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C.F.R.


Mission
As stated on its website, CFR's mission is to be “a resource for its members, government officials, business executives, journalists, educators and students, civic and religious leaders, and other interested citizens in order to help them better understand the world and the foreign policy choices facing the United States and other countries.” CFR aims to maintain a diverse membership, including special programs to promote interest and develop expertise in the next generation of foreign policy leaders. It convenes meetings at which government officials, global leaders and prominent members of the foreign policy community discuss major international issues. Its think tank, the David Rockefeller Studies Program, is composed of about fifty adjunct and full-time scholars, as well as ten in-resident recipients of year-long fellowships, who cover the major regions and significant issues shaping today’s international agenda. These scholars contribute to the foreign policy debate by making recommendations to the presidential administration, testifying before Congress, serving as a resource to the diplomatic community, interacting with the media, authoring books, reports, articles, and op-eds on foreign policy issues. CFR publishes Foreign Affairs, “the preeminent journal of international affairs and U.S. foreign policy.” CFR also publishes Independent Task Forces which bring together experts with diverse backgrounds and expertise to work together to produce reports offering both findings and policy prescriptions on important foreign policy topics. To date, CFR has sponsored more than fifty reports.[5]

CFR aims to provide up-to-date information and analysis about world events and U.S. foreign policy. In 2008, CFR.org's “Crisis Guide: Darfur” was awarded an Emmy Award by the Television Academy of Arts and Sciences, in the category of "New Approaches to News & Documentary Programming: Current News Coverage."

[edit] Early history
The earliest origin of the Council stemmed from a working fellowship of about 150 scholars, called "The Inquiry," tasked to brief President Woodrow Wilson about options for the postwar world when Germany was defeated. Through 1917–1918, this academic band, including Wilson's closest adviser and long-time friend "Colonel" Edward M. House, as well as Walter Lippmann, gathered at 155th Street and Broadway at the Harold Pratt House in New York City, to assemble the strategy for the postwar world. The team produced more than 2,000 documents detailing and analyzing the political, economic, and social facts globally that would be helpful for Wilson in the peace talks. Their reports formed the basis for the Fourteen Points, which outlined Wilson's strategy for peace after war's end.[6]

These scholars then traveled to the Paris Peace Conference, 1919 that would end the war; it was at one of the meetings of a small group of British and American diplomats and scholars, on May 30, 1919, at the Hotel Majestic, that both the Council and its British counterpart, the Chatham House in London, were born.[7]

Some of the participants at that meeting, apart from Edward House, were Paul Warburg, Herbert Hoover, Harold Temperley, Lionel Curtis, Lord Eustace Percy, Christian Herter, and American academic historians James Thomson Shotwell of Columbia University, Archibald Cary Coolidge of Harvard, and Charles Seymour of Yale.

In 1938 they created various Committees on Foreign Relations throughout the country. These later became governed by the American Committees on Foreign Relations in Washington, D.C.

[edit] About the organization
The Council on Foreign Relations is a sister organization to the Institute of International Affairs, in London, was formed in 1922 as a noncommercial, nonpolitical organization supporting American foreign relations. [8]From its inception the Council was bipartisan, welcoming members of both Democratic and Republican parties. It also welcomed Jews and African Americans, although women were initially barred from membership. Its proceedings were almost universally private and confidential.[9] A study by two critics of the organization, Laurence Shoup and William Minter, found that of 502 government officials surveyed from 1945 to 1972, more than half were members of the Council.[10]

Today it has about 5,000 members (including five-year term members between the ages of 35-40), which over its history have included senior serving politicians, more than a dozen Secretaries of State, former national security officers, bankers, lawyers, professors, former CIA members and senior media figures. As a private institution however, the CFR maintains through its official website that it is not a formal organization engaged in U.S. foreign policy-making, and its reports regularly take issue with U.S. government policy.[citation needed]

In 1962, the group began a program of bringing select Air Force officers to the Harold Pratt House to study alongside its scholars. The Army, Navy and Marine Corps requested they start similar programs for their own officers.[10]

Vietnam created a rift within the organization. When Hamilton Fish Armstrong announced in 1970 that he would be leaving the helm of Foreign Affairs after 45 years, new chairman David Rockefeller approached a family friend, William Bundy, to take over the position. Anti-war advocates within the Council rose in protest against this appointment, claiming that Bundy's hawkish record in the State and Defense Departments and the CIA precluded him from taking over an independent journal. Some considered Bundy a war criminal for his prior actions.[10]

Seven American presidents have addressed the Council, two while still in office – Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.[11]

The Council says that it has never sought to serve as a receptacle for government policy papers that cannot be shared with the public, and they do not encourage government officials who are members to do so. The Council says that discussions at its headquarters remain confidential, not because they share or discuss secret information, but because the system allows members to test new ideas with other members.[12]

Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., in his book on the Kennedy presidency, A Thousand Days, wrote that Kennedy was not part of what he called the "New York establishment":

"In particular, he was little acquainted with the New York financial and legal community-- that arsenal of talent which had so long furnished a steady supply of always orthodox and often able people to Democratic as well as Republican administrations. This community was the heart of the American Establishment. Its household deities were Henry Stimson and Elihu Root; its present leaders, Robert Lovett and John J. McCloy; its front organizations, the Rockefeller, Ford and Carnegie foundations and the Council on Foreign Relations; its organs, the New York Times and Foreign Affairs."[13]

[edit] Influence on foreign policy
Beginning in 1939 and lasting for five years, the Council achieved much greater prominence with government and the State Department when it established the strictly confidential War and Peace Studies, funded entirely by the Rockefeller Foundation.[14] The secrecy surrounding this group was such that the Council members (total at the time: 663) who were not involved in its deliberations were completely unaware of the study group's existence.[14]

It was divided into four functional topic groups: economic and financial, security and armaments, territorial, and political. The security and armaments group was headed by Allen Welsh Dulles who later became a pivotal figure in the CIA's predecessor, the OSS. It ultimately produced 682 memoranda for the State Department, marked classified and circulated among the appropriate government departments. As a historical judgment, its overall influence on actual government planning at the time is still said to remain unclear.[14]

In an anonymous piece called "The Sources of Soviet Conduct" that appeared in Foreign Affairs in 1947, CFR study group member George Kennan coined the term "containment." The essay would prove to be highly influential in US foreign policy for seven upcoming presidential administrations. 40 years later, Kennan explained that he had never meant to contain the Soviet Union because it might be able to physically attack the United States; he thought that was obvious enough that he didn't need to explain it in his essay. William Bundy credited the CFR's study groups with helping to lay the framework of thinking that led to the Marshall Plan and NATO. Due to new interest in the group, membership grew towards 1,000.[15]

Dwight D. Eisenhower chaired a CFR study group while he served as President of Columbia University. One member later said, "whatever General Eisenhower knows about economics, he has learned at the study group meetings."[15] The CFR study group devised an expanded study group called "Americans for Eisenhower" to increase his chances for the presidency. Eisenhower would later draw many Cabinet members from CFR ranks and become a CFR member himself. His primary CFR appointment was Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. Dulles gave a public address at the Harold Pratt House in which he announced a new direction for Eisenhower's foreign policy: "There is no local defense which alone will contain the mighty land power of the communist world. Local defenses must be reinforced by the further deterrent of massive retaliatory power." After this speech, the council convened a session on "Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy" and chose Henry Kissinger to head it. Kissinger spent the following academic year working on the project at Council headquarters. The book of the same name that he published from his research in 1957 gave him national recognition, topping the national bestseller lists.[15]

On 24 November 1953, a study group heard a report from political scientist William Henderson regarding the ongoing conflict between France and Vietnamese Communist leader Ho Chi Minh's Viet Minh forces, a struggle that would later become known as the First Indochina War. Henderson argued that Ho's cause was primarily nationalist in nature and that Marxism had "little to do with the current revolution." Further, the report said, the United States could work with Ho to guide his movement away from Communism. State Department officials, however, expressed skepticism about direct American intervention in Vietnam and the idea was tabled. Over the next twenty years, the United States would find itself allied with anti-Communist South Vietnam and against Ho and his supporters in Vietnam War.[15]

The Council served as a "breeding ground" for important American policies such as mutual deterrence, arms control, and nuclear non-proliferation.[15]

A four-year long study of relations between America and China was conducted by the Council between 1964 and 1968. One study published in 1966 concluded that American citizens were more open to talks with China than their elected leaders. Kissinger had continued to publish in Foreign Affairs and was appointed by President Nixon to serve as National Security Adviser in 1969. In 1971, he embarked on a secret trip to Beijing to broach talks with Chinese leaders. Nixon went to China in 1972, and diplomatic relations were completely normalized by President Carter's Secretary of State, another Council member, Cyrus Vance.[15]

In November 1979, while chairman of the CFR, David Rockefeller became embroiled in an international incident when he and Henry Kissinger, along with John J. McCloy and Rockefeller aides, persuaded President Jimmy Carter through the State Department to admit the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, into the US for hospital treatment for lymphoma. This action directly precipitated what is known as the Iran hostage crisis and placed Rockefeller under intense media scrutiny (particularly from The New York Times) for the first time in his public life.[16]

[edit] World Order in the 21st Century
The CFR started a program in 2008 to last for 5 years called "International Institutions and Global Governance: World Order in the 21st Century" which aims in setting up global institutions in different levels to foster a global governance, in order to tackle different trans-national problems[17]

Countering Transnational Threats, including terrorism, proliferation of WMD, and infectious disease
Protecting the Environment and Promoting Energy Security
Managing the Global Economy
Preventing and Responding to Violent Conflict
In August 2009, the Obama Administration urged cooperation with UN to tackle the same points covered by CFR plan's. "The Obama administration will work with the United Nations to fight terrorism and other major world challenges...like nuclear programs of Iran and North Korea, the global financial crisis, wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, pandemics and global warming."[18]

[edit] Membership
Main article: Members of the Council on Foreign Relations
There are two types of membership: life, and term membership, which lasts for 5 years and is available to those between 30 and 36. Only U.S. citizens (native born or naturalised) and permanent residents who have applied for U.S. citizenship are eligible. A candidate for life membership must be nominated in writing by one Council member and seconded by a minimum of three others.[19]

Corporate membership (250 in total) is divided into "Basic", "Premium" ($25,000+) and "President's Circle" ($50,000+). All corporate executive members have opportunities to hear distinguished speakers, such as overseas presidents and prime ministers, chairmen and CEOs of multinational corporations, and U.S. officials and Congressmen. President and premium members are also entitled to other benefits, including attendance at small, private dinners or receptions with senior American officials and world leaders.[20]

[edit] Board of directors

OFFICE NAME

Co-Chairman of the Board Carla A. Hills
Co-Chairman of the Board Robert E. Rubin
Vice Chairman Richard E. Salomon
President Richard N. Haass

Board of Directors
Director Peter Ackerman
Director Fouad Ajami
Director Madeleine Albright
Director Charlene Barshefsky
Director Henry Bienen
Director Alan Blinder
Director Stephen W. Bosworth
Director Tom Brokaw
Director Sylvia Mathews Burwell
Director Frank J. Caufield
Director Kenneth Duberstein
Director Richard N. Foster
Director Stephen Friedman
Director Ann M. Fudge
Director Maurice R. Greenberg
Director J. Tomilson Hill
Director Richard Holbrooke
Director Alberto Ibargüen
Director Shirley Ann Jackson
Director Henry Kravis
Director Jami Miscik
Director Joseph Nye
Director Ronald L. Olson
Director James W. Owens
Director Colin Powell
Director David Rubenstein
Director George E. Rupp
Director Anne-Marie Slaughter
Director Joan E. Spero
Director Vin Weber
Director Christine Todd Whitman
Director Fareed Zakaria

The Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations is composed in total of thirty-six officers. Peter G. Peterson and David Rockefeller are Directors Emeriti (Chairman Emeritus and Honorary Chairman, respectively). It also has an International Advisory Board consisting of thirty-five distinguished individuals from across the world.[5][21]

[edit] Corporate Members
The following members are listed on the Corporate Roster of the Council on Foreign Relations:[22]

AARP
Access Industries, Inc.
ACE Limited
AEA Investors Inc.
Airbus North America
Alcoa, Inc.
Allied World Assurance Company, Ltd.
American Express Company
Apollo Management, LP
ARAMARK Corporation
Aramco Services Company
Archer Daniels Midland Company
AREVA Inc.
Arnhold and S. Bleichroeder Holdings, Inc.
Arnold & Porter LLP
Baker & Hostetler LLP
Baker Capital Corp.
Baker, Nye Advisers, Inc.
Baldwin-Gottschalk Group, The
Banca d'Italia
Banco Mercantil
Bank of America / Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.
Bank of New York Mellon Corporation, The
Barclays Capital
BASF Corporation
Bennett Jones LLP
BGR International
Blackstone Group L.P., The
Bloomberg
BNP Paribas
Boeing Company, The
Booz & Co.
Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
BP p.l.c.
Bridgewater Associates, Inc.
Bunge Limited
CA
CALYON Corporate and Investment Bank
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce
Canon, Inc.
Caxton Associates
Chevron Corporation
Chrysler LLC
Cisneros Group of Companies
CIT Group Inc.
Citi
Clarium Capital Management, LLC
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP
CNA Corporation, The
Coca-Cola Company, The
ConocoPhillips Company
Continental Properties
Control Risks Group
Corsair Capital
Covington & Burling
Craig Drill Capital Corporation
Credit Suisse
De Beers
Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
Deere & Company
Deloitte
Deutsche Bank AG
Duke Energy Corporation
DynCorp International
Energy Intelligence Group, Inc.
Eni S.p.A.
Equinox Partners, L.P.
Estee Lauder Companies Inc.
Exxon Mobil Corporation
Federal Express Corporation
Ford Motor Company
Fortress Investment Group LLC
Freeport-McMoRan Copper and Gold Inc.
French-American Chamber of Commerce
Future Pipe Industries, Inc.
General Atlantic LLC
General Electric Company
Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, LLP
GlaxoSmithKline
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
Google, Inc.
Granite Associates LP
Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Guardsmark LLC
Hemispheric Partners
Hess Corporation
Hitachi, Ltd.
IBM Corporation
Idemitsu Apollo Corporation
Indus Capital Partners, LLC
Intellispace, Inc.
Intesa Sanpaolo
Investcorp International, Inc.
Invus Group, LLC
ITOCHU International
J.E. Robert Companies
Jacobs Asset Management, LLC
Japan Bank for International Cooperation
JETRO New York
Joukowsky Family Foundation
JPMorgan Chase & Co
Kailix Investment Advisors
KBR
Kingdon Capital Management
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.
Kometal GMBH Austria
Korn/Ferry International
Kuwait Petroleum Corporation
Lazard
Lockheed Martin Corporation
MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings Inc.
Mannheim LLC
Marathon Oil Company
Mark Partners
Mars, Inc.
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
Marubeni America Corporation
MBIA Insurance Corporation
McGraw-Hill Companies, The
McKinsey & Company, Inc.
MeadWestvaco Corporation
Medley Capital
Medley Global Advisors
Merck & Co., Inc.
Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy LLP
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries America, Inc.
Mitsubishi International Corporation
Mitsui USA Foundation
Moody's Investors Service
Moore Capital Management LLC
Morgan Stanley
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
Munich Re America Corporation
National Interest Security Company
New Media Investments
New York Life International, Inc.
News Corporation, The
Nike, Inc.
NYSE Euronext
Occidental Petroleum Corporation
Olayan Group, The
Oxford Analytica Inc.
PepsiCo, Inc.
Pfizer Inc.
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Principal Financial Group
Prudential Life Insurance Co.
Raytheon Company
Reliance Industries Limited
Resource Holdings, Ltd.
Rho Capital Partners
Rio Tinto
Rockefeller Group International, Inc.
Rohatyn Group, The
Rothschild North America, Inc.
Shell Oil Company
Silver Lake Partners
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP
Sony Corporation of America
Soros Fund Management
Standard & Poor's
Standard Chartered Bank
Starwood Capital Group
Strategic Real Estate Advisors
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP
Tata Group, The
The Nasdaq OMX Group
Thomson Reuters
Time Warner Inc.
Tishman Speyer Properties, Inc.
TOTAL S.A.
Toyota Motor North America, Inc.
Turkish Industrialists' and Businessmen's Association
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
UBS AG
United Technologies Corporation
Veritas Capital LLC
Verizon Communications Inc.
Visa Inc.
Volkswagen of America, Inc.
Vornado Realty Trust
Warburg Pincus LLC
Weber Shandwick Worldwide
Weiss Multi-Strategy Advisors, LLC
Wyoming Investment Corporation
Xerox Corporation
Zephyr Management, L.P.
Ziff Brothers Investments LLC
[edit] Notable current council members
Erin Burnett - CNBC News Anchor[23]
Timothy Shriver[24]
Madeleine Albright, 64th United States Secretary of State
Sandy Berger (United States National Security Advisor under President Bill Clinton)
Michael R. Bloomberg (Current Mayor of New York City)
Bill Brock (former Republican United States Senator from Tennessee)
Edgar Bronfman (a member of the Bronfman dynasty, president of the World Jewish Congress)
Ethan Bronner (deputy foreign editor of The New York Times)
Zbigniew Brzezinski (United States National Security Advisor to President Jimmy Carter)
George H.W. Bush, 41st President of the United States
Jonathan S. Bush (healthcare CEO, son of Jonathan Bush, brother of NBC entertainment reporter Billy Bush)
Jimmy Carter, 39th President of the United States
Dick Cheney, 46th Vice President of the United States
Warren Christopher (former United States Secretary of State)
Bill Clinton, 42nd President of the United States
Hillary Rodham Clinton, 67th United States Secretary of State
Paul Cravath, name partner of law firm Cravath, Swaine & Moore
Michael Crow (president of Arizona State University)
Peggy Dulany (fourth child of David Rockefeller)
Lawrence Eagleburger ( former United States Secretary of State under President George H. W. Bush)
Roger W. Ferguson, Jr.
Noah Feldman (academic and author)
Alan H. Fleischmann (Co-Founder of ImagineNations Group)
Mikhail Fridman (Russian oligarch, International Advisory Board member)
Thomas Friedman (journalist, The New York Times)
Robert M. Gates (United States Secretary of Defense, former Director of Central Intelligence)
Alan Greenspan (former Chairman of the Federal Reserve)
Chris Heinz (Heir to the H. J. Heinz Company ketchup fortune)
Warren Hoge (American journalist)
Angelina Jolie (UN Goodwill Ambassador)[25]
Vernon Jordan (close advisor to President William J. Clinton)
Robert Kagan (cofounded Project for the New American Century)
Henry Kissinger, 56th United States Secretary of State
Paula Zahn - news media, formerly an anchor on CNN
John McCain, United States Senator from Arizona
Henry Paulson (United States Treasury Secretary)
Norman Podhoretz (former editor-in-chief of "Commentary", senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, Project for the New American Century (PNAC) signatory)
Steve Poizner (California businessman and Republican politician)
Colin Powell, 65th United States Secretary of State
Charles Prince (chief executive officer of Citigroup)
Condoleezza Rice, 66th United States Secretary of State
Keith A. Ridley, IV(Washington,DC Businessman)
Alice Rivlin (economist, former U.S. cabinet member)
David Rockefeller, Jr.
John D. Rockefeller, IV
George Shultz, 60th United States Secretary of State
Walter B. Slocombe (former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy)
Paul Volcker (former Chairman of the Federal Reserve)
Shirley Williams, Baroness Williams of Crosby (International Advisory Board member)
Adam Wolfensohn
James D. Wolfensohn (former president of the World Bank)
Paul Wolfowitz (former president of the World Bank, former U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense)
James Woolsey (former Director of Central Intelligence and former head of the Central Intelligence Agency)
Robert Zoellick (President of the World Bank)
[edit] Notable historical members
Kenneth Bacon
Conrad Black (International Advisory Board member)
McGeorge Bundy
William Bundy
C. Douglas Dillon
Allen Dulles
John Foster Dulles
President Gerald Ford
Sergei Karaganov (International Advisory Board member)
George Kennan
Robert Lovett
John J. McCloy
Charles Peter McColough
Robert McNamara
Paul Nitze
Nelson Rockefeller
John D. Rockefeller 3rd
Felix Rohatyn
Mark B. Rosenberg
Eugene Rostow
Walt Rostow
Dean Rusk
Arthur Schlesinger
Strobe Talbott
Albert Wohlstetter
Roberta Wohlstetter
Paul Warburg
Caspar Weinberger
[edit] List of Chairmen
Russell Cornell Leffingwell 1946-53
John J. McCloy 1953-70
David Rockefeller 1970-85
Peter G. Peterson 1985-2007
Carla A. Hills (co-chairman) 2007-
Robert E. Rubin (co-chairman) 2007-
[edit] List of Presidents
John W. Davis 1921-33
George W. Wickersham 1933-36
Norman H. Davis 1936-44
Russell Cornell Leffingwell 1944-46
Allen Welsh Dulles 1946-50
Henry Merritt Wriston 1951-64
Grayson L. Kirk 1964-71
Bayless Manning 1971-77
Winston Lord 1977-85
John Temple Swing 1985-86 (Pro tempore)
Peter Tarnoff 1986-93
Alton Frye 1993
Leslie Gelb 1993-2003
Richard N. Haass 2003-
[edit] Notable historical members
This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2009)

Graham Allison
Robert Orville Anderson
Les Aspin
Kenneth Bacon (1944-2009), Department of Defense spokesman who later served as president of Refugees International.[26]
J. Bowyer Bell[27]
W. Michael Blumenthal
Amy Bondurant
Harold Brown
Zbigniew Brzezinski
William P. Bundy
George H. W. Bush
William S. Cohen
Warren Christopher
E. Gerald Corrigan
William J. Crowe
Kenneth W. Dam
John W. Davis
Norman Davis
C. Douglas Dillon
Thomas R. Donahue
Lewis W. Douglas
Elizabeth Drew
Peggy Dulany
Allen Welsh Dulles
Dianne Feinstein
Tom Foley
Leslie H. Gelb
David Gergen
Louis V. Gerstner, Jr.
Joachim Gfoeller
Maurice R. Greenberg
Alan Greenspan
Chuck Hagel
Najeeb E. Halaby
W. Averell Harriman
Gabriel Hauge
Theodore M. Hesburgh
Carla A. Hills
Stanley Hoffmann
Richard Holbrooke
James R. Houghton
Charlayne Hunter-Gault
Bobby Ray Inman
Otto H. Kahn
Nicholas Katzenbach
Lane Kirkland
Jeane Kirkpatrick
Roger T. Moritz
Walter Lippmann
Winston Lord
Charles Mathias, Jr.
John McCain
John J. McCloy
William J. McDonough
Donald F. McHenry
George J. Mitchell
Bill Moyers
Peter George Peterson
Frank Polk
John S. Reed
Elliot L. Richardson
Keith A. Ridley,IV
Alice M. Rivlin
David Rockefeller
Jay Rockefeller
Robert Roosa
Elihu Root
William D. Ruckelshaus
Brent Scowcroft
Donna E. Shalala
George P. Shultz
Theodore Sorensen
George Soros
Adlai E. Stevenson
Strobe Talbott
Peter Tarnoff
Fred Thompson
Garrick Utley
Cyrus Vance
Paul Volcker
Paul M. Warburg
Paul Warnke
Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.
Owen D. Young
Robert Zoellick
Source: The Council on Foreign Relations from 1921 to 1996:Historical Roster of Directors and Officers[28]

[edit] List of chairmen and chairwomen
Russell Cornell Leffingwell 1946-1953
John J. McCloy 1953-1970
David Rockefeller 1970-1985
Peter George Peterson 1985-2007
Carla A. Hills (co-chairwoman) 2007-
Robert E. Rubin (co-chairman) 2007-


[edit] List of presidents

John W. Davis 1921-1933
George W. Wickersham 1933-1936
Norman Davis 1936-1944
Russell Cornell Leffingwell 1944-1946
Allen Welsh Dulles 1946-1950
Henry Merritt Wriston 1951-1964
Grayson L. Kirk 1964-1971
Bayless Manning 1971-1977
Winston Lord 1977-1985
John Temple Swing 1985-1986 (Pro tempore)
Peter Tarnoff 1986-1993
Alton Frye 1993
Leslie Gelb 1993-2003
Richard N. Haass 2003-


Source:The Council on Foreign Relations from 1921 to 1996: Historical Roster of Directors and Officers[28]

[edit] Controversy
The Council has been the subject of debate, as shown in the 1969 film The Capitalist Conspiracy by G. Edward Griffin, the 2006 film by Aaron Russo, America: Freedom to Fascism and a 2007 documentary Zeitgeist, the Movie.

This is partly due to the number of high-ranking government officials in its membership, along with world business leaders, its secrecy clauses, and the large number of aspects of American foreign policy that its members have been involved with, beginning with Wilson's Fourteen Points. Wilson's Fourteen Points speech was the first in which he suggested a worldwide security organization to prevent future world wars.[6]

The John Birch Society believes that the CFR is "[g]uilty of conspiring with others to build a one world government...".[29]

Historian Carroll Quigley, who was the official historian for the CFR, "became well known among those who believe that there is an international conspiracy to bring about a one-world government. In his book Tragedy and Hope, he based his analysis on his research in the papers of an Anglo-American elite organization that, he held, secretly controlled the U.S. and UK governments through a series of Round Table Groups. The Round Table group in the United States was the Council on Foreign Relations. ... Conspiracy theorists assailed Quigley for his approval of the goals (not the tactics) of the Anglo-American elite while selectively using his information and analysis as evidence for their views."[30]

Systems theorists working with tools developed at MIT by Jay Forrester counter David Rockefeller's support for his goals with the claim that an attempt to build an integrated global political and economic structure is a serious danger to humanity's freedom and prosperity. They argue that a dearth of distributed systems on a global scale would mean, first, a globe more susceptible to total economic and/or resource calamity, and second, a world in which lack of competition between rival political systems would make totalitarianism—if ever globally established—extremely difficult to challenge. Supporting the former charge, they cite the recession of 2008, which was exacerbated by the global nature of capital and derivative markets, as an example of the dangers of extreme economic interdependency.[31][page needed]

The direct cause of the global financial crisis highlighted governmental intervention into markets and once more established the need for retraction of government entities from areas of interaction not deemed appropriate for their participation; in this case, mortgage lending and affiliated services.[32]

[edit] See also
Think tanks and policy institutes, national and international
Brookings Institution
RAND
[edit] Notes
^ "the most influential foreign policy think tank in the U.S.,"the most influential US organisation in the field of foreign policy and security" Stepping ever closer to NATO - The Sofia Echo - Apr 17, 2003
^ "The nation's most influential foreign-policy think tank" Realists Rule? - Inter Press Service - Aug 22, 2005
^ "most influential and prestigious think tank in America" New scramble for Africa Jamaica Gleaner - Jan 29, 2006
^ "Independent Task Force reports". Council on Foreign Relations. http://www.cfr.org/publication/by_type/task_force_report.html. Retrieved 2009-10-08.
^ a b c "President's Welcome". Council on Foreign Relations. http://www.cfr.org/about/. Retrieved 2007-02-24.
^ a b Wilson, Woodrow. "President Woodrow Wilson's 14 Points (1918)". Our Documents. http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=true&doc=62.
^ "The Inquiry". History of CFR. Council on Foreign Relations. http://www.cfr.org/about/history/cfr/inquiry.html. Retrieved 2007-02-24.
^ "Council on Foreign Relations". U.S. Department of Justice. Federal Bureau of Investigation. http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/cfr.htm. Retrieved 30 November 2009.
^ "Continuing the Inquiry: Basic Assumptions".
^ a b c "Consensus Endangered". History of CFR. Council on Foreign Relations. http://www.cfr.org/about/history/cfr/consensus_endangered.html. Retrieved 2007-02-24.
^ "American Presidents at the Council on Foreign Relations". Barack Obama spoke at CFR as a U.S. Senator in 2005 on the issue of nuclear proliferation.
^ "The Second Transformation". History of CFR. Council on Foreign Relations. http://www.cfr.org/about/history/cfr/second_transformation.html. Retrieved 2007-02-24.
^ "A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House"
^ a b c "Continuing the Inquiry: War and Peace"
^ a b c d e f "Continuing the Inquiry: “X” Leads the Way"
^ Scrutiny by NYT over the Shah of Iran - David Rockefeller, Memoirs (pp.356-75)
^ "Global Governance: World Order in the 21st Century". Council on Foreign Relations. http://www.cfr.org/project/1369/international_institutions_and_global_governance.html. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
^ "US vows to embrace UN in break with Bush-era policy". Reuters. http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN12189461. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
^ "Membership".
^ "Corporate Program"PDF (330 KiB).
^ "Leadership and Staff". Accessed February 24, 2007.
^ Corporate Roster - Council on Foreign Relations. Retrieved 2009-11-20.
^ "Erin Burnett". CNBC TV Profiles. CNBC, Inc. http://www.cnbc.com/id/15838220/?site=14081545.
^ "Special Olympics: Timothy Shriver". Special Olympics. http://www.specialolympics.org/tim_shriver.aspx. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
^ Washington Post, Columnists, "Talk About Your Serious Roles", By Amy Argetsinger and Roxanne Roberts, Wednesday, February 28, 2007; Page C03. Nominated by council member Trevor Neilson. If she's voted in at the June board meeting, the 31-year-old Jolie will receive a five-year "term" membership.
^ Schudel, Matt. "Pentagon Spokesman Became an Advocate for Refugees", The Washington Post, August 16, 2009. Accessed August 17, 2009.
^ "John Bowyer Bell". The Daily Telegraph. 14 October 2003. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/10/15/db1502.xml. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
^ a b "Continuing the Inquiry: Historical Roster of Directors and Officers". http://www.cfr.org/about/history/cfr/appendix.html.
^ Letting the CFR Cat Out of the Bag
^ "Carroll Quigley: Theorist of Civilizations". http://www.scientiapress.com/findings/quigley.htm.
^ "The Architecture of Modern Political Power". http://www.mega.nu/ampp.
^ http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10860
[edit] References
[edit] Books
Grose, Peter. Continuing the Inquiry: The Council on Foreign Relations from 1921 to 1996. New York: Council on Foreign Relations: 1996. ISBN 0-876-09192-3.
Schulzinger, Robert D. The Wise Men of Foreign Affairs. New York: Columbia University Press, 1984. ISBN 0-231-05528-5.
Wala, Michael. The Council on Foreign Relations and American Foreign Policy in the Early Cold War. Providence, RI: Berghann Books, 1994. ISBN 1-571-81003-X
[edit] Miscellaneous articles
Kassenaar, Lisa. "Wall Street's New Prize: Park Avenue Club House With World View".[1] Bloomberg December 15, 2005. [Profile of the Council and its new members.]
Sanger, David E. "Iran's Leader Relishes 2nd Chance to Make Waves". The New York Times September 21, 2006, Foreign Desk: A1, col. 2 (Late ed.-Final). Accessed February 23, 2007. (TimesSelect subscription access). ("Over the objections of the administration and Jewish groups that boycotted the event, Mr. Ahmadinejad, the man who has become the defiant face of Iran, squared off with the nation’s foreign policy establishment, parrying questions for an hour and three-quarters with two dozen members of the Council on Foreign Relations, then ending the evening by asking whether they were simply shills for the Bush administration.")