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55365


Date: September 03, 2024 at 05:55:16
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: The UK government covertly plotted to discredit John Pilger

URL: https://www.declassifieduk.org/the-uk-government-covertly-plotted-to-discredit-john-pilger/


Declassified UK@declassifiedUK
·
Sep 1
🚨The UK government covertly plotted to discredit John Pilger

The legendary foreign correspondent who died recently at the age of 84 was
monitored and targeted by a covert British propaganda unit, declassified files
show👇

THE UK GOVERNMENT COVERTLY PLOTTED TO DISCREDIT JOHN PILGER
The legendary foreign correspondent who has died at the age of 84 was
monitored and targeted by a covert British propaganda unit, declassified files
show.
JOHN MCEVOY
8 JANUARY 2024

Recently declassified files show how the UK government covertly monitored
Australian journalist John Pilger, and sought to discredit him by encouraging
media contacts to attack him in the press.

Pilger, who died in London on 30 December at the age of 84, was best known for
his numerous documentaries exposing US, UK and Australian government
policies.

His film, Stealing a Nation, showed how Britain expelled the native population of
the Chagos Islands to make way for a US military base, while Death of a Nation
exposed how the genocide in East Timor “happened with the connivance of
Britain, the US, and Australia”.

Secret file
In 1975, the Foreign Office’s secret cold war propaganda unit, the Information
Research Department (IRD), opened a file on Pilger.

That year, IRD official Mrs J. O’Connor Howe complained that Pilger’s television
programme broadcast in the UK, “A Nod and a Wink”, had given “entirely
sympathetic treatment to the Shrewsbury pickets”, when several trade unionists
were wrongfully convicted and imprisoned.

Howe added: “It must be hoped that John Pilger and his sort do not become
influential in their current affairs coverage”. Another official responded that
“Pilger’s nods and winks need more careful watching”.

Though the IRD was shut down in 1977, Pilger’s file was transferred to its
successor organisation, the Special Production Unit (SPU), and the Foreign
Office continued to track his movements over the following years.

John Pilger's Legendary Career Praised by Fellow Journalists
‘Hatchet job’

During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Pilger visited southeast Asia to film Year
Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia and Cambodia: Year One.

The documentaries covered Washington’s secret bombing campaign of
Cambodia during the Vietnam War, and the partial responsibility of the US and
Britain for the brutality under the Pol Pot regime.

Throughout this period, the UK government monitored Pilger’s activities and
plotted to launch counter-measures against him.

The office of then prime minister Margaret Thatcher privately asked the British
embassy in Bangkok for “information on Pilger’s journalistic background”.

“Thatcher’s office asked for information on Pilger’s background”
It specifically requested “examples of any Pilger material on Vietnam/Cambodia
over the period 1968-78, and examples of his work criticising UK domestic
policies”.

In September 1980, Thomas J. Duggin, a British embassy official in Bangkok,
noted that Pilger’s work on Cambodia “deserves a rejoinder [response] before his
film is shown – a subject worthy of Peter Joy’s attention perhaps”.

Peter Joy was no ordinary diplomat. He had been the head of the IRD’s top-secret
Special Editorial Unit (SEU), which planned and executed “black propaganda”
operations worldwide against those deemed to threaten Britain’s interests.
In this effort, the SEU worked closely with MI6 to produce reports from fake
sources and fictitious organisations, and planted strategically valuable
information into the press.

What Duggin was seemingly suggesting, in other words, was that the Foreign
Office covertly inspire a hit-job on Pilger prior to the release of his film.

Charge sheet
The Foreign Office subsequently compiled a charge sheet on Pilger, and sought
out a journalist who would be prepared to carry out a “hatchet job” on him.

Such an article could draw on “the commentaries from the two Bangkok
Embassies [the UK and the US] to counter the impressions created by Pilger’s
reporting”.

The embassy also obtained information from “one of Pilger’s associates” who
privately told them “about his motives and activities” in the region. It is unclear
who this was.

Ultimately, “the reluctance of one journalist” to carry out the hatchet job
scuppered the Foreign Office plan to counter Pilger’s reporting on Cambodia.
It nonetheless remains unclear whether the Foreign Office succeeded elsewhere
in inspiring attack pieces on Pilger.

Many of the documents in Pilger’s file have been removed, with some due to
remain classified until 2041.
RELATED

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INSIDE BRITAIN

READ MORE
‘I can only burst out laughing’
The Foreign Office frequently discussed Pilger in seething terms. His work on
Southeast Asia read like a “cynical voice from the Kremlin”, one Foreign Office
official argued, with another complaining that it “looks like a PR job on behalf of
Hanoi and Moscow”.

Before his passing, Pilger responded to these revelations: “Some of the
documents on me going back to the eighties – and that was when I was reporting
from Southeast Asia, Cambodia, Vietnam.

“My reporting, which was really exclusive, it was telling people something that
they didn’t know, it was exposing a great deal, it was exposing the tyrants, but it
was also exposing who was backing the tyrants secretly – it’s rather
embarrassing.

“I was described in one of these documents as pro-Kremlin. I mean, when I read
this I, I say many years later, I can only burst out laughing… But we must never
make light of it”.

John Pilger privately told this author that he was aware of a Foreign Office
campaign against him, linked to the US, but had few supporting documents.
“The stories of mine that stung them was their involvement with the Khmer
Rouge and Suharto’s war on East Timor”, he said.

TAGGED:
Declassified Files
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

John McEvoy is an independent journalist who has written for International
History Review, The Canary, Tribune Magazine, Jacobin and Brasil Wire.
VIE


Responses:
[55366]


55366


Date: September 03, 2024 at 05:57:01
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: The Foreign Office's Covert Propaganda Campaign Inside Britain

URL: https://www.declassifieduk.org/home-desk-the-foreign-offices-covert-propaganda-campaign-inside-britain/


‘HOME DESK’: THE FOREIGN OFFICE’S COVERT PROPAGANDA CAMPAIGN
INSIDE BRITAIN

A secret unit of the Foreign Office monitored leftist journalists, intellectuals and
trade unions deemed “subversive” and sought to discredit them during the Cold
War, recently declassified files reveal.
JOHN MCEVOY
3 JANUARY 2024

Historian Eric Hobsbawm. (Photo: Hulton Archive via Getty)
UK propaganda officials planned a “hatchet job” on investigative TV programme
World in Action to discredit this “highly suspect organisation”
The Home Desk worked with MI5 to undermine communist trade unionists, and
interfered in trade unions’ election processes
The Foreign Office used a private network of journalists and academics to
delegitimise Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm
Home Desk was kept hidden from the public and its funding was not subject to
parliamentary oversight
The UK Foreign Office conducted covert propaganda operations inside the UK
during the Cold War, recently declassified files show.
It sought to challenge and discredit leading journalists at television’s World In
Action programme, intellectuals such as Eric Hobsbawm and the leaders of some
of Britain’s largest trade unions.
The government body responsible was a highly secretive unit called the Home
Desk, a part of Britain’s Cold War propaganda arm, the Information Research
Department (IRD), which was housed within the Foreign Office.
The Home Desk’s modus operandi was to collect information on “subversive”
individuals and organisations from open and secret sources, ranging from
newspaper clippings and books to MI5 moles and classified material.
It would then pass this information to trusted contacts in the British press,
parliament, think tanks, universities, and other private networks in an effort to
discredit the activities of “subversive” leftists in Britain.
The Home Desk was kept entirely hidden from the public, and its funding was not
subject to parliamentary oversight. Outside of a small clique of high-ranking
British ministers, diplomats, and intelligence agents, the Home Desk simply did
not exist.
Its ultimate target was the British public. The recently declassified record allows
us to peel back a layer of these secret operations.
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The Home Desk
The IRD was established in 1948 as a secret, anti-communist propaganda unit
whose role was to collect information about communist movements, and
distribute this material to key figures all over the world. The objective was to build
resilience against communism, and cultivate foreign agents of influence.
The IRD also planned and executed covert counter-measures, involving placing
articles in the press, financing publishing houses and magazines, disseminating
forged documents, and encouraging political agitators in foreign states.
During the late 1940s, Clement Attlee’s Labour government began to view
communist subversion as a dual international and domestic concern.
In 1951, a secret group named the Anti-Communist (Home) Committee was
established, comprising representatives from the Foreign Office, Treasury, Home
Office, Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Labour, and Security Service (MI5).
Chaired by cabinet secretary Norman Brook, the committee’s objective was “to
keep communist activities in this country under review and to recommend what
counter-action could properly be taken”.
In June of that year, the committee recommended that a “Home Desk” should be
“added to the Information Research Department… to act as the focus for the
collation and dissemination of intelligence about communist activities on the
home front”.
‘Passing information to the right people’
The Home Desk was thus born as “an extension on to British soil of what [the]
Information Research Department was trying to do globally”. This involved
“passing information to the right people in the right way at the right time”.
The Anti-Communist (Home) Committee met five times in 1951, four times in
1952, and then roughly twice a year until 1963, at which time it was renamed the
Official Committee on Communism (Home).
“When the minutes of a Home Regional Meeting are issued, the recipients
destroy the minutes of the previous meeting”
Throughout this time, the IRD chaired a sub-committee named the Home
Regional Meeting. It was attended by representatives from the Foreign Office,
MI5 and Ministry of Labour, and functioned as a forum for discussing the Home
Desk’s operations and other domestic counter-subversion activities.
The Home Regional Meeting convened 104 times between 1952 and 1963, yet it
never “had any official existence” until years later.
Indeed, it was a highly secretive affair. “We have a rule that when the minutes of a
Home Regional Meeting are issued, the recipients destroy the minutes of the
previous meeting”, newcomers were instructed.
Targeting television
One set of targets the Home Desk identified were journalists working for World in
Action, Granada Television’s flagship investigation series which ran from the
1960s to the 1990s.
The programme broke a number of high-profile and damning stories about the
British state. It also led a campaign which resulted in the release of the
Birmingham Six, a group of Irish men who were falsely accused of orchestrating
the Birmingham pub bombings in 1974, and sentenced to life in prison.
“World in Action is a highly suspect organisation”, one IRD official complained. It
was among a number of outlets to publish stories that were “anti-police, anti-
immigration policy, pro-PIRA [referring to the Provisional Irish Republican Army]
etc. or… guilty of gross distortion”.
In 1976, the Home Desk prepared a “bout de papier” (literally, scrap of paper) on
Gavin MacFadyen, an American journalist at World in Action who had moved to
Britain during the 1960s. It noted his “recent activities as leader of a ‘World in
Action’ team in Hong Kong, where it was investigating child labour in the toy
industry”.
MacFadyen was said to be tainted by “political bias” and seen to be using
“questionable investigative methods”. This was “only the latest example of a
number of occasions when Trotskyists or other extremists connected with this
programme have given cause for concern”, it was noted.
As events unfolded, the IRD became increasingly interested in taking counter-
measures against MacFadyen and his colleagues, Gus MacDonald and David
Boulton. IRD chief Ray Whitney, for instance, noted that “we are… attracted to the
idea of taking counter-action against ‘World in Action’”.
“World in Action is a highly suspect organisation”
With this in mind, the IRD collaborated with a “highly delicate source” in Hong
Kong – then still a British-controlled territory – who fed sensitive information
about the journalists’ activities to the Foreign Office.
By compiling information on the World in Action team, the IRD planned to inspire
a “hatchet job” on the journalists. This would take the shape of a “feature article”
in the British press which would be based on a “crime-sheet of errors” regarding
“how ‘World in Action’ operate”.
One Foreign Office official even recommended that “we might try to stop the
broadcast of the programme” altogether, with another deliberating an approach
to Sir Paul Bryan, an MP and director of Granada Television.
The IRD’s “hatchet job” on World in Action did not ultimately transpire, but not
due to reticence about targeting a domestic media organisation.
Whitney was worried that such an attack could play “into the hands of the ‘World
in Action’ Trotskyists”, he claimed. It could do this “by illustrating the extent to
which… they have succeeded in raising sensitive issues”, and might also
“stimulate increased public interest in the programme”.
The IRD chief nonetheless advised that the IRD could “add these papers to the
dossier which has been accumulated on ‘World in Action’ over the years in the
hope that there will be an opportunity in the future to use this material more
effectively”.
MacFadyen went on to found the Centre for Investigative Journalism in London,
before passing away in 2016.
RELATED

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Eric Hobsbawm
Another remarkable episode in Britain’s domestic counter-subversion campaign
concerns Eric Hobsbawm, a renowned Marxist intellectual who was described in
one obituary as “arguably Britain’s most respected historian of any kind”.
It shows how the Foreign Office used a private network of journalists and
academics to target him and delegitimise the Communist Party of Great Britain
(CPGB). It also demonstrates how the UK government capitalised on the
declassification of official files to launder strategically valuable information
through supposedly independent media organisations.
In 1973, Hobsbawm published Revolutionaries, a series of essays about
revolutionary parties, movements and writers across the globe.
The IRD viewed the publication of the book as a useful “peg” with which to attack
Hobsbawm and his views on the CPGB’s actions in the lead-up to the second
world war.
Hobsbawm’s contention that “there is something heroic about the British and
French Communist Parties in September 1939” was seen as particularly
offensive, and counter-measures were drawn up.
In August 1973, then IRD chief Thomas Barker approached Lord Chalfont, a
British journalist and former defence minister, with a plan to hit back at the
historian. “The whole conversation would have to be strictly unattributable”,
Chalfont was repeatedly told.
“The whole conversation would have to be strictly unattributable”
The idea was for Chalfont to publish an article in The Times refuting Hobsbawm’s
claims, and arguing that the CPGB’s actions in the run-up to the second world
war had been little more than cowardly.
Remarkably, most of the article had already been written for Chalfont by the IRD.
Chalfont merely needed to sign his name to it, and send it to The Times for
publication.
Barker also provided Chalfont with a photocopy of a declassified War Cabinet
paper on the subject of the CPGB’s conduct before the second world war,
alongside a summary of the supporting documents, a copy of Hobsbawm’s book,
and press cuttings. The supporting documents were based on classified
information, and were for “background use” only.
Chalfont declared that he was “much attracted by the prospect of writing an
article or series of articles for The Times on this theme”, but changed his mind
shortly afterwards.
MI5’s monitoring of prominent academics like Hobsbawm has been explored
further in academic William Styles’ PhD thesis, published in 2016.
‘The Security Service are very pleased’
The IRD then moved on to British-American historian Robert Conquest, “an old
departmental contact and former Foreign Office official”, to whom it passed on
much of the same material. Conquest promised to “see if he, or discreetly any of
his friends, can use it”.
In October 1975, an article appeared in the Daily Telegraph by Donald Cameron
Watt, a distinguished professor of international history at the London School of
Economics. The article was largely based on the information passed by the IRD to
Conquest.
MI5 and the Home Desk viewed this as a successful operation.
“The Security Service are very pleased and will inform us of reactions”, noted IRD
official J.E. Tyrer. “So far the Morning Star has ignored the piece, but, now that
attention has been drawn to these papers in the Public Record Office, the
controversy (not least inside the [Communist] party) arising from these
disclosures is likely to simmer gently for some time”.
The Home Desk also sent the War Cabinet document to Ghita Ionescu, a
professor at Manchester University, alongside a pre-written letter to The Times
condemning the CPGB’s historical revisionism with regards to the second world
war.
“A characteristic common to dictatorships, whether of right or left, is the need to
distort and suppress uncomfortable and discreditable facts”, the pre-written letter
noted, with no apparent sense of irony.
Ionescu was encouraged to attach his name to the letter, and send it to The
Times for publication. “I enclose a suggested draft letter to The Times on the
subject”, wrote Tyrer. “Perhaps you could tell [Foreign Office official] Mervyn
[Jones] when he gets in touch with you on Monday how it strikes you?”.
RELATED

BRITAIN’S SECRET POLITICAL POLICE

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‘The charge of conspiracy’
In collaboration with MI5, the Home Desk also kept “a watch on communist
activities in the trade unions” throughout the Cold War.
During the late 1940s and 1950s, the CPGB enjoyed strong representation within
the Electrical Trades Union (ETU).
“At one point”, wrote trade unionist Jim Harte in Tribune, the CPGB “could boast of
having an ETU general secretary and a general president as loyal members,
bucking a national movement which saw communists banned from holding office
in British trade unions”.
After elections in 1959, the ETU was rocked by allegations of ballot rigging
against general secretary Frank Haxell and 14 others, and was taken to court by
trade unionists Jock Byrne and Frank Chapple.
The recently declassified files show that the Home Desk secretly inspired the
allegations against Haxell and his colleagues, thereby prompting the legal
challenge and paving the way for the ETU’s take-over by more right-wing
elements.
“Our main asset at present is the charge of conspiracy against the ETU. This is
itself a product of our action”, reads an IRD file from 1961 which is marked Top
Secret.
As the legal case proceeded, the Home Desk conducted “discreet publicity
action” regarding the ETU and planned to encourage “questions of measures to
reform or control more closely election procedures in the [British] unions”.
Once the legal case had concluded, communists were barred from holding
elected positions in the union.
Exposing strike leaders
Haxell was far from the only ETU member pinpointed by the Home Desk. The files
show how it worked with MI5 to target leading British trade unionists and
interfere in trade union elections.
In 1963, the IRD and MI5 were “charged with the task of… exposing the leading
members of the strike committee” in the ETU, “especially the communist
electrician Charles Doyle and the communist engineer George Wake”.
“The Home Desk worked with MI5 to target leading British trade unionists”
The Home Desk subsequently boasted that the Daily Mirror had executed “a
most effective exposure” of Doyle and Wake, “partly on the basis of its own
information”, and partly on information provided by the Home Desk itself. Doyle
was subsequently expelled from the ETU.
Many of these operations were conducted in association with the Industrial
Research and Information Service (IRIS), an anti-communist trade union
organisation which received covert funding from the British state.
In 1968, one IRD official noted how IRIS “played a major part in the past decade
in effecting the defeat of communists in various key elections in a number of
unions.”
These included the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) presidential election of
1959, the Yorkshire NUM elections of 1960, and the Amalgamated Union of
Foundry Workers general secretary election of 1967.
RELATED

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‘The operations were successful’
The 1950s and early 1960s were a high point in the Home Desk’s activities. “The
operations were successful; intelligence was successfully ‘marketed’, and non-
official publicists and organisations were discreetly enlisted”, noted Norman
Reddaway, a seasoned British propagandist.
After Harold Wilson’s Labour Party was elected in 1964, the Home Desk
seemingly operated at a slower rate.
Wilson had “always been uneasy about the activities of this [Home] Desk”, it was
noted, given he felt an IRD associate had made an “unfortunate intervention”
during the 1964 election. By 1970, the Home Desk’s “volume of operations had
dwindled to modest responsive work to meet a few requests from old clients”.
Nonetheless, the Home Desk continued in operation, and the Official Committee
on Communism (Home) was renamed to the Official Committee on Subversion
(Home) in 1968 to reflect the “other subversive fields [emerging] such as
Trotskyism, Anarchism, ‘Protest’ and even violent Welsh extremism”.
After the Conservative Party won the 1970 election, prime minister Edward Heath
“showed new interest in stepping up this work”.
This was partly to counter “the systematic provision to militant Unions of
meticulous briefs on how to extract the last ounce of flesh from the employers
and the country”. New life was thus breathed into the Home Desk, with
heightened levels of coordination between Downing Street, the IRD and MI5.
In 1977, after the Labour Party had returned to power, the IRD was shut down.
Britain’s domestic counter-subversive machinery, however, did not disappear with
it.
The Foreign Office continued to conduct IRD-type activities through a covert arm
named the Special Production Unit (SPU), while MI5 remained wholly intact.
TAGGED:
Declassified Files
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

John McEvoy is an independent journalist who has written for International
History Review, The Canary, Tribune Magazine, Jacobin and Brasil Wire.
VIEW MORE ARTICLES


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