Abstract

Former President and Director of Central Intelligence George Bush signed the Intelligence Authorization Act in December 1991. The National Security Education Act (NSEA), a little known provision of this huge bill, created the National Security Education Board, funding it with $150 million to implement a variety of measures affecting higher education. It aims to provide universities with the “necessary resources, accountability and flexibility to meet the national security education needs of the United States” by improving the “quantity, diversity and quality of the teaching and learning of subjects in the fields of foreign languages, area studies and other international fields that are critical to the Nation's interest.” Stripped of its packaging as an “educational” initiative, the real purpose of the act is to help the U.S. government's intelligence branches fill their appointed roles in the New World Order. In spite of the rhetoric of change emanating from Washington, there is ample evidence that the ce...

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