The quotient is not equal to the whole
The elements of the scheme:
A - Target areas
B - Subjects (wealthy interested parties)
B1 - academic circles
B2 – analytical centers
B3 – private sector
B4 - government
C - Areas of activity
C1 - development
C2 – diplomacy
C3 - defense
PERSONAL COMPETENCE
PC1 - energetic leadership style
PC2 - ability to see the big picture
PC3 - focus on cooperation
PC4 - aspiration to unite people to solve complex problems
Experience
E1 - experience in managing the functional link of international politics and operations
E2 - the intelligence picture to understand everything that is happening. She learned to think and write, often to Secretary of State and to President
E3 - experience in partnering with stakeholders in relevant areas
E4 - Bureau of Intelligence and Research (I&R)
E5 - … 12 years of flying across countries, working in the political departments of embassies, traveling with then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a vast field of international meetings
University
I have been introduced to an appeal sent several years ago to an American philanthropist with a proposal to financially support the developers of the Israeli project “A UNIVERSAL MODEL FOR THE TRANSFORMATION OF MODERN SOCIETY AND MAN IN THE 21st CENTURY.”
==== Philanthrop
Izak Parviz Nazarian was born into a Persian-Jewish family in 1929 in Tehran. The father died when the child was 5 years old, the mother opened a sewing workshop. The boy studied at a Jewish elementary school, then at a technical high school. In 1943, he worked as a busboy at a US army base in Iran.
At the age of 18, he moved to Italy, where he became a member of the Haganah in Genoa in 1947. On May 17, 1948, three days after Israel became an independent state, he moved to Israel and served in an Armored Brigade in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. He was blown up by a mine and was in the hospital for 5 months. Having lost his combat capability, he retired and became the chauffeur of Foreign Minister Golda Meir.
Career
Nazarian started a gravel transportation business shortly after his service with the IDF. He acquired trucks and hired drivers to move gravel to construction sites in Israel. He also owned a cement factory in Yarka. He returned to Iran in 1957, where he expanded his construction business and oversaw the construction of many government buildings. He enjoyed close ties with the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
During the Iranian Revolution of 1979, his name was on the kill list. He went into exile in the United States, settling in Los Angeles. By 1985, he co-founded Omninet with two others, initially to track the flow of trucks from one construction site to another. The start-up, which merged with Qualcomm, became one of the world's largest chipmakers. As Nazarian was a major shareholder, he became a billionaire.
Nazarian served as a managing partner of Omninet Capital, "a diversified investment firm in the fields of private equity, real estate and venture capital", and managing partner of Omninet Ventures. He was also the chair of a leading producer of high-precision tooling and parts for the aerospace industry.
Philanthropy
Prior to 1979, Nazarian was an advocate of women's rights in Iran. Once in the United States, he worked with Armand Hammer to help Soviet Jews emigrate to Israel in the 1980s. He is a co-founder of the Iranian American Jewish Federation, headquartered in Los Angeles. Was the founder of the Magbit Foundation, a non-profit organization which gives scholarships to university students in Israel. He has made charitable contributions to Tel Aviv University (where he endowed the Chair for Modern Iranian Studies), Ben-Gurion University, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology and the Weizmann Institute of Science. Was the recipient of an Honorary Doctorate from Tel Aviv University. He was recognized as one of four "philanthropic visionaries" alongside Guilford Glazer, Jona Goldrich and Max Webb by the American Friends of Tel Aviv University.
In 2003, Nazarian founded the Citizens Empowerment Center in Israel (CECI), a non-partisan organization which promotes election reform in Israel. In 2009, he published an opinion piece entitled 'Israel must address flawed electoral system' in the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
In order to "calculate" the possible experiences and motives of a philanthropist in response to an "Appeal", it is necessary to consider the influence of a heterogeneous environment that determines the mood of a person immersed in it.
Let me try to check the possibility of identifying one of the many influential personalities.
==== Jenna Ben-Yehuda
President and Chief Executive Officer of the Truman National Security Project and the Truman Center for National Policy. In 2021 she became part of the think-tank’s Advisory Council to help shape ideas on the future of Transatlantic relations and security.
She is the founder of the Women’s Foreign Policy Network - a global membership organization of five thousand national security professionals in one hundred countries. She serves on the advisory boards of the Leadership Council for Women in National Security, the Partnership for Public Service, and GLOBSEC.
A life member of the Council on Foreign Relations and member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future’s Council on US National Security.
She earned multiple Superior and Meritorious Honor Awards during her twelve years at the US Department of State where she served in a range of intelligence and policy roles in the Western Hemisphere, including serving as Senior Military Advisor to US Northern Command, US Southern Command, and US Special Operations Command.
She holds graduate degrees from the National Intelligence University, and National Defense University and undergraduate degrees from The George Washington University, where - - > she later taught security studies at the Elliott School of International Affairs.
A former State Department official with experience in the private sector, Ms. Ben-Yehuda is a member of the Global Future Council (IAC) for the US National Security of the World Economic Forum and a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
IAC is a body of strategic importance that decides on important issues influencing the long-term direction of think-tank’s flagship events, research programms and key initiatives. Current IAC members include former heads of states, prime ministers and other distinguished personalities from both sides of the Atlantic.
==== The Experience
Experience is pre–conscious/intuitive and conscious memories of precedents that pop up when meeting in new situations with semantic or external analogues. Such memories help the Owner of experience - to notice and feel/realize familiar meanings and forms in new situations, to understand relationships in new situations faster and more accurately, to determine possible favours and threats to themselves.
The signs of experience proposed in Ms. Ben-Yehuda's self-presentation, I, without attempting "deep philosophizing", decipher as follows:
- university.
As a child, she skipped school to see the-United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan speak at UCLA. She later chose The George Washington University for her undergraduate degree because the school had a program in which undergrads could work at the State Department. The State Department then, as now, suffered from staffing shortages.
She holds graduate degrees from the National Intelligence University, and National Defense University and undergraduate degrees from The George Washington University, where she later taught security studies at the Elliott School of International Affairs.
==== My comment.
I assume that the university's teaching proposals (lectures, study assignments, etc.) are of a multi-layered nature, because they are focused on students with different personal characteristics (different natural aspirations for self-actualization and self-realization; different aspirations for a holistic or pragmatic worldview; under different influence on natural aspirations from the social environment - from the family to the world community with its history; etc.). Starting a career after graduation in the Bureau of Intelligence and Research (I&R)
- as it says in Wikipedia, the Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) is an intelligence agency in the United States Department of State. Its central mission is to provide all-source intelligence and analysis in support of U.S. diplomacy and foreign policy. INR is the oldest civilian element of the U.S. Intelligence Community and among the smallest, with roughly 300 personnel. Though lacking the resources and technology of other U.S. intelligence agencies, it is "one of the most highly regarded" for the quality of its work.
INR is descended from the Research and Analysis Branch (R&A) of the World War II-era Office of Strategic Services (OSS), which was tasked with identifying the strengths and weaknesses of the Axis powers. Widely recognized as the most valuable component of the OSS, upon its dissolution in 1945, R&A assets and personnel were transferred to the State Department, forming the Office of Intelligence Research. INR was reorganized into its current form in 1957.
In addition to supporting the policies and initiatives of the State Department, INR contributes to the President's Daily Briefings (PDB) and serves as the federal government's primary source of foreign public opinion research and analysis. INR is primarily analytical and does not engage in counterintelligence or espionage, instead utilizing intelligence collected by other agencies, Foreign Service reports and open-source materials, such as news media and academic publications. INR reviews and publishes nearly two million reports and produces about 3,500 intelligence assessments annually.
The INR is headed by the Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research reporting directly to the Secretary of State and serves as the secretary's primary intelligence advisor. In March 2021, President Joe Biden nominated Brett Holmgren to lead INR.
INN was the only US intelligence agency that disagreed with the view that Kiev would fall in a few days during the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. While it agreed with other agencies in reassessing Russia's military might, unlike others, INR used Ukraine's growing willingness to fight in opinion polls to predict that the country would resolutely resist an invasion.
Currently, the US intelligence community is beginning to check the failure of intelligence on Ukraine and Afghanistan.
- an intelligence picture for understanding everything that is happening. I learned to think and to write, often for the Secretary of State and the President ("...Working at the State Department has really been a very formative experience for me. I started my career after graduating from university in the Bureau of Intelligence and Research, I&R, as it is called in one of the 17 US intelligence agencies. Events were moving so fast, and the intelligence picture was so important for understanding everything that was happening. And it's also the place where I learned to think and write. I have often written for the Secretary of State and for the President").
and
- experience in managing the functional link of international politics and operations
… despite its relatively obscurity and size compared to the CIA, DIA and other better-known intelligence agencies, the Bureau of Intelligence and Research often bats above its weight in interagency discussions, current and former officials say.
"They get paid attention to because they're good and they tend to be contrarian, that is also good," Treverton, a former chairman of the National Intelligence Council under President Barack Obama, said. "Often they're contrarian and right."
But just because an administration is presented with a given assessment does not mean that it will act on it.
… one smaller intelligence agency within the State Department did more accurately assess the Ukrainian military's capability to resist Russia. But while that assessment was shared within the US government, it did not override the wider intelligence community's predictions.
... The Senate Intelligence Committee … sent a classified letter to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Defense Department and the CIA pointing out that the agencies broadly underestimated how long the Ukrainian military would be able to fend off Russian forces and overestimated how long Afghan fighters would hold out against the Taliban last summer after the US withdrawal from the country, multiple sources familiar with the matter tell CNN. They questioned the methodology behind the intelligence community's assessments, and the underlying assumptions behind them, the sources said.
- ... 12 years of flying around countries, working in the political departments of embassies, traveling with then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a vast field of international meetings.
and
- "experience in partnering with stakeholders in relevant areas."
It has been resulted in the skill of orientation in complex (dynamic systems of heterogeneous interdependencies, including the structure of the field of intersubjective relations).
PERSONAL COMPETENCE
- a HOLISTIC (systemically hole) intuitive and conscious worldview developed by a natural adequate experience of life circumstances.
The educational impact and the very story of the grandfather who survived the Holocaust caused Jenny Ben-Yehuda to feel/realize from a young age that "US policy is more than just a bill signed by the president, and that even the most mysterious bureaucratic components of American politics can change people's lives for better or worse."
This is illustrated, in particular, by her statement: "I knew there was a pretty clear dotted line between the decisions made by someone at the Ellis Island port of entry about whether to let my grandfather in or not and the fact that I was here." She has an adequate understanding of who, how and from whom the Israeli statehood was formed and the saturation of the territory of the state with the Jewish mass. From this understanding, an understanding of the conditions for the continued existence of the Israeli Jewish mass develops in interdependence with the existence of the world Jewish mass, including the American part, and with the global context. And behavioral manifestations are formed - goals, tasks, actions - as a significant participant in the formation of the future.
12 years of SUCH work in the State Department led to the position of senior Military Adviser to the Assistant Minister for Western Hemisphere Affairs and:
- it had to form a vision and motivation to mobilize the "West" to confront the growing threat of an anti-"Western" onslaught
- in this vision, the Israeli Jewish Mass, framed as a state, is a far-sighted outpost with the purpose of delaying and weakening the expected onslaught as much as possible.
With this vision and motivation, Ben-Yehuda embarked on the activities of the Director General and president of the Truman National Security Project, an analytical center and an environment for nurturing the current generation of Democratic foreign policy leaders. The Project's students are widely represented in the Biden administration, including National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.
The 40-year-old Ben-Yehuda is aware and expresses that her interest in foreign policy was formed thanks to her Jewish upbringing. And specifically - "Part of my Jewish identity is related to the role that US national security policy can play for people, and how it can create a safe harbor or not. … I felt very connected to the rest of the world." Her circle has always discussed the "ancient Jewish country", Jewish ghettos of different historical periods - in the context of world events.
==== My comment.
The modern state of Israel and its Jewish mass are perceived and experienced as nothing more than an element in this dynamics of general Jewish existence.
- Self-presentation on www.weforum.org/people/jenna-ben-yehuda:
Jenya Ben-Yehuda - President and Chief Executive Officer, Truman National Security Project and on https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennabenyehuda /, as an experienced head of International Policy and Operations with almost twenty years of joint experience working with stakeholders in the field of diplomacy, defense and development in government, the private sector, think tanks and academia:
- striving to unite people to solve complex problems ("I am known for my energetic leadership style, focused on cooperation, the ability to see the big picture and love to unite people to solve complex problems. ... I often write in the media about ... national security).
...after graduating from college, she began a career in the Western Hemisphere Bureau. She started with intelligence gathering, but later switched to policy analysis. "I really burned in pursuit of all this. I was less interested in sitting in front of a computer for 10 hours a day, writing down my research... I moved on to the political aspect, worked a lot on the problems with Central American gangs in the aspects of regional security, and I really focused on what President Biden now calls the root causes of migration."
The transition from intelligence to politics is not common, but a career foreign service officer who served as undersecretary of State for Political Affairs in the Obama administration and led Ben-Yehuda a few years earlier said she handled it well: "When you move from intelligence analysis to policy development, you really move from someone who observes and analyzes, to someone who protects. You leave the sphere of objectivity and become a participant in efforts to promote and achieve certain political goals, and this is a transition that is not easy for everyone to make. But Jenna did it well."
Ben-Yehuda clearly realized that she was not interested in office work.
==== Persons in whose environment experience and personal competencies are used to achieve their goals and solve relevant tasks:
- academic circles
- private sector
- government
President Biden announces his intention to appoint the following persons to key positions:
Jenna Ben-Yehuda, Member of the Board of Visitors of the US Air Force Academy
(The U.S. Air Force Academy Board of Visitors advises the Secretary of Defense and the Deputy Secretary of Defense through the Secretary of the Air Force, as well as the Senate Armed Services Committee and the House Armed Services Committee on independent advice and recommendations on morale, discipline, as well as social climate, curriculum, training, physical equipment, financial issues, teaching methods and other issues related to the Academy that the Council decides to consider. The Board consists of six members appointed by the President for a term of 3 years)
- thinktanks
After 12 years at the State Department, culminating in the position of Senior Military Adviser to the Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, Ben-Yehuda is currently the CEO and president of the Truman National Security Project, a think tank and membership organization that helped raise a generation of democratic foreign policy leaders. Its members are widely represented in the Biden administration, among the Truman alumni there are officials such as National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan and Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg.
==== Areas of activity:
- defense
- the development of relations in the subsystem of management of society and, as a result, the purposeful development of the behavior of society
- diplomacy
==== Core Target area of activity:
- National security
The statements of Jenna Ben-Yehuda and the documented views of the American establishment clearly show the utmost preoccupation with the problem of ensuring national security. When Ben-Yehuda began traveling and staying outside the United States, she learned about Jewish communities around the world. While attending high school in 1996, she studied in Hungary just a few years after the fall of the Iron Curtain. "I spent time in synagogues in Eastern Europe," she said. "The country was still very strong in the early days of the reopening, and there was an open discussion of anti-Semitism that only got worse."
In college, she made a trip to the United Jewish Communities (now the Jewish Federations of North America) in Prague and Israel, which she compared to Birthright. Later, before joining the State Department, Ben-Yehuda worked for the American Jewish Committee as a member of its Goldman Fellowship Program in its Atlanta office, which "works very closely with the black community," she explained. For her, it mattered: "Growing up in the South and returning there every summer as a child, I saw firsthand the dynamics of relations between blacks and Jews in the South." She viewed her work building relationships between Atlanta's Jewish and black communities as a continuation of her parents' civil rights activism decades earlier.
"I really liked this work. I felt that it was deeply meaningful and actually served as the basis for subsequent participation in the field of human rights and advocacy activities that I conducted in many other countries of the world," she said. "It wasn't so much that I refused to work in the Jewish community space, but that I was really attracted by the desire to work in the State Department."
Born in Atlanta but raised in a part of California that lacked a significant Jewish population, Ben-Yehuda often felt like an outsider, and she looked beyond her community in search of a sense of belonging.
"My father didn't know he was Jewish until he went to college," Ben-Yehuda said. A paternal Holocaust survivor grandfather who became a doctor in a small Indiana town changed his last name to Hoffman- Ben Yehuda's maiden name-and married a non-Jewish woman, eventually hiding his religion from his children. I didn't like it when children publicly wore a Jewish star, I didn't want stickers on the bumper of a car when driving and parking at a summer camp – a public demonstration of Jewishness caused nervousness in both the family and the environment."
As the granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor, Jenna Ben-Yehuda understood from a young age that U.S. policy is more than just a bill signed by the president, and that even the most mysterious, bureaucratic components of American politics can change people's lives, for better or for worse.
"I knew there was a pretty strong dotted line between the decisions that someone at the Ellis Island port of entry made about whether or not to let my grandfather in and my stay here."
Ben-Yehuda, 40, says her interest in foreign policy was driven by her Jewish upbringing. “Part of my Jewish identity,“ she said, "was what role U.S. national security policy could play for people and how it could create a safe harbor or not."
Ben-Yehuda, 40, says her interest in foreign policy was driven by her Jewish upbringing. “Part of my Jewish identity,“ she said, "was what role U.S. national security policy could play for people and how it could create a safe harbor or not."
As a child, she skipped school to watch the speech of the United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan at the University of California, Los Angeles. She later chose George Washington University for her bachelor's degree because the school had a program where undergraduates could work in the State Department. The State Department then, as now, was experiencing a shortage of personnel to solve the problems of guaranteed security.
"America first" is how President Trump describes returning to our long-standing role as the leader of the free world and uncompromising pursuit of goals that benefit the United States and the American people. Of course, we remain citizens of the world and are aware of the need to take this into account. But the purpose of this nation and the Government we have built is to provide the benefits of freedom for our citizens. Fortunately for the rest of the world, what is good for the US is generally good for others.
==== My comment.
When the countries from which the ancestors of current Americans moved to the North American continent - in Russia, Ukraine, Ireland, Italy, etc., a situation of "social welfare" for citizens is established, will the masses of modern Americans be directed to the COUNTRIES of THEIR ANCESTORS? Not specific religious or religious-like groups, but "normal" inhabitants? I assume that "normal" American citizens of Russian, Ukrainian, Irish, Italian, etc. origin will be sentimentally interested tourists to these countries, but will remain "normal" American citizens. It's the same with American Jews.
Another important topic is principled realism, which was the subject of numerous discussions and criticism during the first year. As practiced by President Trump, realism involves putting America's interests first, but not risking abandoning the principles that make our country great. So yes, we will make profitable alliances with countries that do not have outstanding results in the field of human rights. This will be done in a coordinated pursuit of larger goals that benefit us while simultaneously exerting pressure to bring about positive change in others.
An example of such realism was the official recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and the beginning of the transfer of our embassy there. This is their capital, and the US law of 1995 required this, but three successive presidents could not do it. President Trump has decided that we will no longer play along with the Palestinian delusion that one day they will change this and completely expel the Israelis from Jerusalem and from Israel. Now peace negotiations can proceed from a realistic idea that Israel exists and its capital is Jerusalem.
Another important topic is America's return to competitive status. It seems strange that we have to do this, but the globalist agenda that Obama pursued made America not just a country among many, but a country trying to make amends for being the most powerful and productive in history. We have nothing to apologize for, and we have every right to pursue goals that benefit the people of the United States. We will do this not unfairly towards others, but fairly promoting the national interests of this country.
President Trump stated this directly in his first speech at a joint session of Congress: "My job is not to represent the world; my job is to represent the United States of America.
This is not a rejection of our role as a leader of positive change around the world. This is an understanding that we will not subordinate the interests of the United States to any organization, organization or other country. We expect that the groups to which we belong, such as the United Nations, will achieve results that will positively affect the security and prosperity of American citizens. Where there are none, we will move to change them. This is the essence of America First, a strong country that serves its people and thereby makes the world a safer and better place for everyone."
==== My comment.
If a global force would be formed that actualizes a large-scale threat to America, and this formation rolls over to America through the territory of Palestine, then America, together with local interested parties - the Israeli Jewish Mass and other inhabitants of the region - will try to weaken and delay the roll. Weaken and delay - at the appropriate tactical level, consistent with the strategy of the (regional front?) and with the America First meta-strategy.
Within this triad of metastrategy-strategy-tactics, American Jews will experience competing concerns:
- concern for the well-being/security of America and them as an organic part of America,
- concern about the next drama of the Jewish Mass concentrated in this Middle Eastern territory.
A psychological solution to this rivalry, a practical solution, will be to help the surviving and injured units of this Israeli Jewish Mass to settle down in the American environment, in other countries, in the post-war Middle Eastern territory. That arrangement, just as it was after the 2nd century with the unfinished and expelled Jews from other countries, will include various compensations, distributions of things and products, entertainment events, memorial ... Theoretically, a more worthy option for the behavior of American Jews in relation to the Israeli Jewish Mass would be:
- insisting on a combination of the direction of the American military contingent for complicity in the implementation of tactics to weaken and delay this inocivilizational onslaught and
- proactive evacuation of noncombatants (sick, old, women, children) from the war zone, evacuation - timely and equipped.
The Israeli Jewish Mass, under the imitation slogan "melting pot", is an environment fragmented by synagogues, "fellow countrymen", parties, etc. social strata; in the upper echelons, rivalry with the use of the lowest methods of struggle. A significant proportion of this Mass are elderly people and are completely absorbed in religious and cult life. Only individual hi-techs who have earned "Western" interest, working for the "West" or earning such a prospect stand out positively.
The Israel Defense Forces and other combat structures can effectively:
- to counteract small-scale "proxies" generated and directed by global world actors (the USSR, Islamism, jihadism, possibly others like it),
- to inflict destructive preventive strikes on individual points of the developing formation of a metastrategic threat to America (in Iran with its progress towards nuclear armament, with its formation of a global jihadist structure).
These features of the State of Israel, as the organizational design of the FAR-sighted Jewish Mass concentrated here, work for the "America First" meta-strategy.
Viewing the specifics of the interpretation and practical implementation of the meta-aspirations of "America First" shows that American Jews, together with the entire American people, will sacrifice their fellow tribesmen concentrated in the doomed region, and then carry out large-scale activities on various compensation benefits, distribution of things and products, entertainment events, memorial …
... . not always conscious or, even, intuitively not passed to awareness …
==== Jenna Ben-Yehuda as President and CEO, Truman National Security Project, By Jenna Ben-Yehuda, 2021:
- Jewish everyday political experience. Let me quote Ben-Yehuda.
I was 7 years old and my mom asked about my first day at school in Atlanta. "It was good," I told my mom. - But they threw pennies (pennies) at my feet?
It was 1987. I didn't understand what Jewishness had to do with pennies, or why kids were throwing them at me.
That's when I first started hearing these stories.
When my mom was 6 years old in the late 1950s in Savannah, somehow she accepted and brought a postal receipt to her mom. It included a letter from the KKK addressed to my grandparents. It listed the names and ages of my mother and her two older brothers.
It was the Clan's way of letting them know that they knew who they were.
At the age of 12, Mom was chosen by the school principal to be a friend for a new girl who entered the school. This girl and her brother were the first two black students admitted to the school in the process of integration by court order. Mom was friendly and didn't think about why she was chosen for this special role.
At the end of the day, she returned to her locker and found that he had been beaten and defiled with anti-Semitic insults. That was the day she learned the word "kike". When she was first called a "dirty Jew." One student, using the worst derogatory word for black people, accused her of being something like a racial traitor.
This was the case with me and my family, as well as with many Jews and black people who grew up in the South.
We were denied the same country clubs, hated the same groups. But it wasn't just our shared outsider status that brought us closer to African Americans. Our two communities have had a rich history of joint struggle and partnership, although over time our black brothers and sisters have continued and continue to bear a much greater burden of this hatred and discrimination. Many Jews in recent decades have gained access to levels of privilege that remain closed to black people. Now many of us consider it our duty to restore an alliance that has become worn out in some moments and completely torn apart in others.
- concern about gender equality among participants in the struggle for America's national security
www.trumanproject.org/about/letter-from-trumans-ceo
www.trumanproject.org/team/jenna-ben-yehuda: Jenna Hoffman Ben-Yehuda, as President and CEO of the Truman Center for National Policy and the Truman National Security Project, is a long-time advocate of gender equality in national security, she is the founder of the Women's Foreign Policy Network, a global community of women in international affairs in more than 100 countries. ... She is a member of the advisory boards of the Governing Council for Women in National Security, Partnership for Public Service and GLOBSEC.
The Center and the Project publish analytical materials and research on foreign policy issues, but it is best known for its complicity program. “Our mission is to unite and equip a diverse community of American leaders to develop timely, innovative and principled solutions to complex national security problems,” Ben-Yehuda explains.
==== My comment.
She felt and approximately realized that the subsystem “The Leadership Center based on the Brain Trust and through the Executive Apparatus” in the chaos of global and internal local social relations is looking for and straining to carry out purposeful adherence to the interests of the life of the American People (Electorate). she preferred to self-actualize on solving problems that were less priority for this subsystem. In her subconscious, she may have felt that the life perspective of the IEM can be provided precisely and only within the framework of the subsystem - if the focus of the Jewish mass created by American POLICY FOR American PURPOSES in the location and form of the state of Israel will be accepted as an element of the AMERICAN POPULATION MASS. But, the feeling of impossibility to achieve and, simply, to achieve such acceptance by both the Governing Center and the American population mass directed Ben-Yehuda to use himself in pragmatic tasks.
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