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北約金主 比爾德伯格集團

(2025-03-21 05:27:56) 下一個

比爾德伯格集團為適應現代世界而改變自己——特朗普回歸

查理·斯凱爾頓 2024 年 12 月 25 日
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/dec/25/jens-stoltenberg-bilderberg-group-trump-presidency

這個曾經是陰謀論的頂峰的有影響力的組織通過任命前北約秘書長為新任聯合主席來發出轉變信號

前北約秘書長延斯·斯托爾滕貝格被任命為有影響力的比爾德伯格集團的新任聯合主席,該集團每年召開一次跨大西洋政策會議,長期以來一直是圍繞其影響全球事件的權力範圍的陰謀論的主題。

在執掌北約軍事力量十年之後,斯托爾滕貝格現在接管了該組織最重要的討論論壇:這是一個為期四天的極其私密的活動,總理、歐盟委員、銀行老板、企業首席執行官和情報主管經常光顧。

斯托爾滕貝格第一次參加比爾德伯格集團是在 2002 年,當時他正擔任挪威總理的第二任任期的幾年前。在擔任北約秘書長的十年中,他進行了更多訪問,甚至在 2018 年該組織在都靈舉行的周六晚宴上發表了主旨演講。他被任命為比爾德伯格集團的聯席主席,鞏固了該組織在跨大西洋戰略中的核心地位。

今年 2 月,斯托爾滕貝格還將接任慕尼黑安全會議主席,這是另一個重要的國防和外交研討會。另一位比爾德伯格集團資深成員、前荷蘭首相馬克·呂特接替斯托爾滕貝格出任北約主席,標誌著大西洋聯盟高層在關鍵時刻集中控製權。

斯托爾滕貝格在北約任職期間,俄羅斯與烏克蘭的衝突占據了主導地位,這場衝突在他 2014 年上任前不久就已開始。斯托爾滕貝格最近稱,這是“我們這一代人以來最大規模的集體防禦增援”,他自豪地指出,“整個聯盟的國防開支呈上升趨勢”。

他在比爾德伯格集團的許多新同事都從這一增長中受益。

該集團 31 名指導委員會成員中有幾人在國防工業擔任高級職務。億萬富翁、前穀歌老板埃裏克·施密特最近擔任了國家人工智能安全委員會主席,目前正忙於成立一家神風無人機公司,瞄準利潤豐厚的烏克蘭市場。與此同時,瑞典富豪馬庫斯·瓦倫伯格 (Marcus Wallenberg) 是國防製造商薩博的董事長,該公司在 2024 年前 9 個月的訂單增長了 71%,這主要歸功於與俄羅斯的戰爭。

科技界名人、唐納德·特朗普 (Donald Trump) 內部人士彼得·泰爾 (Peter Thiel) 創立了快速發展的機器人公司 Anduril 和蓬勃發展的監控和人工智能巨頭 Palantir。他忠實的副手、Palantir 首席執行官亞曆克斯·卡普 (Alex Karp) 幾年前被選入比爾德伯格董事會。卡普聲稱他的公司“對烏克蘭的大部分目標攻擊負有責任”,他最近告訴《紐約時報》,美國“很可能”很快會與中國、俄羅斯和伊朗打一場三線戰爭。

從某些方麵來看,今天的地緣政治情緒與比爾德伯格誕生時的 1950 年代並無太大不同。

1954 年第一次會議的首要議題是“對共產主義和蘇聯的態度”,會議報告“嚴格保密”多次提到“共產主義威脅”。70 年後,在最近一次馬德裏峰會上,主要威脅是“俄羅斯”,它被冷酷地排在會議議程的最底部,排在“烏克蘭和世界”和“戰爭的未來”之後。

1954 年,北約麵臨“共產主義帝國主義的崛起”。2024 年,北約將麵對斯托爾滕貝格所說的“新興獨裁軸心”,由俄羅斯、中國和朝鮮領導。

斯托爾滕貝格和他的繼任秘書長呂特都參加了今年夏天的馬德裏會議。與他們一起在會議廳的還有五角大樓的一群高級官員和北約第二資深軍事領導人、美國將軍克裏斯·卡沃利,他是歐洲盟軍最高指揮官。這是卡沃利第二次參加會議,他並不是第一個參加會談的薩塞烏:自 60 年代中期以來,他們就一直來製定戰略。

比爾德伯格集團一直與軍方保持著密切聯係:其創始人包括英國和美國情報部門的高級成員,前北約領導人卡林頓勳爵在 1990 年至 1998 年期間擔任該集團主席。

即使是其創始主席荷蘭親王伯恩哈德的羞愧辭職也與軍事有關:他卷入了 1976 年的洛克希德賄賂醜聞,這是該會議唯一被取消的一年(新冠疫情之前)。值得注意的是,過去幾十年來,比爾德伯格集團最具影響力的人物可以說是大戰略家和戰爭販子亨利·基辛格,一些人稱讚他為外交政策天才,另一些人則鄙視他為大屠殺戰犯。

比爾德伯格集團依靠謹慎的外交、精英網絡和情報蓬勃發展:英國軍情六處前負責人約翰·索爾斯爵士

是該組織指導委員會的成員,現任中央情報局局長威廉·伯恩斯曾是該組織的成員,但在就職後悄悄辭職。

但斯托爾滕貝格的到來可能預示著一場巨變:這是一次大牌任命,此前,備受矚目的 CNN 采訪者法裏德·紮卡裏亞最近當選為該組織指導委員會成員,這或許預示著這個不願拋頭露麵的組織將走出陰影。

比爾德伯格集團幾十年來都沒有舉行過新聞發布會,但溫文爾雅的政治家斯托爾滕貝格比他所取代的荷蘭經濟學家、高盛顧問維克多·哈爾伯施塔特更習慣於媒體簡報和問答,後者於 9 月去世。

事實上,斯托爾滕貝格已經向媒體發表了關於其新角色的聲明,他告訴挪威報紙《每日新聞報》,比爾德伯格集團“與慕尼黑安全會議一起……是政界、商界和學術界領導人合作的良好平台”。

如果斯托爾滕貝格希望引導比爾德伯格集團與媒體多接觸一些,他可能希望得到聯合主席瑪麗-約瑟·克拉維斯的幫助,她是全球最大的公關和傳播公司之一陽獅集團的董事會成員。

然而,克拉維斯本人很可能很快就會卸任:自 80 年代末以來,她一直在勤奮地參加比爾德伯格集團會議。圈內年輕一代的億萬富翁,尤其是矽穀的富豪,往往更喜歡對著麥克風聊天,而該組織管理機構的其他成員,如政治家斯泰西·艾布拉姆斯和星巴克董事會成員梅洛迪·霍布森,則是出色的公眾演講者。

斯托爾滕貝格是否會改變該組織的宣傳政策,還得等到他作為比爾德伯格集團聯合主席召開的第一次會議才能知曉。這次會議恰好在瑞典舉行。在北約期間,斯托爾滕貝格歡迎了四個新成員加入北約,瑞典是最新加入的成員。

瑞典加入北約的首席談判代表奧斯卡·斯滕斯特倫被發現在今年馬德裏的比爾德伯格集團會議期間徘徊:他正在代表他的新老板億萬富翁瓦倫伯格幫助組織明年在斯德哥爾摩舉行的峰會。瓦倫伯格家族恰好擁有這個會場:宏偉的大酒店,該酒店將於 6 月中旬為活動封鎖。

我們可以肯定的是,斯托爾滕貝格在新職位上將像施密特的神風特攻隊一樣,專注於加強跨大西洋關係——隨著特朗普重返白宮,美國外交政策受到“美國優先”議程的影響,這可能並不完全順利。

斯托爾滕貝格上個月在《金融時報》撰文指出,特朗普的“競選言論引發了人們對他對歐洲安全承諾的合理擔憂”。話雖如此,斯托爾滕貝格知道,無論特朗普的情況有多棘手,他都可以通過彼得·蒂爾與白宮聯係:即將上任的副總統 JD Vance 曾在 Mithril Capital 為蒂爾工作,蒂爾科技網絡中的許多人將在特朗普第二屆政府中擔任高級職位。

但這就是比爾德伯格集團刻意追求兩黨合作的本質:無論誰獲勝,他們總有內部人選。

例如,蒂爾在 Palantir 的首席執行官卡普是卡馬拉·哈裏斯的堅定支持者。在指導委員會中,納迪亞·沙德洛是特朗普的前副國家安全顧問,而艾布拉姆斯是一位高調的民主黨政治家和活動家。斯托爾滕貝格上個月在《金融時報》發表的專欄文章強調了跨大西洋聯盟的兩黨性質:“對世界上最強大的軍事聯盟的支持和自豪感在各個政治領域依然強烈。”

這位前北約秘書長謹慎地歡迎特朗普 2.0。他的策略是什麽?很簡單,“我們需要在國防上投入更多”,以“提醒新政府,跨大西洋關係非但不是負擔,而且是大國競爭時代的關鍵戰略資產”。

因此,所有受邀參加斯托爾滕貝格比爾德伯格集團的金融大亨們都可以期待在軍事和國防投資方麵得到大力推銷。現在是詹斯在跨大西洋聯盟中建立人脈和拉攏關係的時候了,讓戰爭繼續進行,讓聯盟保持強大,讓軍事技術數十億美元源源不斷。

Bilderberg Group changes itself for the modern world – and return of Trump

 Dec 25, 2024
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/dec/25/jens-stoltenberg-bilderberg-group-trump-presidency
 

Once the apex of conspiracy theories, the influential group signals a shift by naming ex-Nato chief as new co-chair

The former head of Nato, Jens Stoltenberg, has been named the new co-chair of the influential Bilderberg Group, which convenes a yearly transatlantic policy conference and has long been the subject of conspiracy theories around the extent of its power to shape global events.

After a turbulent decade at the helm of the alliance’s military, Stoltenberg now takes over at its pre-eminent discussion forum: a fiercely private four-day event frequented by prime minsters, EU commissioners, bank bosses, corporate CEOs and intelligence chiefs.

Stoltenberg’s first Bilderberg was back in 2002, a few years before his second tenure as Norway’s prime minister. His decade as secretary general of Nato saw further visits, and he even gave the keynote speech at the group’s Saturday night banquet in Turin in 2018. His appointment as Bilderberg’s co-chair cements the group’s role at the heart of transatlantic strategy.

In February, Stoltenberg will also take over as chair of the Munich Security Conference, another important defence and diplomacy symposium. With a fellow Bilderberg veteran, the former Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte, replacing Stoltenberg at Nato, it marks a concentration of control at the top of the Atlantic alliance at a critical time.

Stoltenberg’s tenure at Nato was dominated by the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which had begun in earnest not long before he took office in 2014. Stoltenberg oversaw what he recently described as “the largest reinforcement of our collective defence in a generation”, noting proudly that “defence spending is on an upward trajectory across the alliance”.

A number of his new colleagues at Bilderberg have been benefiting from this uptick.

Several of the group’s 31-member steering committee have senior roles in the defence industry. The billionaire former Google boss, Eric Schmidt, chaired the recent National Security Commission on AI, and is now busy launching a kamikaze drone company aimed at the lucrative Ukraine market. Meanwhile, the hugely wealthy Swedish industrialist Marcus Wallenberg is chair of defense manufacturer Saab, which enjoyed a 71% boost in orders in the first nine months of 2024, largely due to the war with Russia.

The tech luminary and Donald Trump insider Peter Thiel founded the fast-growing robotics company Anduril and the booming surveillance and AI giant Palantir. His loyal lieutenant Alex Karp, the CEO of Palantir, was voted on to the board of Bilderberg a few years ago. Karp, who claims his company is “responsible for most of the targeting in Ukraine”, recently told the New York Times that the US will “very likely” soon be fighting a three-front war with China, Russia and Iran.

In some respects, the geopolitical mood today is not so different from how it was in the 1950s, when Bilderberg was born.

 

Top of the agenda at the first meeting in 1954 was “the attitude towards communism and the Soviet Union”, with the “strictly confidential” conference report referring repeatedly to “the communist threat”. Seventy years later, at the most recent summit in Madrid, the primary threat is “Russia”, which sat grimly at the foot of the conference agenda underneath “Ukraine and the world”, and “the future of warfare”.

In 1954, the alliance was facing “the emergence ofcommunist imperialism”. In 2024, it’s up against what Stoltenberg calls “the emerging axis of autocrats”, headed by Russia, China and North Korea.

Stoltenberg and his successor as secretary general, Rutte, were both at this summer’s Madrid meeting. Joining them in the conference hall were a clutch of high-up Pentagon officials and Nato’s second most senior military leader, US general Chris Cavoli, the Supreme Allied Commander Europe. It was Cavoli’s second conference, and he’s not the first Saceur to attend the talks: they’ve been coming along to strategise since the mid-60s.

Bilderberg has always had close links with the military: its founders included senior members of British and American intelligence, and a previous Nato leader, Lord Carrington, chaired the group from 1990 to 1998.

Even the shamefaced resignation of its founding chair, Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, had a military twist: he was caught up in the Lockheed bribery scandal of 1976, the only year (pre-Covid) that the conference was cancelled. And it’s telling that arguably the most dominant figure at Bilderberg in the last several decades was the grand strategist and warmonger, Henry Kissinger, who was lauded as a foreign policy genius by some and despised as a mass-murdering war criminal by others.

Bilderberg thrives on discreet diplomacy, elite networking and intelligence: a former chief of MI6, Sir John Sawers, is a member of the group’s steering committee and the current head of the CIA, William Burns, was a member before quietly resigning when he took office.

 

But the arrival of Stoltenberg might signal a sea change: it’s a big-name appointment and follows the recent election of the high-profile CNN interviewer Fareed Zakaria to the group’s steering committee, perhaps signalling a shift out of the shadows for the publicity-shy group.

Bilderberg hasn’t held a press conference for decades, but the urbane politician Stoltenberg is far more used to media briefings and Q&As than the man he replaces: the Dutch economist and Goldman Sachs adviser Victor Halberstadt, who died in September.

In fact, Stoltenberg has already made a statement to the press about his new role, telling the Norwegian newspaper Dagens Näringsliv that Bilderberg, “together with the Munich Security Conference … is a good platform for cooperation between leaders in the political arena, business and the academic world”.

If Stoltenberg is hoping to steer Bilderberg towards a little more engagement with the press, he might hope to get a helping hand from his co-chair, Marie-Josée Kravis, who sits on the board of Publicis, one of the world’s largest PR and communications companies.

However, it’s quite possible that Kravis herself will step aside fairly soon: she’s been assiduously attending Bilderbergs since the late 80s. The younger generation of billionaires in the inner circle, particularly the Silicon Valley crowd, tend to be more at ease chatting into a microphone, while others on the group’s governing body, like the politician Stacey Abrams and the Starbucks board member Mellody Hobson, are accomplished public speakers.

It will have to wait until Stoltenberg’s first conference as Bilderberg co-chair to find out if he’s shaking up the group’s publicity policy. This will, appropriately enough, be in Sweden. While at Nato, Stoltenberg welcomed four new members to the alliance: and Sweden was the most recent.

 

The chief negotiator for Sweden’s accession to Nato, Oscar Stenström, was spotted hovering around the fringes of this year’s Bilderberg conference in Madrid: he is helping to organise next year’s summit in Stockholm on behalf of his new boss, the billionaire Wallenberg. The Wallenberg family conveniently own the venue: the magnificent Grand hotel, which will be cordoned off in mid-June for the event.

What we know for sure is that Stoltenberg in his new role will be laser-focused, like one of Schmidt’s kamikaze drones, on strengthening transatlantic ties – which may not be entirely straightforward with Trump back in the White House and US foreign policy shaped by the “America first” agenda.

Writing in the Financial Times last month, Stoltenberg noted that Trump’s “campaign rhetoric had raised legitimate concerns about his commitment to European security”. That said, Stoltenberg knows that however tricky things get with Trump, he’s got a hotline to the White House through Peter Thiel: the incoming vice-president, JD Vance, used to work for Thiel at Mithril Capital, and a healthy handful of Thiel’s tech network are lined up for senior posts in the second Trump administration.

But that’s the thing with the studiously bipartisan Bilderberg: they’ve always got someone on the inside, whoever wins.

For example, Karp, Thiel’s CEO at Palantir, was a big backer of Kamala Harris. Looking down the steering committee, Nadia Schadlow is Trump’s former deputy national security adviser, while Abrams is a high-profile Democratic politician and activist. Stoltenberg’s op-ed in the Financial Times last month stressed the bipartisan nature of the transatlantic alliance: “Support for and pride in the most powerful military alliance the world has ever seen remains strong across the political spectrum.”

The former Nato chief was carefully welcoming of Trump 2.0. His strategy? Simply that “we need to invest more in defence” in order to “remind the incoming administration that, far from being a burden, the transatlantic relationship is a key strategic asset in this era of great-power competition”.

So all of the high finance high rollers who get invited to Stoltenberg’s Bilderberg can expect to get the hard sell on military and defence investment. Now’s the time for Jens to get networking and glad-handing in the transatlantic wings, keeping the war on the road, the alliance strong and the mil-tech billions flowing.

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