Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: Impeach98

Last Updated:5/11/05
Center for International Policy
Staff and Board of Directors

Staff

Robert E. White, president
William Goodfellow, executive director
Raymond Baker, senior fellow, Global Financial Flows
Nicole Ball, senior fellow, National Security
Yeimi Bautista, assistant, Central America
Landrum Bolling, senior fellow, National Security
Parker Borg, senior fellow, National Security
Eva Boster, associate, Freedom to Travel Campaign
Tracee Brown, director of finance
Elsa Chang, senior associate, Central America
Frick Curry, development consultant
Craig Eisendrath, senior fellow, National Security
Melvin A. Goodman, senior fellow, National Security
Selig Harrison, program director, Asia
Adam Isacson, senior associate, Demilitarization/Colombia
Paul Lubeck, senior fellow, National Security
Jim Mullins, senior associate, National Security
Jennifer Nordin, director, Economic Studies
Abigail Poe, office manager/intern coordinator
Wayne S. Smith, senior fellow, Cuba
Anne Snouck-Hurgronje, development associate
Sarah Stephens, director, Freedom to Travel Campaign
Winifred Tate, associate, Demilitarization/Colombia
Ingrid Vaicius, associate, Central America



Board of Directors

Chair: • Cynthia McClintock, professor, George Washington University
• Mario Baeza, investment banker
• Matt Balitsaris, record producer
• Lowell Blankfort, newspaper publisher
• William J. Butler, chairman, executive committee, International Commission of Jurists
• Thomas Cooper, president, Gulfstream International Airlines
• Adrian W. DeWind, attorney
• Alfredo Duran, attorney
• Robert W. Edgar, general secretary, National Council of Churches
• Joseph T. Eldridge, chaplain, America University
• Samuel Ellsworth, partner, Ellsworth-Howell
• Mike Farrell, actor
• Gerald F. Gilmore, Episcopal minister (retired)
• Jeffrey Horowitz, city planner
• Susan W. Horowitz, social worker
• Robert G. Kerrigan, attorney
• Lucy Lehman, social activist
• Sally Lilienthal, president, Ploughshares Fund
• Conrad Martin, Fund for Constitutional Government
• Paul Sack, businessman
• Donald Soldini, International Preferred Enterprises, Inc.
• Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, former Lt. Governor of Maryland
• Edith Wilkie, president, Peace Through Law Education Fund
• Dessima Williams, professor, Brandeis University




51 posted on 04/24/2006 7:29:25 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]


To: Lancey Howard; Freee-dame
Thanks for the list of Board of Directors

I want to highlight one name:
• Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, former Lt. Governor of Maryland

This is from the book "Covert Cadre: Inside the Institute for Policy Studies, by S Steven Powell, with an introduction by David Horowitz, " published in 1987:

"Jimmy Carter's "progressive global" and "human rights" approach to foreign policy had backfired, but it had at least demonstrated what a short distance separated progressive liberalism from revolutionary socialism, the model enthusiastically embraced by IPS and the Latin network." - page 223

"The Center for International Policy (CIP) was formed in 1975 by Lindsay Mattison, with Orlando Letelier's help, as another "human rights" research/lobbying organization. Like the IPS spinoff Center for National Security Studies, which focused on the intelligence agencies, CIP operates under the aegis of the Fun for Peace, with support from the Rubin Foundation, the Ruth Mott Fund, and the Stern Fund. Donald Ranard, a disaffected State Department official and friend of Orlando Letelier, is CIP's director and William Goodfellow its deputy director.* Susan Weber, an early staff member, was previously registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act as an employee of the Soviet embassy to copyedit Soviet Life.

CIP has focused much of its effort on stopping financial institutions, like the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the International Monetary Fund, from aiding Latin American countries friendly to the United States.

---snip---

A theme CIP plays is that Latin America's problems are really the fault of the United States. For instance, the introduction to William Biddle's CIP paper on Nicaragua states that "basic U S interests are more threatened by the customary American response to radical governments than by the governments themselves."** Likewise, on the Grenadan crisis, CIP fellow W Frick Curry wrote, "In the final analysis, the greatest threat to American citizens was caused by violence precipitated by the [U S] invasion itself.*** Despite its overt bias, CIP avers that "the press corps and Congressional leaders and staffs have found the Center's bimonthly International Policy Report useful in getting a fresh look at the problems of aid and repression.**** --pages 236-7 ----- All quotes in original text. Asterisks refer to footnotes of attribution.

Not much has changed with the world view or methods of operation of these folks in the past twenty years.

69 posted on 04/25/2006 5:45:52 AM PDT by maica ( We have a destination in mind, and that is a freer world. -- G W Bush)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 51 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson