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    Council on Foreign Relations-the real power in the US

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_on ... _Relations

    Where money, power and media come together to pull the wool over our eyes. Unelected and undetected!

    The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is an American nonpartisan foreign policy membership organization founded in 1921 and based at 58 East 68th Street (at Park Avenue) in New York City, with an additional office in Washington, D.C. Some international journalists and American
    paleoconservatives believe it to be the most powerful private organization to influence United States foreign policy.[1][2][3][4][5] It publishes the bi-monthly journal Foreign Affairs. It has an extensive website, featuring links to its think tank, The David Rockefeller Studies Program, other programs and projects, publications, history, biographies of notable directors and other board members, corporate members, and press releases.[6]


    The Council's mission is promoting understanding of foreign policy and the United States' role in the world. Meetings are convened at which government officials, global leaders and prominent members debate major foreign-policy issues. It has a think tank that employs prominent scholars in international affairs and it commissions subsequent books and reports. A central aim of the Council, it states, is to "find and nurture the next generation of foreign policy leaders." It established "Independent Task Forces" in 1995, which encourage policy debate. Comprising experts with diverse backgrounds and expertise, these task forces seek consensus in making policy recommendations on critical issues; to date, the Council has convened more than fifty times.[6]
    The internal think tank is The David Rockefeller Studies Program, which grants fellowships and whose programs are described as being integral to the goal of contributing to the ongoing debate on foreign policy; fellows in this program research and write on the most important challenges facing the United States and the world.[7]
    At the outset of the organization, founding member Elihu Root said the group's mission, epitomized in its journal Foreign Affairs, should be to "guide" American public opinion. In the early 1970s, the CFR changed the mission, saying that it wished instead to "inform" public opinion.[8]
    [edit]Early history

    The earliest origin of the Council stemmed from a working fellowship of about 150 scholars, called "The Inquiry," tasked to brief President Woodrow Wilson about options for the postwar world when Germany was defeated. Through 1917–1918, this academic band, including Wilson's closest adviser and long-time friend Col. Edward M. House, as well as Walter Lippmann, gathered at 155th Street and Broadway in New York City, to assemble the strategy for the postwar world. The team produced more than 2,000 documents detailing and analyzing the political, economic, and social facts globally that would be helpful for Wilson in the peace talks. Their reports formed the basis for the Fourteen Points, which outlined Wilson's strategy for peace after war's end.[9]
    These scholars then traveled to the Paris Peace Conference, 1919 that would end the war; it was at one of the meetings of a small group of British and American diplomats and scholars, on May 30, 1919, at the Hotel Majestic, that both the Council and its British counterpart, the Chatham House in London, were born.[10] Although the original intent was for the two organizations to be affiliated, they became independent bodies, yet retained close informal ties.[11]
    Some of the participants at that meeting, apart from Edward House, were Paul Warburg, Herbert Hoover, Harold Temperley, Lionel Curtis, Lord Eustace Percy, Christian Herter, and American academic historians James Thomson Shotwell of Columbia University, Archibald Cary Coolidge of Harvard, and Charles Seymour of Yale.
    [edit]About the organization

    From its inception the Council was non-partisan, welcoming members of both Democratic and Republican parties. It also welcomed Jews and African Americans, although women were initially barred from membership. Its proceedings were almost universally private and confidential.[12] It has exerted influence on U.S. foreign policy from the beginning, due to its roster of State Department and other government officials as members; as such, it has been the focus of many controversies.[13] A study by two critics of the organization, Laurence Shoup and William Minter, found that of 502 government officials surveyed from 1945 to 1972, more than half were members of the Council.[14]
    Today it has about 4,300 members (including five-year term members), which over its history have included senior serving politicians, more than a dozen Secretaries of State, former national security officers, bankers, lawyers, professors, former CIA members and senior media figures. As a private institution however, the CFR maintains through its official website that it is not a formal organization engaged in U.S. foreign policy-making.[citation needed]
    In 1962, the group began a program of bringing select Air Force officers to the Harold Pratt House to study alongside its scholars. The Army, Navy and Marine Corps requested they start similar programs for their own officers.[14]
    Vietnam created a rift within the organization. When Hamilton Fish Armstrong announced in 1970 that he would be leaving the helm of Foreign Affairs after 45 years, new chairman David Rockefeller approached a family friend, William Bundy, to take over the position. Anti-war advocates within the Council rose in protest against this appointment, claiming that Bundy's hawkish record in the State and Defense Departments and the CIA precluded him from taking over an independent journal. Some considered Bundy a war criminal for his prior actions.[14]
    Seven American presidents have addressed the Council, two while still in office – Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.[15]
    Journalist Joseph Kraft, a former member of both the CFR and the Trilateral Commission, said the Council "comes close to being an organ of what C. Wright Mills has called the Power Elite – a group of men, similar in interest and outlook, shaping events from invulnerable positions behind the scenes."[16]
    Economist John Kenneth Galbraith resigned in 1970, objecting to the Council's policy of allowing government officials to conduct twice-a-year off-the-record briefings with business officials in its Corporation Service.[17] The Council says that it has never sought to serve as a receptacle for government policy papers that cannot be shared with the public, and they do not encourage government officials who are members to do so. The Council says that discussions at its headquarters remain confidential, not because they share or discuss secret information, but because the system allows members to test new ideas with other members.[18]
    Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., in his book on the Kennedy presidency, A Thousand Days, wrote that Kennedy was not part of what he called the "New York establishment":
    "In particular, he was little acquainted with the New York financial and legal community-- that arsenal of talent which had so long furnished a steady supply of always orthodox and often able people to Democratic as well as Republican administrations. This community was the heart of the American Establishment. Its household deities were Henry Stimson and Elihu Root; its present leaders, Robert Lovett and John J. McCloy; its front organizations, the Rockefeller, Ford and Carnegie foundations and the Council on Foreign Relations; its organs, the New York Times and Foreign Affairs."[19]
    [edit]Morgan and Rockefeller involvement

    The Americans who subsequently returned from the conference became drawn to a discreet club of New York financiers and international lawyers who had organized previously in June 1918 and was headed by Elihu Root, J. P. Morgan's lawyer;[16] this select group called itself the Council on Foreign Relations.[10] They joined this group and the Council was formally established in New York on July 29, 1921, with 108 founding members, including Elihu Root as a leading member, geographer Isaiah Bowman as a founding Director, and John W. Davis, the chief counsel for J. P. Morgan & Co. and former Solicitor General for President Wilson,[16] as its founding president. Davis was to become Democratic presidential candidate in 1924.
    Other members included John Foster Dulles, Herbert H. Lehman, Henry L. Stimson, Averell Harriman, the Rockefeller family's public relations expert, Ivy Lee,[20] and Paul M. Warburg and Otto Kahn of the investment bank Kuhn, Loeb.[16]
    The Council initially had strong connections to the Morgan interests, such as the lawyer, Paul Cravath, whose pre-eminent New York law firm (later named Cravath, Swaine & Moore) represented Morgan businesses; a Morgan partner, Russell Cornell Leffingwell, later became its first chairman. The head of the group's finance committee was Alexander Hemphill, chairman of Morgan's Guaranty Trust Company. Economist Edwin F. Gay, editor of the New York Evening Post, owned by Morgan partner Thomas W. Lamont, served as Secretary-Treasurer of the organization. Other members related to Morgan included Frank L. Polk, former Under-Secretary of State and attorney for J.P. Morgan & Co. Former Wilson Under-Secretary of State Norman H. Davis was a banking associate of the Morgans.[16] Over time, however, the locus of power shifted inexorably to the Rockefeller family. Paul Cravath's law firm also represented the Rockefeller family.[21] Edwin Gay suggested the creation of a quarterly journal, Foreign Affairs. He recommended Archibald Cary Coolidge be installed as the first editor, along with his New York Evening Post reporter, Hamilton Fish Armstrong, as assistant editor and executive director of the Council.[16]
    Even from its inception, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. was a regular benefactor, making annual contributions, as well as a large gift of money towards its first headquarters on East 65th Street, along with corporate donors .[22] In 1944, the widow of Standard Oil executive Harold I. Pratt donated the family's four-story mansion on the corner of 68th Street and Park Avenue for council use and this became the CFR's new headquarters, known as The Harold Pratt House, where it remains today.
    Several of Rockefeller's sons joined the council when they came of age; David Rockefeller joined the council as its youngest-ever director in 1949 and subsequently became chairman of the board from 1970 to 1985; today he serves as honorary chairman.[23] The major philanthropic organization he founded with his brothers in 1940, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, has also provided funding to the Council, from 1953 to at least 1980.[24]
    Another major support base from the outset was the corporate sector; around 26 corporations provided financial assistance in the 1920s, seizing the opportunity to inject their business concerns into the weighty deliberations of the academics and scholars in the Council's ruling elite. In addition, the Carnegie Corporation contributed funds in 1937 to expand the Council's reach by replicating its structure in a diminished form in eight American cities.[25]
    John J. McCloy became an influential figure in the organization after the Second World War, and he held connections to both the Morgans and Rockefellers. As assistant to Secretary of War (and J. P. Morgan attorney) Henry Stimson during World War II, he had presided over important American war policies; his brother-in-law John Zinsser was on the board of directors of JP Morgan & Co. during that time, and after the war McCloy joined New York law firm Milbank, Tweed, Hope, Hadley & McCloy as a partner. The company had long served as legal counsel to the Rockefeller family and the Chase Manhattan bank. McCloy became Chairman of the Board of Chase Manhattan, a director of the Rockefeller Foundation and Chairman of the Board of the CFR from 1953 to 1970. President Harry S. Truman appointed him President of the World Bank Group and U.S. High Commissioner to Germany. He served as a special adviser on disarmament to President John F. Kennedy and chaired a special committee on the Cuban crisis. He was said to have had the largest influence on American foreign policy of anyone after World War II. McCloy's brother-in-law, Lewis W. Douglas, also served on the board of the CFR and as a trustee for the Rockefeller Foundation; Truman appointed him as American ambassador to Great Britain.[16]
    [edit]Influence on foreign policy

    Beginning in 1939 and lasting for five years, the Council achieved much greater prominence with government and the State Department when it established the strictly confidential War and Peace Studies, funded entirely by the Rockefeller Foundation.[26] The secrecy surrounding this group was such that the Council members (total at the time: 663) who were not involved in its deliberations were completely unaware of the study group's existence.[26]
    It was divided into four functional topic groups: economic and financial, security and armaments, territorial, and political. The security and armaments group was headed by Allen Welsh Dulles who later became a pivotal figure in the CIA's predecessor, the OSS. It ultimately produced 682 memoranda for the State Department, marked classified and circulated among the appropriate government departments. As a historical judgment, its overall influence on actual government planning at the time is still said to remain unclear.[26]
    In an anonymous piece called "The Sources of Soviet Conduct" that appeared in Foreign Affairs in 1947, CFR study group member George Kennan coined the term "containment." The essay would prove to be highly influential in US foreign policy for seven upcoming presidential administrations. 40 years later, Kennan explained that he had never meant to contain the Soviet Union because it might be able to physically attack the United States; he thought that was obvious enough that he didn't need to explain it in his essay. William Bundy credited the CFR's study groups with helping to lay the framework of thinking that led to the Marshall Plan and NATO. Due to new interest in the group, membership grew towards 1,000.[27]
    Dwight D. Eisenhower chaired a CFR study group while he served as President of Columbia University. One member later said, "whatever General Eisenhower knows about economics, he has learned at the study group meetings."[27] The CFR study group devised an expanded study group called "Americans for Eisenhower" to increase his chances for the presidency. Eisenhower would later draw many Cabinet members from CFR ranks and become a CFR member himself. His primary CFR appointment was Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. As an attorney for Standard Oil and a longtime board member of the Rockefeller Foundation, Dulles maintained strong ties to the Council and to the Rockefellers.[16] Dulles gave a public address at the Harold Pratt House in which he announced a new direction for Eisenhower's foreign policy: "There is no local defense which alone will contain the mighty land power of the communist world. Local defenses must be reinforced by the further deterrent of massive retaliatory power." After this speech, the council convened a session on "Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy" and chose Henry Kissinger to head it. Kissinger spent the following academic year working on the project at Council headquarters. The book of the same name that he published from his research in 1957 gave him national recognition, topping the national bestseller lists.[27]
    On 24 November 1953, a study group heard a report from political scientist William Henderson regarding the ongoing conflict between France and Vietnamese Communist leader Ho Chi Minh's Viet Minh forces, a struggle that would later become known as the First Indochina War. Henderson argued that Ho's cause was primarily nationalist in nature and that Marxism had "little to do with the current revolution." Further, the report said, the United States could work with Ho to guide his movement away from Communism. State Department officials, however, expressed skepticism about direct American intervention in Vietnam and the idea was tabled. Over the next twenty years, the United States would find itself allied with anti-Communist South Vietnam and against Ho and his supporters in Vietnam War.[27]
    The Council served as a "breeding ground" for important American policies such as mutual deterrence, arms control, and nuclear non-proliferation.[27]
    A four-year long study of relations between America and China was conducted by the Council between 1964 and 1968. One study published in 1966 concluded that American citizens were more open to talks with China than their elected leaders. Kissinger had continued to publish in Foreign Affairs and was appointed by President Nixon to serve as National Security Adviser in 1969. In 1971, he embarked on a secret trip to Beijing to broach talks with Chinese leaders. Nixon went to China in 1972, and diplomatic relations were completely normalized by President Carter's Secretary of State, another Council member, Cyrus Vance.[27]
    In November 1979, while chairman of the CFR, David Rockefeller became embroiled in an international incident when he and Henry Kissinger, along with John J. McCloy and Rockefeller aides, persuaded President Jimmy Carter through the State Department to admit the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, into the US for hospital treatment for lymphoma. This action directly precipitated what is known as the Iran hostage crisis and placed Rockefeller under intense media scrutiny (particularly from The New York Times) for the first time in his public life.[28]
    [edit]Membership

    There are two types of membership: life, and term membership, which lasts for 5 years and is available to those between 30 and 36. Only U.S. citizens (native born or naturalised) and permanent residents who have applied for U.S. citizenship are eligible. A candidate for life membership must be nominated in writing by one Council member and seconded by a minimum of three others.[29]
    Corporate membership (250 in total) is divided into "Basic", "Premium" ($25,000+) and "President's Circle" ($50,000+). All corporate executive members have opportunities to hear distinguished speakers, such as overseas presidents and prime ministers, chairmen and CEOs of multinational corporations, and U.S. officials and Congressmen. President and premium members are also entitled to other benefits, including attendance at small, private dinners or receptions with senior American officials and world leaders.[30]
    [edit]Members
    [edit]Board of directors
    OFFICE NAME
    Co-Chairman of the Board Carla A. Hills
    Co-Chairman of the Board Robert E. Rubin
    Vice Chairman Alexandre Louise Mohan
    President Richard N. Haass
    Board of Directors
    Director Peter Ackerman
    Director Fouad Ajami
    Director Madeleine Albright
    Director Charlene Barshefsky
    Director Henry Bienen
    Director Alan Blinder
    Director Stephen W. Bosworth
    Director Tom Brokaw
    Director Sylvia Mathews Burwell
    Director Frank J. Caufield
    Director Kenneth Duberstein
    Director Martin Feldstein
    Director Richard N. Foster
    Director Stephen Friedman
    Director Ann M. Fudge
    Director Helene D. Gayle
    Director Maurice R. Greenberg
    Director J. Tomilson Hill
    Director Richard Holbrooke
    Director Karen Elliott House
    Director Alberto Ibargüen
    Director Shirley Ann Jackson
    Director Henry Kravis
    Director Jami Miscik
    Director Michael H. Moskow
    Director Joseph Nye
    Director Ronald L. Olson
    Director James W. Owens
    Director Colin Powell
    Director David Rubenstein
    Director George E. Rupp
    Director Anne-Marie Slaughter
    Director Joan E. Spero
    Director Vin Weber
    Director Christine Todd Whitman
    Director Fareed Zakaria
    The Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations is composed in total of thirty-six officers. Peter G. Peterson and David Rockefeller are Directors Emeriti (Chairman Emeritus and Honorary Chairman, respectively). It also has an International Advisory Board consisting of thirty-five distinguished individuals from across the world.[6][31]
    [edit]Corporate Members
    ABC News
    Alcoa
    American Express
    AIG
    Bank of America
    Bloomberg L.P.
    Boeing
    BP
    CA, Inc.
    Chevron
    Citigroup
    Coca-Cola
    De Beers
    Deutsche Bank
    Duke Energy
    DVS Group
    ExxonMobil
    FedEx
    Ford Motor
    General Electric
    GlaxoSmithKline
    Google
    Halliburton
    Heinz
    Hess
    IBM
    JPMorgan Chase
    Kohlberg Kravis Roberts
    Lockheed Martin
    MasterCard
    McGraw-Hill
    McKinsey
    Merck
    Merrill Lynch
    Morgan Stanley
    Motorola
    NASDAQ
    News Corp
    Nike
    PepsiCo
    Pfizer
    Shell Oil
    Sony Corporation of America
    Tata Group
    Time Warner
    Total S.A.
    Toyota Motor North America
    UBS
    United Technologies
    United States Chamber of Commerce
    U.S. Trust Corporation
    Verizon
    Visa[32]
    [edit]Notable current council members
    Angelina Jolie (UN Goodwill Ambassador)[33]
    Roger St. Moritz
    Erin Burnett - CNBC News Anchor [34]
    Timothy Geithner[35]
    [edit]Notable historical members
    Graham Allison
    Robert Orville Anderson
    Les Aspin
    J. Bowyer Bell[36]
    W. Michael Blumenthal
    Harold Brown
    Zbigniew Brzezinski
    William P. Bundy
    George H. W. Bush
    Dick Cheney
    William S. Cohen
    Warren Christopher
    E. Gerald Corrigan
    William J. Crowe
    Kenneth W. Dam
    John W. Davis
    Norman Davis
    C. Douglas Dillon
    Thomas R. Donahue
    Lewis W. Douglas
    Elizabeth Drew
    Peggy Dulany
    Allen Welsh Dulles
    Dianne Feinstein
    Tom Foley
    Leslie H. Gelb
    David Gergen
    Louis V. Gerstner, Jr.
    Maurice R. Greenberg
    Alan Greenspan
    Chuck Hagel
    Najeeb E. Halaby
    W. Averell Harriman
    Theodore M. Hesburgh
    Carla A. Hills
    Stanley Hoffmann
    Richard Holbrooke
    James R. Houghton
    Charlayne Hunter-Gault
    Bobby Ray Inman
    Otto H. Kahn
    Nicholas Katzenbach
    Lane Kirkland
    Jeane Kirkpatrick
    Roger T. Moritz
    Walter Lippmann
    Winston Lord
    Charles Mathias, Jr.
    John McCain
    John J. McCloy
    William J. McDonough
    Donald F. McHenry
    George J. Mitchell
    Bill Moyers
    Peter George Peterson
    Frank Polk
    John S. Reed
    Elliot L. Richardson
    Alice M. Rivlin
    David Rockefeller
    Jay Rockefeller
    Robert Roosa
    Elihu Root
    William D. Ruckelshaus
    Brent Scowcroft
    Donna E. Shalala
    George P. Shultz
    Theodore Sorensen
    George Soros
    Adlai E. Stevenson
    Strobe Talbott
    Peter Tarnoff
    Fred Thompson
    Garrick Utley
    Cyrus Vance
    Paul Volcker
    Paul M. Warburg
    Paul Warnke
    Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.
    Owen D. Young
    Robert Zoellick
    Source: The Council on Foreign Relations from 1921 to 1996:Historical Roster of Directors and Officers[37]
    [edit]List of chairmen and chairwomen
    Russell Cornell Leffingwell 1946-1953
    John J. McCloy 1953-1970
    David Rockefeller 1970-1985
    Peter George Peterson 1985-2007
    Carla A. Hills (co-chairman) 2007-
    Robert E. Rubin (co-chairman) 2007-
    [edit]List of presidents
    John W. Davis 1921-1933
    George W. Wickersham 1933-1936
    Norman Davis 1936-1944
    Russell Cornell Leffingwell 1944-1946
    Allen Welsh Dulles 1946-1950
    Henry Merritt Wriston 1951-1964
    Grayson L. Kirk 1964-1971
    Bayless Manning 1971-1977
    Winston Lord 1977-1985
    John Temple Swing 1985-1986 (Pro tempore)
    Peter Tarnoff 1986-1993
    Alton Frye 1993
    Leslie Gelb 1993-2003
    Richard N. Haass 2003-
    Source:The Council on Foreign Relations from 1921 to 1996: Historical Roster of Directors and Officers[38]
    [edit]Controversy

    The Council has been the subject of many conspiracy theories, as shown in the popular documentary of 2007 Zeitgeist. This is partly due to the number of high-ranking government officials in its membership, among with world business leaders, its secrecy clauses, and the large number of aspects of American foreign policy that its members have been involved with, beginning with Wilson's Fourteen Points. The John Birch Society believes that the CFR plans a one-world government.[39] Wilson's Fourteen Points speech was the first in which he suggested a worldwide security organization to prevent future world wars.[9]
    For more than a century ideological extremists at either end of the political spectrum have seized upon well-publicized incidents such as my encounter with Castro to attack the Rockefeller family for the inordinate influence they claim we wield over American political and economic institutions. Some even believe we are part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of the United States, characterizing my family and me as "internationalists" and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure — one world, if you will. If that's the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it.
    —David Rockefeller, "Memoirs" autobiography (2002, Random House publishers), page 405
    Historian Carroll Quigley included the CFR in his discussion of the Anglo-American Establishment's efforts to shape international developments during the 20th century. His book "Tragedy and Hope" was cited by conspiracy theorists as showing that the CFR was engaged in a conspiracy against American interests, though Quigley himself denied this.[40]
    [edit]See also

    Bilderberg Group
    Brookings Institution
    Globality
    RAND

  2. #2
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Council on Foreign Relations-the real power in the US
    Theres no doubt in my Military Mind
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  3. #3
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    There's no doubt in my civilian mind
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  4. #4
    Senior Member Rockfish's Avatar
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    The preceeding was a list of our enemies. They are scum in regard to our Constitution and our Liberty.
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  5. #5
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Can you add the Bilderberg group to that please!
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  6. #6
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    moving to other topics
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