[NYTr] The Predictable Intellectual Whores at CSIS Study Colombia Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2008 04:25:52 -0600 (CST) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit [The Center for Strategic and International Studies in Georgetown has long been a right-wing bastion crawling with scholar-agents eager to do the US Government's bidding. For years it was officially affiliated with Georgetown University -- a Catholic, CIA-infested pro-military institution. CSIS is now supposedly operated as an independent think-tank. They're still doing the same old job, however, and COHA says that their upcoming report on Colombia will be long on pro-US imperial analysis and woefully short on real scholarship. Just what the Bush regime -- so allergic to reality -- ordered, bought, and paid for through the White House Trade Office. -NY Transfer] Council on Hemispheric Affairs - Jan 8, 2008 http://www.coha.org/2008/01/08/brazil%e2%80%99s-legislators-react-to-chavez%e2%80%99s-failed-effort-to-obtain-the-release-of-several-farc-political-prisoners/ CSISb Predictable Colombia Project COHA will shortly release an overview of what it sees as possible conceptual shortcomings in the Center for Strategic and International Studiesb (CSIS) November 2007 report entitled bBack from the Brink: Evaluating Progress in Colombia, 1999-2007.b In its assessment of the CSIS research project, contracted with the White House Trade Office, COHA researchers argue that the organizationbs account of Colombian realities had to nicely satisfy the Bush administrationbs expectations, and therefore its convictions may have preceded its research. Whatever the truth of this assertion may be, the CSIS document certainly projects the wrong signal when it comes to avoiding all appearances of any conflict of interest, as well as the possibility of performing tethered research for the organizationbs White House client. The administrationbs trade office b the reportbs principal sponsor b certainly was counting on a highly favorable finding in order to buttress its intense campaign for a positive U.S. Congressional vote on the embattled pending free trade pact with Colombia. Unfortunately, there never was much of a prospect that the CSIS study would surprise many people by not turning in an anticipated result. With the participation of a former senior State Department official, Peter DeShazo, who heads CSISb Americas Program and is one of the authors of the report, and who was not a known maverick on Latin American free trade matters, there wasnbt much prospect that the research project would provide any damning anti-free trade ammunition to its enemies. Characteristically, CSIS has been relatively predictable when it comes to a hardline approach regarding Colombia, and seldom has expressed any non-orthodox findings about the country that would be resented by Colombian military and or would cast Bogotabs current drug and national security policy in a negative light, no matter how much stress its overlooking of the countrybs problems has placed on its human rights observance. The fact is that when it comes to CSIS, the Bush administration had long received for free the same kind of tendentious politically correct research for which it was now prepared to pay, and the enthusiasm on the part of Colombian officials over the CSIS document is both comprehensible and lamentable. * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================