Oliver Kamm

Oliver Kamm is a columnist for the Times. He is a founding member of the Henry Jackson Society, a British neocon think-tank/lobbying group. Kamm is also affiliated to Democratiya – the publication of the Euston Manifesto, another British neocon group. Kamm was born in 1963 and studied at Oxford and London universities. He is the nephew of journalist Martin Bell.

According to a biographical note on his own blog:

I am an author, columnist and banker. I write regularly for The Times, and have written also for The Guardian, Prospect, The New Republic, Index on Censorship and The Jewish Chronicle. I am an advisory editor of Democratiya. My book Anti-Totalitarianism: The Left-wing Case for a Neoconservative Foreign Policy was published in 2005. I was a contributor to Britain's Bomb: What Next?, edited by Brian Wicker and General Sir Hugh Beach, in 2006. I have worked at the Bank of England, HSBC Securities and Commerzbank Securities, and am a founder of an asset management and advisory firm, WMG Advisors LLP, based in London.

Justin Raimondo comments (4 Jan 2010):  This would be funny if it weren’t being taken seriously, including by the Obama administration, which is treating this fabrication as if it were real, as Times columnist Oliver Kamm gloated the other day. Kamm is that rarest of British political fauna, a neoconservative who valorizes George W. Bush, hails the invasion of Iraq, and spends a great deal of energy arguing that the inhabitants of another country – the United States – should bear the burden of executing a properly "internationalist" foreign policy. Kamm’s neoconnish credentials are impeccable: to begin with, he’s a founder of the Henry Jackson Society. Yes, it’s an actual British organization, a memorial to the Senator whose name is virtually synonymous with the military-industrial complex, an enthusiasm which rightly earned him the appellation "the Senator from Boeing." Jackson’s staff during the cold war years was a veritable neocon kindergarten, which trained such worthies as Richard Perle, Elliott Abrams, and Paul Wolfowitz – the warmongers of tomorrow. Oh, but Kamm’s got more than credentials. He walks the walk. A typical neocon method of argumentation, when cornered, is to change the subject by smearing your opponent, and that has been the reaction of the Times, in the person of Kamm, to the debunking of the phony document they "report" as "news." In a column published on the Times web site, Kamm doesn’t even bother defending what is by now an obvious hoax: instead he cites a ten year old letter Giraldi wrote to an alumni magazine questioning the use of the Holocaust in pro-Israel publicity campaigns. He also attacks Gareth Porter, whose seminal article effectively deconstructed the claims made by the Times, for stating, in the 1970s, that the Cambodian massacres carried out by the Khmer Rouge were overblown. Kamm and the Times effectively have no response to the charge made by US intelligence officials, speaking through Giraldi, that their "scoop" is a scam. Kamm is a bit of a nut, whose notions of truth and falsehood are notoriously supple, and whose intellectual and moral standards are not the highest: here is somebody who makes a big deal out of "denialists" who dispute the numbers put out by the Bosnians and the Kosovars detailing their brutalization at the hands of the Serbs, and (rightly) abhors those who downplay the Holocaust, and yet turns around and defends the extermination of hundreds of thousands of civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He not only defends it but makes rather a show of doing so, glorying in the slaughter as if it were an act of purest virtue. That the Obama administration is now citing "intelligence" gleaned by this sleazy operator Kamm, and Rupert Murdoch’s tabloid Times, as "evidence" that sanctions on Iran must be imposed is nauseating in the extreme. It ought to produce vertigo in those liberals and deluded "progressives" who still hope Obama – their Obama, the Obama of their dreams – will come through on the foreign policy front. Perhaps this will wake them up to what they're dealing with in this White House.

Politics
At the 1979 election, Kamm canvassed for Labour in his hometown constituency of Leicester South. He also voted Labour in the 1983 election.

Kamm is a former chairman of the Oxford University Labour Club.

In 1997, Kamm worked on Martin Bell's independent campaign to unseat Conservative MP Neil Hamilton:
 * I take some pride in having drafted an election manifesto so right-wing that Hamilton was incapable of outflanking it.

In December 2003, Kamm quoted an 1976 address to the Social Democrats USA from Sidney Hook, who he described as one of "my principal intellectual influences".

In 2004, Kamm supported the re-election of George W. Bush.

In 2005, Kamm contemplated rejoining the Labour Party, but ultimately voted Conservative, because the local Conservative candidate, Nicholas Boles, was more supportive of Labour Government foreign policy than the Labour one.

In November 2005, Kamm supported New Republic editor Peter Beinart in calling for the left to update the tradition of Cold War anti-communism for the war on terror:
 * Beinart recalled the fractious debates over foreign policy in the late 1940s, when American liberals were divided over whether to define themselves principally as anti-conservative or to put anti-communism at the heart of their programme. He identified a similar cleavage within liberalism now in confronting Islamist terrorism, and concluded: “The fundamental question is again whether the proper prism through which to view this new world is anti-totalitarianism based on the idea that we face another totalitarian foe.”

In April 2006, Peter Wilby claimed Kamm was "one of those mysterious commentators" who "claim to be left-wing but hold no discernible left-wing views."

Kamm responded that: "[I] do claim to be left-wing, for the straightforward reason that it's true."
 * My views will be of largely autobiographical interest to me and scant interest to anyone else, but here they are. I support economic redistribution (though on grounds of autonomy, not equality), progressive taxation and a welfare state of very roughly its current scope and size.

In January 2007, Kamm supported the thesis of Nick Cohen's What's Left, arguing that there had been "an extraordinary process in which part of the left has ended up arguing for what by any objective standards are reactionary positions".

Chomsky controversy
After Prospect Magazine readers voted Noam Chomsky the world's leading public intellectual, Kamm wrote in the magazine that Chomsky "deploys dubious arguments leavened with extravagant rhetoric."

In response, Chomsky accused Kamm of "failing with impressive consistency, to find something to criticise in the efforts to terminate state crimes for which he and I share responsibility".
 * To demonstrate "a particularly dishonest handling of source material," Kamm alleges that, "Chomsky manipulates a self-mocking reference in the memoirs of the then US ambassador to the UN... to yield the conclusion that Moynihan took pride in Nazi-like policies." The topic is Indonesia's 1975 invasion of East Timor, condemned by the security council, which ordered Indonesia to withdraw, to no effect. Moynihan explains why: "The US wished things to turn out as they did, and worked to bring this about. The department of state desired that the UN prove utterly ineffective in whatever measures it undertook. This task was given to me, and I carried it forward with no inconsiderable success." He then refers to reports that within two months 60,000 people had been killed, "10 per cent of the population, almost the proportion of casualties experienced by the Soviet Union during the second world war"-at the hands of Nazi Germany. His comparison, not mine, as Kamm pretends.

In a subsequent letter to the magazine, Kamm accused Chomsky of reprising his "polemical distortions":
 * Chomsky's account of Daniel Patrick Moynihan's comments on East Timor excises relevant context, presents unrelated passages as sequential, and interpolates remarks that Moynihan did not make. Even where Chomsky was right to attack western policy, he is analytically unscrupulous.

Kamm had earlier given a fuller account of his argument on this point in a blog post at FrontPage Magazine. This appeared to show that Moynihan had been misquoted, while conceding the point that he had blocked opposition to the invasion of East Timor at the UN.

On Iraq
In May 2005 Kamm wrote of the 2003 invasion:


 * Contrary to the Liberal Democrats’ depiction of it as the biggest foreign policy error since Suez, Iraq was the most far-sighted and noble act of British foreign policy since the founding of Nato. Mr Blair’s record exemplifies foreign policy 'with an ethical dimension'.

In the run-up to the third anniversary of the Iraq War, Kamm defended the invasion:
 * It is a fine judgment whether a rogue state or a failed state, prey to the barbarities that jihadists are trying to inflict on Iraq now but without hindrance, would have been the worse prospect. The notion that terrorism has been brought to Iraq uniquely by the west's overthrow of Saddam, who bankrolled it and was the most likely conduit for Islamist groups to obtain WMD, is astonishingly ahistorical.

On the 2006 Lebanon War
In August 2006 Kamm wrote that "the principal ethical question concerning Israel's military campaign is whether it has been curtailed too soon."
 * There is a substantial risk, on historical precedent, that not all necessary action will be taken. Continued failure will be damaging - for Israel, for the government of Lebanon, and for the prospects of a Palestinian state. This was why Tony Blair was right to resist calls at the start of the conflict for an immediate ceasefire, on the grounds that: "If [the violence] is to stop, it has to stop by undoing how it started. And it started with the kidnap of Israeli soldiers and the bombardment of northern Israel. If we want this to stop, that has to stop."

Affiliations

 * Democratiya - advisory editor
 * Henry Jackson Society - Signatory and founding member
 * Euston Manifesto signatory in 2006
 * Social Affairs Unit
 * Chatham House
 * FrontPage Magazine - interviewee

Links
The following links appeared on Kamm's blog as of 1 May 2012:

Contact

 * Blog: oliverkamm.typepad.com
 * Times article list
 * Email: oliver.kamm AT tiscali.co.uk

Resources

 * For further information, see relevant Neocon Europe page Oliver Kamm
 * PowerBase profile
 * Edward S. Herman and David Peterson, The Oliver Kamm School of Falsification: Imperial Truth-Enforcement, British Branch, Monthly Review zine, 22 January 2010.