Everything about Front Organization totally explained
A
front organization is any entity set up by and controlled by another organization, such as
intelligence agencies,
criminal organizations, banned organizations, religious or political groups, advocacy groups, or
corporations. Front organizations can act for the parent group without the actions being attributed to the parent group. Front organizations that appear to be independent voluntary or charitable associations are called
front groups. In the business world, front organizations such as
front companies or
shell corporations are used to shield the parent company from legal liability. In
international relations, a
puppet state is a
state which acts as a front (or surrogate) for another state.
Intelligence agencies
Intelligence agencies use front organizations to provide "cover", plausible occupations and means of income, for their covert agents. These may include legitimate organizations, such as charity, religious or journalism organizations; or
brass plate firms which exist solely to provide a plausible background story, occupation, and means of income.
The airline
Air America, an outgrowth of
Civil Air Transport of the 1940s, and
Southern Air Transport, ostensibly a civilian air charter company, were operated and wholly owned by the
CIA, supposedly to provide
humanitarian aid, but flew many combat support missions and supplied
covert operations in
Southeast Asia during the
Second Indochina War. Other CIA-funded front groups have been used to spread American
propaganda and influence during the
Cold War, particularly in the
Third World.
When intelligence agencies work through legitimate organizations, it can cause problems and increased risk for the workers of those organizations. To prevent this, the
CIA has had a 20-year policy of not using
Peace Corps members or US journalists for Intelligence purposes.
Organized crime
Many
organized crime operations have substantial legitimate businesses, such as licensed
gambling houses, building construction companies, trash hauling services, or dock loading enterprises. These front companies enable these criminal organizations to
launder their income from illegal activities. As well, the front companies provide plausible cover for illegal activities such as
drug trafficking,
smuggling, and
prostitution.
Where
brothels are illegal, criminal organizations set up front companies providing services such as a "massage parlor" or "sauna", up to the point that "massage parlor" or "sauna" is thought as a synonym of
brothel in these countries.
Religious organizations
Some religious organizations use front groups either to promote their interests in politics or to make their group seem more legitimate. The
Church of Scientology is one such organization; the
FBI's
July 7,
1977 raids on the Church's offices (following discovery of the Church's
Operation Snow White) turned up, among other documents, an undated memo entitled "PR General Categories of Data Needing Coding". This memo listed what it called "Secret PR Front Groups," which included the group
APRL, "Alliance for the Preservation of Religious Liberty" (later renamed "Americans Preserving Religious Liberty"). The
Cult Awareness Network (CAN) is considered by many to now be a front group for the Church of Scientology, which took the group over financially after bankrupting it in a series of lawsuits.
Time identified several other fronts for Scientology, including: the
Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR),
The Way to Happiness Foundation,
Applied Scholastics, the
Concerned Businessmen's Association of America, and
HealthMed Clinic(External Link
). Seven years later the Boston Herald showed how
Narconon and
World Literacy Crusade are also fronting for Scientology
(External Link
).
Other Scientology groups include
Downtown Medical,
Criminon and the
Association for Better Living and Education (ABLE).
Politics
Pro-Israel lobbying fronts
The
American Israel Public Affairs Committee has been accused of using front organizations as a means of circumventing limits on
campaign spending These front organizations have names unrelated to AIPAC.
Delaware Valley Good Government Association (
Philadelphia),
San Franciscans for Good Government (
California),
Beaver PAC (
Wisconsin),
Cactus PAC (
Arizona), and
Icepac (
New York) are examples of former AIPAC front groups.
Gun control lobbying fronts
Many in the
gun rights movement claim that the
American Hunters and Shooters Association is a front for gun control groups aimed at dividing gun owners into the sport-oriented and the
self-defense oriented.
Islamist front organizations
Council on American-Islamic Relations is regarded by many scholars and intelligence agencies to be front organizations based on their founding ties to known Islamist or terrorist organizations like
Hamas. Rep.
Cass Ballenger of North Carolina has stated that CAIR is a "fund-raising arm for Hezbollah" in an interview with the Charlotte Observer published
4 October 2003. CAIR official Todd "Ismail" Royer was convicted of conspiring to train on American soil for violent jihad. CAIR officials
Rabih Haddad,
Bassem Khafagi and
Ghassan Elashi have all been convicted of conspiring to fund Islamic terrorist groups.
Hezbollah, the Lebanese anti-Israel guerilla army runs many front organizations for fundraising, including the
Al-Mabarrat organization in
Dearborn. Hezbollah also has been implicated in
counterfeiting.
Other Islamist front organizations used to gather money for terrorist groups (including
al-Qaeda), or accused of doing so, include the
Global Relief Foundation,
Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development,
Al Barakaat,
Benevolence International Foundation, and
Konsojaya Trading Company. In the UK, the
Muslim Association of Britain has been accused of being a front for or connected to the
Muslim Brotherhood.
Apartheid government fronts
South Africa's
apartheid-era government used numerous front organizations to influence world opinion and to undertake
extra-judicial activities and the killing of anti-apartheid activists; these included the following:
- The Citizen - funded secretly by government, intended to challenge the liberal Rand Daily Mail, contributing to the political ruin of John Vorster and Connie Mulder
- Civil Cooperation Bureau (CCB) - a covert, special forces organization that harassed, seriously injured and eliminated anti-apartheid activists
- Federal Independent Democratic Alliance (FIDA)
- International Freedom Foundation - Washington-based mechanism to combat sanctions, and support Jonas Savimbi and UNITA
- Jeugkrag - or Youth for South Africa, led by Marthinus van Schalkwyk a short-lived Afrikaner youth group, surreptitiously funded by the Military Intelligence's Project Essay
- National Student Federation (NSF) - led by Russell Crystal, intended to challenge NUSAS
- Roodeplaat Research Laboratories
- Taussig Familienstiftung - or Taussig Family Trust, a Liechtenstein conduit for secret government transactions
- Veterans for Victory - consisting of national servicemen, a countermeasure against the End Conscription Campaign which was allied to the United Democratic Front (UDF)
Communist fronts
Communist and other
Marxist-Leninist parties have sometimes used front organizations to attract support from those (sometimes called
fellow travellers) who may not necessarily agree with Leninist ideology. The front organization often obscures its provenance and may often be a tool for recruitment. Other
Marxists often describe front organizations as
opportunist.
According to a list prepared in 1955 by the United States
Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, the
Comintern set up no less than 82 front organizations in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s. This tactic was often used during the
Red Scare of the
1950s, when a number of organizations in the
labor and
peace movements were accused of being "Communist fronts". Sometimes, Communist fronts worked at an international level, as has been alleged with the
World Peace Council.
More recently, the
Workers' World Party (WWP) set up an
anti-war front group,
International ANSWER. (ANSWER is no longer closely associated with WWP; it's closely associated with a WWP splinter, the
Party for Socialism and Liberation, but PSL plays a more open role in the organization.) Similarly,
Unite Against Fascism, the
Anti-Nazi League, the
Stop the War Coalition and
Respect – The Unity Coalition are all criticised as being fronts for the
Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party (UK).
Some anti-Islamist
feminist groups in the
Muslim world have also been accused of being front organizations. The
Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan has been accused of being a
Maoist front, while the
Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq has been accused of being a front for the
Worker-Communist Party of Iraq .
The concept of a front organization should be distinguished from the
united front - a
coalition of
working class or
socialist parties - and the
popular front - a coalition of a
Communist party with
bourgeois groups. Both the united front and popular front usually disclose the groups that make up their coalitions.
Animal rights groups
The
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), an organization which advocates
vegetarianism for health reasons, has criticized high-protein diets such as the
Atkins Diet, and seeks to eliminate the use of animals in scientific research, has been accused of being a front group for
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, an
animal rights organization.
(Citation needed)
Banned paramilitary organizations
Banned paramilitary organizations sometimes use front groups to achieve a public face with which to raise funds, negotiate with opposition parties, recruit, and spread propaganda. For example, banned
paramilitary organizations often have an affiliated
political party that operates more openly (though often these parties, themselves, end up banned). These parties may or may not be front organizations in the narrow sense — they've varying degrees of autonomy and the relationships are usually something of an open secret — but are widely considered to be so, especially by their political opponents.
Examples are the relationship between the
Irish Republican Army and
Sinn Féin in 1980s
Ireland or between the
Basque groups
ETA (paramilitary) and
Batasuna (party) in
Spain. Similarly, in the
United States in periods where the
Communist Party was highly stigmatized, it often operated largely through front groups. In addition, the
Provisional IRA also operated a
vigilante front group, called
Direct Action Against Drugs.
Corporate front organizations
Corporations from a wide variety of different industries set up front groups. Some pharmaceutical companies set up "patients' groups" as front organizations that pressure healthcare providers and legislators to adopt their products. For example, Schering Healthcare and Biogen Ltd. tried to pressure the
UK National Health Service (NHS) to adopt its drug
Beta Interferon to treat
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) sufferers. Schering set up and funded a group called
MS Voice, with its own website, which claimed to represent MS sufferers.
Another pharmaceutical company,
Biogen, set up a campaign called
Action for Access, which also claimed it was an independent organization and the voice of MS sufferers. People who visited the website and signed up for the campaign didn't realise that these were not genuinely independent patient groups. It has been alleged that computer software giant
Microsoft created and funded the
Association for Competitive Technology to defend its interests against charges of antitrust violations. Tobacco companies frequently use front organizations and doctors to advocate their arguments about tobacco use, although less openly and obviously than in the 1980s.
The
Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) is one of the more active corporate front groups and one of several front groups created by Berman & Co., a public affairs firm owned by lobbyist Rick Berman. They claim to be supported by restaurants, food companies and more than 1,000 concerned individuals. Based in Washington, DC, Berman & Co. represents the tobacco industry as well as hotels, beer distributors, taverns, and restaurant chains. The group actively opposes smoking bans and lowering the legal blood-alcohol level, while targeting studies on the dangers of red meat consumption, overfishing and pesticides. Each year they give out the "nanny awards" to groups who, according to them, try to tell consumers how to live their lives. They also run affiliated websites such as
ActivistCash.com
.
A list of some alleged corporate front groups active in the US is maintained by the
Multinational Monitor. Some
think tanks are corporate front groups. These organizations present themselves as research organizations, using phrases such as "...Institute for Research" in their names. Because their names suggest neutrality, they can present the commercial strategies of the corporations which sponsor them in a way which appears to be objective
sociological or
economical research rather than political lobbying.
Similarly the
Center for Regulatory Effectiveness has been criticised as a front organization for various industry bodies which seek to undermine regulation of their environmentally damaging activities under the guise of 'regulatory effectiveness'.
Astroturfing
Astroturfing, a wordplay based on "
grassroots" efforts, is an
American term used pejoratively to describe formal
public relations projects which try to create the impression of a groundswell of spontaneous popular response to a politician, product, service, or event. Corporations have been known to "astroturf", but are not the only entities alleged to have done so. In recent years, organizations of plaintiffs' attorneys have established front groups such as
Victims and Families United and the
Center for Justice and Democracy to oppose
tort reform.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Front Organization'.
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