Foundation for Defense of Democracies

The Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) is 501(c)(3) non-profit[1] think tank and policy institute[2] and registered lobbying organization[3] based in Washington, D.C., United States.

Foundation for Defense of Democracies
AbbreviationFDD
Formation2001 (2001)
Type501(c)(3) organization
13-4174402
Location
President
Clifford May
CEO
Mark Dubowitz
Websitewww.fdd.org

Its political leanings have been described variously as nonpartisan,[4][5][6][7][8] hawkish,[9][10][11][12] and neoconservative.[13][14][15] FDD holds events throughout the year, including its annual Washington Forum, briefings on Capitol Hill, expert roundtables for public officials, diplomats, and military officers, book releases, and panel discussions and debates within the policy community.

FDD publishes research on foreign policy and security issues, focusing on subjects such as nuclear-non proliferation, cyber threats, sanctions, illicit finance, and policy surrounding North Korea, Iran, Russia, the war in Afghanistan, and other areas of study.[16][17]

FDD has been identified as part of the Israel lobby in the United States by several scholarly sources.[18]

History and mission

FDD was founded shortly after the September 11 attacks in 2001.[19] In the initial documents filed for tax-exempt status in Internal Revenue Service, the FDD stated its mission "was to provide education to enhance Israel's image in North America and the public's understanding of issues affecting Israeli-Arab relations".[20] Later documents described the mission as "to conduct research and provide education on international terrorism and related issues".[21]

On its website, FDD describes itself as a "a non-profit, non-partisan 501(c)3 policy institute", with focus "on foreign policy and national security that combines policy research, democracy and counterterrorism education, strategic communications and investigative journalism in support of its mission to promote pluralism, defend democratic values and fight the ideologies that drive terrorism".[19]

FDD has been identified as part of the Israel lobby in the United States by several scholarly sources.[22][23][24] Sima Vaknin-Gil, Director General of Israel's Ministry of Strategic Affairs, had stated that the FDD works in conjunction with Israeli government, in particular the ministry she works for.[25] Later documents described the mission as "to conduct research and provide education on international terrorism and related issues".[26]

On 15 November 2019, FDD was officially registered as a lobby under Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995.[3]

Funding

According to Dennis Jett, FDD "offers hardly any information on where its money comes from and where it goes".[19]

2001–2004

Money funneled to the FDD during first decade of its activity, based on calculations made by Christopher Bail, expanded by 442%.[27]

In 2011, news website ThinkProgress published FDD's Form 990 documents[28] that revealed where FDD funding came from, from 2001 to 2004. Top donors included:

Other notable donors who gave lesser money during the same period were:

2008–2011

FDD's Schedule A documents filed by the end of the 2011 tax year, indicates that the organization from 2008 to 2011 was funded more than $20,000,000,[30] and the top three donors were:

2017

In 2018, AP reported that the United Arab Emirates has wired $2,500,000 to the FDD through Elliott Broidy and George Nader, to host a conference amidst Qatar diplomatic crisis about the country's role as a state-sponsor of terrorism.[31] FDD stated that it does not accept money from foreign governments, adding that "[a]s is our funding policy, we asked if his funding was connected to any foreign governments or if he had business contracts in the Gulf. He assured us that he did not".[31]

Adam Hanieh states that the FDD high-profile conference of 23 May 2017 was in line with UAE's policy at the time, which officially alleged that Qatar finances Islamist groups, adding that emails leaked shortly after show that UAE's Ambassador Yousef Al Otaiba had a "cosy relationship" with the FDD, and had reviewed the remarks made by Robert Gates at the convention.[32]

Others

Additionally, it is known that as of 2016, FDD has received donations from the following institutions:

Activities

The Iran Project

Iran's government officially threatened FDD and its CEO Mark Dubowitz, enacting sanctions against the CEO, and implicitly threatening the think tank with force from the Iranian state's "security apparatus," as implied in Tehran's own official announcement.[37][38]

Led by CEO[39] Mark Dubowitz, FDD's Iran Program[40] seeks to "address the threat posed by the Islamic Republic of Iran to America and its allies, FDD conducts detailed research, develops actionable and comprehensive policy options, and appears regularly in media." [40] FDD says it does this through attacking Iran's "most vulnerable points: its worldwide media operations, its standing in the United States and Europe, its finances, and its efforts to support terrorist activities abroad".[41] Specifically, FDD concerns itself with Iran's nuclear ambitions through its Iran Energy Project[42] and Iran's human rights abuses through its Iran Human Rights Project.[43]

In 2008, FDD founded the Iran Energy Project which "conducts extensive research on ways to deny the Iranian regime the profits of its energy sector".[44] The Wall Street Journal credited FDD with bringing "the idea of gasoline sanctions to political attention."[45] FDD's bi-partisan approach to advocating sanctions legislation has earned praise from Congressmen in both parties. Congressman Howard Berman (D-CA) thanked the organization saying "FDD has been one the most committed and creative voices in Washington regarding the Iran nuclear issue and specifically Iran sanctions".[46] FDD's efforts to target the Iranian regime's finances has gone beyond energy sanctions. The organization pushed for sanctions against the Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran and its use of Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) to perform transactions. According to The Wall Street Journal, FDD "has done most of the spadework on the issue".[47]

The Syria Project

For years, Syria has been a focus of FDD's research because of its alignment with Iran and support for organizations such as Hezbollah.[48] In 2012, as the Arab Spring spread to Syria, FDD launched "The Syria Project" to support dissident efforts in removing the Assad regime.[49] In that effort, FDD facilitated a Skype call between dissidents and U.S. journalists in 2012[50] and produced multiple studies and memos urging U.S. officials to act.[51]

Long War Journal

Long War Journal is a FDD project dedicated to reporting the Global War on Terror launched by the United States and its allies following the attacks of September 11, 2001. Under the direction of FDD senior fellows Bill Roggio and Thomas Joscelyn, this website covers stories about countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, and Iraq and follows the actions of al Qaeda and its affiliates.[52] According to the Columbia Journalism Review, "Roggio's greatest service, then, may be the way he picks up where the mainstream press leaves off, giving readers a simultaneously more specific and holistic understanding of the battlefield".[53]

European Foundation for Democracy

Personnel

Clifford May, FDD's founder and current president

Executives

Former staff include:

  • Nir Boms (President)[20]

Board of directors

As of 2005, members of FDD's board of directors were:

Advisors

The following people served as advisors to FDD as of 2005:

Fellows

Criticism

The International Relations Center features a report on the foundation on its "Right Web" website, a program of the think tank Institute for Policy Studies[55] which, according to its mission statement, seeks to "check the militaristic drift of the country". The report states that "although the FDD is an ardent critic of terrorism, it has not criticized actions taken by Israel against Palestinians that arguably fall into this category".[56]

The left-leaning political blog ThinkProgress has criticized FDD for "alarmist rhetoric and fear mongering",[29] for example in April 2002 when they aired a 30-second television ad campaign called "Suicide Strategy" that was described by critics as "conflating" Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat with the likes of Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. As FDD explained it: "a militant Islamic terrorist who 'martyrs' himself by hijacking a plane and flying it into the World Trade Center"—i.e., the September 11 attacks—"is no different from a militant Islamic terrorist who 'martyrs' himself by strapping explosives to his body and walking into a hotel"—i.e., Palestinian suicide attacks.

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References

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  2. "Charity Navigator - Rating for Foundation for Defense of Democracies". Charity Navigator. Retrieved 2020-04-17.
  3. Schaffer, Aaron; Pecquet, Julian (15 November 2019), "Anti-Iran advocacy group FDD registers to lobby", Al-Monitor, archived from the original on 16 November 2019, retrieved 15 April 2020
  4. Richter, Paul (March 14, 2012). "Chinese bank pulls out of Pakistan-Iran pipeline project". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 2013-03-01. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
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  18. For example, see the following sources:
    • Ahmad, Muhammad Idrees (2014), Road to Iraq: The Making of a Neoconservative War, Edinburgh University Press, p. 179, ISBN 9780748693054, The [Israel] lobby has insulated itself with a network of satellite institutions and alliances all invested in cultivating the view that Israeli and US interests are identical... It consists of... think thanks such as WINEP, JINSA, AEI, CSP, the Saban Center for Middle East Policy, FDD, and the defence/national security programmes of the Hudson Institute and the Heritage Foundation...
    • Seliktar, Ofira; Rezaei, Farhad (2018), Iran, Israel, and the United States: The Politics of Counter-Proliferation Intelligence, Rowman & Littlefield, p. 168, ISBN 9781498569767, The Israel lobby stalwarts—the WINEP, the FDD, the Israel Project, the Jewish National Security Affairs (JINSA), CSP, and UANI, among others—produced a considerable number of reports, policy papers, articles, and op-eds, and their reprasantatives regularly testified before Congress.
    • Mearsheimer, John J.; Stephen, Walt (2007), The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, pp. 128–130, ISBN 978-0-374-17772-0, The [Israel] lobby's drift to the right has been reinforced by the emergence of the neoconservatives... The think tanks and advocacy groups most closely associated with these neoconservatives are the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), the Center for Security Policy (CSP), the Hudson Institute, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA), the Middle East Forum (MEF), the Project for a New American Century (PNAC), and the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP). Virtually all neoconservatives are strongly committed to Israel, a point they emphasize openly and unapologetically.
    • Ashwarya, Sujata (2017), India-Iran Relations: Progress, Problems and Prospects, Routledge, p. 179, ISBN 9781351987073, In a 155-page report “US Non-proliferation Strategy for the Changing Middle East,” co-authored by the head of a right-wing pro-Israel lobby group, the Foundation for Defence of Democracies (FDD), Mark Dubowitz, states that...
  19. Jett, Dennis (2017), The Iran Nuclear Deal: Bombs, Bureaucrats, and Billionaires C., Springer, p. 83–86, ISBN 9783319598222
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  24. Seliktar, Ofira,. Iran, Israel, and the United States : the politics of counter-proliferation intelligence. Rezaei, Farhad,. Lanham, Maryland. ISBN 978-1-4985-6975-0. OCLC 1030485498.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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