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  • ...t in organised crime, [[Paul Wilkinson]], [[Anthony Richards]], a one-time British Gas facilities manager, and [[Magnus Ranstorp]]. <ref>Vicky Allan, '[http:/ ...argued that the occupation strategy can be successful only if it adopts a British colonial model of counter-insurgency, comparable to perspectives in [[Frank
    25 KB (3,625 words) - 15:30, 3 December 2015
  • ...r Science and Technology and is a member of the Board of Trustees of the [[British Nuclear Energy Society]]. He is chairman of the [[Nuclear Academia-Industry
    3 KB (429 words) - 00:21, 5 November 2014
  • *[[British United Industrialists]] *[[Confederation of British Industry]] - CBI
    1 KB (166 words) - 13:10, 16 September 2010
  • *[[British Small Animal Veterinary Association ]] *[[British Toy & Hobby Association]] *
    7 KB (778 words) - 19:59, 1 May 2006
  • ...the office block also houses [[NHS England]] and the [[Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry]]]] ...or and board member at [[Havas Worldwide]], where his clients included the British Army, [[RBS]], the Government of Israel and [[Air Asia]]<ref name="AR"> Ann
    68 KB (8,353 words) - 13:31, 3 March 2017
  • ...ayian insurgency, Cyprus and Northern Ireland, where in 1971 he headed the British Army's covert black propaganda unit, [[Information Policy]]. In 1990 the cu ...ackenzieinstitute.com/2010/canadas-navy061510.htm First Impressions of the Navy] By John C. Thompson, Mackenzie Briefing Notes Issue # 27--June 2010
    16 KB (2,075 words) - 13:06, 9 November 2011
  • ...g's School in Canterbury from 1940 to 1942. He served in the British Royal Navy from 1942 to 1946, enlisting at the age of 15. <ref>The Complete Marquis Wh After leaving the British Navy in 1946 de Borchgrave spent a year working in Eastern Europe as a freelance
    11 KB (1,667 words) - 10:02, 3 December 2012
  • ...ounded in 1958 the IISS has strong establishment links, with former US and British government officials among its members. The Foreign Office contributed £10 ...day later ''The Guardian'' headline read, ‘Institute for Defence Study, British Members, U.S. Finance’.<ref>''The Guardian'', 28 November 1958</ref>
    27 KB (3,936 words) - 21:46, 8 December 2016
  • *[[Marsha Evans]] (Former President, American Red Cross/Retired U.S. Navy Admiral) *Sir [[Jeremy Greenstock]] (Former British Ambassador to the United Nations)
    9 KB (1,156 words) - 13:45, 5 October 2007
  • ...l turnover of £10 million.[1] A survey in 1985 reported that of 180 major British companies, 41 per cent retained political consultancies for 'Government wor Born in 1903, Powell was educated in Dartmouth and joined the Royal Navy, serving in the Mediterranean and the Far East. In 1929 he formed his first
    53 KB (8,562 words) - 13:36, 21 November 2012
  • ...connection with Hoskins and Sons Ltd, which supplied fittings to the Royal Navy. This was virtually the family firm. His second son, Neville, was the compa ...hareholdings? After all, Godfrey Isaacs was managing director of Marconi's British contractor.
    59 KB (9,302 words) - 09:53, 21 August 2012
  • ...al Armed Forces in Europe (CFE), Vienna, 1989-1991, Under Secretary of the Navy (1977-1979), and General Counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee on Armed Serv *Department of the Navy: Under Secretary of the Navy (1977-79)<br>
    11 KB (1,537 words) - 01:47, 9 March 2017
  • ...Kelly]] was the victim of an assassination that had nothing to do with the British State or its Secret Intelligence Service.<ref>Rowena Thursby, [http://www.t ...n Egypt in 1928, with a view to mounting terrorist and sabotage actions in British-controlled territories in the Middle East and gaining control of Middle Eas
    34 KB (5,259 words) - 10:58, 17 June 2016
  • ...as owned by [[John Lehman|John F. Lehman Jr.]], later the Secretary of the Navy. ...]]. The Policy Forum claimed success in selling U.S. foreign policy to the British Media, Claiming:
    16 KB (2,429 words) - 15:03, 2 February 2015
  • ...e Royal Navy Staff College and, in the Ministry of Defence and Director of Navy Plans. Before retiring from the Royal Navy as Deputy Chief of Defense Staff (Equipment Capability), Blackham launched
    4 KB (547 words) - 08:51, 22 August 2013
  • ..."Weapons of Mass Destruction" was flawed. He was a career soldier in the British Army between 1956 and 1997. ...[[Chief of the General Staff]] and in 1994 the professional head of the [[British Army]]. On 15 March 1994 he was promoted to [[Field Marshal]] and became [[
    10 KB (1,595 words) - 03:51, 11 May 2018
  • ...on coordinated by the National Security Council (NSC). In a speech to the British Parliament on June 8, 1982, President Reagan announced that the U.S. would ...easurer, was head of the 1980 CIA transition team, former secretary of the Navy, and ambassador to the Organization of American States under Reagan. Until
    43 KB (6,368 words) - 12:00, 29 March 2013
  • ...eliberately targeted essential civilian services.[48] In Yugoslavia the US navy fired 220 Tomahawk missiles, designed to weaken the country by making life ...870 employees at two aircraft plants in England that it had purchased from British Aerospace. This was despite the fact, according to union officials, that wo
    17 KB (2,542 words) - 16:00, 3 December 2006
  • ...ation states, and to a lesser extent, the huge budgets of airlines such as British Airways. ...in the American market, one of the variants of the JSF is tipped to be the British Ministry of Defence replacement for the outdated Harrier jump jet. {{ref|2}
    5 KB (715 words) - 09:56, 2 October 2007
  • ...liamentary Group on British Council]] | [[All-Party Parliamentary Group on British Economy]] | [[All-Party Parliamentary Group on Building Societies and Finan *[[British Council APG|British Council]] (APG)
    47 KB (5,638 words) - 13:13, 24 April 2012
  • ...lle-Jones''' was Chairman of [[QinetiQ]] Group PLC (2002-05), chair of the British Joint Intelligence Committee (1993-94),International Governor, BBC (1998-20 ...Stanley, a director of RAND Corporation, Marathon Oil and a Patron of the British American Project. Before entering government service, he was executive vice
    40 KB (6,320 words) - 19:22, 5 December 2019
  • ...tor in corporate/intelligence intrigue, a Tory MP, a key activist in the [[British Commonwealth Union]] and a founder of [[National Propaganda]] (later known ...ich influenced not only the course of the Great War but also the course of British, American and Irish history. Blinker Hall was by all accounts a charismatic
    14 KB (2,241 words) - 22:05, 26 July 2009
  • :The British Commonwealth Union, that is the group that acted as midwife to the Economic ...i-socialist causes amongst working class voters. The negotiations with the British Workers League were, it seems, successful. But it was a relatively small an
    6 KB (949 words) - 17:53, 12 January 2007
  • ...[[Political Warfare Executive]]. He is recognised as the founder of the [[British Council]]. An Australian by birth, he entered the British Foreign Office in 1920 and in 1929 joined the [[News Department]], which wa
    4 KB (681 words) - 09:08, 31 January 2008
  • ...en created which would play an important, and largely clandestine, role in British political and industrial life for the remainder of the twentieth century. A ...mber of groups often treated by historians as independent entities - the [[British Empire Union]], [[National Citizens Union]], [[National Alliance of Employe
    35 KB (5,533 words) - 20:46, 1 February 2008
  • ...onments. International customers include Boeing, Raytheon, the US Army, US Navy, police departments, mass transit authorities, and port authorities." <ref> ...Mobile/Tactical. Prime Contractors are: Alenia Marconi Systems, Raytheon, British Aerospace, IBM, Vickers and 'Others'. According to their presentation <ref>
    5 KB (788 words) - 01:42, 12 August 2015
  • ...MI6 officer. 'A former head of MI6's London office',<ref>Alastair Dalton NAVY PAPERS SHED LIGHT ON THE MURKY DEATH OF DIVING SPYThe Scotsman, October 22, ...s are [[Paul Channon]] and [[Alan Duncan]]. [[David Burnside]], the former British Airways public affairs chief, is a member - not for his BA work but for his
    5 KB (779 words) - 01:55, 7 June 2008
  • ...]][[Category:Arms Trade Revolving Door|Tolhurst, John]] [[Category:British Navy|Tolhurst, John]][[Category:UK Ministry of Defence|Tolhurst, John]][[Categor
    1 KB (176 words) - 23:48, 20 March 2018
  • ...1930s which illustrate the degree to which the [[Economic League]] and the British Intelligence services were cooperating. ...re had been no more than a handful of Communist Party members in the whole navy. One of those discharged men was [[Fred Copeman]], who though not a Communi
    60 KB (9,504 words) - 20:51, 1 February 2008
  • ...he City and industry. He was in fact the only Labour Party leader that the British Establishment could really regard as "one of us". As [[Hugh Dalton]]'s secr ...Gaitskell's slavish pro-Americanism and roused the utmost suspicion of the British secret state, and naturally enough their American colleagues.
    58 KB (9,216 words) - 20:55, 1 February 2008
  • *A B Carew, "The Lower Decks of the Royal Navy 1900-39", Manchester University Press, 1981 ...Curious Careers of Maxwell Knight and James McGuirk Hughes", Lobster #22; "British Fascism and the State 1917-1927: a re-examination of the documentary eviden
    8 KB (1,139 words) - 14:01, 13 September 2007
  • ...'s marketing division in 1977. Before joining P&G, Lafley served in the US Navy for five years. He was elected president and chief executive officer on 8 J ...Fitzgerald of Unilever, Mr de Lapuente was invited along with the elite of British business to a recent Chequers summit with the prime minister, Tony Blair. A
    14 KB (2,071 words) - 15:56, 18 December 2007
  • * ‘Head of P&G UK de Lapuente was invited along with the elite of British business to a recent Chequers summit with the Prime Minister, Tony Blair. A ...national corporations and several branches of the US Government and the US Navy [74].
    31 KB (4,647 words) - 13:59, 7 May 2007
  • ...s and are the 'prime' contractor for Astute class submarines for the Royal Navy. British Aerospace (BAe), now [[BAE Systems]], gave the Labour Party more than £5,0
    5 KB (716 words) - 22:01, 13 April 2008
  • ...d in 1987. Full reference: I-Spy Productions Written in Flames: Naming the British Ruling Class London: Hooligan Press ISBN 1869802071. Undated, but published ...Chief Marshal Sir [[David Craig]] and other top men of the RAF and' Royal Navy. Also there was Bruce Matthews, boss of [[Rupert Murdoch]]'s [[News Interna
    3 KB (418 words) - 16:16, 9 July 2010
  • ...hroughout the world. Introductions to these clubs are available to Army & Navy Club members through our Membership Office.{{ref|1}}
    959 bytes (145 words) - 15:20, 16 August 2007
  • ...tempt to expel [[Aneurin Bevan]] from the Labour Party . <ref>The CIA, The British Left and the Cold War: Calling The Tune? by Hugh Wilford, Frank Cass, 2003, ...etown University in Washington DC., Roy organized "educational visits" for British trade unionists to visit the U.S. during the Reagan administration "to broa
    65 KB (9,862 words) - 08:59, 16 September 2014
  • ...worked that was owned by [[John F. Lehman Jr.]], now the Secretary of the Navy. ...sought evidence in relation to another former Abington consultant, former navy official [[Melvyn R. Paisley]] and Zabludowicz-controlled company [[Pocal I
    11 KB (1,564 words) - 14:32, 12 February 2014
  • ...he [[Britannia Royal Naval College|Royal Naval College]] in Dartmouth (the navy’s equivalent of [[Sandhurst]]), which at that time was essentially specia ===In the Navy===
    9 KB (1,369 words) - 09:59, 15 October 2008
  • ...d aid from the [[Society for Individual Freedom]], which he describes as a British Intelligence front involving [[George K. Young]], [[Ross McWhirter]] (both ...y with Goodall joined by the Cabinet Secretary [[Robert Armstrong]] on the British side and Lillis joined by another senior Irish diplomat, [[Sean Donlon]], a
    10 KB (1,503 words) - 20:35, 11 April 2011
  • ...the square and proceeds anti-clockwise as far as Number 21. The [[Army and Navy Club]]'s clubhouse occupies the former sites of Number 22, a smaller adjace * No. 10 is [[Chatham House]], former home of British Prime Minister [[William Pitt the Elder]] and of the [[Charles John Gardine
    10 KB (1,427 words) - 17:12, 27 March 2008
  • ...$19.5 billion in 2005). These 5 corporations are perennially in the top 6 (British Company [[BAE]] is consistently ranked in the top 6) on the Defense News’ ...nes are built in partnership with [[BAE]] and [[Northrop Grumann]] for the Navy and Airforce
    10 KB (1,379 words) - 14:53, 27 March 2018
  • ...conference, it is very likely that this is connected to the rise of the [[British American Project for a Successor Generation]] and Reagan's [[Project Democr ...Anglo-American trade union relations, organizing "educational visits" for British trade unionists to visit the U.S. during the Reagan administration. The tri
    50 KB (7,394 words) - 19:46, 20 October 2015
  • *November 2002 - September 2004 Shadow Defence Minister for the Royal Navy, the nuclear deterrent and strategic issues. *May 2005 until May 2010, Shadow Defence Minister for the Royal Navy, the nuclear deterrent and strategic issues.
    5 KB (685 words) - 16:25, 20 January 2023
  • ...y troops and contractors who do not know what they are doing, according to British military sources. The techniques devised in the system, called [[R2I]] - re ...using R2I techniques, but they didn't know what they were doing." He said British and US military intelligence soldiers were trained in these techniques, whi
    4 KB (602 words) - 13:06, 6 June 2008
  • ...her advance their skills. Another encouraging statistic is the increase in Navy and RAF personnel coming forward for specialised HUMINT training; we hope t According to the British government:
    4 KB (567 words) - 13:01, 18 February 2011
  • ...e was not charged at that point. His trial focused on favours he did for a British acquaintance Mohammed Ajmal Khan, a member of Lashkar-e-Taiba (Mohammed Ajm Mohammed Ajmal Khan is British man from Coventry who confessed to ‘directing a terrorist organisation’
    45 KB (7,051 words) - 07:18, 8 October 2008
  • ...e [[House of Lords]] and the European Court. He is a Vice-President of the British Institute of International and Comparative Law, and has written extensively
    2 KB (350 words) - 08:50, 10 June 2010
  • ...as the Army's 'pre-eminent doctrine writer'<ref>Alderson, A. 'Revising the British Army's Counter-indurgency doctrine', RUSI Journal August 2007, 152(4)</ref> ...ne and Counterinsurgency: A British Perspective," Brigadier Gavin Bulloch (British Army, Ret.), From Parameters, Summer 1996, pp. 4-16, Available on-line at:
    4 KB (602 words) - 09:02, 3 May 2008
  • ...East, and Northern Ireland as well as a live satellite service to [[Royal Navy]] ships at sea. ...orm’ British armed forces around the world and is entirely funded by the British Ministry of Defence. BFBS is run by the SSVC.<ref>http://www.ssvc.com/index
    11 KB (1,823 words) - 16:13, 17 November 2017

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