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>From http://www.fair.org/extra/9811/brookings.html

EXTRA!, November/December 1998

Brookings: The Establishment's Think Tank

By Sam Husseini

"I want it implemented�. God damn it, get in and get those files. Blow the
safe and get it." So railed President Richard Nixon (Abuse of Power,
Stanley Kutler) to his aides about papers regarding the Vietnam War that he
thought were at the Brookings Institution.

The documents the White House apparently wanted to get hold of allegedly
showed that Johnson curtailed the bombing of Vietnam in 1968 to boost the
Democrats' election prospects. How things have changed: In the strange
world of 25 years ago, stopping a bombing boosted a president's standing,
and Brookings could be at serious odds with a Republican administration.

To this day, Brookings is commonly, and inaccurately, dubbed "liberal"
(e.g., Baltimore Sun, 8/9/98; Cincinnati Enquirer, 7/30/98; Dallas Morning
News, 7/1/98; AP, 5/29/98). CBS News correspondent Bernard Goldberg even
publicly chastised one of his colleagues for not tagging Brookings as
"liberal" in his reporting (Wall Street Journal op-ed, 2/13/96). It's
called "centrist" almost as often, but never "conservative," though that
label would be more accurate than "liberal."

In fact, much of Brookings' top brass has come from Republican
administrations. Its current president, Michael Armacost, was an
undersecretary of state for the Reagan administration and ambassador to
Japan under Bush. Brookings' president from 1977 to 1995, Bruce MacLaury,
spent most of his career in the Federal Reserve, with a stint in the Nixon
Treasury Department.

As for Brookings' most prominent analysts: Richard Haas, who heads the
think tank's foreign policy department, was a senior director at the
National Security Council under Bush. Stephen Hess was a speech writer for
Eisenhower, an advisor on urban affairs for Nixon and editor-in-chief of
the Republican platform under Ford. Brookings has dubbed itself as the home
of "fanatic moderates," offering the "full spectrum of opinion from K to Q"
(Brookings Review, Winter/97)--but, moving right, it's becoming more like
"M to V."

The liberal tag for Brookings is itself a victory of right-wing think
tanks. The conservative American Enterprise Institute (AEI) used the
Brookings as a model--and its dubious "liberal" tag as a rallying cry for
fundraising. Robert Roosa, Brookings' chair from the mid-'70s to the
mid-'80s, and a senior partner at the Wall Street firm Brown Brothers,
Harriman and Co., resented AEI's pitch: "AEI is selling against Brookings.
They don't have to do that--they have a role to fill," he commented. "We do
some things on the conservative side--and more so now." (The American
Establishment, Silk & Silk)

Brookings Vs. Brookings

Brookings, though hardly considered "hot," is huge. It sometimes dominates
media discussions so thoroughly that it can get more than one staffer into
the same story. A Knight Ridder story on Clinton's scandals (Cincinatti
Enquirer, 8/30/98), for example, featured the insights of "Washington
analyst Stephen Hess, who served three previous presidents" ("He has
basically blown his sixth year, in large part because of the scandal"), as
well as the analysis of "government scholar Thomas Mann" (who was convinced
that "his ability to be influential in Congress is greatly diminished").
Despite the fact that both commentators are Brookings staffers, the think
tank itself was never mentioned in the story. (The Richmond Times
Dispatch--1/12/97--got the same two Brookings analysts into a story on
Gingrich's ethical troubles.)

Ironically, Hess made his mark at Brookings in the early '80s by
interviewing hundreds of journalists, finding that they were surprisingly
conservative or apolitical. In the resulting book, The Washington
Reporters, Hess concluded that reporters had a symbiotic relationship with
the political establishment that tended to maintain the status quo.

This kind of centrism is so pervasive that it is frequently not recognized
as ideology--indeed, it's not even a word, according to the spellchecker
I'm using. So it follows that the Washington Post does not bother
identifying its columnist E.J. Dionne as a senior fellow at Brookings,
although they ID James Glassman as "a fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute," a conservative think tank. (Of course, no one from any
left-of-center think tank has a column at the Post.) Dionne has even quoted
a colleague at Brookings without disclosing that they work at the same
institute (Washington Post Magazine, 3/15/98).

It's Your Money

Senior fellow Dionne places himself in the tradition of the
turn-of-the-century progressive movement, "involving the careful but active
use of government to temper markets and enhance individual opportunities."
Those are basically the roots of the think tank he works at, as well.
Robert Brookings, a high school dropout who got his start as a clothespin
salesman, came to be a very successful businessman, and promoted
progressivism as a form of enlightened self-interest for the business
class.

"You see how the government is spending the money it takes from you in
taxes. What are you going to do about it?" he asked his fellow moguls (The
Brookings Institution, Charles Saunders). "Do you want an intelligent
treatment of the matters which lie closest to your personal interest? Or do
you want things to go on in the haphazard fashion of the past? Do you want
a log-rolling or a scientific tariff? Do you want pork-barrel bills or a
budget?"

Robert Brookings helped establish three groups to promote such principles,
which merged into the Brookings Institution in 1928. After Brookings' death
in 1932, his namesake veered right, opposing the New Deal. Coming out of
World War II, these conservative leanings helped foster Republican support
for the Marshall Plan, which the institute helped develop. By the 1960s,
Brookings was linked to the establishment wing of the Democratic Party,
backing Johnson's Great Society and Keynesian economics.

The Brookings Institution's influence on the operations of the federal
government has been substantial. In the 1920s, Brookings was largely
responsible for the creation of the federal budget. Prior to that, Congress
had doled out money as requests came in. In the 1970s, Brookings pushed for
the creation of the Congressional Budget Office, and then provided its
first head, former senior fellow Alice Rivlin, now at the Fed (National
Journal, 10/18/97).

This summer, Brookings teamed up with AEI to form the Joint Center for
Regulatory Studies. Robert Hahn, the center's director, said it aims to be
a source of information all sides "can really trust." Said Hahn, "the real
purpose is to keep the regulators--and the legislators who regulate the
regulators--on their toes." (New York Times, 7/30/98) Don't look for this
center/right co-production to call for tighter scrutiny of big business.

"We Need a Strong Private Sector"

Meanwhile, Michael Malbin, a former associate director of the House
Republican Conference now at Brookings, is a diehard foe of public campaign
financing. He seems to identify with those who give large sums of money to
politicians: He is deeply concerned about "unseemly pressures running from
officeholders to citizens" (Roll Call, 9/6/97), but he seems less concerned
about the pressures funders can exert on officeholders.

Senior fellow Henry Aaron has opposed the advocates of Social Security
privatization at Heritage and Cato, while Thomas Mann, Brookings' director
of governmental studies, has steered a centrist course on campaign finance
reform, occasionally teaming up with AEI's Norman Ornstein on the
Washington Post op-ed page. The duo recently defended the notion of
campaign finance reform from the current ACLU "money equals free speech"
position (Washington Post, 7/14/98)--but have called for an increase in the
maximum legal political donation ("Reforming Campaign Finance," paper,
5/7/97).

Mann--like Brookings in general--has an anti-democratic streak. He has
bemoaned elections as "blunt instruments of democratic control," sniffing
that "relatively few citizens meet the highest standards of informed
participation in the electoral process." (National Journal, 7/22/95) After
several anti-corporate ballot initiatives were defeated in 1996 under an
avalanche of big money, Mann remarked (New York Times, 11/7/96) that "the
public is less angry and less willing to identify with populism. There's a
certain sobriety out there--a new understanding that we need a strong
private sector."

Brookings has certainly benefited from a strong private sector; the
corporate money behind Brookings reads like a who's who of blue chip
companies. A brief sampling of some 138 corporate supporters: Bell
Atlantic, Citibank, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, NationsBank, Exxon,
Chevron, Microsoft, HP, Toyota, Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, Dupont, Mobil
and Lockheed Martin, and the foundations of companies like American
Express, Travelers, AT&T, GM, ADM and McDonnell Douglas. A few media
conglomerates, like Time Warner and the Washington Post Co., are among the
donors. Corporations accounted for $3.3 million of Brookings $21 million
budget in 1997, but this figure is misleadingly low: Brookings is blessed
with a sizable endowment that takes care of almost one-third of its budget,
and it receives hefty fees for conducting seminars for executives on how to
maneuver in Washington.

Brookings also gets sizable contributions from individuals. The Brookings
Council was founded in 1983 to spruce up funding; its "members are
substantially engaged in the Institution's research and programs through
discussion groups which meet regularly in five chapter cities, one-on-one
meetings with Brookings scholars, and research advisory committees."
Executives from Visa, Procter and Gamble, BankAmerica and U.S. Airways thus
have multiple opportunities to share their concerns with Brookings'
detached scholars. Among the other luminaries giving money are insiders
such as Vernon Jordan and Washington Post owner Katharine Graham.

"Objective and Dispassionate"

One of the biggest donors is Brookings chair James Johnson, who also heads
up the Fannie Mae mortgage authority. He has worked for five failed
Democratic presidential campaigns, but is still on top of political life in
Washington. In addition to his generous bequests to Brookings, he has
donated to Democrats and Republicans on the congressional banking
committees, which doesn't hurt the prospects of Fannie Mae's continued
federal subsidies (Washington Post, 3/27/98).

In the 1997 annual report Johnson writes that Brookings provides "objective
and dispassionate research by respected scholars who are assured academic
freedom and intellectual independence." William Quandt, a noted scholar
formerly at Brookings, told Extra! that "it was a remarkably supportive
place, at least for senior scholars," while he was there in the '80s and
'90s but that "the new president and the director of foreign policy seem to
be interested in a new agenda with the end of the Cold War�. Support for
independent scholarship by big foundations has waned, so there's a stress
on narrow, short think pieces."

Of course, scholars who peruse an overly independent course may simply be
ignored by the major media. An in-depth study, "The World Bank: Its First
Half Century," produced jointly by the Bank and Brookings, which The Nation
(3/23/98) found to be a "remarkably candid and balanced institutional
history," produced a hardly a whimper in the media earlier this year.

And while MSNBC and other networks might as well have a camera crew
following Richard Haass around when things heat up somewhere, be it India
or the Middle East, actual experts in those areas at Brookings have been
mostly ignored by major media.

Brookings president Michael Armacost wants to cater to the gliterati
culture and get someone like Haass, who is more 'soundbite savvy' and might
be better able to get his face--and the Brookings name--on Nightline and
such," the Washington Post (6/21/96) noted just before Haass came on board.
The day after the U.S. bombed Afghanistan and the Sudan, Haass was on
Nightline (8/21/98), warning of "grand terrorism"--not a reference to the
U.S.'s actions, but to the idea of a small group acquiring a nuclear
weapon.

Haass not only took the place of some other guest who might have pointed
out the illegality of the U.S. strike, he bemoaned that "we've yet to set
up the institutions to maintain any semblance of international order," and
urged Americans to "think about our whole concept of civil liberties."

When Jack Ford of NBC's Today (8/22/98) show asked, "Richard, what is it
that these terrorists want from the United States?" Haass echoed the subtle
Islam-bashing (popularized by Bernard Lewis of Princeton) that has
permeated official U.S. thinking: "Well, the answer is it's not anything
we're simply doing. It is who we are, Jack. It's the fact that we're the
most powerful country in the world. It's the fact that we're a secular
country.... It is simply who we are and it is our existence that really
bothers them, and it is a fact of life now." (See Extra!, 7-8/95.)

Thinking Global

Brookings' ultimate philosophy is pragmatic to the point of being amoral,
putting out tracts on military spending called How to Be a Cheap Hawk and
opposing international sanctions because they might hurt U.S.
companies--not because people might starve.

Robert Litan, Brookings' director of economic studies, doesn't think the
U.S. should take serious action against a country that allows harsh child
labor conditions--but should intervene if a country allows unauthorized
duplication of Windows 95. His main fear is creeping "globalphobia." In a
recent book by that title, he and several centrist colleagues protest that
"protection invites foreign exporters to leap trade barriers by building
plants in this country"--as if U.S. corporations, not U.S. workers, are the
ones who need protection. "There is some irony in the claim that it is in
America's self-interest to insist that other nations meet tough
environmental and labor standards," Globalphobia argues. "Any harms alleged
to flow from lax standards are suffered by foreign residents, not those of
the United States." (Washington Peace Letter, 5/98)

Litan, Haass and others at Brookings, seeing themselves as sort of
interdisciplinary philosopher-king technocrats, eye the task of building
global structures. Brookings' leaders seek desperately to be "relevant,"
but they are so often parroting the conventional wisdom, fearing that they
are outmatched in the media by the right-wing Heritage Foundation, that
they are sidetracked from doing the strategic planning for elites that has
made Brookings so influential.

James Ridgeway (The Nation, 12/22/97), describing the Heritage public
relations machine, wrote: "[PR giant] Hill & Knowlton, not Brookings,
provides a more fitting comparison." But increasingly, Brookings is not
even its own model anymore--Heritage is.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Think Tank Monitor is a joint project of FAIR and the Institute for Public
Accuracy. Research assistance: Nihar Bhatt, Jenifer Dixon and Omar
Nashashibi.


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