This is longer than I would normally reproduce from elsewhere. But then, there is nothing normal about its content. The same Marko Attila Hoare who once branded me "Far Right" despite having made his own name as a shill for Franjo Tudjman, now writes:
Earlier this year, I resigned from the Henry Jackson Society (HJS) and
requested that my name be removed from its website. The HJS is a UK think-tank
frequently described as ‘neoconservative’. It includes among its Trustees
Michael Gove, the current Secretary of State for Education, and it is alleged to have influenced the foreign
policy of David Cameron and William Hague. It currently serves as a
secretariat, at the House of Commons, to the All-Party Parliamentary Groups for
Transatlantic and International Security and for Homeland Security. I had held
a senior post within this organisation for seven years, first as European
Neighbourhood Co-Director, then as Greater Europe Section Director. However, I
reluctantly had to face the fact that the HJS has degenerated to the point
where it is a mere caricature of its former self. No longer is it a centrist,
bipartisan think-tank seeking to promote democratic geopolitics through
providing sober, objective and informed analysis to policy-makers. Instead, it
has become an abrasively right-wing forum with an anti-Muslim tinge, churning
out polemical and superficial pieces by aspiring journalists and pundits that
pander to a narrow readership of extreme Europhobic British Tories, hardline US
Republicans and Israeli Likudniks. The story of the HJS’s degeneration provides
an insight into the obscure backstage world of Conservative politics.
There are three factors that define this
degeneration. The first is that almost all the people who founded and
established the HJS have either left or been edged out of the organisation.
According to its Wikipedia
entry as it currently stands, ‘The society was founded in March 2005 by
academics and students at Cambridge (mostly affiliated with the Centre for
International Studies), including Brendan Simms, Dr. Alan Mendoza, Marko Attila
Hoare (who has since severed his links with the society), Gideon Mailer,
James Rogers and Matthew Jamison.’ The list should include also John Bew,
Martyn Frampton and Gabriel Glickman. None of these people are now left, except
Mendoza as Executive Director, and Simms as nominal president (or possibly
president of the Cambridge branch; the website is
ambiguous on this point, probably deliberately). Simms is the only
intellectually serious figure still attached to the organisation, but no longer
has much – if any – influence over it.
The second factor is that there is absolutely no
internal democracy in the HJS, nor any transparency or rules of procedure.
Absolutely none whatsoever. Less than in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Probably
less than in the Syrian Arab Republic. As someone with an early background in
far-left politics, I grew up with groups like the Socialist Workers Party, in
which total power is held by one or two leaders, but the totalitarianism is
disguised by window-dressing consisting of branch meetings, annual conferences,
meetings of the Politburo and the like. Well, the HJS is like that, but without
the window-dressing: there isn’t even the pretence of democracy or
consultation. Instead, the organisation operates on the basis of cronyism and
intrigue. Sole power is held by one individual – Executive Director Alan
Mendoza. He was not elected to the post and is not subject even to formal or
technical restraints, nor to performance review and renewal of contract.
The third factor is that, although the HJS was
intended to be a centrist, bi-partisan organisation, its leadership has now
moved far to the right, and abandoned any pretence of being bi-partisan or
pro-European (its Associate Director, Douglas Murray, is on record as having stated
that ‘the EU is a monstrosity – no good can come of it… The best thing could
just simply be for it to be razed to the ground and don’t start again [sic]‘).
Most of the people who left or have been purged are of a broadly centre-left
outlook and background: Rogers and Jamison are Labour Party supporters; I came
from an early background in Trotskyist politics; Mailer and Bew also came from
left-wing backgrounds.
Things were not always this way. When the HJS was
founded on the initiative of Brendan Simms back in 2005, it was an organisation
intended to transcend the left-right divide, uniting Labour and
Conservative supporters on a platform of supporting a progressive, forward
foreign policy, involving the promotion of democracy and human rights globally.
It was set up as a reaction against the conservative-realist right and the
anti-imperialist left, whose hostility to the idea of progressive intervention
abroad led them to line up behind dictators such as Slobodan Milosevic and
Robert Mugabe. The HJS was supposed to be both pro-American and pro-European.
It was Simms’s insight that, in order to be an important player on the world
stage, Britain had to be centrally involved in European affairs. As he
explained in his book Three
Victories and a Defeat: The Rise and Fall of the First British Empire,
1714-1783 (Penguin, 2008), Britain’s defeat in the American War of
Independence and loss of its American colonies was the direct result of its
withdrawal from European affairs.
The HJS’s members were young academics, most of
them graduate students of Simms’s, and it was run in a collegiate and
democratic manner. There were regular meetings at which policy and
organisational activities were discussed. Simms was the de facto
leader, by virtue of being the founder and the oldest and most senior
individual, but everyone was free to participate and express themselves, it
being recognised that there were significant political differences amongst us,
and that this was a good thing, since the HJS was supposed to be a broad
church.
In those comradely early days of the HJS, it was
difficult to appreciate just how important it should have been to establish
clear rules of procedure, rights of membership and good governance.
Unfortunately, this was not done, and the organisation grew exponentially while
remaining dangerously informal and opaque in its internal organisation. When,
after all the hard work and efforts of the founding members, the HJS was able
to acquire a London office, it was at once the mark of its success and the
start of its internal degeneration. It was now no longer so easy to assemble
the still mostly Cambridge-based team for regular meetings. The move to London
occurred shortly after Brendan Simms, the HJS’s President and founder, opted to
retreat from day-t0-day management of the organisation, while James Rogers,
the Director of Operations, scaled back his activities. Mendoza, the Executive
Director, took over the central role in managing the organisation. By default,
power fell into his lap.
Alan
Mendoza is an ambitious young professional politician of the Conservative
Party and a former Tory local councillor in the London Borough of Brent.
According to his HJS
page, he is ‘Founder and President of the Disraelian Union, a London-based
progressive Conservative think-tank and discussion forum, and has worked to
develop relationships and ideas between political networks in the United
Kingdom, United States and Europe. He is also Chief Advisor to the All-Party Parliamentary
Group on Transatlantic & International Security and the All-Party
Parliamentary Group on Homeland Security’. However, unlike Rogers and Simms,
Mendoza is not someone with a grand vision or a developed geopolitical
philosophy to put forward. He has not produced much in the way of analysis, and
did not contribute to The British Moment; the HJS’s
manifesto, published in 2006 and still one of the very few genuine publications
that this think-tank has produced. The HJS website, at the time of writing,
contains only two
articles by Mendoza – one from March 2011 and one from May 2012.
Instead, Mendoza’s field was administration: he had helped run such bodies as
the Disraelian Dining Society and the Cambridge University Conservative
Association. Once he took over the running of the HJS from Rogers and Simms,
Mendoza had his hands on all the levers of power within the organisation, of
which the most important was control of the website. Mendoza set about
converting the HJS into his personal fiefdom, packing its staff with his own
apparatchiks recruited via his personal network.
The practice of regular staff meetings was now
ended, and staff members were no longer consulted or even informed about major
policy or organisational decisions. In practice, Mendoza just did whatever he
wanted to, adding or removing staff to and from the website and inventing or
erasing their virtual job-titles as and when he felt like it. For example, a
certain Duncan Crossey was one of two founders and co-presidents of a
Conservative organisation called the Disraelian
Union. The other founder and co-president was Mendoza. It was thus perhaps
not entirely for meritocratic reasons that Crossey was appointed for a while to
the grandiose but meaningless title of ‘Political Director of the Henry Jackson
Society’. I’m not aware of him having done much political directing while he
held this virtual title, but it’s something he can put on his CV.
The other Old Bolsheviks lasted only until they
had outlived their usefulness, and until Mendoza was in a position to get rid
of them. In my own case, Mendoza once informed me that having established
experts such as myself in the HJS allowed it to ‘punch above its weight’ as a
think-tank. He needed my name and reputation as a Balkan expert to lend
credibility to the HJS, while it was still in the process of establishing
itself.
On 31 July 2007, James Rogers had a letter
published in The Times, arguing in favour of Britain’s signature
of the EU constitution treaty. He signed the letter ‘Director of Operations of the
Henry Jackson Society’. This letter provoked the ire of one the HJS’s
right-wing Eurosceptic supporters, who sent a complaint to the Society about
the pro-European line it was endorsing, along with an ultimatum that Rogers’s
letter be repudiated. The gentleman in question was oblivious to the fact that
the HJS’s statement of principles explicitly supported European defence
integration. Nevertheless, Mendoza published a ‘correction’ prominently on the
HJS website, stating that Rogers had incorrectly and wrongly attributed his
personal views to the HJS as a whole. Mendoza did this entirely on his own
initiative, without consulting Simms (who was out of the country at the time)
or Rogers himself. It was a very public repudiation by the HJS of Rogers –
the man whose hard work over a long period had done more than anyone’s to
launch the Society – and prompted his resignation as Director of Operations and
withdrawal from virtually all HJS activity.
In reality, Rogers had not violated the HJS’s
rules and procedures, which did not exist in any written or codified form. He
had, in fact, previously published several letters
in British newspapers on his own initiative, signed with his HJS affiliation,
without being so much as criticised privately by his HJS colleagues, let alone
publicly repudiated. The ‘correction’ was simply an expression of Mendoza’s
personal policy and control of the website, and his desire to appease a
relatively minor Conservative Party figure. In the years to come, Mendoza would
do much more on his own personal initiative than simply publish a letter in a
newspaper, but would issue policy statements, merge the organisation with other
organisations, and change senior staff members’ job titles or purge them
altogether – all without consulting his colleagues.
The HJS was organised on the basis of ‘Sections’
for different parts of the world, with ‘Section Directors’ responsible for
analysis in their own area. Soon after the HJS’s creation, Simms and Rogers
devised a scheme, whereby Section Directors would, every month, write one
report in their field and republish one other article from an external website
or author. Eventually, we would receive in return a nominal payment of £50 per
month. Section Directors could post their articles directly onto the website.
While it lasted, this system ensured that the HJS’s analysis did not represent
the views of just one or two leaders at the top, but rather those of a range of
regional experts. It guaranteed the organisation’s pluralism, but only until
the Section Directors had served their purpose, Mendoza’s personal fiefdom had
been established and he could jettison them.
One example of how this jettisoning was done was
the case of Matthew Jamison, Section Director for Britain. Jamison had been
centrally involved with the HJS from its foundation, and organised the very
first meeting of the embryonic society at Peterhouse, Cambridge in autumn 2004.
He was a principal organiser of many events and roundtable discussions and
seminars, including the HJS’s Westminster launch in November 2005 and the book
launch of The British Moment in July 2006. However, he was never
paid for any of the work he did, nor did he receive expenses for the times he
hosted guests of the Society for PR purposes (though the guests’ meals were
paid for). He did not receive payment for the analytical pieces he wrote for
the HJS either. In effect, he subsidised the HJS over a period of years. But
this effort was not rewarded or appreciated – on the contrary. One day, Jamison
woke up to find that on the HJS website, he was no longer listed as ‘Section
Director for Britain’, and that someone else’s name appeared in his place. This
occurred without any prior warning or consultation; it was simply the personal
decision of the Executive Director. Eventually, Jamison’s name would be removed
from the website altogether – again without any prior warning or consultation.
This sort of treatment has been the norm.
The people who replaced the HJS founders at the
head of the organisation were staff members of another think-tank: the
Israel-advocacy organisation ‘Just Journalism’, of which Mendoza was a member
of the Advisory Board and which shared the HJS’s London office. At the time of
Just Journalism’s launch in March 2008, the Spectator columnist
Melanie Phillips wrote
of it that ‘A very welcome and desperately-needed initiative has just been
launched to monitor distortions, bias and prejudice in British media coverage
of the Middle East.’
(Following the international recognition of
Kosovo’s independence in February 2008, Phillips wrote in the Spectator:
‘It was at the Battle of Kosovo in 1389 that some 70,000 died to keep the
Islamic Ottoman Empire from advancing further into Europe. What is the point of
fighting the jihad in Iraq when we are cheerfully opening the door to it in
that very same place?’ Despite, or perhaps because of such a worldview,
Phillips’s books were until recently advertised on the HJS website).
Just Journalism was forced to close in September
2011, only three and a half years after its launch, due to lack of funds, but
not before this financially destitute outfit had taken over its financially
thriving room-mate. Just Journalism’s Executive Director, Michael Weiss, joined
the HJS staff in March 2010. His title has been redefined at least a couple of
times and at one point he was ‘Acting Director of Research’, but he is listed
today as ‘Director of Communications and Public Relations’.
Some months before Just Journalism closed, Weiss
had ceased to be its Executive Director, serving for a while as its spokesman.
He says
he was taken by surprise by the news that the organisation was to be closed.
However, by that time he was safely ensconced in the HJS. I was aware that he
had joined the team but otherwise knew nothing about him, though I had accepted
his ‘friend’ request on Facebook (temporarily, as it turned out). I became
rather more aware of him last autumn, when he tried unsuccessfully to prevent
me publishing my regular monthly report on the HJS website, on the grounds
that, as ‘Acting Director of Research’, it was up to him to decide what was
published there. I had by then been contributing articles to the HJS website
for six years, and that was the first time I had ever heard of that rule, or of
that title. (‘Acting’ was the operative word, for Weiss didn’t appear to direct
much in the way of research while he held that virtual title. This virtual
title was short-lived, and Weiss was then listed for a while as ‘Director of
Communications and Public Relations’, while the HJS apparently managed to
function without any ‘Director of Research’, ‘acting’ or otherwise. Now Weiss
is again listed as ‘Director of Research’, though it is possible that his title
will change again in a couple of months).
Since the report
that I had written and that Weiss tried to veto was scarcely out of keeping
with the HJS ‘line’, and since I had never had any previous dealings with
Weiss, I do not attribute his behaviour to political or personal differences
with me. Indeed, the report was subsequently republished by The Commentator, the website of senior HJS
staff-member Robin Shepherd. Weiss was either attempting to throw his
weight around in the section of Mendoza’s fiefdom assigned to him, or was
enacting Mendoza’s policy of squeezing out what remained of the other HJS
founding members.
On the occasion in question, Mendoza overruled
Weiss, and agreed to publish my report on the HJS blog. Given that the HJS
had contracted me to write a monthly report, he may have been legally obliged
to do this. But at our last meeting, Mendoza did confirm to me that it would
henceforth be up to ‘them’ to approve who published what on the website. Under
Weiss’s direction, the website has been not entirely ungenerous in providing
space for the promotion of his own work: at the time this article was first
drafted, no fewer than five of the ten ‘commentary’ articles and three of the
ten ‘blog’ articles on the HJS website were by Weiss. And Weiss is not, be it
remembered, an academic expert on Syria and the Middle East in the manner of
someone like Daniel Pipes, but merely an activist with strong views who follows
events there closely.
Recently, Weiss has reinvented himself also as an
expert on Russia – about which he has no more academic expertise than he does
about the Middle East – using as his launch-pad the HJS website. The latter now
hosts a Potemkin-village ‘Russia Studies
Centre’, which describes itself grandiloquently as a ‘research and advocacy
centre’, but is really just a website where Weiss blogs about Russia. Such
amateurism is now the norm: of the staff members listed for the London office,
Mendoza alone appears to be educated to PhD level, while the average age for
those working there is below 30. The website has even started to include
anonymous blogger types among its authors, at one point including a certain ‘Brett’,
whose surname wasn’t listed.
In addition to Weiss, two other members of Just
Journalism’s Advisory Board joined the HJS’s senior staff: Robin Shepherd as
‘Director of International Affairs’ and Douglas Murray as ‘Associate Director’.
Thus, four of the six top posts in the HJS are now held by former managers of
Just Journalism. They have ensured that the HJS’s political goals have departed
radically to those with which it was founded.
Murray was and is also the director of another
outfit, the ‘Centre for Social Cohesion’. Or rather, he is the Centre
for Social Cohesion: the ‘About
Us‘ section of its website says only that ‘Douglas Murray is the
Director of the Centre for Social Cohesion. Murray is a bestselling author
and political commentator who regularly appears in the British and foreign
press and media. A columnist for Standpoint magazine, he writes for a variety
of other publications, including the Sunday Times, Spectator and Wall Street
Journal. He is an Associate Director at the Henry Jackson Society. As of
the 1 April 2011 CSC personnel has joined the Henry Jackson Society. CSC will
continue to operate as a non-partisan independent organisation specialising in
studying radicalisation and extremism within Britain.’ That is how the
organisation defines itself.
In April 2011, the Centre for Social Cohesion
merged with the HJS. This merger was engineered by Mendoza without consulting
or even informing in advance other HJS staff members; I and others learned
about it only from the announcement on the public mailing list. The merger was
incongruous, since whereas the HJS was intended to be a bi-partisan
organisation promoting democratic geopolitics, Murray’s interest lay in
opposing Islam and immigration (thus, a few days after the announcement of the
merger, Murray published an article
in The Express entitled ‘Britain has let in far too many
foreigners’).
The following are examples of Murray’s anti-Muslim statements:
‘Conditions for Muslims in Europe must be
made harder across the board: Europe must look like a less attractive
proposition. We in Europe owe – after all – no special dues to Islam. We owe
them no religious holidays, special rights or privileges. From long before we
were first attacked it should have been made plain that people who come into
Europe are here under our rules and not theirs. There is not an inch of ground
to give on this one. Where a mosque has become a centre of hate it should be
closed and pulled down. If that means that some Muslims don’t have a mosque to
go to, then they’ll just have to realise that they aren’t owed one. Grievances
become ever-more pronounced the more they are flattered and the more they are
paid attention to. So don’t flatter them.’
‘It is late in the day, but Europe still has
time to turn around the demographic time-bomb which will soon see a number of
our largest cities fall to Muslim majorities. It has to. All immigration into
Europe from Muslim countries must stop. In the case of a further genocide such
as that in the Balkans, sanctuary would be given on a strictly temporary basis.
This should also be enacted retrospectively. Those who are currently in Europe
having fled tyrannies should be persuaded back to the countries which they fled
from once the tyrannies that were the cause of their flight have been removed.’
‘We do have a problem; we have a problem when
the failures of Islam throughout the world; the failures of all Islamic
societies come here into Britain. Their intolerance of freedom of conscience;
their intolerance of apostates; their intolerance of freedom of expression and
freedom of speech; their intolerance of minorities, other religious minorities,
sexual minorities; their intolerance of gays; their dislike and distrust of
half of the population – women; and many, many other things. And they call,
what is more, for a parallel legal system within Britain and European
societies. This is monstrous; no other group behaves like this – asks for
parallel laws. This is a fundamental problem, and it’s one we’re going to have
to deal with. It’s a problem between a society – Western Europe – that believes
that laws are based on reason, and Islam that believes that they are based on
revelation. Between these two ideas, I’m not sure there is very much compromise
for Europe. It is not Europe that has let down its Muslims, but the
Muslims of Europe that have let down Europe. … It is not Europe that
has failed its Muslims; it is Islam that has failed Europe.’
Murray is also on record as saying of Robert Spencer
(the director of Stop the Islamization of
America, proprietor of the viciously anti-Muslim website Jihad Watch and a loud denier
of the Srebrenica genocide): ‘I happen to know Robert Spencer; I respect him;
he’s a very brilliant scholar and writer’.
I was shocked that someone with such extreme
views about Muslims and Islam should be appointed Associate Director of the
HJS. I published an article on
my blog explaining how it had been foisted on the HJS without consultation with
senior staff members, and condemning his views on Muslims and Islam (after
informing Mendoza and Simms well in advance that I would do so). After this
article was published, Mendoza phoned me to try to pressurise me to remove it,
claiming that Murray would otherwise sue me for libel. By way of warning, he
pointed out that Murray had previously threatened legal action against Sunny
Hundal, editor of Liberal Conspiracy,
forcing him to remove a reference to him on Hundal’s website. On another
occasion, he had apparently pressurised the Huffington Post into removing
references to him as well. In the words of The Commentator, the website of senior HJS
staff-member Robin Shepherd: ‘Murray warned the Huffpo that its time
in Britain would be short if it persisted in libeling people in this manner. At
which point, the Huffington Post agreed to remove references to Murray from the
story.’
I refused to delete or substantially alter the
content of my article, but I agreed to make some minor changes. I had quoted
some not entirely unambiguously negative comments that Murray had made about
the English Defence League
(EDL), and at Mendoza’s express request, I agreed to insert into the text a
somewhat more negative statement that Murray had previously made about the EDL.
The modified article therefore balanced the less-than-negative statements that
Murray had made about the EDL with a more negative one, so did greater justice
to his vacillating opinion on this organisation. Mendoza also asked me to
delete my description of Murray’s views on Islam as ‘bigoted and intolerant’; I
agreed to delete ‘bigoted’ but refused to delete ‘intolerant’. Thus, my article
about him concluded with ‘I consider his views on Islam and Muslims to be
intolerant, ignorant, two-dimensional and, frankly, horrifying.’
Murray’s behaviour, in this instance and in the
others mentioned above, was somewhat hypocritical, given that he has appeared
as a speaker at entire
conferences
dedicated to attacking Muslims for employing libel ‘lawfare’ to silence
criticism of Islam. On at least one such occasion, he did so alongside Mendoza.
Or as he put
it: ‘If there were one thing I would wish Muslims in Europe could learn
today, as fast as possible, it would be this: you have no right, in this
society, not to be offended. You have no right to say that because you don’t
like something, you would use violence or you would like something to be
stopped or censored…’.
In retrospect, I should have resigned from the
HJS at this point, but I was encouraged to stay by the fact that all three of
the founding members with whom I discussed my article (apart from Mendoza)
sympathised or agreed with it. I wrongly believed that this constituted some
guarantee that the HJS would remain true to its founding principles and retain
a pluralistic character. I didn’t realise the extent to which the Just
Journalism clique had expropriated all power within the organisation, and that
the other founding members were all now wholly irrelevant within it.
By appointing as his ‘Associate Director’ a
pundit known primarily for his polemics against Muslims and Islam, Mendoza
signalled a change, not only in the HJS’s political orientation, but also in
its tone. Since then, instead of sober analytical pieces providing analysis and
suggesting strategy, the HJS website has been filled with republished op-eds of
a more polemical nature, seemingly calculated not so much to influence
policy-makers as to pander to the HJS’s increasingly right-wing readership.
Thus, the HJS has published or republished several articles attacking the
marginal, maverick far-left UK politician George Galloway (Douglas
Murray, ‘Behind Galloway’s Grin’; George Grant,
‘Galloway back in parliament: Not free from imperialist yoke yet’ and ‘George
Galloway is no friend of the Arab world’; as well as a video
of ‘Houriya Ahmed on George Galloway’s election’).
Conversely, the HJS’s coverage of more serious
international political issues has been less copious. For example, it has made
virtually no attempt to provide any strategic analysis, or suggest policy,
regarding the Eurozone crisis (James Rogers would have been ideally qualified
to do this, had he remained in the organisation). The HJS has effectively given
up on analysis of most parts of the world. Its founding member Gideon Mailer
was an Africa expert and had written the chapter on Africa in The
British Moment, but he too has long ceased to have any voice in the organisation,
so the HJS has given up on covering sub-Saharan Africa, except in relation to
the Islamist threat. Its geographical focus is now mostly limited to the Middle
East and Russia, with some coverage of British and US domestic affairs. The ‘France’
category of the HJS contains, at the time of writing, seven articles: four on
the Islamist perpetrator of the Toulouse killings; one in support of the
jailing of a French Muslim woman for violating the burkha ban; and one
attacking President Sarkozy for his hostility to Binyamin Netanyahu. And the
seventh doesn’t say much about France either.
Coverage of the Middle East has, indeed, largely
squeezed out the rest of the world, and has become less about policy and more
about commentary. But even here, the increasingly blog-like character of the
website has taken its toll so far as quality and consistency are concerned. As
recently as August, Weiss rejected the
possibility of Western military intervention in Syria on the grounds that ‘in
contrast to Libya’s expansive geography, Syria is a densely-packed country
where the proximity of military installations to civilian population centers is
too close to allow for an aerial bombardment campaign without incurring heavy
civilian casualties.’ This article has been removed from the HJS website, but
is available elsewhere.
Four months later, he argued the opposite: that
civilian losses could be ‘minimized given the technological and
strategic superiority of Western powers.’ Either the second conclusion is
questionable or the first was made too hastily.
In exchange for abandoning its geopolitical,
policy-making focus and its coverage of most global regions, the HJS has
inherited Murray’s obsession with British Islamism and Islam generally. But it
has shown no equivalent concern with white or Christian extremism; there are no
articles on its website concerning groups like the British National Party or
EDL. It has published at least four articles on the Toulouse killings by a lone
Islamist, but none on the massacres carried out by Anders Behring Breivik in
Norway in July. Actually, as European Neighbourhood Section Director, I did
publish an article
on Breivik and the European anti-Islamic far-right, in which I concluded that
‘The Islamophobic, anti-immigration far-right is the no. 1 internal threat in
Western Europe to European society and Western values today.’ This article was
immediately removed from the website and resulted in me having my right to post
articles directly to the HJS website revoked.
Mendoza’s last reorganisation of the website,
earlier this year, resulted in all the remaining founding members of the HJS
being removed from the online staff-list, including myself, Mailer, Bew and
Jamison – all without prior consultation or notification. When one of my
colleagues, so purged, contacted Mendoza to ask about this, he was told that
the HJS was ‘reducing its online presence’, and that he (Mendoza) had written
to inform staff members of this, but had forgotten to include the colleague in
question’s name on the mailing list. This was false, as none of us had been informed.
My own name nevertheless remained on the HJS’s
list of authors, along with my biography and photo; when I wrote to ask about
this, I was told I had been assigned a ‘new position’. If this was true, I have
absolutely no idea what that ‘new position’ was, and whatever it was, it was
certainly not one I had been invited to take up, let alone agreed to do so.
The leadership of the reconstructed HJS does not
appear actually to believe in the liberal or democratic
transformation of the Middle East – at least if Murray’s views
on the subject are anything to go by. Yet its support for war against Middle
Eastern regimes, in particular Iran, is very vocal. The HJS
has thrown out the progressive and democratic baby but kept the pro-war
bathwater.
How different from the utterly transparent, democratic procedures of the British People's Alliance. Whatever happened to that, by the way?
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