This annual affair is essentially a social gathering of the folks
with the most responsibility in the world. They can really screw
things up and it gives comfort to know that they can speak to their
counterparts on a friendly basis with a common set of assumptions. I
suspect North Korea is not invited.
The opinions listened to do matter just because it sets terms of
engagement that may be right or wrong but will exist. Recall the
nonsense around global warming. A session such as this one can put
an agenda firmly on the road or alternatively kill it for a
generation.
The group by its nature is likely barely effective, but realistically
it is all we presently have until the establishment of the Communion
of Zanadu as described in my unpublished manuscript ' Paradigms
shift'.
Bilderberg Group?
No conspiracy, just the most influential group in the world
Conspiracy theorists
claim it is a shadow world government. Former leading members tell
the Telegraph it was the most useful meeting they ever went to and it
was crucial in forming the European Union. Today, the Bilderberg
Group meets in Britain.
Matthew Holehouse
9:56AM BST 06 Jun 2013
“The abuse is
terrible,” said Peter Mandelson, leading the walking party through
the throng of protesters and carrying the group’s uniform orange
ski jacket under his arm.
Amid the din, Peer
Steinbruck, the former German Finance Minister, pointedly refused to
break off his conversation with Thomas Enders, the head of defence
giant EADS. Behind him, Eric Schmidt, the Google chairman, picked up
the pace along the narrow road and kept his eyes fixed on the
Suvretta hotel ahead. Franco Bernabe, the vice chairman of Rothschild
Europe, grinned through the chorus of booing and chanting in German
down megaphones, before ducking under the police tape and into the
safety of the hotel's grounds.
It was June 2011.
Demonstrations were sweeping through the stricken eurozone, China and
North Africa. And in tranquil St Moritz, high in the Swiss alps, half
a dozen of the most powerful men in the West had taken a break from a
weekend of intensive and strictly confidential debate to walk in the
woods, when their paths crossed with the protesters who had come from
around the world to keep an eye on them.
The gathering was
entirely innocent, the walking party would insist. But what were they
doing there?
No such encounters
will take place in Watford this week, as the Bilderberg, the annual
conference for 140 of the world’s most powerful, meet for four days
at The Grove, a £300-a-night golf hotel close to the M25. The entire
hotel has been booked out, and a high fence erected around the
exclusion zone. Armed checkpoints have been set up on local roads,
and locals must show their passports to enter their own driveways.
The Home Office may foot the bill. A US news site dedicated to
uncovering conspiracies had booked a room for last week but were told
by phone not to turn up.
The Bilderberg was
founded in 1954 to bring the leaders of Western Europe and the United
States closer as the Soviet Union cemented its control of the Eastern
bloc. They met first at the Bilderberg Hotel, near Arnhem, at the
instigation of Joseph Retinger, a Polish polio victim who had fought
the Nazis during the war. Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands was the
chair. In that first meeting, the participants – including bankers,
economists, and the future Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell – debated
the Communist threat and the prospect of European integration.
Publicly, the group
says it is still merely a debating society – a forum for leaders to
"listen, reflect and gather insights" unbound by official
policy positions.
But while they rankle
at the conspiracy theorists, former leaders of the Bilderberg
confences says they were the most important events they ever went to,
and the freedom of speaking away from the ears of Whitehall officials
meant the discussions that took place decisively shaped modern
Europe.
It is above all a club
for life’s winners. George Osborne, Ed Balls and Ken Clarke, the
Cabinet Minister who also serves on the group’s steering committee,
will arrive this afternoon, as will Mr Mandelson. They will be joined
by Jose Manuel Barroso, the President of the European Commission;
Christine Lagarde, the head of the IMF; Francois Fillon, the former
French Prime Minister; Robert Rubin and Timothy Geithner, the former
secretaries to the US Treasury; and serving prime ministers, foreign
ministers and finance ministers from across north west Europe.
The chairmen and chief
executives of some of the world’s biggest businesses will attend,
with a combined wealth running into hundreds of millions of pounds –
from Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Amazon, Google, Shell, HSBC, Lazard,
Prudential and Alcoa. Henri de Castries, the chairman of the
Bilderberg, is the head of AXA, the insurance giant. Peter Thiel, the
billionaire founder of PayPal, is also on the guest list. Goldman
Sachs and BP have in recent years been donors to the British
committee organising this week's gathering.
Then there are the
defence officials: Olivier de Bavinchove, the commander of Eurocorps,
the EU’s standing army; Sherard Cowper-Cowles, the former British
diplomat who now works for BAE Systems; Robert Kaplan, the chief
analyst at intelligence firm Stratfor; Henry Kissinger, the former US
secretary of state; and David Petraeus, the former US commander in
Afghanistan who briefly ran the CIA. Those are the publicly issued
names. A source involved in this year’s planning admits sometimes
others may turn up, “just for the day”.
On the agenda is
economic growth, big data, Africa, medical research and the rise of
cyber warfare. The future of the welfare state is likely to be
discussed, as one topic is titled "jobs, entitlement and debt".
Another session is called simply "current affairs".
The debates take place
with the delegates seated together in one large room. Some prepare
written papers. It is bad form not to join in the discussion; they
are not there to listen, a source says. On Saturday afternoon there
will be time for golf, followed by dinner at which guests are seated
alphabetically. Discussions are minuted and a report of what each
guest said circulated, former guests say, but there are no formal
resolutions voted on or policies adopted.
Few want to talk about
it. I’m out of the office when Baroness Williams of Crosby returns
my call, but when her secretary learns it is about the Bilderberg she
says she cannot speak. The Treasury’s press office do not answer
emails asking whether the Chancellor has arranged any meetings with
delegates in advance, and if he is attending in an official capacity,
or what he might say. Ed Balls’s staff are similarly shy.
Emanuele Ottolenghi,
an expert in Iran at the Washington think thank Foundation for the
Defense of Democracies who will sit next to Osborne at dinner,
politely emails: “The conference is off the record. I will,
therefore, be unable to comment on it, before or after.”
I asked if he will
make a case for the defence of off-the-record meetings. They are far
from unique to the Bilderberg. He replies with a link to an old
Daniel Pipes essay on the rise of conspiracy theories, which argues
they have flourished in the States amongst the politically
disaffected, the hard Right and, controversially, the black
community. “I sympathise with your point of view, and can recommend
this as a frame of reference,” he says.
And the conspiracy
theoretician-in-chief is Daniel Estulin, a 46-year-old Lithuanian and
the author of the best-selling The True Story of the Bilderberg
Group. Fidel Castro, the former Cuban leader, is a fan. It argues the
group’s founders were former Nazis, and it now gathers to choose
presidents and control the media.
“Bilderberg is not a
conspiracy theory. It’s a conspiracy reality,” he writes from
Moscow, where he is filming his weekly show for Russia Today, the
Kremlin-backed broadcaster. “It was a vehicle through which private
financier oligarchical interests were able to impose their policies
on nominally sovereign governments. The idea is the creation of a
global network of cartels, more powerful than any nation on Earth,
destined to control the necessities of life of the rest of humanity.”
A major victory, he
tells me, was engineering the 1973 oil price shock to prop up the
dollar and make Wall Street rich. He sends me long lens photographs
he took of de Castries and Richard Holbrooke, the US diplomat,
relaxing in chinos and linen jackets at a gathering in Italy. He's
unsure what they were up to.
But high on the agenda
in Watford will be Eric Schmidt and Google, his sources say. “It is
an integral part of the United States security apparatus. Your
information is processed, analysed and stored for later use,” he
adds. He adds: “Limitless anything spells c-o-n-t-r-o-l.”
He asks for a copy of
the guest list. I direct him to a newspaper story, taken from a press
release on the Bilderberg's official website.
“Lots of the stuff
written about it is a load of crap,” says Lord Healey of Riddleden,
who served as Chancellor to Harold Wilson and James Callaghan. He
would know. He attended the first Bilderberg meeting in 1954 and sat
on the steering committee for forty years.
“Those who weren’t
invited were very jealous. Some people described it as a secret
Communist organisation. Others said it was a secret American
organisation. But it was balls.”
For much of the
post-War era Healey helped set the agenda and chose the delegates. He
is proud of their record in spotting future leaders. Bill Clinton and
Tony Blair were invited early in their careers. “The steering
committee, because of their wide range of backgrounds, made some very
good choices,” he says.
Lord Carrington is
also frustrated at the theories. “I remember there was this
American who thinks it’s a great conspiracy and the Queen is
involved, and probably Satan,” he said.
Carrington, now 93,
was Margaret Thatcher’s foreign secretary during the Falklands War,
and after leading Nato he served as chairman of the Bilderberg in the
1990s. He has never spoken publicly about the role before.
“The reason people
talk about conspiracy is if you want people to speak freely on
matters of importance, either financial or political, they don’t
want every word they say reported in the press. It’s been secret in
that sense,” he says.
Healey is sure of the
influence of the group. At 95, his memory for dates and speeches has
dimmed, but he recalls discussing at length the Vietnam war with
Henry Kissinger.
Most vividly, he
recalls its role in bringing the architects of the European
integration – Schmidt, Pompidou, Giscard d’Estaing, Leone –
together for open-ended discussions with bankers and economists about
how the European monetary system might work.
“The great advantage
of the Bilderberg thing was they did not have to reach agreement. You
had time to discuss things with people who influence events who
normally you would not meet at all.”
He adds: “People
could talk very freely, much more freely than they would at home.”
Would the European
Union and single currency have taken the shape they have now without
those early Bilderberg meetings, I ask him.
“I think it was a
very important element in it. Whether it would have happened without
it is difficult to say,” he says.
Other accounts suggest
the annual meeting can be decisive.
Alexandre Lamfalussy,
the banker who went on to run the European Monetary Institute, the
forerunner to the ECB, recalls sitting next to Helmut Kohl, the West
German chancellor, at the Bilderberg in the mid-1980s. He was asked
whether Germany would ever be unified. It was inflammatory, and
publicly unutterable, with Soviet troops still occupying the East.
“It’s going to happen,” Kohl said. “Forget about your
reticence, you will have to understand that German division will not
endure.” Americans at the table thought, at first, he was joking.
Similarly, according
to the author Jon Ronson, during the Falklands War David Owen managed
to turn the weight of world opinion with a single speech demanding
sanctions on Argentina before an audience of foreign ministers at
Bilderberg. The sanctions were later imposed.
And for business
leaders, it is a perfect opportunity to lay the groundwork for deals.
According to Tom Bergin’s Spills and Spin, the account of the Gulf
of Mexico oil disaster, Lord Browne, the head of BP, used a walk by
Lake Como at the 2004 gathering in Italy to suggest a vast merger
with Shell to create the world’s biggest oil company. Lord Browne
left under the impression it would happen.
Such cosiness, critics
say, is a threat to democracy.
“If our politicians
want to be wined and dined in luxury for three days with Goldman
Sachs, that seems to me a little bit like lobbying,” says Hannah
Borno, a journalist and transparency campaigner, who will be outside
The Grove today. She wants the minutes of the discussions to be
published. She is puzzled as to how the Bilderberg Association is
granted tax exemption as a charity, when groups such as private
schools usually need to pass a public benefit test.
She adds: “Conspiracy
theories have served the group quite well, because any serious
scrutiny could be dismissed as hysterical and shrill. But look at the
participant list. These people have cleared days from their extremely
busy schedules."
Such scrutiny would
kill the Bilderberg, delegates insist, and as a consequence
international relations would suffer.
“I found it the most
useful of all the meetings I attended regularly. The Bilderberg was
the best because the level of the people attending regularly was so
much higher,” says Healey. “There was the Atlantic Institute
which discussed the Americans’ and Canadians’ issues, and there
was the purely European one, which used to meet in Germany. But
Bilderberg was the most useful of the lot.”
Healey, who like
Carrington served in the war, writes of the meetings in his memoirs:
“Experience has taught me that lack of understanding is the main
cause of all evil in public affairs. Nothing is more likely to
produce understanding than the sort of personal contact which
involves people not just officials or representatives, but human
beings.”
Carrington also
enjoyed the equality shared amongst the leaders when away from the
office.
“The fact they were
whatever they were made no difference, because everybody was pretty
distinguished,” he says. “They behaved like ordinary people, if
you can believe that.”
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