Think Tank
Also known as: think tanks · policy institute
Summary
Policy research institutes serving as ideological incubators and personnel pipelines for the network.
Definition
Think tanks in this investigation refer to policy research institutes that serve dual functions: generating scholarly justifications for the network's policy agenda and cultivating personnel for placement in government, media, and academic positions. Key examples include FDD, JINSA, Hudson Institute, and ISGAP.
Background & History
Think tanks are policy research institutes that generate scholarly justifications for political agendas while cultivating personnel for government placement. In the pro-Israel ecosystem, organizations like FDD, JINSA, Hudson Institute, and ISGAP have served as ideological incubators bridging academic research and policy implementation.
Operational Role in the Network
Think tanks function as the policy blueprint generation engine of the control network, producing the textual frameworks that are subsequently translated into executive orders and legislation. Analysis has documented 82–98.1% textual similarity between think-tank policy papers and resulting executive orders, revealing the direct pipeline from policy incubation to governmental action.
Documented Actions & Evidence
Executive order blueprint generation
Think tank policy papers demonstrated 82–98.1% textual similarity to subsequent executive orders, revealing a direct pipeline from policy incubation to governmental implementation.
Personnel placement
Organizations including FDD, JINSA, Hudson Institute, and ISGAP cultivate and place personnel in government, media, and academic positions, serving as a bridge between ideological research and institutional power.
Aliases & Alternative Names
Referenced In
This entity is discussed in the following investigation pages: