Memo: Soros Group Funded ‘Opposition Research’ On Critics Of Radical
Islam
A non-profit group controlled by billionaire financier George Soros set
out to conduct opposition research on a handful of critics of radical Islam, a
newly released internal memo shows.
The 2011 document, entitled “Extreme
Polarization and Breakdown in Civil Discourse,” is one of more than 2,500
files stolen from Soros’ Open Society Foundations and published online on
Saturday. It names prominent critics of radical Islam, such as Pamela Geller,
Frank Gaffney, and Robert Spencer as targets for opposition researchers working
on a project operated by the Centre for American Progress (CAP), a liberal
think tank that has received millions of dollars in grants from Soros’ groups.
In the memo, Open Society Foundations
(OSF) executives lamented that progressive groups and members of the Arab,
Middle Eastern, Muslim, and South Asian-American (AMEMSA) community lacked
“high quality opposition research” to combat “anti-Muslim xenophobia and to
promote tolerance.” To close that gap, OSF sought to
provide a $200,000 grant to CAP, which was founded in 2003 by Hillary Clinton’s
campaign chairman John Podesta. The CAP
project, called the Examining Anti-Muslim Bigotry Project, set out to engage
progressives and journalists to raise awareness about the critics of radical
Islam. In addition to Geller, Gaffney and Spencer, CAP planned to “research and
track” the activities of David Horowitz, Daniel Pipes, Cliff May and Liz
Cheney, the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney.
“CAP’s first step will be to interview
and engage journalists, researchers, academics, and leaders in the anti-hate
movement who are researching and writing on Islamophobia, and to develop a
roster of knowledgeable and credible experts to whom journalists and
policymakers can turn for information,” it continues. OSF did fund CAP’s project. Its 2011
tax filings show that it gave CAP the $200,000 grant as well as two others
totalling $500,000.
According to the OSF document, which
was published on a new website called DCLeaks, CAP would also explore the
interactions of groups of conservative think tanks, pundits and politicians
which were part of the so-called Islamophobia movement.
“We need a clearer understanding of
what by all indications is a well orchestrated and well financed system by
which right-wing think tanks, pundits, and politicians are able to introduce
false narratives and flawed research into the media cycle and use their
misinformation to manipulate public opinion and thwart progressive
counterterrorism policies,” the memo states.
“Just as critically, CAP will approach
its work with an appreciation of the connections between the Islamophobia
movement and related forms of xenophobia.”
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