Trilateral Tentacles Extend Reach
By John F. McManus
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Source: The New American, June 16, 2003
The
Trilateral Commission is on the move, extending its sovereignty-sapping
tentacles far beyond the initial “trilateral” regions. |
The
Trilateral Commission is on the move, broadening its influence. The
elitist group that seeks world union initially drew its membership from
North America, Western Europe, and Japan. But beginning in 2000 the TC
dramatically widened its membership. The Japanese portion became the
Pacific Asian Group, the North American Group (the U.S. and Canada)
added Mexico, and the European Group’s numbers grew “in line with the
enlargement of the European Union.”
Thirty years ago, the TC’s
European members came from the nine nations most closely allied to
America: UK, Germany, France, Denmark, Belgium, Italy, Norway, Ireland,
and the Netherlands. As of 2003, another dozen have been added: Greece,
Portugal, Czech Republic, Spain, Finland, Hungary, Poland, Austria,
Sweden, Cyprus, Russia, and Estonia. The new Pacific Asian Group has
grown from Japanese members alone to include members from New Zealand,
Australia, Singapore, South Korea, Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand, and
Indonesia.
With global control as the goal, TC expansion is
exactly what its architects had envisioned. The Trilateral approach to
world government was proposed by Professor Zbigniew Brzezinski (a
protégé of capitalist-socialist extraordinaire David Rockefeller) in
his 1970 book Between Two Ages. Therein, Brzezinski recommended a
“community of the developed nations” as part of a “piecemeal” approach
to world government. “[A] council of this sort — perhaps initially
linking only the United States, Japan, and Western Europe, and thus
bringing together the political leaders of states sharing certain
common aspirations and problems of modernity — would be more effective
in developing common programs than is the United Nations, whose
efficacy is unavoidably limited by the Cold War and by north-south
divisions,” he wrote.
According to Brzezinski: “Movement toward
a larger community of the developed nations … cannot be achieved by
fusing existing states into one larger entity.... It makes much more
sense to attempt to associate existing states through a variety of
indirect ties and already developing limitations on national
sovereignty.”
Indeed it does, from the global architects’ point
of view. In building this house of world order, linking the U.S.,
Japan, and Western Europe constituted not the final objective but an
opening phase. “The second phase,” Brzezinski explained, “would include
the extension of these links to more advanced communist countries. Some
of them — for example, Yugoslavia or Romania — may move toward closer
international cooperation more rapidly than others, and hence the two
phases need not necessarily be sharply demarcated.”
Keep in mind
that Brzezinski was writing in 1970, many years before the apparent
collapse of Communism accelerated the already-developing East-West
merger, and many years before a supposed free-trade arrangement known
as the Common Market became (by design) an emerging suprastate now
known as the European Union. He was writing, in fact, three years
before David Rockefeller created the Trilateral Commission, selecting
Brzezinski to be its first director.
Since that time the
Trilateralists have succeeded greatly in forging the links that
facilitated the rise of the EU, including its expansion eastward to
include former members of the Soviet bloc. If Trilateral success
continues, they will also expedite the proposed Free Trade Area of the
Americas (FTAA), to be modeled after the EU. And they will facilitate
other arrangements that will gradually become more intertwined on the
road to world government, thereby accomplishing what would not have
been possible if attempted overtly and suddenly.
Who are these
would-be rulers of the world? As already mentioned, they include David
Rockefeller, who also chaired the Council on Foreign Relations from
1970-85, and Zbigniew Brzezinski, another CFR member, who left his
Trilateral post to become President Jimmy Carter’s national security
adviser. Carter also was a founding member of the TC, and he later
became a CFR member as well. Many American members of the TC, in fact,
are also CFR members.
For the U.S., the TC currently names as
“former members in public service” top Bush officials Richard Cheney,
Paul Wolfowitz, Paula Dobriansky, Robert Zoellick, and Richard Haass.
Tom Foley, a former speaker of the House of Representatives, is now the
TC’s North American chairman, topping a list of “Executive Committee”
members that also includes Brzezinski and former Federal Reserve
Chairman Paul Volcker. Other current American TC members include former
cabinet officials Henry Kissinger, Madeleine Albright, Richard
Holbrooke, William Perry, Carla Hills, and Robert McNamara. Other TC
members include U.S. Senators Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Jay
Rockefeller (D-W.Va.). Yet there are fewer than 100 American TC members.
Despite
the TC’s influence on public policy, there is still good reason to
believe its plans can be derailed. All that is necessary is to shine
the light of public exposure on what it is doing. If that were not the
case, the TC, the CFR, and other like-minded groups would simply
advocate instant world government instead of being forced to achieve
the same objective piecemeal.
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