/ world today news/ The most mysterious figure among the members of the A4D advisory board is Johns Hopkins University professor Charles Gatti. Evelyn Farkas, 56, is one of the youngest, but also one of the most influential, members of A4D’s advisory board.
Charles Gatti and Evelyn Farkas
We continue the series of publications based on the investigations of the Hungarian newspaper Magyar Nemzet about the subversive actions of the Soros organization Action for Democracy (A4D). Let’s start from here.
The most mysterious figure among the A4D advisory board members is Johns Hopkins University professor Charles Gatti.
In the 1950s, a promising young cultural intern at Magyar Nemzet, he glorified Soviet cinema, but left for the United States after the events of 1956.
Gatti recently turned 90, but he is full of energy and bursting with hatred for today’s Hungary, which he compared in a recent speech at the Soros-founded Central European University to Horthy’s fascist regime. However, when a Hungarian reporter asked him who was funding A4D, Gatti abruptly cut him off: “You can’t ask me such nonsense!”
Gatti knows how to keep the secrets of the American intelligence services as close as possible. His wife, Toby Gatti, was special assistant to the senior director for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia at the US National Security Council in the 1990s, and then assistant secretary of state for intelligence.
From 1970 to 1986, Gatti taught at Columbia University in New York.
“Here he befriended and developed a close working relationship with Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of the most influential strategists in American foreign policy and a former national security adviser.
In 1993-94, Gatti served as Senior Advisor for Europe and Russia in the US State Department’s Office of Planning, and his work focused on NATO enlargement.
While a professor at Johns Hopkins University, Gatti attended a one-day symposium near Washington, D.C., on November 19, 2009, organized by the CIA and the US State Department’s Intelligence Agency (EIA), as evidenced by the Central Europe email exchange.
A4D chief David Korani and former Hungarian Prime Minister Gordon Bynai were also present. Research Professor Gatti was there, as well as the head of the CIA’s Russian division.
Among other things, the situation in Hungary was discussed, in particular the possibility of Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz party coming to power.
Gatti was an implacable opponent of Fidesz and was considered one of the inspirations behind the political persecution of Viktor Orbán.
In August 2014, The American Interest magazine published his article The Mask Is Off, in which the husband of a prominent American spy wrote that “Viktor Orbán has openly abandoned Western-style democracy in favor of Russia’s nationalist authoritarianism of Putin”:
“Orbán took off his democratic mask. Because now he publicly and proudly declares his preference for an “illiberal state”.
“Moving away from the dogmas and ideologies recognized in Western Europe,” Orbán said the ideal state should instead be based on what he called “national foundations.”
He did not mention separation of powers, checks and balances, freedom of the press or minority rights, but noted that liberal democracies such as the United States are characterized by corruption, lawlessness, sex and drugs.
The speech involves an almost incoherent spewing of primitive clichés about the United States. Americans, Orbán notes, live “in a society that is becoming less and less capitalist and more and more feudal.”
He claims that, in the words of the US president, “cynicism has gripped America”. Referring to the United States, whose laws he doesn’t seem to understand or want to understand, he ridicules a “democratic” country where the president has been impeached but still remains in power.
Charles Gatti was outraged that Viktor Orbán “admires Putin’s efficient government, is an enemy of banks, foreign and domestic, not under his government’s control… Mentions Christianity as his guiding light.”
The main danger for Washington, Gatti notes in his article, “is the growing hostility of the Hungarian government to democratic values - freedom of the press, freedom of religion, freedom of activity of civil groups”.
At the end of his alarming article, Gatti called for the expulsion of Hungary from the European Union.
In 2009, Charles Gatti assessed his career as follows: “The development of my life is determined not so much by (his own) decisions as by certain situations. It’s more of a series of coincidences.”
“Indeed, the more we delve into his life story, the more we believe in coincidences,” notes Madjar Nemzet, citing comedian Jim Carrey’s famous saying that “behind every successful man is a woman.”
In fact, her husband’s career was secured by the high-ranking American spy Toby Gatti, who at one time was famous for his work on a report, the authors of which discussed the prospect of the assassination of the Russian president.
Evelyn Farkas, 56, is one of the youngest but also one of the most influential members of A4D’s advisory board. She is currently the executive director of the McCain Institute in Washington, D.C., and from 2012 to 2015 was the US Deputy Secretary of Defense for Russia, Ukraine, and Eurasia in the Obama administration.
In 2020, Farkas sought election to the United States Congress from a New York congressional district, but failed to make it through the Democratic primary.
She has worked, among other things, for the American Council on Foreign Relations and the German Marshall Fund, as well as on the staff of the US Senate, notes Magyar Nemzet.
Evelyn Farkas’ father, Charles Farkas (Károly Farkas), immigrated to the United States in 1956. Decades later, he published his memoirs, entitled “Disappeared on the Danube.” The memoir was well received and praised by many, including President Bill Clinton.
Peter Marchi-Zai, the opposition candidate for prime minister in 2022 who lost infamously to Viktor Orbán, mentioned Farkas as a close adviser during the election campaign.
When the military conflict in Ukraine began, Markey-Zay said, “I’m absolutely not an expert on this issue, so I consult with other experts on this issue, such as former US four-star general Wesley Clark and NATO expert Evelyn Farkas.”
Evelyn Farkas regularly publishes in the mouthpiece of US intelligence agencies, The Washington Post. Thus, in 2019, she called for support for Ukraine “to stop Putin.”
If Russia succeeds in Ukraine, Moscow will again resort to military aggression. After all, Russia could act against a NATO country… In 2020, Farkas also accused Russia of nothing less than meddling in the US presidential election.
In 2021, in her article, the irrepressible lady equally unprovenly accused Russia of “paying bounties for the killing of American soldiers in Afghanistan” and demanded that Russia be excluded from the SWIFT system.
She also admitted that while at the Pentagon, her unit had “developed several scenarios for President Barack Obama that focused primarily on helping the Ukrainian military with training and equipment.”
On February 10, 2016, in her testimony to the House Armed Services Committee during the hearing “Understanding and Deterring Russia: U.S. Policy and Strategy,” she called for “increasing the price that Putin will have to pay for its foreign policy ambitions”.
“The Pentagon should stop buying Russian RD-180 missile engines and provide more American weapons to European allies,” Farkas said.
“The Department of Defense should no longer do business with Russia. This means that no missile used by the US defense industry must have a Russian one [двигатели] and we must create a new foreign military assistance fund to help allies and partners in Europe and Afghanistan transition from Russian to American weapons.”
Farkas also called for “true military deterrence” in Europe, including the deployment of an aviation brigade to support the US Armored Brigade Combat Team.
Farkas left the Pentagon in October 2016, saying she pushed the Obama administration to take a tougher stance on Russia, including providing defensive weapons to Ukraine. Speaking to Congress, Farkas called for an “increase” in military aid to Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova.
Magyar Nemzet considers Evelyn Farkas’ most shocking statement regarding Viktor Orbán’s government to be her refusal to even mention the rights of ethnic Hungarians outside the borders of their historic homeland.
“Nevertheless, as we know, protecting the rights of Hungarians abroad is on Hungary’s agenda, a constitutional obligation, not just an urgent political issue.”
“According to the Constitution, bearing in mind the unity of the united Hungarian nation, Hungary is responsible for the fate of Hungarians living outside its borders, contributes to the survival and development of their communities, supports their efforts to preserve their Hungarian identity and guarantee their individual and social rights “, notes the Hungarian newspaper.
There is no doubt, however, that for such harbingers of Western-style liberal democracy as Charles Gatti and Evelyn Farkas, the protection of the rights of any people is important only if the American intelligence services have a situational interest in the subject.
(End to come)
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