Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
The CFR's Annual Report for July 1, 1993 - June 30, 1994, page 4,
states: "The Council on Foreign Relations is a nonprofit and nonpartisan
membership organization dedicated to improving the understanding of U.S. foreign
policy and international affairs through the exchange of ideas.
The Council was founded in 1921 shortly after the end of World War
I. Several of the American participants in the Paris Peace Conference decided
that it was time for more private American citizens to become familiar with the
increasing international responsibilities and obligations of the United States.
This decision led to the creation of an organization dedicated to the continuous
study of U.S. foreign policy for the benefit of both its members and a wider
audience of interested Americans."
"The New World Order", by Pat Robertson, Copyright 1991, by Word,
Inc., Dallas, Texas. All rights reserved, page 66-67, states:
"This august body of 'wise men' has effectively dominated the
making of foreign policy by the United States government since before World War
II. The CFR has included virtually every key national security and foreign
policy adviser of this nation for the past seventy years." (in 1990)
Page 96: "In government policy, the most visible expression of the
Establishment is the Council on Foreign Relations and its publication, Foreign
Affairs. Out of some twenty- nine hundred members, at least five hundred are
very powerful, another five hundred are from centers of influence, and the rest
are influential in academia, the media, business and finance, the military, or
government. A few are token conservatives."
Page 97: "According to a man who had been a member for fifteen
years, Rear Admiral Chester Ward, former judge advocate general of the Navy from
1956 to 1960:
'The purpose of promoting disarmament and submergence of U.S.
sovereignty and national independence into an all- powerful one-world government
is the only objective revealed to about 95 percent of 1,551 members [in 1975].
There are two other ulterior purposes the CFR influence is being used to
promote; but it is improbable that they are known to more than 75 members, or
that these purposes ever have even been identified in writing.'
The goals of the Establishment are somewhat strange, and we will
discuss them in detail. At the central core is a belief in the superiority of
their own skill (they often refer to themselves as THE BEST and THE BRIGHTEST)
to form a world system in which enlightened monopolistic capitalism can bring
all of the diverse currencies, banking systems, credit, manufacturing, and raw
materials into one government- supervised whole, policed of course by their own
world army." (Could this be the army of the United Nations?)
CFR membership is made up of present and past Presidents,
Ambassadors, Secretaries of State, Wall Street investors, international bankers,
foundation executives, think tank executives, lobbyist lawyers, NATO and
Pentagon military leaders, wealthy industrialist, media owners and executives,
university presidents and key professors, select Senators and Congressmen,
Supreme Court Justices, Federal Judges, and wealthy entrepreneurs.
They hold regular secret meetings including members and very
select guests. Occasionally they will hold a public meeting and invite the open
press, in order to give the impression that they are a harmless group engaged
only in social activities. Newt Gingrich (CFR) was asked by a TV reporter if he
was a member of the CFR. His response was that "Yes, I am a member. About 40
years ago the CFR was probably a very dangerous organization, but today it is
simply a place for college professors to meet, smoke their cigars and swap
stories." RIGHT!!!!!
A number of people, when hearing about the CFR subject, ask "If
you say that the CFR is such a secret organization, why is it that we can get a
copy of their annual report, which contains a list of their members? Why should
I believe you when you say that they are a secret organization?"
"The American Heritage Dictionary" defines attribute as: "To
relate to a particular cause or source; ascribe; To regard as the work of a
specified agent or creator; A quality or characteristic inherent in or ascribed
to someone or something; An object associated with and serving to identify a
character, a personage, or an office."
The literal translation is: "You better not tell the outsiders
what we do, or say."
The answer then comes from their own document, the Council on
Foreign Relation's 1992 Annual Report, where they emphatically state, in 20
different places, and in varying terms, that members "better not tell".
Page 21: "At all meetings, the Council's rule of non-attribution
applies. This assures participants that they may speak openly without others
later attributing their statements to them in public media or forums, or
knowingly transmitting them to persons who will."
Page 122: "Like the Council, the Committees encourage candid
discourse by holding their meetings on a not-for-attribution basis."
Page 169: Article II of the By-Laws states: "It is an express
condition of membership in the Council, to which condition every member accedes
by virtue of his or her membership, that members will observe such rules and
regulations as may be prescribed from time to time by the Board of Directors
concerning the conduct of Council meetings or the attribution of statements made
therein, and that any disclosure, public, or other action by a member in
contravention thereof may be regarded by the Board of Directors in its sole
discretion as grounds for termination or suspension of membership pursuant to
Article I of the By-Laws."
Page 174: "Full freedom of expression is encouraged at Council
meetings. Participants are assured that they may speak openly, as it is the
tradition of the Council that others will not attribute or characterize their
statements in public media or forums or knowingly transmit them to persons who
will. All participants are expected to honor that commitment."
Page 175: "It would not be in compliance with the reformulated
Rule, however, for any meeting participant (i) to publish a speaker's statement
in attributed form in a newspaper; (ii) to repeat it on television or radio, or
on a speaker's platform, or in a classroom; or (iii) to go beyond a memo of
limited circulation, by distributing the attributed statement in a company or
government agency newspaper. The language of the Rule also goes out of its way
to make it clear that a meeting participant is forbidden knowingly to transmit
the attributed statement to a newspaper reporter or other such person who is
likely to publish it in a public medium. The essence of the Rule as reformulated
is simple enough: participants in Council meetings should not pass along an
attributed statement in circumstances where there is substantial risk that it
will promptly be widely circulated or published."
... "In order to encourage to the fullest a free, frank, and open
exchange of ideas in Council meetings, the Board of Directors has prescribed, in
addition to the Non-Attribution Rule, the following guidelines. All participants
in Council meetings are expected to be familiar with and adhere to these
Guidelines. ..."
Page 176: "Members bringing guests should complete a "guest notice
card" and acquaint their guests with the Council's Non-Attribution Rule
governing what is said at meetings."
Later on page 176: "As a condition of use, the officers of the
Council shall require each user of Council records to execute a prior written
commitment that he will not directly or indirectly attribute to any living
person any assertion of fact or opinion based upon any Council record without
first obtaining from such person his written consent thereto."
In "A letter from the Chairman" in the 1994 Annual Report for the
CFR, Peter G. Peterson states on page 7, that:
"... Members had occasion to meet in intensive off-the-record
sessions with Secretary of State [Warren] Christopher, National Security Advisor
[Anthony] Lake, [former] Secretary [of State] George Pratt] Shultz, [Trade]
Ambassador [Mickey] Kantor, Under Secretary of the Treasury [Lawrence H.]
Summers, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and other ranking officials. Next on our
agenda are plans for reaching out to congressional leaders as well, an
opportunity we will fashion as one component of an enhanced Washington Program."
If this was not a secret organization, why would they be so
emphatic, and state in over 20 different ways that non-attribution was so
important, in these 1992 and 1994 annual reports? In addition, if you are proud
of what you say and do, then you don't care whether it becomes public knowledge
or not. The other side of this coin is: if you are doing something illegal,
immoral, unethical, unpopular, and/or unconstitutional, you will do whatever is
necessary to see that it is kept secret.
The headquarters for the CFR is The Harold Pratt House located at
58 East 68th Street, New York, NY 10021., Tel. No.: 212-734-0400, Fax No.:
212-861-1789. Oddly enough, this building is located just across the street from
the Russian (former Soviet) Embassy.