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To: cuz1961; Fedora

EXCLUSIVE: CIA Director’s Former Think Tank Hired Experts From Nonprofits Controlled By Chinese Spy Agencies
Daily Caller ^ | 11/11/2022 | Philip Lenczycki
Posted on 11/11/2022, 12:00:56 PM by DFG

https://dailycaller.com/2022/11/11/cia-william-burns-carnegie-endowment-alex-joske-china/

An elite Washington, D.C., think tank has employed individuals who’ve worked for front groups controlled by Chinese spy agencies, a Daily Caller News Foundation investigation found.

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has employed over a dozen individuals who’ve worked in a range of capacities at China-based nonprofits set up or co-opted by Chinese intelligence agencies, including the Ministry of State Security (MSS) and the intel arm of the People’s Liberation Army.

These individuals have served as experts in various policy areas, including international relations, American politics and nuclear policy while working at both the think tank’s D.C. headquarters and at its Tsinghua University center in Beijing. Moreover, not only did Carnegie employ the majority of these experts while current CIA Director William Burns was president of the think tank, but, according to the nonprofit’s current records, Carnegie still employs individuals working for Chinese intelligence front groups.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com


29 posted on 07/21/2023 9:53:47 PM PDT by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge)
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To: piasa

“The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has employed over a dozen individuals who’ve worked in a range of capacities at China-based nonprofits set up or co-opted by Chinese intelligence agencies, including the Ministry of State Security (MSS) and the intel arm of the People’s Liberation Army.”

The Carnegie Endowment has been promoting the Chicoms on behalf of socialists for almost a century:

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https://www.conservapedia.com/Institute_of_Pacific_Relations

The Institute of Pacific Relations was established in 1925 to provide a forum for discussion of Asian problems and relations between Asia and the West. It was governed by an international body in which each nation interested in the Pacific was represented and had its own national council. The constituent nations were the United States, United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, China, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Netherland-Netherlands East Indies, Philippines and France. The overall international ruling body was called the Pacific Council. The IPR had two organs of expression. One was a quarterly journal called Pacific Affairs, under the auspices of the International or Pacific Council. The other was Far Eastern Survey, published by the American Council. Owen Lattimore was the editor of Pacific Affairs and Lawrence E. Salisbury was the editor of Far Eastern Survey. The executive secretary of the American Council was Frederick Vanderbilt Field, a notorious professional Communist and popularly known as the “Millionaire Communist.” Field was enlisted for the job by Edward C. Carter in 1928, when Field became assistant secretary and very soon after executive secretary. He remained a member of the governing executive committee until 1948 and executive secretary until 1940.[6] Edward C. Carter was also member of the board of directors of the American Russian Institute and a contributor to Soviet Russia Today in which Carter defended the infamous Moscow show trials during the Stalinist terror.[7] Carter tried to get Field, owner and chairman of the editorial board of Amerasia which received stolen classified documents from the U.S. Government, a commission in Army Intelligence.

To promote greater knowledge of the Far East, the IPR established a large research program, which was supported by grants from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation, and other major corporations. Prof Quigley states there is considerable truth in the contention that the American experts on China were organized into an interlocking group of a Leftish character. . .

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https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1954/09/undermining-the-foundations/640948/

. . .In 1953, the Social Science Research Council, using funds supplied by the Ford Foundation, awarded 41 undergraduate research stipends to superior students in 25 institutions; the same organization, using funds from the Rockefeller Foundation, awarded 39 research training fellowships to graduate students or recent graduate students in 19 institutions, and with funds from the Carnegie Corporation gave 25 grants-in-aid to 25 mature research workers in 24 colleges and one outside organization. Of special interest are the 156 awards to residents of the United States made by the Guggenheim Foundation in 1952. These awards went to men and women from 67 colleges and universities, 6 museums or private research agencies, and 6 government organizations, and to 17 independent artists, writers, and professional workers. . .


41 posted on 07/24/2023 5:01:21 PM PDT by Fedora
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