Difference between revisions of "Bruce P. Jackson"

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Bruce P. Jackson President of the [[Project on Transitional Democracies]]. He is also a member of the [[Council on Foreign Relations]] and the [[International Institute for Strategic Studies]]. He is on the Board of Advisors of the [[Center for Security Policy]]. He is the President of the [[U.S. Committee on NATO]]. Past experience includes: US Army intelligence (1979-1990), Office of the Secretary of Defense (1986-1990), chief strategist of proprietary trade operations at [[Lehman Brothers]] (1990-1993), high level management positions at [[Martin Marietta]] and [[Lockheed Corporation]] (1993-1999?).<ref> Right Web Profile [http://www.rightweb.irc-online.org/beta/profile/Jackson_Bruce/ Bruce Jackson] Last accessed November 12th 2007 </ref>
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[[Bruce P. Jackson]] is the President of the [[Project on Transitional Democracies]]. He is also a member of the [[Council on Foreign Relations]] and the [[International Institute for Strategic Studies]]. He is on the Board of Advisors of the [[Center for Security Policy]]. He is the President of the [[U.S. Committee on NATO]]. Past experience includes: US Army intelligence (1979-1990), Office of the Secretary of Defense (1986-1990), chief strategist of proprietary trade operations at [[Lehman Brothers]] (1990-1993), high level management positions at [[Martin Marietta]] and [[Lockheed Corporation]] (1993-1999?).<ref> Right Web Profile [http://www.rightweb.irc-online.org/beta/profile/Jackson_Bruce/ Bruce Jackson] Last accessed November 12th 2007 </ref>
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According to [[John B. Judis]], Jackson was tapped by the Bush administration to run the [[Committee for the Liberation of Iraq]] on the basis of his experience promoting NATO enlargement:
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::This year Jackson was able to parlay his NATO connections into support for the administration's war plans for Iraq. As the Bush administration was desperately searching for allies, Jackson helped draw up a declaration from the foreign ministers of the "Vilnius Ten," the 10 Eastern European countries that are up for NATO membership. "The newest members of the European community agree that we must confront the tyranny of Saddam Hussein and that the United Nations must now act," the foreign ministers declared on the same day that Secretary of State Colin Powell addressed the United Nations. The declaration provided ammunition for the administration, but it also created a furor in Western Europe and even in some of the Vilnius Ten countries, where the public, and even the governments, did not want to be identified as part of what one Slovenian writer termed the "war coalition."<ref>John B. Judis, [http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=minister_without_portfolio Minister Without Portfolio], The American Prospect, 30 April 2003.</ref>
  
 
==Afflitiations==
 
==Afflitiations==

Latest revision as of 16:02, 23 April 2013

Bruce P. Jackson is the President of the Project on Transitional Democracies. He is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the International Institute for Strategic Studies. He is on the Board of Advisors of the Center for Security Policy. He is the President of the U.S. Committee on NATO. Past experience includes: US Army intelligence (1979-1990), Office of the Secretary of Defense (1986-1990), chief strategist of proprietary trade operations at Lehman Brothers (1990-1993), high level management positions at Martin Marietta and Lockheed Corporation (1993-1999?).[1]

According to John B. Judis, Jackson was tapped by the Bush administration to run the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq on the basis of his experience promoting NATO enlargement:

This year Jackson was able to parlay his NATO connections into support for the administration's war plans for Iraq. As the Bush administration was desperately searching for allies, Jackson helped draw up a declaration from the foreign ministers of the "Vilnius Ten," the 10 Eastern European countries that are up for NATO membership. "The newest members of the European community agree that we must confront the tyranny of Saddam Hussein and that the United Nations must now act," the foreign ministers declared on the same day that Secretary of State Colin Powell addressed the United Nations. The declaration provided ammunition for the administration, but it also created a furor in Western Europe and even in some of the Vilnius Ten countries, where the public, and even the governments, did not want to be identified as part of what one Slovenian writer termed the "war coalition."[2]

Afflitiations

Jackson's Past experience also includes:

References

  1. Right Web Profile Bruce Jackson Last accessed November 12th 2007
  2. John B. Judis, Minister Without Portfolio, The American Prospect, 30 April 2003.
  3. Right Web Profile Bruce Jackson Last accessed November 12th 2007