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Myers took the journalists who exposed the USAID-OTI program to task, claiming that "individual grants were pulled out of context and described as failures without heed to their actual goals," provoking an unfair "Capitol Hill pillorying."
He lamented that the exposure of covert programs like these had forced USAID officials to pursue "the opposite of the programming most likely to produce real impact in a hard aid environment." In other words, fear of public scrutiny had complicated efforts to subvert societies targeted by the US for regime change and he didn't like it one bit.
To Syracuse University professor of African American studies Horace Campbell, youthful cadres like Myers were a symptom of the American university's transformation into a neoliberal training ground.
"Many idealistic graduates from elite centers such as the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, the Maxwell School of Citizenship of Syracuse University or the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University among others had been seduced" into careers with USAID contractors like Creative Associates, Chemonics, and McKinsey, Campbell lamented in a lengthy 2014 survey of the OTI's sordid record.
"It has been painful," the professor wrote, "to see the ways in which the so called NGO initiatives have been refined over the past 20 years to support neoliberalism and to depoliticize idealistic students."
Campbell's comments painted a clear portrait of Myers, who earned his master's degree at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School on his way towards becoming a "hard aid" specialist at USAID.
They also captured the psychology of Buttigieg, who celebrated Bernie Sanders as a hero when he was a high school senior, and spoke out against the Iraq war as a Harvard junior before being absorbed into the culture of McKinsey and DC institutions like the Truman Center.
The Truman showWhen Pete Buttigieg made his journey to Somaliland in 2008, he had just earned a fellowship at the Truman Center, a Washington-based think tank that provided a steppingstone for national security-minded whiz kids like him to leadership positions in the Democratic Party.
Buttigieg likely earned the fellowship after answering an ad like the one the Truman Center published on the website of the Harvard Law School Student Government in 2010. Soliciting applicants for its security fellowship, the center declared that it was seeking "exceptionally accomplished and dedicated men and women who share President Truman's belief in muscular internationalism, and who believe that strong national security and strong liberal values are not antagonistic, but are two sides of the same coin."
This was not the first time Buttigieg had dipped his toes into Washington's national security swamp. After graduating from Harvard, he worked at the Cohen Group, a consulting firm founded by former Secretary of Defense William Cohen that maintained an extensive client list within the arms industry. (As The Grayzone reported, the Cohen Group has been intimately involved in the Trump administration's bungling regime change attempt in Venezuela).
But it was Buttigieg's fellowship at the Truman Center that placed him on the casting couch before the Democratic Party's foreign policy mandarins.
A Tablet Magazine profile of Truman Center founder Rachel Kleinfeld described her as a "gatekeeper and ringleader" whose network of former fellows spanned Congress and the Obama administration's National Security Council. Her career trajectory mirrored Buttigieg's.
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