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Show s Page 6 The Paper That Dares To Take The Utah Independent October 19, 1978 A Stand CFR? sistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Af. fairs; David Rockefeller, Task Force on International Development; Nelson A. Rockefeller, head of a Presidential mission to ascertain the views of leaders in the Latin American nations; Robert V. Roosa, Task Force on International Development; Kenneth Rush, Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany; Dean Rusk, General Advis'ory ' Committee of the U.S. Arms . Control and Disarmament Agency; Nathaniel Samuels, Deputy Undersecretary of State; Adolph William Schmidt, A mbassador to Canada; Joseph J. Sisco, Assistant Secretary of State for the Middle East and South Asia; Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission; Gerard Smith, Director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency; Henry DeW. Smyth, Alternate Representative to the 13th Session of the General Con- ference of the International Atomic Energy Agency; Helmut Sonnenfeldt, Operations Staff of the National Security Council; John R. Stevenson, Legal Adviser of the State Department; . Robert Strausz-Hup- e, Ambassa- dor to Ceylon and the Maidive Republic; Llewellyn Thompson, senior member, U.S. delegation for talks with the Soviet Union on strategic arms limitations (S.A.L.T.); Philip H. Trezise, Assistant Secretary of State; Cyrus Vance, General Advisory Committee of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency; and Charles W. Yost, Ambassador to the United Nations. . An increasing number of Americans have ini recent years been asking the question, Why do policies detrimental to our nation continue regardless of which Party is in power? An important clue to the answer is to be found in a careful study of the Council on Foreign Relations. Administrations, both Democrat and Republican, come and go but the C.F.R. lingers on. This is why the more things seem to change, the more they remain the same. The fix is in at the top, where the same coterie of Insiders , bent on control of the world, runs the show. Excerpted from the article Council for Revolution by' Reed Benson and Robert Lee, The Review Of The News; February 4, 1970. Council on Foreign Relations are running the show. In The Review Of The News for February 4,, 1970, we discussed the pervasive influence of the Council on Foreign Relations (C.F.R) within the Nixon Administration. We included a list of seventy C.F.R. members holding influential Administration posts a list that would eventually balloon to over one hundred. In February of 1970 Richard Nixon had been President for more than a year. Today, President Carter has occupied the White House for less than a who camyear, yet Mr. Carter as last the plain folks, paigned year is candidate well ahead of the Nixon pace; in signing C.F.R. personnel to crucial posts.' Here are seventy examples: Harold M. Agnew, member of the U.S. Metric Board; George S. Aldrich, head of the U.S. Delegation to the Fourth Session of the Diplomatic Conference on the Reaffirmation and Development of International' Humanitarian Law Applicable in Armed Conflicts; C. Fred Bergsten, Deputy Undersecretary of the Treasury and a member of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation; W. Michael Blumenthal, Secretary of the TreaInterna- sury, U.S. Governor 'of-thtional Monetary Fund, U.S. Governor of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, a Govern nor of the Development Bank, U.S. Governor of the Asian Development Bank, U.S. Governor of the African Development Fund, and Chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability; King-ma- n Brewster Jr., Ambassador to the United Kingdom; Harold Brown, Secretary of Defense; Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Ad- visor; Jos6 Cabranes, member of the Presidents Commission on Mental Health; Joseph A. Califano Jr., Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, and advisor-membof, the Council on Wage and Price Stability; Warren M. Christopher, Deputy Secretary of State; Richard N. Cooper, Undersecretary of State for Economic Affairs; Lloyd N. Cutler, Presidents Special Representative for United a Maritime Boundaries Resource and Negotiations, and member of the Presidents Commission on White House Fellowships; William Drayton Jr., Assistant Administrator of' the Environmental Protection... Agency; Ralph A. Dungan, U.S. ' Executive Director of the ican Development Bank; Lawrence S. Eagleburger, Ambassador to Yugoslavia; Ralph Earle II, Alternate Chairman' of the U.S. Delegation to the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks; Thomas Ehrlich, member of the Presidents Commission on Military ' ' Compensation; Thomas L. Farmer, Chairman of the Intelligence Oversight Board; Adrian S. Fisher, U.S. Representative to the Conference of the Committee on Disarmament; Edward R. Fried, United States Executive Director of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development; John W. Gardner, Chairman e . Inter-America- . er States-Canad- I 1 I I . wul!wy"sIlver Bam and Medallions TOP MARKET PRICES Continental Trading 227 West 600 South Salt Lake City. Utah 84101 Phone (801)531-643- 7 1 1 r- , M. Keeney Jr., Deputy Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency; Carol C. Laise, Director. General of the State Departments . Foreign Service; James F. Leonard Jr., Deputy U.S. Representative to the United Nations; Sol M. Linowitz, Special Representative for the Panama Canal Negotiations; James G. Lowenstein, Ambassador to Luxemburg; Charles McC. Mathias Jr., member of the Presidential Task Force on the District of Columbia; C. William Maynes, Assistant. Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs; Alonzo L. McDonald Jr., Deputy Special Representative for Trade Negotiations; Gale W. McGee, Permanent Representative of the U.S. to the Organization of American States; David E. McGiffert, Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs; Donald F. McHenry, U.S. Deputy Representative to the U.N. Security Council; Walter F. Mondale, the Vice President, Convenor of the Presidential Task Force on the District of Columbia; Richard M. Moose, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs; Steven Muller, member of the Presidents Commission on White House Fellowships; John Newhouse, Assistant Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency; Matthew Counselor of the Department of State; Philip A. Odeen, member of Ni-met- y, -- . . In 1970, we began our summary of the C.F.R. influence in the Nixon Administration by quoting Thomas Jefferson as follows: Single acts of tyranny may be ascribed to the accidental opinion of the day; but a series of. oppressions, begun at a distinguished period, and pursued unalterably through every change of ministers, too plainly prove a deliberate, systematical plan of reducing us to slavery. A .single word to describe such a deliberate, systematic plan for reducing us to the slavery of World Government is conspiracy. But, please, dont tell anyone we suggested it. z, ri, ships; Jane Cahill Pfeiffer, member of the Presidents Commission on White House Fellowships; Benjamin H. Read, Deputy Undersecretary of for Management; Elliot L. Richardson, Ambassador at Large and Special Representative of the President for the Law of the Sea Conference; Dean Rusk, member of the Presidential Advisory Board on Ambassadorial Appointments; Herbert Salzman, U.S. Representative to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; Harold H. Saunders, Director of the State Bureau of Intelligence . Department's and Research; Charles L. Schultze, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors and member of the Council on Wage and Price Stability; Marshall D. Shulman, Special Advisor to the Secretary of State for Soviet Affairs; Gerard C. Smith, U.S. Special - ' Commission on White House Fellow- State -- Com-'missio- n, the Presidents Commission on Military Compensation; Victor H. member of the Presidents Pal-mie- on . . ; Representative for matters, U.S. Representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency, and Alternate Representative to the 21st Session of the General Conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency'; Anthony M. Solomon, Undersecretary of the Treasury for Monetary Affairs; Theodore Sorenson, nominated as Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (nomination withdrawn under fire); Ronald I. Spiers, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey; William H. Sullivan, Ambassador to Iran; Stansfield Turner, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency; Cyrus Vance, Secretary of State and member of the Council on Wage and Price Stability; Paul C. Warnke, Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and Special Negotiator at the S.A.L.T. disarmament talks; Leonard Woodcock, Chief of the U.S. Liaison Office in Red China and member of the Presidential Advisory Board on Ambassadorial Appointments; R. James Wool-seUndersecretary of the Navy; W. Howard Wriggins, Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives; and; Herbert F. York, member of the Presidents Commission on Military Com- pensation. As you can see, President Carter has covered the important bases fairly, well for his One World associates, as did his predecessors from Richard-Nixoback to at least Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mr. Carter is not, himself, a member of the C.F.R., but in 1973 he affiliated with the Trilateral a C.F.R. dominated internationalist clique founded by. David Rockefeller the C.F.R.s Board Chairman. If one looks even further behind the scenes of the Carter Administration, additional C.F.R. tracks may be found. For example, U.S. Information Agency Director John Reinhardt is not listed as a Council member, but he elected the C.F.R.s R. Peter Strauss to serve both as Assistant U.S.I.A. Director and Director of the Voice Non-Proliferati- Board on Ambassadorial Appointments; Richard Holbrooke, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs; Philip M. Kaiser, Ambassador to Hungary; Spurgeon anti-Establishm- Inter-Ame- LASTTIME I'm telling you for the last time that I wont let you kiss me, the girl said. "I knew you'd weaken, the lad interpreted in his favor. of the Presidents Commission on White House Fellowships; Richard N.. Gardner, Ambassador to Italy; Raymond L. Garthoff, Ambassador to Bulgaria; Robert F, Goheen, Ambassador to India; Andrew J. Good paster, Superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point; W. Averell. Harriman, member of the Presidential Advisory Board on Ambassadorial Appointments; Patricia Roberta Harris, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and member of the Council on Wage and Price Stability; Arthur A. Hartman, Ambassador to France; Ulric S. Haynes Jr., Ambassador to Algeria; Stanley Hoffman, member of the Presidential Advisory Seventy appointments selected from the ranks of David Rockefellers . Excerpted from the article, How the CFR Now Dominates The Carter Regency, by Robert W. Lee, The Review Of The News, September 28, 1977. How the C.F.R. Now Dominates The Carter Regency is reprinted with permission from the September 28, 1977 issue of The Review Of The News, a national Conservative newsweekly for which Mr. Lee is a- Contributing Editor. - . |