"Increasingly, it appears, intelligence agencies the world over are beginning to appreciate agents with a strong academic background."<p>John Le Carre's upper-echelon spies seemed to be mostly Oxonian. I am not particularly a historian of the CIA, but its leadership seemed to have fairly expensive schooling, to, didn't they?
MintPressNews was deprecated from Wikipedia - it should not be used for any claim or purpose - because of its extensively documented history of publishing completely fabricated stories.<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_268#RfC:_MintPress_News" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Not...</a><p>Even if something in MintPressNews happens to be true that day, in general it's on the level of the Daily Mail. If you can't find a quality source for a claim in MintPressNews, you should strongly question it.
In similar fashion there are the Chicago Boys from Chile too.<p>A lot of this article, whilst interesting, comes across as a 'well yeah'. And with a school with so many apparent connections, I would believe people would want to study there even if there was opposing ideology.