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Global Banking -- The Bank for International Settlements: msg#00066
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Global Banking -- The Bank for International Settlements |
It is not
surprising that the BIS, its offices, employees, directors and members share an
incredible immunity from virtually all regulation, scrutiny and
accountability.
GLOBAL BANKING: THE BANK FOR
INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS
Patrick Wood October 19, 2005
Preface
When David
Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski founded the Trilateral Commission in 1973,
the intent was to create a "New International Economic Order" (NIEO). To this
end, they brought together 300 elite corporate, political and academic leaders
from North America, Japan and Europe.
Few people
believed us when we wrote about their nefarious plans back then. Now, we look
back and clearly see that they did what they said they were going to do...
globalism is upon us like an 8.6 magnitude earthquake.
The question
is, "How did they do it?" Keep in mind, they had no public mandate from any
country in the world. They didn't have the raw political muscle, especially in
democratic countries where voting is allowed. They didn't have global
dictatorial powers.
Indeed, how
did they do it?
The answer is
the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), self-described as the "central
bank for central bankers", that controls the vast global banking system with the
precision of a Swiss watch.
This report
offers a concise summation of BIS history, structure and current activities.
Introduction
The famous
currency expert Dr. Franz Pick once stated, "The destiny of the currency is, and
always will be, the destiny of a nation."
With the
advent of rampant globalization, this concept can certainly be given a global
context as well: "The destiny of currencies are, and always will be, the destiny
of the world."
Even though
the BIS is the oldest international banking operation in the world, it is a low
profile organization, shunning all publicity and notoriety. As a result, there
is very little critical analysis written about this important financial
organization. Further, much of what has been written about it is tainted by its
own self-effacing literature.
The BIS can be
compared to a stealth bomber. It flies high and fast, is undetected, has a small
crew and carries a huge payload. By contrast, however, the bomber answers to a
chain of command and must be refueled by outside sources. The BIS, as we shall
see, is not accountable to any public authority and operates with complete
autonomy and self-sufficiency.
Leading up
to Founding
As we will
see, the BIS was founded in 1930 during a very troubled time in history. Some
knowledge of that history is critical to understanding why the BIS was created,
and for whose benefit.
There are
three figures that play prominently in the founding of the BIS: Charles G.
Dawes, Owen D. Young and Hjalmar Schacht of Germany.
Charles G.
Dawes was director of the U.S. Bureau of the Budget in 1921, and served on the
Allied Reparations Commission starting in 1923. His latter work on "stabilizing
Germany's economy" earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1925. After being elected
Vice President under President Calvin Coolidge from 1925-1929, and appointed
Ambassador to England in 1931, he resumed his personal banking career in 1932 as
chairman of the board of the City National Bank and Trust in Chicago, where he
remained until his death in 1951.
Owen D Young
was an American industrialist. He founded RCA (Radio Corporation of America)
in1919 and was its chairman until 1933. He also served as the chairman of
General Electric from 1922 until 1939. In 1932, Young sought the democratic
presidential nomination, but lost to Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
More on
Hjalmar Schacht later.
In the
aftermath of World War I and the impending collapse of the German economy and
political structure, a plan was needed to rescue and restore Germany, which
would also insulate other economies in Europe from being affected adversely.
The Versailles
Treaty of 1919 (which officially ended WWI) had imposed a very heavy reparations
burden on Germany, which required a repayment schedule of 132 billion gold marks
per year. Most historians agree that the economic upheaval caused in Germany by
the Versailles Treaty eventually led to Adolph Hitler's rise to power.
In 1924 the
Allies appointed a committee of international bankers, led by Charles G. Dawes
(and accompanied by J.P. Morgan agent, Owen Young), to develop a plan to get
reparations payments back on track. Historian Carroll Quigley noted that the
Dawes Plan was "largely a J.P. Morgan production"[1] The plan called for $800 million
in foreign loans to be arranged for Germany in order to rebuild its economy.
In 1924, Dawes
was chairman of the Allied Committee of Experts, hence, the "Dawes Plan." He was
replaced as chairman by Owen Young in 1929, with direct support by J.P. Morgan.
The "Young Plan" of 1928 put more teeth into the Dawes Plan, which many viewed
as a strategy to subvert virtually all German assets to back a huge mortgage
held by the United States bankers.
Neither Dawes
nor Young represented anything more than banking interests. After all, WWI was
fought by governments using borrowed money made possible by the international
banking community. The banks had a vested interest in having those loans repaid!
In 1924, the
president of Reichsbank (Germany's central bank at that time) was Hjalmar
Schacht. He had already had a prominent role in creating the Dawes Plan, along
with German industrialist Fritz Thyssen and other prominent German bankers and
industrialists.
The Young Plan
was so odious to the Germans that many credit it as a precondition to Hitler's
rise to power. Fritz Thyssen, a leading Nazi Industrialist, stated
"I
turned to the National socialist party only after I became convinced that the
fight against the Young Plan was unavoidable if complete collapse of Germany
was to be prevented." [2]
Some
historians too quickly credit Owen Young as the idea-man for the Bank for
International Settlements. It was actually Hjalmar Schacht who first proposed
the idea[3], which was then carried forward
by the same group of international bankers who brought us the Dawes and Young
Plans.
It is not
necessary to jump to conclusions as to the intent of these elite bankers, so we
will instead defer to the insight of renowned Georgetown historian, Carroll
Quigley:
"The
Power of financial capitalism had another far reaching plan, nothing less than
to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to
dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as
a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalistic fashion by the
central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at
in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was to be the
Bank for International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, a private bank owned
and controlled by the world's central banks, which were themselves private
corporations. Each central bank, in the hands of men like Montagu Norman
of the Bank of England, Benjamin Strong of the New York Federal Reserve Bank,
Charles Rist of the Bank of France, and Hjalmar Schacht of the Reichsbank,
sought to dominate its government by its ability to control treasury loans, to
manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in
the country, and to influence co-operative politicians by subsequent rewards
in the business world."[4] [Bold emphasis added]
So here we
have a brief sketch of what led up to the founding of the BIS. Now we can
examine the nuts and bolts of how the BIS was actually put together.
The Hague
Agreement of 1930
The formation of the BIS was agreed upon by its constituent central
banks in the so-called Hague Agreement on January 20, 1930, and was in operation
shortly thereafter. According to the Agreement,
The duly authorised
representatives of the Governments of Germany, of Belgium, of France, of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, of Italy and of Japan of
the one part; And the duly authorised representatives of the Government of the
Swiss Confederation of the other part Assembled at the Hague Conference in the
month of January, 1930, have agreed on the following:
Article
1. Switzerland undertakes to grant to the Bank for International Settlements,
without delay, the following Constituent Charter having force of law: not to
abrogate this Charter, not to amend or add to it, and not to sanction
amendments to the Statutes of the Bank referred to in Paragraph 4 of the
Charter otherwise than in agreement with the other signatory
Governments.[5]
As we will
see, German reparation payments (or lack thereof) had little to do with the
founding of the BIS, although this is the weak explanation given since its
founding. Of course, Germany would make a single payment to the BIS, which in
turn would deposit the funds into the respective central bank accounts of the
nations to whom payments were due. (It would be the subject of another paper to
show the shallowness of this operation: Money and gold were shuffled around, but
the net amount that Germany actually paid was very small.)
The original
founding documents of the BIS have little to say about Germany, however, and we
can look directly to the BIS itself to see its original purpose:
?The
objects of the Bank are: to promote the co-operation of central banks and to
provide additional facilities for international operations; and to act as
trustees or agent in regard to international financial settlements entrusted
to it under agreements with the parties concerned.? [6]
Virtually
every in-print reference to the BIS, including their own documents, consistently
refer to it as "the central banker's central bank."
So, the BIS
was established by an international charter and was headquartered in Basle,
Switzerland.
BIS
Ownership
According to
James C. Baker, pro-BIS author of The Bank for International Settlements:
Evolution and Evaluation, "The BIS was formed with funding by the central
banks of six nations, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United
Kingdom. In addition, three private international banks from the United States
also assisted in financing the establishment of the BIS."[7]
Each nation's
central bank subscribed to 16,000 shares. The U.S. central bank, the Federal
Reserve, did not join the BIS, but the three U.S. banks that participated got
16,000 shares each. Thus, U.S. representation at the BIS was three times that of
any other nation. Who were these private banks? Not surprisingly, they were J.P.
Morgan & Company, First National Bank of New York and First National Bank of
Chicago.
On January 8,
2001, an Extraordinary General Meeting of the BIS approved a proposal that
restricted ownership of BIS shares to central banks. Some 13.7% of all shares
were in private hands at that time, and the repurchase was accomplished with a
cash outlay of $724,956,050. The price of $10,000 per share was over twice the
book value of $4,850.
It is not
certain what the repurchase accomplished. The BIS claimed that it was to correct
a conflict of interest between private shareholders and BIS goals, but it
offered no specifics. It was not a voting issue, however, because private owners
were not allowed to vote their shares.[8]
Sovereignty
and Secrecy
It is not
surprising that the BIS, its offices, employees, directors and members share an
incredible immunity from virtually all regulation, scrutiny and accountability.
In 1931,
central bankers and their constituents were fed up with government meddling in
world financial affairs. Politicians were viewed mostly with contempt, unless it
was one of their own who was the politician. Thus, the BIS offered them a
once-and-for-all opportunity to set up the "apex" the way they really wanted it
-- private. They demanded these conditions and got what they demanded.
A quick
summary of their immunity, explained further below, includes
-
diplomatic immunity for persons
and what they carry with them (i.e., diplomatic pouches)
-
no
taxation on any transactions, including salaries paid to employees
-
embassy-type immunity for all
buildings and/or offices operated by the BIS
-
no
oversight or knowledge of operations by any government authority
-
freedom
from immigration restrictions
-
freedom
to encrypt any and all communications of any sort
-
freedom
from any legal jurisdiction[9]
Further,
members of the BIS board of directors (for instance, Alan Greenspan) are
individually granted special benefits:
-
?immunity from arrest or
imprisonment and immunity from seizure of their personal baggage, save in
flagrant cases of criminal offence;? ?inviolability of all papers and
documents;?
-
?immunity from jurisdiction,
even after their mission has been accomplished, for acts carried out in the
discharge of their duties, including words spoken and writings;?
-
?exemption for themselves, their
spouses and children from any immigration restrictions, from any formalities
concerning the registration of aliens and from any obligations relating to
national service in Switzerland ;?
-
?the
right to use codes in official communications or to receive or send documents
or correspondence by means of couriers or diplomatic bags.?[10]
Lastly, all
remaining officials and employees of the BIS have the following immunities:
-
?immunity from jurisdiction
for acts accomplished in the discharge of their duties, including words spoken
and writings, even after such persons have ceased to be Officials of the
Bank;?[bold emphasis added]
-
?exemption from all Federal,
cantonal and communal taxes on salaries, fees and allowances paid to them by
the Bank??
-
exempt
from Swiss national obligations, freedom for spouses and family members from
immigration restrictions, transfer assets and properties ? including
internationally ? with the same degree of benefit as Officials of other
international organizations.[11]
Of course, a
corporate charter can say anything it wants to say and still be subject to
outside authorities. Nevertheless, these were the immunities practiced and
enjoyed from 1930 onward. On February 10, 1987, a more formal acknowledgement
called the "Headquarters Agreement" was executed between the BIS and the Swiss
Federal Council and basically clarified and reiterated what we already knew:
Article 2
Inviolability
-
The
buildings or parts of buildings and surrounding land which, whoever may be the
owner thereof, are used for the purposes of the Bank shall be inviolable. No
agent of the Swiss public authorities may enter therein without the express
consent of the Bank. Only the President, the General Manager of the Bank,
or their duly authorised representative shall be competent to waive such
inviolability.
-
The
archives of the Bank and, in general, all documents and any data media
belonging to the Bank or in its possession, shall be inviolable at all times
and in all places.
-
The
Bank shall exercise supervision of and police power over its
premises.
Article 4 Immunity from
jurisdiction and execution
-
The
Bank shall enjoy immunity from criminal and administrative jurisdiction,
save to the extent that such immunity is formally waived in individual cases
by the President, the General Manager of the Bank, or their duly authorised
representative.
-
The
assets of the Bank may be subject to measures of compulsory execution for
enforcing monetary claims. On the other hand, all deposits entrusted to the
Bank, all claims against the Bank and the shares issued by the Bank shall,
without the prior agreement of the Bank, be immune from seizure or other
measures of compulsory execution and sequestration, particularly of attachment
within the meaning of Swiss law. [12][bold emphasis added]
As you can see,
the BIS, its directors and employees (past and present) can do virtually
anything and everything they want, with complete secrecy, immunity and with no
one looking over their shoulders. It was truly a banker's dream come true, and
it paved the international freeway for the rampant financial globalism that we
see manifest today.
Footnotes:
1,
Quigley, Tragedy & Hope, (MacMillan, 1966),
p.308 2, Edgar B Nixon, ec.,
Franklin D. Roosevelt and Foreign Affairs, Volume III (Cambridge: Balknap Press,
1969) p. 456 3, Sutton, Wall Street and
the Rise of Hitler, (GSC & Associates, 2002) p. 26 4, Quigley, op cit, p. 324
5, BIS web site, Extracts
from the Hague Convention, www.bis.org/about/conv-ex.htm 6, BIS, Statutes of the
Bank for International Settlements Article 3 [as if January 1930, text as
amended on March 10,2003], Basic Texts (Basle, August 2003), p.
7-8 7, Baker, The Bank for
International Settlements: Evolution and Evaluation, (Quorum, 2002), p. 20
8, ibid., p. 16
9, BIS, Protocol Regarding
the Immunities of the Bank for International Settlements, Basic Texts, (Basle,
August 2003), p. 33 10, ibid, Article 12,
p.43. 11, ibid, p. 44
12,
BIS, Extracts from the Headquarters Agreement, www.bis.org/about/hq-ex.htm
----
Day-to-Day Operations
Acting as a central bank, the BIS has sweeping powers to do
anything for its own account or for the account of its member central banks. It
is like a two-way power-of-attorney ? any party can act as agent for any other
party.
Article 21 of the original BIS statutes define day-to-day
operations:
1, buying and selling of gold coin or bullion for its
own account or for the account of central banks; 2, holding
gold for its own account under reserve in central banks; 3,
accepting the supervision of gold for the account of central banks;
4, making advances to or borrowing from central banks against
gold, bills of exchange, and other short-term obligations of prime liquidity
or other approved securities; 5, discounting, rediscounting,
purchasing, or selling with or without its endorsement bills of exchange,
checks, and other short-term obligations of prime liquidity; 6,
buying and selling foreign exchange for its own account or for the account
of central banks; 7, buying and selling negotiable
securities other than shares for its own account or for the account of central
banks; 8, discounting for central
banks bills taken from their portfolio and rediscounting with central banks
bills taken from its own portfolio; 9, opening and
maintaining current or deposit accounts with central banks; 10,
accepting deposits from central banks on current or deposit account;
11, accepting deposits in connection with trustee agreements
that may be made between the BIS and governments in connection with
international settlements.; 12, accepting such other
deposits that, as in the opinion of the Board of the BIS, come within the
scope of the BIS? functions.[1]
1, act as agent or
correspondent for any central bank 2, arrange with any
central bank for the latter to act as its agent or correspondent;
3, enter into agreements to act as trustee or agent in
connection with international settlements, provided that such agreements will
not encroach on the obligations of the BIS toward any third
parties.[2]
Why is "agency" an important issue? Because any member of the
network can obscure transactions from onlookers. For instance, if Brown
Brothers, Harriman wanted to transfer money to a company in Nazi Germany during
WWII (which was not "politically correct" at that time), they would first
transfer the funds to the BIS thus putting the transaction under the cloak of
secrecy and immunity that is enjoyed by the BIS but not by Brown Brothers,
Harriman. (Such laundering of Wall Street money was painstakingly noted in Wall
Street and the Rise of Hitler, by Antony C. Sutton.)
There are a few things that the
BIS cannot do. For instance, it does not accept deposits from, or provide
financial services to, private individuals or corporate entities. It is also not
permitted to make advances to governments or open current accounts in their
name.[3] These restrictions are easily
understood when one considers that each central bank has an exclusive franchise
to loan money to their respective government. For instance, the U.S. Federal
Reserve does not loan money to the government of Canada. In like manner, central
banks do not loan money directly to the private or corporate clients of their
member banks.
How Decisions are Made
The board of directors consist of the heads of certain member
central banks. Currently, these are:
Nout H E M Wellink, Amsterdam
(Chairman of the Board of Directors) Hans Tietmeyer, Frankfurt am Main
(Vice-Chairman) Axel Weber, Frankfurt am Main Vincenzo Desario, Rome
Antonio Fazio, Rome David Dodge, Ottawa Toshihiko Fukui, Tokyo
Timothy F Geithner, New York Alan Greenspan, Washington Lord George,
London Hervé Hannoun, Paris Christian Noyer, Paris Lars Heikensten,
Stockholm Mervyn King, London Guy Quaden, Brussels Jean-Pierre Roth,
Zürich Alfons Vicomte Verplaetse, Brussels[4]
Of these, five members ( Canada, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden
and Switzerland) are currently elected by the shareholders. The majority of
directors are "ex officio," meaning they are permanent and are automatically a
part of any sub-committee.
The combined board meets at least six times per year, in secret,
and is briefed by BIS management on financial operations of the bank. Global
monetary policy is discussed and set at these meetings.
It was reported in 1983 that there
is an inner club of the half dozen central bankers who are more or less in the
same monetary boat: Germany, U.S., Switzerland, Italy, Japan and
England.[5] The existence of an inner club is
neither surprising nor substantive: the whole BIS operation is 100% secret
anyway. It is not likely that members of the inner club have significantly
different beliefs or agendas apart from the BIS as a whole.
How the BIS works with the IMF and the World Bank
The interoperation between the three entities is understandably
confusing to most people, so a little clarification will help.
The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) interacts with governments whereas the BIS interacts only with other
central banks. The IMF loans money to national governments, and often these
countries are in some kind of fiscal or monetary crisis. Furthermore, the IMF
raises money by receiving "quota" contributions from its 184 member countries.
Even though the member countries may borrow money to make their quota
contributions, it is, in reality, all tax-payer money.[6]
The World Bank also lends money
and has 184 member countries. Within the World Bank are two separate entities,
the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and the
International Development Association (IDA). The IBRD focuses on middle income
and credit-worthy poor countries, while the IDA focuses on the poorest of
nations. In funding itself, the World Bank borrows money by direct lending from
banks and by floating bond issues, and then loans this money through IBRD and
IDA to troubled countries.[7]
The BIS, as central bank to the
other central banks, facilitates the movement of money. They are well-known for
issuing "bridge loans" to central banks in countries where IMF or World Bank
money is pledged but has not yet been delivered. These bridge loans are then
repaid by the respective governments when they receive the funds that had been
promised by the IMF or World Bank.[8]
The IMF is the BIS' "ace in the hole" when monetary crisis hits.
The 1998 Brazil currency crisis was caused by that country's inability to pay
inordinate accumulated interest on loans made over a protracted period of time.
These loans were extended by banks like Citigroup, J.P. Morgan Chase and
FleetBoston, and they stood to lose a huge amount of money.
The IMF, along with the World Bank and the U.S., bailed out Brazil
with a $41.5 billion package that saved Brazil, its currency and, not
incidentally, certain private banks.
Congressman Bernard Sanders (I-VT), ranking member of the
International Monetary Policy and Trade Subcommittee, blew the whistle on this
money laundry operation. Sander's entire congressional press release is worth
reading:
IMF Bailout for Brazil is Windfall to Banks, Disaster for US
Taxpayers Says Sanders
BURLINGTON, VERMONT - August 15 - Congressman Bernard Sanders
(I-VT), the Ranking Member of the International Monetary Policy and Trade
Subcommittee, today called for an immediate Congressional investigation of the
recent $30 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout of Brazil.
Sanders, who is strongly opposed to the bailout and considers
it corporate welfare, wants Congress to find out why U.S. taxpayers are being
asked to provide billions of dollars to Brazil and how much of this money
will be funneled to U.S. banks such as Citigroup, FleetBoston and J.P. Morgan
Chase. These banks have about $25.6 billion in outstanding loans to
Brazilian borrowers. U.S. taxpayers currently fund the IMF through a $37
billion line of credit.
Sanders said, "At a time when we have a $6 trillion national
debt, a growing federal deficit, and an increasing number of unmet social
needs for our veterans, seniors, and children, it is unacceptable that
billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars are being sent to the IMF to bailout
Brazil."
"This
money is not going to significantly help the poor people of that country.
The real winners in this situation are the large, profitable U.S. banks
such as Citigroup that have made billions of dollars in risky investments in
Brazil and now want to make sure their investments are repaid. This
bailout represents an egregious form of corporate welfare that must be put to
an end. Interestingly, these banks have made substantial campaign
contributions to both political parties," the Congressman
added.
Sanders noted that the neo-liberal policies of the IMF
developed in the 1980's pushing countries towards unfettered free trade,
privatization, and slashing social safety nets has been a disaster for Latin
America and has contributed to increased global poverty throughout the world.
At the same time that Latin America countries such as Brazil and Argentina
followed these neo-liberal dictates imposed by the IMF, from 1980-2000, per
capita income in Latin America grew at only one-tenth the rate of the previous
two decades.
Sanders continued, "The policies of the IMF over the past
20 years advocating unfettered free trade, privatizing industry, deregulation
and slashing government investments in health, education, and pensions has
been a complete failure for low income and middle class families in the
developing world and in the United States . Clearly, these policies have
only helped corporations in their constant search for the cheapest labor and
weakest environmental regulations. Congress must work on a new global policy
that protects workers, increases living standards and improves the
environment."
One can surmise that a financial circle exists where the World
Bank helps nations get into debt, then when these countries can't pay their
massive loans, the IMF bails them out with taxpayer money -- and in the middle
stands the BIS, collecting fees as the money travels back and forth like the
ocean tide, while assuring everyone that all is well.
BIS dumps gold-backed Swiss Francs for SDR's
On March 10, 2003, the BIS abandoned the Swiss gold franc as the
bank's unit of account since 1930, and replaced it with the SDR.
SDR stands for Special Drawing Rights and is a unit of currency
originally created by the IMF. According to Baker,
"The SDR is an international
reserve asset, created by the IMF in 1969 to supplement the existing official
reserves of member countries. SDR's are allocated to member countries in
proportion to their IMF quotas. The SDR also serves as the unit of account of
the IMF and some other international organizations. Its value is based on a
basket of key international currencies."[9]
This "basket" currently consists of the euro, Japanese yen, pound
sterling and the U.S. dollar.
The BIS abandonment of the 1930 gold Swiss franc removed all
restraint from the creation of paper money in the world. In other words, gold
backs no national currency, leaving the central banks a wide-open field to
create money as they alone see fit. Remember, that almost all the central banks
in the world are privately-held entities, with an exclusive franchise to arrange
loans for their respective host countries.
Regional and Global Currencies: SDR's, Euros and Ameros
There is no doubt that the BIS is moving the world toward regional
currencies and ultimately, a global currency. The global currency could well be
an evolution of the SDR, and may explain why the BIS recently adopted the SDR as
its primary reserve currency.
The Brandt Equation, 21st Century Blueprint for the New Global
Economy notes, for instance, that
Since the SDR is the world's
only means of meeting international payments that has been authorized through
international contract, "The SDR therefore represents a clear first step
towards a stable and permanent international currency"[10] [bold emphasis added]
As to regional currencies, the BIS has already been hugely
successful in launching the euro in Europe. Armed with new technical and social
know-how, the BIS' next logical step is to focus on America and Asia.
For instance, according to BIS Papers No. 17, Regional currency
areas and the use of foreign currencies,
"Canada, Mexico and the
United States are members of the trade group NAFTA. Given the high proportion
of Canada and Mexico?s trade with the United States, a NAFTA dollar or ?Amero?
has been proposed by some Canadian academics such as Grubel (1999). See also
Beine and Coulombe (2002) and Robson and Laidler (2002)."[11]
Assuming that NAFTA permanently identifies Canada, the U.S. and
Mexico as one trading block, then North America will look like the European
Union and the Amero will function like the Euro. All of the work put into the
SDR would be perfectly preserved by simply substituting the Amero for the U.S.
dollar when they choose to bring the Amero to ascendancy over the dollar.
For those American readers who do not grasp the significance of
the adoption of the euro by European Union countries, consider how one American
globalist describes it.
C. Fred Bergsten is a prominent and core Trilateral Commission
member and head of the Institute for International Economics. On January 3,
1999, Bergsten wrote in the Washington Post
"The adoption of a common
currency is by far the boldest chapter of European integration. Money
traditionally has been an integral element of national sovereignty ..and the
decision by Germany and France to give up their mark and franc ..represents
the most dramatic voluntary surrender of sovereignty in recorded history.
The European Central Bank that will manage the euro is a truly supranational
institution".[12] [bold emphasis added]
Bergsten will have to rephrase this when the U.S. gives up the
dollar for the amero -- that will become the most dramatic voluntary surrender
of sovereignty in recorded history!
Conclusions
Our credo is "Follow the money, follow the power." This report has
endeavored to follow the money. We find that:
-
The BIS is central bank to all major central banks in the world
-
It is privately owned by central banks themselves, most of whom
are also private
-
It was founded under questionable circumstances by questionable
people
-
It is accountable to no one, especially government bodies
-
It operates in complete secrecy and is
inviolable
-
Movement of money is obscured and hidden when routed through the
BIS
-
The BIS is targeting regional currency blocks and ultimately, a
global currency
-
It has been hugely successful at building the New International
Economic Order, along with its attendant initiatives on global governance.
As to "follow the power," another paper will more fully explore
the influence of power that the BIS exerts over other banks, nations and
governments. For your own consideration in the meantime, Proverbs 22:7 provides
a useful compass: "The rich rule over the poor, and the borrower is servant to
the lender".
NOTE: Carl Teichrib, World Research Library Senior Fellow,
contributed to this report.
Footnotes:
1, Baker, op cit, p.
26-27 2, ibid, p. 27
3, BIS, The BIS in profile,
Bank for International Settlements flyer, June, 2005 4, BIS, Board of Directors,
www.bis.org/about/board.htm 5, Epstein, Ruling the
World of Money, Harper's Magazine, 1983 6, IMF web site,
http://www.imf.org 7, World Bank web site. 8, Baker, op cit, p.
141-142 9, IMF web site
10, The Brandt Equation: 21
st Century Blueprint for the New Global Economy. The Brandt Proposals ? A
Report Card: Money and Finances. 11, BIS, Regional currency
areas and the use of foreign currencies, BIS Papers No. 17, September, 2003
12, Washington Post, The
Euro Could Be Good for Trans-Atlantic Relations, C. Fred Bergsten, January 3,
199
© 2005 Patrick Wood - All Rights
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Patrick M. Wood is
editor of The August Review, which
builds on his original research with the late Dr. Antony C. Sutton, who was
formerly a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution for War, Peace and Revolution
at Stanford University. Their 1977-1982 newsletter, Trilateral Observer, was the
original authoritative critique on the New International Economic Order
spearheaded by members of the Trilateral Commission.
Their highly regarded
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E-Mail: pwood@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Web Site: www.AugustReview.com
Global Banking: The Bank
for International Settlements, Part 2, 10-19-05
Global Banking: The Bank
for International Settlements, Part 1, 10-19-05
Bush' Second Push to
Federalize Emergencies 10-15-05
Bush Off Base With Plan to
Federalize Emergencies 9-28-05
International Bankers
Invading China? 9-24-05
Global Cities for Global
Corporations 9-1-05
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