. *[[American Committee for Cultural Freedom]] - Former Executive Director
    11 KB (1,582 words) - 00:45, 21 April 2013
  • ...tive [[Irving Kristol]]. It was largely an Anglo-American intellectual and cultural journal, published in England. The magazine ceased publication in 1990. Spe ...in a Europe-based organization of intellectuals called the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]]. Another agent became an editor of ''Encounter''."<ref>Thomas W.
    11 KB (1,631 words) - 23:44, 21 February 2010
  • ...azine [[Der Monat]].<ref>Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Frances Stonor Saunders, Granta Books 2000, pp.27-30</ref> *[[Congress for Cultural Freedom]]
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  • ...of the leading organisers in the West of the democratic front against Cold War communism. Urban was known for his interviews (with Raymond Aron, Arnold To He also joined the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] (CCF) in Geneva, running a series of European seminars on the sub
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  • ...the recasting of British nuclear deterrence policy at the end of the Cold War. He served for seven years on the UK’s [[Joint Intelligence Committee]] a ...n honorary Fellow of Pembroke College Cambridge, and Chair of the [[London Cultural Consortium]]. He is a member of the [[The British American Project for the
    26 KB (3,886 words) - 23:53, 30 October 2008
  • ...g more than a Soviet ploy to detach western Europe from the U.S. without a war. ...of George McGovern as Democratic Candidate in 1972 on a 'stop the Vietnam war' platform which pushed the Democratic right into a counter-attack, which gr
    50 KB (7,394 words) - 19:46, 20 October 2015
  • ...ions. He has published several books and studies including: ''The Faceless War'' (2002); ''Jihad. Secret History and European Networks'' (2004); and ''Jih ...was preparing the attack on the American embassy in Paris and the American Cultural Center in Paris.<ref>CNN October 2, 2001 Tuesday, SHOW: CNN THE POINT WITH
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  • ...'<ref>Transatlantic midwife; WHEN THE MOON WAS HIGH: Memories of Peace and War, 1897-1942. By Ronald Tree. Macmillan. 208 pages. £4.95.The Economist July ....<ref>Transatlantic midwife; WHEN THE MOON WAS HIGH: Memories of Peace and War, 1897-1942. By Ronald Tree. Macmillan. 208 pages. £4.95.The Economist July
    54 KB (8,468 words) - 15:42, 10 March 2015
  • ...acts of cultural dictatorship'.<ref>The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War: Calling the Tune? by [[Hugh Wilford]], Frank Cass, 2003, p9.</ref> ...Sol Levitas]]'s [[New Leader]].<ref>The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War: Calling the Tune? by [[Hugh Wilford]], Frank Cass, 2003, p125.</ref>
    823 bytes (121 words) - 20:33, 20 April 2013
  • ...tirement he become senior research fellow at the [[Hoover Institution]] on War, Revolution, and Peace at [[Stanford University]] (1973-89). ...witch-hunt of dissent. [[Ellen Schrecker]], for example writes that 'cold war liberals like [[Sidney Hook]], [[Irving Kristol]], and [[Arthur Schlesinger
    14 KB (1,987 words) - 10:33, 25 April 2011
  • ...on various arms conferences.<ref>Mark Lincoln Chadwin, The Hawks of World War II, University of North Carolina Press, 1968, p.60.</ref> ...of US neutrality legislation.<ref>Mark Lincoln Chadwin, The Hawks of World War II, University of North Carolina Press, 1968, p.60.</ref>
    19 KB (2,877 words) - 14:41, 27 October 2014
  • ...ur immigration and highlight the positive aspects such as the economic and cultural contributions of immigration to Britain. ...ELL, E. (1947). ''Human Breeding and Survival Population Roads to Peace Or War''. New York: Penguin Books.</ref>; the idea was taken to extremes by the Na
    17 KB (2,491 words) - 06:33, 24 September 2014
  • ...was [[Tom Braden]].<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, Granta Books, 2000, p97.</ref> ...al American policy.'<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, Granta Books, 2000, p98.</ref>
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  • American arm of the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]]. ...s public statements.<ref>Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, by Francis Stonor Saunders, Granta Books, 2000, p201.</ref>
    2 KB (264 words) - 20:13, 17 May 2008
  • ...It ran until 1989 and produced a series of reports on terrorism, guerrilla war, union activism and other topics. ...earlier news service set up by another CIA front group, the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]], after the latter's lead publication ''[[Encounter]]'' had come u
    55 KB (8,198 words) - 15:42, 20 February 2020
  • :Traditional definitions of public diplomacy include government-sponsored cultural, educational and informational programs, citizen exchanges and broadcasts u ...iplomacy helped win the Cold War, and it has the potential to help win the war on terror;"
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  • ==Early life and war years== ...t-class degree in classics shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War.<ref>Richard Clogg, ‘Woodhouse, Christopher Montague [Monty], fifth Baron
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  • ...the democracy-despising, Shariah-law-wanting group, to form the [[Stop the War Coalition]]. The former Labour MP [[George Galloway]] created the Respect P ...e essay which puts forward the idea of a reviving or recasting of the cold war:
    18 KB (2,649 words) - 12:22, 24 July 2019
  • ..., as his Chief of Staff. Other [[Policy Exchange]] appointees included his cultural advisor [[Munira Mirza]] and [[Dan Ritterband]].<ref>[http://www.timesonlin ...nto one of the most significant political events since the end of the Cold War.
    19 KB (2,796 words) - 05:09, 24 July 2019
  • ...) General Edward G. Lansdale and the Folksongs of Americans in the Vietnam War, Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 102 October-December, No. 406.]</ref></ ...of counterinsurgent warfare were developed in the Philippines after World War II and again in South Vietnam. Lansdale is rumoured to have inspired charac
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  • ...ietnam War. It is not limited to the USA and gained momentum with the cold-war, particularly under President Reagan and could be said to have achieved som ...he view of concocting a surrogate left. However, at the end of the Vietnam war the neocons abandoned liberalism to evolve into their present disposition a
    30 KB (4,458 words) - 10:37, 12 February 2017
  • ...was involved in various covert propaganda operations by the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] and the [[Information Research Department]] and later became Dire ...r in 1938 and West Regional Drama Director in 1939. After the Second World War he returned to the BBC as a script writer and producer, first in the Featur
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  • ...tal socialist parties and educating the party in the realities of the Cold War, weaning it from naïve pro-Sovietism to solid support for Nato. In the 195 ...artment]], and also had connections with the [[CIA]] funded [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]].
    18 KB (2,696 words) - 07:37, 26 February 2011
  • ...company which published books and journals on behalf of the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]], a CIA funded propaganda operation. It later became [[Forum Infor ...to March 1968. The journal was previously published by the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] and was subsequently published by the Contemporary China Institut
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  • :Even the British peace movement has vacillated when faced with a war being primarily waged against civilians<ref>Letter: 'Humanitarian' aid leav ...ighty propaganda boost by calling for peace talks in the first week of the war when Milosevic's goons were doing their worst in Kosovo. <ref>’’The Her
    32 KB (4,608 words) - 11:14, 1 March 2010
  • ...ferably, but not necessarily exclusively, with similar religious and socio-cultural conditions. ...y Christians) in the Muslim World. The offensive would be modelled on Cold War strategies such as [[Radio Free Europe]] and the [[Jackson/Vanik Amendment]
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  • ...am as “one of the most intriguing conservative intellectuals of the Cold War period”. ...ersion of events (perhaps over-) emphasises that at the first Congress for Cultural Freedom conference the CIA "wanted [Melvin] Lasky and Burnham kept out of s
    47 KB (7,235 words) - 09:16, 5 April 2012
  • ...gh concept toy playing on themes much like TGTF<ref>The image of the 'Cold War Unicorns ("Can the Communist Unicorn’s horn of classless social structure ...that it "defined a new paradigm for Western intellectual life in the Cold War: American-centered, closely tied to political power, and staunchly anti-Sov
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  • The '''Clash of Civilizations''' and its military manifestation, the '''War on Terror''', both require culture wars -- specifically new Orientalism -- ...d to manipulate perceptions. The Pentagon propaganda apparatus has funded war simulation games to project the image that its soldiers are the good guys,
    7 KB (1,107 words) - 09:17, 13 June 2009
  • ...chased away. He agreed, so he said, with our opposition to the second Gulf War in 2003. The last time I spoke to him was at our 2003 summer school, after In a 2001 article, he offered a third campist critique of the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] in a review of Frances Stonor Saunders' study '''Who Paid the Pip
    29 KB (4,292 words) - 09:16, 28 June 2021
  • '''Standpoint''' is a monthly cultural and political magazine published by Social Affairs Unit Magazines Ltd, a su ...amists, while many on the liberal left have been made homeless by the Iraq war. The anti-US or anti-West view dominating the left is alien to them - this
    9 KB (1,259 words) - 10:19, 10 August 2011
  • ...en’s rights in Islam; violence against women propagated by religious and cultural arguments; and Islam in Europe'.<ref>AEI Profile, [http://www.aei.org/schol ...son'' magazine in which she said the West should 'defeat' Islam as 'we are war with Islam.' She explained her views by stating: 'There comes a moment when
    23 KB (3,570 words) - 16:30, 7 November 2016
  • ..."out of tune with the dominant anti-war discourse" in the wake of the Iraq War.<ref>Norman Geras, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2006/apr/13/int ...le effort to tackle European anti-Americanism in the aftermath of the Iraq war.<ref>Tom Griffin, [http://www.spinwatch.org/-articles-by-category-mainmenu-
    24 KB (3,432 words) - 12:22, 10 June 2016
  • ...Organisations like the WFD represent the cosmetic remodeling of the Cold War strategies: the apparent change in foreign policy from supporting dictators ...the vital decisions of society, a democratic distribution of material and cultural resources, then democracy is a profound threat to global capitalist interes
    34 KB (5,189 words) - 00:38, 2 May 2009
  • ...way in the context of the 'war of terror' to mean a holy or Allah-ordained war against non-Muslims.</ref>to as opposed to Western intelligence agencies: ...three and a half years after the September 11 attacks and the start of the War on Terror, the United States still chases after terrorists, denying them th
    33 KB (4,832 words) - 18:47, 10 March 2015
  • ...William Blum, Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions since World War II, first published 1995, revised edition, Zed Books, 2003, NEEDS PAGE REF< ..., following revelations by Ramparts magazine concerning the [[Congress for Cultural Freedom]], The Washington Post's John Harwood wrote of the the U.S. Central
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  • ...most zealous of these lethal idealists found in righteous murder—a holy war—a proper means to shape an ideal Islamic society free from the contaminat ...all, and provided the intellectual rationale for the Bush administration's War on Terror."
    25 KB (3,780 words) - 05:06, 8 March 2017
  • ...ournal is its 'commitment to multi-disciplinary approaches to the study of war.' The journal focuses on two main topics, military and strategic studies an ...ample, Avi Kober's (2008) 'The Israel defense forces in the Second Lebanon War: Why the poor performance?' <ref name= "Journal"/>
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  • ...ice]] (SIS), where he was a colleague of [[Kim Philby]]. At the end of the war, he carried out an SIS investigation into the fate of Hitler, which provide ...f>Hugh Wilford, ''Calling the Tune? The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War'', Frank Cass, 2003, p.195.</ref>
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  • ...ref>Hugh Wilford, Calling the Tune? The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War, Frank Cass, 2003, p.194.</ref>
    1 KB (181 words) - 11:28, 20 May 2009
  • ...ref>Hugh Wilford, Calling the Tune? The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War, Frank Cass, 2003, p.196.</ref> ...ref>Hugh Wilford, Calling the Tune? The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War, Frank Cass, 2003, p.196.</ref>
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  • ...nia by [[Colin Gubbins]], who retained a relationship with [[MI6]] in post-war retirement.<ref>Stephen Dorril, MI6, Touchstone 2002, p.364.</ref> Amery be ...believed that they "forced the Soviets and Albanians to call off the civil war in Greece."<ref>Stephen Dorril, MI6, Touchstone 2002, p.402.</ref>
    8 KB (1,229 words) - 22:17, 2 March 2015
  • ...CIA over a significant span of time in major projects in the cultural Cold War is the Ford Foundation.” [http://www.blackcommentator.com/62/62_haiti_1.h
    6 KB (887 words) - 18:12, 1 July 2009
  • ...ompetent government; a dynamic marketplace for economic, intellectual, and cultural activity; and a vigorous defense, at home and abroad, of American ideas and ...military deployments since the end of the Cold War, new deployments in the war against terrorists and the states that harbor and support them, and changes
    16 KB (2,533 words) - 11:55, 24 March 2017
  • ...the [[AFL-CIO]]'s [[CIA]]-backed international operations during the cold war. ...[[Bill Donovan]].<ref>Hugh Wilford, The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War: Calling the Tune? Frank Cass, 2003, p.93.</ref>
    9 KB (1,326 words) - 18:18, 23 January 2014
  • ...Francis Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 1999, p.67.</ref> Despite security concerns around his 1943 arrest ...Francis Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 1999, p.67.</ref>
    4 KB (679 words) - 00:06, 5 April 2012
  • ...tfield]], [http://www.heartfield.org/economy.pdf ''The economy of time''], Cultural Trends 43&44, 2003 ...000CA6BA.htm ''Zombie anti-imperialists vs the 'Empire''],  Today's anti-war movement is motivated more by romanticism than a serious critique of imperi
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  • ...Alsop]] was a US journalist.<ref>Mark Lincoln Chadwin, The Hawks of World War II, University of North Caroline Press, 1968, p.56.</ref> ...Francis Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 199, pp.402-403.</ref>
    1 KB (185 words) - 17:25, 22 April 2013
  • ...gical warfare.<ref>James Schwoch (2009), Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69, p. 10</ref> ...ublic opinion.<ref>James Schwoch (2009), Global TV: New Media and the Cold War, 1946-69, p. 10</ref>
    11 KB (1,613 words) - 13:04, 15 April 2010
  • ...ill be harder than it was during the Cold War, the attempt we must try and cultural neurasthenia is of little help. Yet one conclusion is obvious. For much of
    5 KB (785 words) - 12:59, 20 March 2018
  • ...ich would go on to be developed by both East and West in the Cultural Cold War.<ref name="Scammell">Michael Scammell, [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/arc Among those who worked for Münzenberg's station in the early months of World War Two, were [[Ernst Adam]] and [[Alexander Mass]], who would later become ass
    6 KB (877 words) - 10:51, 7 July 2012
  • ...'':[[British Council]] | [[CMCS]] | [[CEU]] | [[Cultiwigest]] | [[European Cultural Parliament]] | [[Folkoperan]] | [[Kino Tilsiter Lichtspiele]] | [[Landmark] ...or of journalism and communication, Cardiff University; co-author, Digital War Reporting
    224 KB (30,627 words) - 16:07, 8 December 2016
  • ...-propaganda-in-world-war-ii/ 'FHK Henrion: graphics as propaganda in World War II'], ''Blueprint'', 22 December 1986. ...d-uk-culture/ 'Play as the Main Event in International and UK Culture'], ''Cultural Trends'', 28 April 2003.
    76 KB (8,146 words) - 12:45, 6 July 2017
  • ...urryupharry.org/2010/02/16/hate-speech-israel%E2%80%99s-legitimacy-and-the-war-on-andrew-sullivan/], ''Harry's Place'', 16 February 2010</ref> ...ondon Review of Books criticizing liberal hawks who had supported the Iraq war.<ref>Michael Weiss, [http://www.hurryupharry.org/2010/01/18/tony-judt-good-
    40 KB (5,800 words) - 16:00, 23 June 2010
  • ...odson]] calls for a war of ideas against political Islam: "During the Cold War, organisations such as the [[Information Research Department]] of the Forei ...iniscent of the much-missed liberal anti-totalitarianism of the early Cold War period".
    5 KB (664 words) - 11:11, 22 June 2010
  • ...e biography at the end of the CSC report, Standing has an MA in Critical & Cultural Theory from [[Cardiff University]].<ref>''The BNP and the Online Fascist Ne ...pinwatch.org/images/The%20Cold%20War%20on%20British%20Muslims.pdf The Cold War on British Muslims], ''SpinWatch'', August 2011, p.31.</ref>
    7 KB (987 words) - 17:54, 12 September 2011
  • ...l Bell]] and [[Melvin Lasky]].<ref>The CIA, the British Left, and the Cold War, by Hugh Wilford, Frank Cass, 2003, p.125.</ref> ==World War Two==
    36 KB (5,654 words) - 15:36, 26 February 2011
  • ...domestic "national psychological warfare program" as a part of the US cold war strategy.<ref>http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Evron_Kirkpatrick< ...>Feffer was president of Hampton Arts International, a company involved in cultural exchanges between Eastern Europe and the US.
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  • ...publications/csi-studies/studies/vol46no1/article08.html The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters].</ref> And it is also attested ...erick Preager, a propagandist for the American military government in post-war Germany, published between twenty and twenty-five volumes in which the CIA
    10 KB (1,644 words) - 21:32, 9 August 2010
  • ...d briefly by Jeffrey M. Bale, in a detailed and insightful article on post-war right-wing terrorists and their relation to the extra-parliamentary Left in ...(1989) Right-wing Terrorists and the Extraparliamentary Left in Post-World War 2 Europe: Collusion or Manipulation? Lobster No. 18. In Lobster 19.</ref>
    52 KB (8,253 words) - 01:46, 25 August 2010
  • ...he mid-century', Review of Ernest Mandel, ''The Making of the Second world War', Verso, 1986 ''Confrontation'', No. 3, Summer 1988, July, London: [[Junius ...itics in international relations; Lynn Revell challenges the penchant for cultural explanation in social life; Jane Cullen looks at the real fears behind t
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  • *[[Frank Furedi]], ''The Mau Mau War in Perspective'', London: James Currey Publishers, 1989. ...5313035/qid=1094659459/sr=1-7/ref=sr_1_10_7/202-3369264-1199851 The Silent War: Imperialism and the Changing Perception of Race]'', Pluto Press, 1998
    174 KB (20,814 words) - 12:50, 6 July 2017
  • ...f-the-Journalism-of-Attachment-Mick-Hume-Informinc-LM-Special-1997 ''Whose war is it anyway? The dangers of the journalism of attachment''], An '[[LM]] Sp *[[Mark Ryan]] ''War and Peace in Ireland'' London: Pluto Press; 1st Edition edition (27 May 199
    427 KB (59,501 words) - 09:07, 8 April 2024
  • * BBC News, '[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/677481.stm ITN wins bosnian war libel case]', 15 March 2000 ...uishing Marx from perestroika: Mr Gorbachev leaves our own revolutionaries cold', ''The Independent'', 5 April 1989.
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  • ==World War Two== During the war, Lowenthal was a member of [[David Astor]]'s [[Europe Study Group]] formed
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  • ...r a second triumph of Christian forces in European which would, in a civil war, drive out Islamic influence.<ref>Scott Shane, [http://www.nytimes.com/2011 ...ectness' and acceptance of multiculturalism, in his eyes was tantamount to cultural/national suicide.
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  • ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.26.</ref> ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.27.</ref>
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  • ...United Europe]].<ref>Hugh Wilford, The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War: Calling the Tune? Frank Cass, 2003, p.227.</ref> ...ref>Hugh Wilford, Calling the Tune? The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War, Frank Cass, 2003, p.85.</ref>
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  • ...ref>Hugh Wilford, Calling the Tune? The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War, Frank Cass, 2003, pp.32-34.</ref> ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.68.</ref>
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  • ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.234.</ref> *[[Michael Josselson]] terminates assistance to [[American Congress for Cultural Freedom]].
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  • ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.413.</ref>
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  • ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.405.</ref> ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.409.</ref>
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  • ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.422.</ref> ...rald, Way Out There in the Blue: Reagan, Star Wars and the End of the Cold War, Touchstone, 2000, p.19.</ref>
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  • ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.71.</ref>
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  • ...Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper: The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta, 2000, p.347.</ref>
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