Frank Gaffney

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Frank J. Gaffney Jr.
Frank Gaffney.png
Frank Gaffney pictured in 2013
Born (1953-04-05) April 5, 1953 (age 71)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Residence United States
Citizenship United States
Education Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service (B.A., 1975)
Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (M.A.)
Occupation President of Center for Security Policy
Organization Center for Security Policy
Known for Conspiracy theories, political commentary
Salary $309,000 (2012)[1][2]
Parent(s) Frank J. Gaffney Sr.
Virginia Reed
Awards Louis Brandeis Award (Zionist Organization of America)[3]

Frank J. Gaffney Jr. (born April 5, 1953) is an American political activist and alleged conspiracy theorist[4] who is the founder and president of the Center for Security Policy. He has worked in the US government, including seven months in the post of Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs. He has been strongly criticized for his opposition to both Muslim immigration to the United States, and to the increased activity of various Islamic groups in the country.

Early life

Gaffney was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1953 to Virginia Gaffney (née Reed) and Frank J. Gaffney.[5][6] His father was a classical music aficionado and long-time partner at the law firm of Thorp, Reed & Armstrong, which was founded by his wife's father, Earl Reed.[5][7] (It merged in 2013 with Clark Hill PLC.[8]) Gaffney's grandfather, Joseph Gaffney, was a city solicitor of Philadelphia.[5] In the early twentieth century in that city, he was controversial as a known Catholic, because nativist Protestant groups in the city alleged that Catholics were "gaining control of American institutions while rewriting the nation's history".[9]

In 1975, Gaffney graduated from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service of Georgetown University.[10][6] He received his graduate degree from Johns Hopkins University's Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.[11]

Career

Gaffney began his government career in the 1970s, working as an aide in the office of Democratic Senator Henry M. Jackson, under Richard Perle. From August 1983 until November 1987, Gaffney held the position of Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear Forces and Arms Control Policy in the Reagan Administration, again serving under Perle.[12]

In April 1987, Gaffney was nominated to the position of Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs. He served as the acting Assistant Secretary for seven months. During this time, despite his official post, he was excluded by senior Reagan administration officials from the then-ongoing arms control talks with the Soviet Union. Gaffney was ultimately forced out of the Pentagon; The Washington Post said that within four days of Frank Carlucci's appointment as Secretary of Defense, "Gaffney's belongings were boxed and he was gone".[13][14] Following his departure from government, he immediately set about criticizing Ronald Reagan's pursuit of an arms control agreement with the USSR, since he doubted the sincerity of the Soviet policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring).[13]

Gaffney contributes to the media site Newsmax, writing opinion pieces on topics such as politics, terrorism, and international affairs in a column titled "Security Watch."[15] Formerly, Gaffney wrote a column for The Washington Times.[16] He also hosts a podcast that has featured guests such as white nationalist and human biodiversity proponent Jared Taylor.[17]

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) condemns Gaffney as "one of America’s most notorious Islamophobes".[18]

Gaffney has been associated with David Yerushalmi for spreading controversial allegations about the long-term goals of Islam, and for encouraging the enactment of "anti-Muslim" laws, including anti-Sharia legislation in the United States.[19]

Center for Security Policy

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In 1988, Gaffney established the Center for Security Policy (CSP), a Washington, D.C.-based national security think tank that has been widely criticized as engaging in conspiracy theorizing by opponents. Its activities are focused on exposing and researching perceived jihadist threats to the United States. The Center has been dismissed as "not very highly respected" by BBC News and "disreputable" by Salon. It has faced strong criticism from left wing and right-of-center political figures, but has also had its reports cited by politicians such as US President Donald Trump and former Congresswoman Michele Bachmann.[20][21][22] CSP has been condemned as an "extremist think tank" by the Center for New Community.[23] In 2016, the CSP was classified by the SPLC as a hate group.[24]

On March 16, 2016, Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz announced he would name Frank Gaffney to be one of his National Security Advisors.[25] Cruz said that Gaffney "is a serious thinker who has been focused on fighting jidahists [sic], fighting jihadism across the globe".[26] In December 2015, Nation Institute Fellow Eli Clifton condemned as "unscientific" a CSP-funded poll that Donald Trump had been citing, which showed widespread support for Sharia law among U.S. Muslims. Clifton claimed that, "Between Trump’s calls for a national registry of Muslims and a ban on Muslim immigration, it appears that through coincidence or outright collaboration, Trump is building an immigration and anti-Muslim policy framework that closely mirrors the statements and proposals advocated by" Gaffney and the CSP.[27]

Fax wars

In the 1990s, Gaffney became known in Washington, D.C. for "fax wars" he waged, whereby his "small but loyal following" would be encouraged to inundate the offices of members of Congress with faxes.[28]

In 1995, Gaffney charged that US Secretary of Energy Hazel R. O'Leary was intentionally undermining US nuclear readiness; an analysis of Gaffney's charges against O'Leary published by William Arkin observed that Gaffney "specializes in intensely personal attacks" and his Center for Security Policy's liberal use of faxes to attack its opponents had made it the "Domino's Pizza of the policy business".[29]

Later, in a 1997 column for The Washington Times, Gaffney alleged a seismic incident in Russia was a nuclear detonation at that nation's Novaya Zemlya test site, indicating Russia was violating the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTB).[30] (Subsequent scientific analysis of Novaya Zemlya confirmed the event was a routine earthquake.[31]) Reporting on the allegation, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists observed that, following its publication, "fax machines around Washington, D.C. and across the country poured out pages detailing Russian duplicity. They came from Frank Gaffney", going on to note that during the first four months of 1997, Gaffney had "issued more than 25 screeds" against the CTB.[30]

Conspiracy theories

Background

Gaffney has asserted that the logo of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency is a coded signal showing the "official U.S. submission to Islam."

The Anti-Defamation League has claimed that Gaffney "has promulgated a number of anti-Muslim conspiracy theories over the years" and that he has "undue influence" relative to other like-minded figures.[32]

The SPLC claims that Gaffney's beliefs stem "from a single discredited source – a 1991 fantasy written by a lone Muslim Brotherhood member that was introduced into evidence during the 2008 Holy Land Foundation trial in Dallas federal court." But to Gaffney, this document is one of many smoking guns, "a mission statement pointing to a massive Islamist conspiracy under our noses".[33] The ADL quotes Gaffney as "mentioning that in 1991, a Muslim Brotherhood operative produced the “explanatory memorandum on the general strategic goal of the group in North America.” According to Gaffney, the memo explicitly addresses the progress the Muslim Brotherhood has made in building an infrastructure in the United States with the goal of destroying Western civilization from within so that Islam is victorious over other religions".[34] Political opponents have claimed that Gaffney's alleged propensity for conspiracy theories began during his career in the Reagan administration, where they claim that after being denied a higher position, he was convinced that Soviet agents within the United States government were blocking him.[35]

ACU dispute

In 2011, Gaffney was banned by the American Conservative Union from the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). ACU chairman David Keene claimed that Gaffney had a "weird belief that anyone who doesn't agree with him on everything all the time or treat him with the respect and deference he believes is his due, must be either ignorant of the dangers we face or, in extreme case, dupes of the nation's enemies".[36] (Gaffney has since returned to CPAC to host panels at the conference in 2015 and 2016.[34][37])

In an April 2016 column in The Washington Times titled, "When conspiracy nuts do real damage", Keene again slammed Gaffney, hoping that "Mr. Gaffney will, like the folks at Group Research, Mr. Hoover’s aides and most conspiracy nuts of yore will vanish into the fever swamps from which he came".[35] The column came two months after Gaffney unexpectedly left The Washington Times, where he was a staff columnist and Keene was the opinion editor. Keene, who had slashed the frequency of Gaffney's column from weekly to monthly, described Gaffney's work to Media Matters as "well-researched," and stated, "we're sorry to lose him but we wish him well". Keene also noted that Gaffney had left without giving him any notice: "I guess he's notifying us through you".[38]

Wider reception

Gaffney has been called a conspiracy theorist by mainstream conservative and left wing opponents, who have condemned his stated opposition to immigration[39] from many non-Western countries. They include Dave Weigel writing in Reason magazine;[40] Steve Benen of MSNBC;[41] Slate;[42] and The Intercept,[43][44] among others. Jacob Heilbrunn, editor of The National Interest, has called Gaffney "plain creepy",[45] while The Washington Post has reported that Gaffney's views were "considered radioactive by the Republican establishment",[46] and Eli Clifton claimed that Gaffney suffered "from a lack of mainstream acceptance."[27] Democrats, and many mainstream Republicans, have called Gaffney a "conspiracy theorist".[47]

Beliefs

Alleged conspiracy theories that Gaffney has promoted include:

  • The belief that former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was involved in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and the Oklahoma City bombing.[48][49]
  • Accusations that Republican Party strategist Grover Norquist is a willing or unwitting agent of the Muslim Brotherhood. In 2014, Gaffney claimed that Norquist had "been working with the enemy for over a decade."[50] (Responding to the accusation, the board of directors of the American Conservative Union unanimously condemned Gaffney's charges as "reprehensible" and "unfounded."[51])
  • Accusations that Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin is a secret agent of the Muslim Brotherhood.[52] (After the allegation was repeated by Michele Bachmann, US senators John McCain, Scott Brown, and Marco Rubio joined in condemning such talk, and Speaker of the United States House of Representatives John Boehner said "accusations like this being thrown around are pretty dangerous."[53])[54]
  • Accusations that Barack Obama is a believing Muslim who has secretly orchestrated "the most consequential bait-and-switch since Adolf Hitler", that Gen. David Petraeus had (metaphorically) "submitted to Sharia", that congressman Keith Ellison is "likely to leak information to the Muslim Brotherhood", and that a few deputies in the Broward County, Florida, sheriff's office are "directly tied to Hamas.[55][56]
  • The observation that the logo of the US Missile Defense Agency may be a coded indicator of "official U.S. submission to Islam" because it "appears ominously to reflect a morphing of the Islamic crescent and star with the Obama campaign logo".[57]
  • The belief that the responsibility-to-protect norm has been supported by the United States government to lay the groundwork for a forthcoming American military invasion of Israel.[58]
  • The allegation that some Muslim enemies of the United States are hidden in plain sight and organizing through mainstream Muslim rights organizations. He said said of Muslims, “They essentially, like termites, hollow out the structure of the civil society and other institutions, for the purpose of creating conditions under which the jihad will succeed.”[59] Such talk is considered anathema by mainstream conservatives and most Democrats.

Personal life

Gaffney has donated money to a number of Republican political candidates including Allen West, Chris Myers, and Jon Kyl.[60][not in citation given]

Bibliography

References

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  2. http://www.centerforsecuritypolicy.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/2012-990-PDC-resize.pdf
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  12. Shadow Elite, Janine R. Wedel, 2009. pp.147–91
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  39. https://cis.org/Frank-Gaffney
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