How to Make Millions by Selling War

Interim Georgian President Nino Burjanadze, right, and the President of the US Committee on NATO, Bruce Jackson, talk to the press at a joint press conference after their meeting in Tbilisi in November 2003. Photo by BESO GULASHVILI/AFP/Getty Images
Last September, a man named Bruce Jackson hosted a party for his vineyard's 2014 wines at his 18th-century Chateau Les Conseillans, which sits in the rolling hills of Bordeaux. The afternoon before the party, he took some guests, among them a documentary filmmaker and a former colleague of mine, for a tour of the estate ground, wearing a bland blue suit that matched his mild, drab persona. With his short, carefully combed gray hair, he resembles the conservative columnist George Will, or any number of the people floating around Washington DC's interlocking social circles of foreign policy think-tankers, defense contractors, and lobbyists, which are in fact the exact circles he moves seamlessly in.
There was a smell in the
air of grass, lilacs, and grapes from Jackson's vineyard, which includes
a Merlot plot dating back to 1953. Much of the chateau itself was erected in
the 1700s, but it now boasts haute bourgeois furnishings with a
2,000-square-foot kitchen (with brand new steel sinks and Swedish faucets). The
property includes a pine forest and an impeccable pool whose water appears a
dark, warm blue.
For the guests that
evening, there would be duck confit, crawfish canapés, and a three-piece jazz
band.
"I like the quiet of
the Bordeaux and the pace of the wine growing," Jackson said when asked about his new hobby while strolling through the $4 million estate, which is surrounded by springs and woods that are on France's list of
ecologically protected sites (he purchased the land in 2011). "It's a
slower-paced environment, and you get actually more thinking done."
My former colleague, hoping to prod Jackson on foreign policy, turned the
conversation to Iraq, where that very day 17 people had been killed in bombings
and shootings and a mass grave containing the bodies of 15 truck drivers had
been discovered. That sort of bad day has been horrifically common since US
troops deposed Saddam Hussein in 2003, with the Islamic State recently
beheading American journalists, conducting mass executions of Iraqi soldiers,
and attracting recruits from across the West with horrific propaganda videos.
On VICE News: Syria and Iraq Are Disintegrating, US Defense Intel Chief Says
Jackson has more history
with Iraq than your average rich-guy dilettante grape grower. The year before
the US invasion, Jackson—then a Lockheed Martin executive—founded, with encouragement from White House officials, a group called the Committee for
the Liberation of Iraq, which helped advocate for the war. He agreed to serve as the chairman of the board of the Committee, even though he later
acknowledged, in a 2007
Playboy interview, that at the time he
"knew nothing about Iraq."
In the run-up to the Iraq
War, top advocates forecast that the whole thing would be a
"cakewalk" and swore up and down that they were motivated by a
heartfelt desire to alleviate the suffering of the Iraqi people. Saddam
Hussein's ouster would only be a first step in "the reconstruction of
[Iraq's] economy and the establishment of political pluralism, democratic
institutions, and the rule of law," Jackson pledged on the day the Committee was announced in late 2002.
When asked about the
outcome of the American invasion on that afternoon, Jackson acknowledged that
America's fateful excursion there was "just a complete screw-up" and
laid the blame on Bush administration officials. "The greatest mistake was
letting [Donald] Rumsfeld run the damn thing," he said. "He didn't
talk to anybody, didn't talk to our allies."
Unlike
Rumsfeld, George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and other high-ranking officials who
have been blamed for the disaster of the Iraq War, no one has ever protested
against Jackson. There are few pictures of him online, and hardly anyone outside select
corridors in DC seems to have paid him much mind. But the man has had a long,
cushy career circulating in the halls of power—banging the drums of war,
profiting from foreign adventures, and playing a key role in NGOs that have
paid him and his loved ones generous salaries. He's a sort of neocon Forest
Gump who's been hanging out in government circles for decades, assisting
with
the expansion of the ever-larger military industrial complex while amassing the
kind of fortune that allows him to buy a vineyard in France and maintain an
estate in DC.
He's
not uniquely rich or uniquely powerful or uniquely evil by the standards of the
crowd he runs with, but it's worth looking at the life and times of Bruce
Jackson to see how one maintains power in DC, and what one does with that
power.
Bruce Jackson's father was an investment banker and senior CIA official who specialized in psychological warfare; his mother was a socialite who would later marry a US Senator. Jackson grew up thoroughly inside the Beltway and came of age during the Reagan years. By 1986, he was a military intelligence officer working in the Pentagon on nuclear weapons policy and renting a modest apartment at 1711 Massachusetts Avenue NW, according to public records and that year's DC White Pages. Four years later, he left his government job to take a position in New York with Lehman Brothers, where he was a strategist for proprietary trading. (Basically, that's the often shady practice where a bank or financial institution trades on its own account or money rather than that of a customer.)
He returned to Washington in 1993 to work as an executive at Martin Marietta, which merged with the Lockheed Corporation two years later to become the defense contractor behemoth Lockheed Martin. In 1997, Jackson was put in charge of finding overseas markets for the company's military toys.
A decade later, it wouldn't be controversial to argue that both the US and Iraq came out as losers in the war, but it was a win-win for Jackson and Lockheed.
One useful tool was the Committee to Expand NATO, an NGO that Jackson had formed in 1996. He never disclosed who funded it—he's claimed that he paid the bills himself with the money he made on Wall Street—but a few news reports have said that arms manufacturers backed the organization.
That a weapons manufacturing executive headed the committee led to some skepticism in Congress. Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa called NATO expansion "a Marshall Plan for defense contractors" and a Republican aide on Capitol Hill joked that arms dealers were so intent on lobbying for expansion that, "We'll probably be giving landlocked Hungary a new navy."
The Senate approved
NATO admission for Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic in 1998, and for ten
other former Soviet Bloc states later, exactly as Jackson's group proposed.
This was probably one of the biggest arms deals of all time, since new NATO
members were required to junk their old Soviet military hardware and replace it
with Western arms—like the stuff made by Lockheed Martin.
Meanwhile, Jackson was pushing for war with Iraq in his capacity as executive director of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC), the neocon think tank that was created in 1997 and called for a return to "a Reaganite policy of military strength and moral clarity." Its other members included subsequent Bush administration officials like Cheney and Rumsfeld, and war hacks like William Kristol and Richard Perle. In 1998, PNAC wrote a letter to Congress calling for Hussein's ouster and laid out what became the blueprint to achieve it. Nine days after 9/11, the group issued a public letter, addressed to President Bush, calling for regime change in Iraq—whether Saddam Hussein had anything to do with the attacks or not.
In late 2002, Jackson
founded the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq at the request of then-deputy
national security advisor Stephen Hadley (who was later the author of a 2014
Wall
Street Journal
op-ed, "Americans Can Be Proud of What Was Achieved in Iraq"). The Bush administration had already decided to go to war
it but it was still "struggling with a rationale," Hadley told him,
according to the
Playboy article.
US Army personnel pose under the "Hands of Victory" in Baghdad in 2003. Photo via Wikimedia Commons
The rest is literally
history: The White House won that struggle with rationale, the invasion was
launched, Poland sent 2,500 troops to support it, and in exchange the former
Soviet state was able to buy $5.5 billion worth of Lockheed's F-16 fighters, in
what
Euromoney later revealed to be an "off-balance-sheet deal" arranged by JPMorgan and guaranteed
by the US government.
A decade later, it wouldn't
be controversial to argue that both the US and Iraq came out as losers in the
war, but it was a win-win for Jackson and Lockheed. The company's stock price more than doubled in
the first five years after the invasion, and in the summer of 2006, Jackson
bought a property in Northwest DC—assessed at $1.95 million—which has five
bedrooms, a fireplace, and a deck.
Since then, Jackson has run
or had a key role in three entities, all registered to the address of his DC
estate:
Bruce P. Jackson Consulting, the Project on Transitional Democracies (PTD), and We Remember Foundation. It's impossible to know all
that much about his private consulting business, but the PTD and We Remember
are nonprofits, and are therefore required to file annual IRS
disclosure forms that offer some information.
The mission of We Remember,
which
operated as a tax-exempt 501c(3) between 2002 and 2009, was to
fight for "justice" for dissidents disappeared or murdered by the
government of Belarus, such as the first husband of Jackson's second wife,
Irina Krasovskaya, who was the group's president.
The PTD's stated mission has
been to promote "democratic change" in Euro-Atlantic governments,
primarily the former Soviet bloc. According to its 2012 IRS disclosure forms,
it "provided multiple briefings" on Russia and Eastern Europe to the
Obama White House, State Department, and National Security Council, and Jackson
regularly met with foreign and US officials. According to 2013 disclosure
forms, the group devoted a notable chunk of its time to Ukraine and has
apparently prepared "numerous policy briefing papers" on the
country.
IRS-designated nonprofits
are supposed to have independent boards that provide oversight and make sure
that they don't misspend their tax-free money. But Jackson was on the board of
both nonprofits, and the other members have been his friends and loved ones.
The PTD's original board
from 2002 was composed of Jackson, Randy Scheunemann (a former Rumsfeld adviser
with whom Jackson founded the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq), and Julie
Finley, a major Republican fundraiser. She had been a founding member of the US
Committee on NATO—in 2002, she and Jackson met with a senior Vatican official
to ask for the Pope's endorsement of NATO expansion—and of the Committee for
the Liberation of Iraq.
These nonprofits brought in serious cash—about $6 million for the PTD and $500,000 for We Remember. Of that, Jackson saw about $1.2 million, and his wife nabbed another $200,000. The PTD spent nearly $2.6 million on travel, of which a good amount seems to have been primarily used to fly Jackson around the world first class and put him up at luxury hotels while he spoke at conferences, according to sources with knowledge of his activities. His destinations in recent years have included Montenegro, Germany, Belgium, Poland, Slovakia, England, Morocco, Wales and Bordeaux, his second home, where he claimed to have lectured at a "Georgian seminar."
"You have an influential person who founded a nonprofit and lines up friends and they treat the nonprofit as a spending pool." - Notre Dame Law Professor Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer
The nonprofits also
apparently served as personal piggybanks. The PTD once fronted Jackson a
$150,000 advance on salary and on another occasion offered him a $70,000 interest-free
loan. In 2008, We Remember loaned him $25,000 for "home office
construction" at his DC estate and in 2006, PTD signed a lease that paid
Jackson $36,000 annually to rent the space with tax-exempt money. The PTD also
agreed to pick up 38 percent of the Jackson family's utilities, insurance, maid
service, property taxes, security, and maintenance.
Check out the award-winning VICE News documentary on the Islamic State.
Jackson's wife received
approximately $130,000 in salary from her role as president of We Remember, and
when the group dissolved as a 501c(3) in 2009, it transferred its $146,000 in
remaining assets to the PTD. But We Remember didn't completely ignore victims
of government repression in Belarus: During the
course of its existence it made three grants totaling about $5,000—1 percent of
the $500,000 it raised—to "families of political prisoners and those that
have disappeared."
When I described the way
these nonprofits operated to Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, a law professor and associate
dean at Notre Dame Law School, he said, "What you're describing is not uncommon.
You have an influential person who founded a nonprofit and lines up friends and
they treat the nonprofit as a spending pool. They pay themselves a nice salary
and travel. But it's supposed to be a charity, and the government has an
interest in how these nonprofits are run. There might not be any red flags
here, but there is definitely a perception problem. There are at least yellow
flags and maybe more, it would depend on getting full information. And even if
this doesn't violate tax law, that doesn't mean the public shouldn't be
concerned about this type of thing."
Nonprofits
don'
t have to disclose their donors, but We Remember's 2005 filing to the IRS that
included a list of contributors appears to have been accidentally made public. By
far the biggest donor to We Remember, which had begun the year with $358.97 in
cash, was a company controlled by Ukraine oligarch Rinat Akhmetov that
kicked in $300,000. Akhmetov, who has a fortune estimated at $7.6
billion, "is reputed to have emerged from a bloody power struggle among
organized crime groups in the 1990s that sought to control the mighty coal and
steel assets of the Soviet Union,"
according to the New
York Times.
For
decades, Akhmetov supported
the fabulously corrupt
Viktor Yanukovych, the two-time Ukrainian Prime Minister who was elected
president in 2010. Yanukovych was forced from power by popular protests in
February of last year, which triggered near civil war in Ukraine and an ongoing
confrontation with Russia. Soon thereafter, in a move rather obviously required
by political realities, Akhmetov broke with his former beneficiary.
Jackson has
been periodically identified in US and Ukrainian press accounts as an adviser
to Akhmetov, Yanukovych, and their shared political party. In 2007, Jackson and
Paul Manafort (a lobbyist whose other clients have included two of the most
corrupt rulers of modern times, Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire and Filipino
President Ferdinand Marcos) arranged meetings for Yanukovych in DC with US
government officials, including then US Vice President Cheney. Two years ago,
after Yanukovych's election as president, Jackson set up DC appointments for
the Ukrainian foreign minister, who "kept interrupting everybody" during meetings with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
(It should be noted that Yanukovych's opponents are reportedly as
corrupt as he is and
have
paid millions over the years for
their own American lobbyists.)
At around the same time, a
reliable source told me, Jackson was holding court at a private club in
Washington and loudly boasted, while drinking scotch and smoking a cigar, that
he and Manafort were working together on Yanukovych's PR efforts, but that
Jackson himself was the real brains behind the operation.
All of which may explain
how Jackson's views on Ukraine have shifted over the years.
Back in 2002, the
Associated Press reported that Jackson, who was identified as "a
Washington-based political adviser," had recently met with a pro-Western
opposition leader and criticized the first Yanukovych government. Three years
later, during February 2005 testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, Jackson said Russia had spent $300 million "to basically rig
the outcome" of an election that Yanukovych had won the year before and
hailed the "Orange
Revolution
"that swept aside his "autocratic
regime."
We Remember's 2005 IRS form doesn't
provide a date for Akhmetov's contribution, but by the following year Jackson was introducing
Yanucovych to Cheney and other Washington VIPs, and has never, as far as I can
tell, had a bad word to say about him since.
In a March 2010 speech to the US-Ukraine
Business Council, Jackson said the Obama administration should
"wholeheartedly engage" with Yanukovych, who had been inaugurated as
president the prior month. Whereas in 2005 Jackson had urged the US Senate to
shun Yanukovych's "corrupt business allies," he now declared that
engagement needed to include "the so-called oligarchs."

Islamic State fighters are all over Iraq and Syria. Photo courtesy of VICE News
A story the following year in a pro-government Ukrainian newspaper said Jackson—described as a "renowned American expert"—considered Yanukovych to be a determined reformer who was "really tormented by the corruption that is killing his country." Jackson said that people in Yanukovych's administration "aren't really bad people... They are not stone-cold killers."
Jackson was still on
Yanukovych's side early last year, after his government killed dozens of
protesters and he'd fled to Russia. "What worries him, Mr. Jackson said,
is that the new government is too beholden to the people's movement on the
Maidan," the
New York Times reported in March 2014.
Through it all, Jackson has
kept coming back to his French chateau. "We've done pretty well; these are
all are Bordeaux trees," he told his guests as he led them through his
vineyards. "We... went back to indigenous stuff." He even dreams that
his estate might eventually be the site of a famous international declaration.
"It's a little pretentious, but someday we'll write a treaty here on
something," he said. "And actually, the 'Treaty of Les Conseillians' has a nice ring to it."
When I called Jackson for comment on the nonprofits in February, he declined to give any, other than to say that he was in the process of shutting down the Project on Transnational Democracies.
"We haven't had a
grant in two years," Jackson told me before hanging up. In a follow-up
email conversation in late April, he said the nonprofit was dissolved.
"It had not received
any contributions for at least a couple of years and has not paid salaries
since the early years of the last decade," Jackson wrote.
And by the way, a warning about the wine Jackson produces: It's pretty shitty, I'm told by one person who sampled it, so whatever you think of the Iraq War, don't buy it—or anything else he's selling in the future.
Follow Ken Silverstein on Twitter.
Comments