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  • [[Image:AndrewGilligan.jpg|thumb|right|Andrew Gilligan at the Frontline Club, London, 17 April 2008]] ...e-times-820745.html So was it the 'Standard' wot won it? Or just a sign of the times?], ''Independent'', 4 May 2008.</ref>
    15 KB (2,331 words) - 09:33, 28 June 2023
  • ...Husain.jpg Screengrab of Ed Husain's biography, but no longer available on the Quilliam Foundation website.] Captured on 23/02/10. ...ain has also worked for the British government's cultural propaganda body, the [[British Council]], in Syria and Saudi Arabia from 2003-2005.<ref>[http://
    29 KB (4,398 words) - 02:42, 21 April 2016
  • ...from 1958 and as [[Forum World Features]] from 1965 to 1974. It was run by the anti-communist crusader [[Brian Crozier]]. ...quiry'', 30 September 1979</ref> [[Forum Information Services]] was itself the outgrowth of [[Information Bulletin Ltd]], a [[Congress for Cultural Freedo
    15 KB (2,286 words) - 15:06, 20 February 2020
  • O'Callaghan was named in the British media in connection with the IRA bombing campaign in England in 1983: ...as identified as Sean O'Callaghan, 30, a native of Tralee, County Kerry in the Irish Republic.
    14 KB (2,145 words) - 01:20, 3 September 2012
  • ...encroachment. <ref>Ian Mather, ‘Secret Service story led to deport’, ''The Observer'', 21 November 1976, p.1</ref> It ran until 1989 and produced a se ...documents leaked to ''Time Out'' provided evidence that the Institute for the Study of Conflict had grown out of this operation:
    55 KB (8,198 words) - 15:42, 20 February 2020
  • ...on to what is termed the 'transatlantic community.' Part of this included the ICB: ...funded the International Commission on the Balkans, an initiative to bring American and European experts together to seek solutions to unresolved Balkan issues
    30 KB (4,684 words) - 19:28, 11 August 2008
  • ...ration [[Forum World Features]], as well as the affiliated [[Institute for the Study of Conflict]]. ...test Over Editor Of "The Spectator" Staff Complain Of Shabby Treatment', ''The Times'', 2 November 1963</ref>
    3 KB (483 words) - 00:07, 31 October 2008
  • ...inancial Times'', 2 August 2016, accessed 12 December 2016 </ref>. He left the government in June 2017 after May's disastrous snap general election. ...curity Affairs]] for O'Brien to research and write a book on the future of the [[European Union]]. <ref>[http://www.srf.org/databank/documents/19_doc.pdf
    5 KB (694 words) - 14:12, 19 October 2017
  • ...a Doer and a Thinker, ''Sunday Times'', 14 July 2002.</ref> It is part of the [[Stockholm Network]] <ref>[http://www.stockholm-network.org/network/detail ...ving-classes.html Policy Exchange begins its second decade with a focus on the striving classes]', Conservative Home, 9 March 2012</ref>
    89 KB (12,764 words) - 15:24, 15 February 2023
  • ...linked by his support for Western military intervention in the Balkans in the early 1990s ==On the Balkans==
    32 KB (4,608 words) - 11:14, 1 March 2010
  • ....uk/melaniephillips/6779100/armchair-barbarism.thtml Armchair barbarism]', Spectator Blog, 13 March 2011</ref> ...'[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/mar/07/dailymail.pressandpublishing The changing face of Melanie Phillips]', ''Guardian'', Friday 7 March 2003</ref
    37 KB (5,556 words) - 05:31, 1 February 2018
  • [[Image:HenryJacksonSociety.jpg|350px|right|thumb|The Henry Jackson Society Logo]] ...glance&n=266239 The British Moment: The Case for Democratic Geopolitics in the Twenty-first Century], Amazon.co.uk, Accessed 27-May-2009</ref>
    79 KB (11,005 words) - 08:40, 17 January 2020
  • ...rting about Israel in the British media.' It was a partner organisation of the neoconservative [[Henry Jackson Society]]. <ref>Henry Jackson Society, 'HJS ...ed. It would not compete with other Israeli lobbying groups such as Bicom, the [[Britain-Israel Communications and Research Centre]], which seeks to prese
    17 KB (2,186 words) - 15:15, 1 May 2020
  • ...] (formerly the London College of Printing), where [[Dennis Stevenson]] is the Chancellor. ...ay]], now [[Sarah Brown]], the wife of UK prime minister [[Gordon Brown]]. The firm went into receivership in 2004. Hobsbawm's next venture was a new grou
    22 KB (3,490 words) - 17:31, 30 April 2009
  • ...oger Kimball, Source: [http://www.newcriterion.com/author.cfm?authorid=10/ The New Criterion] ]] From the Encounter Books biography:
    3 KB (469 words) - 12:38, 6 January 2016
  • ...as a stepping stone to ministerial ranks by Labour MPs. LFI boasts some of the wealthiest ...r 2007</ref> Both [[Gordon Brown]] and [[Tony Blair]] have been members of the group.
    43 KB (6,472 words) - 11:13, 12 February 2023
  • ...are popular with the American right and in 2006 George W. Bush awarded him the Medal of Freedom. ...meant he came to be increasingly identified with the right. According to ''The Catholic Herald'':
    5 KB (716 words) - 22:53, 14 April 2011
  • ...he ''Jerusalem Report''. Toameh appears as a commentator in [[Obsession]], the anti-Islamic propaganda film. ...endent Israeli-Arab journalist who has been covering Palestinian issues in the West Bank and Gaza for over two decades. He began his journalism career as
    12 KB (1,865 words) - 12:35, 22 December 2015
  • ...l magazine published by Social Affairs Unit Magazines Ltd, a subsidiary of the [[Social Affairs Unit]].<ref>[http://www.standpointmag.co.uk/about-us About ...alism or political correctness, which is stifling comment on anything from the environment to religion."
    9 KB (1,259 words) - 10:19, 10 August 2011
  • ...opponents.<ref>e.g., "There’s a prize to the person who can come up with the best, non-libellous Galloway insult." Brownie, [http://www.hurryupharry.org ...he Halbertal and the Goldstone Report], ''PULSE'', 6 January 2010</ref> In the preface he added:
    37 KB (5,355 words) - 05:03, 1 November 2020

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