Brian Crozier

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Brian Crozier is a historian, strategist, and journalist. He is the founder of the Institute for the Study of Conflict (ICR), a London-based group that studied insurgencies and terrorism. The ICR was a right-wing propaganda group, reported to have been set up by the CIA and British intelligence in 1970. [1] Despite supposedly closing down in 1990, the ISC still functions today under the name of the Research Institute for the Study of Conflict and Terrorism (RISCT).

Crozier has provided advice to the British Secret Intelligence Service, the Information Research Department (IRD) of the British Foreign Office, and the CIA. He wrote for Reuters, The Economist and was a commentator for the BBC. Crozier is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow on War, Revolution, and Peace of Stanford University's Hoover Institution.

Brian Crozier was born in Australia, and grew up in England and France. He once believed in communism -as a reaction to the Great Depression and to Adolf Hitler- but is now dedicating his life to fighting it.

His memoirs appeared in 1993 as Free Agent: The Unseen War 1941-1991.

Despite his age - he was born in 1918 - until recently Crozier participates in the public debate.In 2000, then 81 years old, he joined the CNN.com chat room to discuss the elections in Russia and his latest book "The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire." This is how CNN introduced him:

"For many years, Crozier led a double life, on contract with the CIA, the British Secret Intelligence Service and the Information Research Department of Britain’s Foreign Office. In 1977 Crozier set up a "private sector" international action service. During most of this period, he was unofficially advising Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and on occasion President Reagan. He later told the story in detail in his autobiography Free Agent: The Unseen War 1941 – 1991." [2]


Brian Crozier is a self-acknowledged disciple of James Burnham, according to David Rees, seeking political and strategic truth through a search for the "real" as distinct from the "formal" meaning of political utterances. Crozier himself explained his debt most thoroughly in a 1976 article in the Lugano Review, later condensed and updated for NR (April 15, 1983). David Rees devoted a long article in National Review in 1985 to Crozier's "immense contribution to modern strategic thought."

If Crozier's realism owes much to the Burnham influence, it owes much as well to his fifty years of working journalism, nearly forty of which he has spent as a foreign reporter. Born in Australia in 1918, Crozier was brought to France in 1923, at age five. He spent his early school years there, and was fully bilingual by the time he moved to England. In 1935, Crozier won a scholarship to study piano and composition at Trinity College of M usic in London. Within a year he was drawn into journalism, writing not about terror and subversion but about music and art. He joined the London staff of Reuters in 1943, soon moved to the now defunct News Chronicle, and then, in 1951, returned to Australia and the Sydney Morning Herald. A year later he was in Southeast Asia as a foreign correspondent for Reuters.
He hasn't stopped traveling since. In 1953 he joined The Economist. For ten years he wrote that magazine's confidential bulletin "Foreign Report," during which time he traveled constantly not only for The Economist but for the English, French, and Spanish services of the BBC. He left The Economist in 1964. But leaving neither lightened his schedule nor reduced his output, as he continued to work under contract for print and electronic media organizations too numerous to list. Over the course of his career he has interviewed 56 heads of state or government, an achievement that has been accepted by Guinness as a record for a journalist.
In 1970 he founded the Institute for the Study of Conflict, the first private think-tank devoted to the study of terrorism and subversion. Under his direction (he left it in 1979) the institute specialized in the study of the "peace-time" strategy of the Soviet Union. Its analyses, including the Annual of Power and Conflict it published for ten years, have been used in war colleges throughout the West. Lately, Crozier has taken up writing realistic spy thrillers. The first, The Andropov Deception, will be available in the U.S. next spring.[3] (this was in 1985).



With the Institute for the Study of Conflict Crozier (co-)authored many books, reports and studies on the dangers of communism and of terrorism (or both).

A small selection:

  • Neo-colonialism (1964)
  • South-East Asia in turmoil (1965)
  • The struggle for the Third World : a background book (1966)
  • Since Stalin : an assessment of Communist power (1970)
  • The future of communist power (1970)
  • The Ulster debate - report (1972) with James Camlin Beckett and Robert Moss
  • Soviet pressures in the Caribbean : the satellisation of Cuba (1973)
  • The peacetime strategy of the Soviet Union - report (1973)
  • Soviet objectives in the Middle East - report (1974)
  • The conflict of information : "détente", freedom & constraint (1975) with Leonid Vladimirov et al.
  • The Soviet presence in Somalia (1975)
  • The surrogate forces of the Soviet Union (1978)


Crozier has also written three biographies:

  • Franco: A Biographical History (1967)
  • De Gaulle, 1. the Warrior, 2. the Statesman (1973, reprinted 1990)
  • The Man Who Lost China: The First Full Biography of Chiang Kai-shek (1976)



Resources