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Revision as of 02:01, 2 June 2006 by Kammania (talk | contribs) (Irrelevant comment deleted)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Oliver Kamm (born 1963) is a British blogger, journalist and author. He writes articles for The Times and has published the book Anti-Totalitarianism: The Left-wing Case for a Neoconservative Foreign Policy for the Social Affairs Unit. In the book he argues in favour of the 2003 Invasion of Iraq.
He studied at Wyggeston and Queen Elizabeth I College, Leicester and Oxford University and had a career in the Bank of England and the securities industry. He helped start a pan-European investment bank in 1997 and is part of its management . He is the nephew of former MP Martin Bell and was his adviser from 1997 to 2001.
Kamm was a founding signatory in 2005 of the Henry Jackson Society principles, advocating a proactive approach to the spread of liberal democracy across the world, including when necessary by military intervention.
Kamm is probably best known for his criticisms of the linguist and radical political activist Noam Chomsky. These are summarised in an article for Prospect magazine opposing its readers' choice of Chomsky in the top position for its 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll. Chomsky retorted that Kamm's article demonstrated "the lengths to which some will go to prevent exposure of state crimes and their own complicity in them". Kamm returned to the fray by claiming Chomsky had failed to quote himself correctly.
In late-2005 Kamm was co-author, with the writers David Aaronovitch and Francis Wheen, of a 4500-word complaint to The Guardian newspaper when it published a correction and apology for an interview with Chomsky by Emma Brockes. . The original interview had suggested Chomsky denied the fact of the Srebrenica massacre of 1995. The Guardian's readers' editor found that this had misrepresented Chomsky's position, and his judgment was upheld in May 2006 by an external ombudsman. .
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