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  • ...haracter and ambiguity of affiliation of the institutes and experts in the terrorism industry. JINSA vice-president [[Morris J. Amitay]] is former head of the [ ...ling Soviet support for the PLO and alleging PLO backing for international terrorism, central points of Israeli propaganda. Until 1981, the JlNSA newsletter was
    6 KB (898 words) - 08:19, 26 April 2009
  • ...he authors of this report, Brian Jenkins, is Rand's resident top expert on terrorism. ...s, exhibits a fundamental bias that fits and supports the Western model of terrorism. It focuses on terrorist incidents of "violence waged outside presently acc
    7 KB (1,075 words) - 15:58, 13 March 2006
  • ...in providing funding and logistical support for many other members of the terrorism industry. Like Heritage, it is important because of its size, influence, an ...e House Internal Security Committee in 1969, under the guise of combatting terrorism. With a 1982 television budget of $5 million, the ASC drove home its hawkis
    13 KB (1,999 words) - 11:47, 3 June 2008
  • This page reproduces an extract from ''The "Terrorism" Industry: The Experts and Institutions That Shape Our View of Terror'' by Edward S. Herman and Ge ...laces more emphasis on terrorism, and it has more - and more prestigious - experts in the field. Its head, [[David Abshire]], succeeded in the late 1970s and
    10 KB (1,595 words) - 19:42, 14 August 2014
  • During the 1970s Laqueur became one of a small group of 'terrorism experts' who formed the nucleus of what was to become a highly influential, and arg ...Harpers, Volume: 252 Issue: 1510 1976; W. Laqueur, 'Continuting Failure of Terrorism' Harpers, Volume: 253, Issue: 1518 1976</ref>
    21 KB (3,074 words) - 10:25, 7 April 2009
  • ...of defence fr International Security Affairs, and asked to be hired as a 'terrorism consultant'. According to Bamford: ...g/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=178857&Itemid=363 "Featured Experts"], FDD Website, accessed on 27 October 2010</ref>
    13 KB (1,937 words) - 03:21, 26 February 2015
  • ...aig and Casey were perturbed to discover that the State Department and CIA experts found Sterling's book not only highly unreliable but based in large part on ...rican actions as terrorist. Any brutalities that might be designated state terrorism are explained away as reactions to retail and guerrilla terrorists who have
    8 KB (1,213 words) - 12:48, 22 October 2007
  • ...been affiliated with CSIS as research director and one of their terrorism experts. ...che is omitted. A reliable test of the integrity of a full-length study of terrorism is the way in which it treats friendly and enemy terror. Thus, if we take C
    11 KB (1,824 words) - 16:11, 3 November 2007
  • ...ions for consideration by the army which Kupperman would describe as state terrorism if employed by a hostile power. ...tern model of terrorism. He notes in his 1979 volume that his past work on terrorism has involved "providing guidance" to government policy makers, and that his
    8 KB (1,287 words) - 20:53, 26 November 2006
  • ...encies puts him in a serious conflict-of-interest position as an expert on terrorism. ...deration is displayed in that he is one of the few among the establishment experts who has openly castigated Sterling's Soviet network model.{{ref|27}} He als
    9 KB (1,442 words) - 18:31, 3 January 2015
  • ...n in 1986 moved on to establish the [[Mackenzie Institute for the Study of Terrorism, Revolution and Propaganda]], "to provide Canadians with a source of inform When Tugwell arrived in Canada in 1978 to organize institutes concerned with terrorism, he brought to bear a background of service to the extreme right and experi
    8 KB (1,268 words) - 10:07, 5 January 2009
  • ...exander's microfilm project, described earlier. He also coedited a book on terrorism with Alexander. In addition, Wilkinson has close connections with the Canad ...ems of the Terrorist Organization," in Merari. On Terrorism and Combatting Terrorism, p. 78.</ref> But for his own side, a murder may be called a "mistake" or "
    19 KB (3,013 words) - 16:39, 8 January 2009
  • ...hout the world. In addition, Professor Alexander is the former Director of Terrorism Studies at The George Washington University and the State University of New ...Georgetown University; Director, [[Institute for Studies in International Terrorism]], State University of New York; and Fellow, [[Institute of Social Behavior
    15 KB (2,056 words) - 22:12, 22 February 2010
  • ...Denton committee. Alexander also edits the journal '[[Terrorism (journal)|Terrorism]]'. ...on on the subject of terrorism.<ref>[[Stephen Segaller]] Invisible Armies: Terrorism into the 1990s (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987), p. 123. </ref>
    7 KB (1,150 words) - 08:03, 5 November 2007
  • ==Counter insurgency and terrorism expert== ...zier, ‘[http://nation-1.thenation.com/archive/detail/13339962 Anatomy of Terrorism]’, ''The Nation'', 21 March 1959, pp. 250-252</ref> In 1960 he published
    29 KB (4,431 words) - 15:36, 23 November 2021
  • ...e 1980s and was also central to the international [[Invisible College]] or terrorism think tanks and institutes. It is now known as the [[Institute for Nationa ...JINSA]] is also on the editorial board.'<ref>The "Terrorism" Industry: The Experts and Institutions That Shape Our View of Terror by Edward S. Herman and Gerr
    13 KB (1,927 words) - 20:10, 6 April 2015
  • *… the Institute will seek to determin the roots of the terrorism which engulfs the world today… The ways and means of coping with this dan ...study of terrorism is booming. But in reality, argues Kevin Toolis, these 'experts' represent an ideology that has its roots in the cold war and in Israeli co
    8 KB (1,118 words) - 15:28, 8 September 2014
  • Fellows nominating some 300 top experts in the political, economic, social, cultural and ...] - Head of Security Affairs for WEF and Technical Head of courses on anti-terrorism at [[Swiss Institute of Police]] | [[Pratik Bhatnagar]] (formerly of [[Pric
    37 KB (5,009 words) - 22:06, 11 August 2015
  • ...relations agency to launch a unit dedicated to helping clients respond to terrorism. September 11 had brought about a "sea change" in the way companies handled Stauber J and Rampton S, 2000, ‘Trust Us, We’re Experts: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles with Your Future’
    14 KB (2,135 words) - 11:20, 25 April 2012
  • ...ttee on Radioactive Waste Management''' (CoRWM) is a group of "independent experts" appointed by Government to "scrutinise plans for managing UK higher activi ...ittee is ignoring issues of security. Protecting future nuclear waste from terrorism or sabotage has been a key issue for CoRWM since its establishment in 2003.
    22 KB (3,355 words) - 04:43, 20 January 2014

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