Introduction
In
the original analysis of the Trilateral Commission in the 1970’s,
the only persons to actually interview and debate members of that
elite group were Antony C. Sutton and myself, Patrick Wood. From 1978
through 1981, we together or individually engaged at least seven
different Commission members in public debate.
On
July 27, 1979, Radio Station KLMG, Council Bluffs, Iowa aired a highly
informative interview with George S. Franklin, Jr.,
Coordinator of the Trilateral Commission and long-time associate of David
Rockefeller.
Joe
Martin, the commentator on the program, invited authors Antony Sutton
and Patrick Wood to participate in the questioning. The program was
probably the most penetrating view of Trilateralism yet uncovered.
Only
one complete transcript remains intact from those interviews, and it
is reproduced below. Hopefully, this will give you some insight into
the inner workings, attitude and mindset of Commission members.
Lest
anyone make accusation that this transcript was selectively edited to
show a "bad light" on the Commission, it is reprinted in
full, without edit. Editor's comments are added in certain places to
clarify the facts, when appropriate and are clearly identified to the
reader as such. Members of the Trilateral Commission are noted in bold
type. The entire interview was first and only published in the
Trilateral Observer in 1979, which was published by Patrick Wood and
The August Corporation.
The
Interview
Commentator:
Hello.
Wood:
Hello.
Commentator:
Is this Mr. Wood?
Wood:
Yes, it is.
Commentator:
Patrick Wood, we have Antony Sutton on the other line. You two are
there now, right?
Wood:
Yes.
Commentator:
Are you there too, Mr. Sutton?
Sutton:
Yes.
Commentator:
All right. Before we get Mr. Franklin on the phone,
tell us, what is your concise opinion of the Trilateral Commission?
Sutton:
It would seem that this is David Rockefeller's concept,
his creation, he financed it. The Trilateral Commission has only 77 or
so American members. It's a closed elitist group. I do not believe
that they in any way represent general thinking in the United States.
For example, they want to restrict the rights of the media in
violation of the Constitution.
[Ed:
Compare this initial statement to Franklin's admissions during the
interview.]
Commentator:
They want to restrict the rights of the media?
Sutton:
Yes.
Commentator:
All right, we have Mr. George Franklin on the phone
right now, okay? Hang on, gentlemen. Hello, am I talking to Mr. George
S. Franklin?
Franklin:
That is right.
Commentator:
You are coordinator of the Trilateral Commission?
Franklin:
That is right.
Commentator:
Mr. Franklin, my name is Joe Martin. I have two other
gentlemen on the line and I have listeners on the line too, who would
like to ask a few questions regarding the Trilateral Commission. Are
you prepared to answer some questions, sir?
Franklin:
I hope so.
Commentator:
Is the Trilateral commission presently involved in any effort to make
a one-world?
Franklin:
Definitely not. We
have not. We have no one-world doctrine. Our only belief that is
shared by most of the members of the Commission itself, is that this
world will somehow do better, if the advanced industrial democracy
that serves Japan and the United States can cooperate and talk things
out together and try to work on programs rather than at cross
purposes, but definitely not any idea of a world government or a
government of these areas.
[Ed:
"Definitely not," says Franklin. Numerous statements in Trilateral
writings show Franklin is in error. For example: "The economic
officials of at least the largest countries must begin to think in
terms of managing a single world economy in addition
to managing international economic relations among
countries," (Emphasis in original.) Trilateral Commission Task
Force Reports: 9-14, page 268.]
Commentator:
Why is it, in the Trilateral Commission that the name David
Rockefeller shows up so persistently or [the name of] one of
his organizations?
Franklin:
Well, this is very
reasonable. David Rockefeller is the Chairman of the
North American group. There are three chairmen: one is [with] the
North American group, one is [with]the
Japanese group, and one is [with] the European group. Also, the
Commission was really David Rockefeller's original
idea.
[Ed:Note
that Franklin does
not say (at this point) that the Trilateral Commission was financed
and established by David Rockefeller.]
Commentator:
On President Carter's staff, how many Trilateral
Commission members do you have?
Franklin:
Eighteen.
Commentator:
Don't you think that is rather heavy?
Franklin:
It is quite a lot, yes.
Commentator:
Don't you think it is rather unusual? How many members are there
actually in the Trilateral Commission?
Franklin:
We have 77 in the United
States.
Commentator:
Don't you think it is rather unusual to have 18 members on the Carter
staff?
Franklin:
Yes, I think we chose
some very able people when we started the Commission. The President
happens to think well of quite a number of them.
Commentator:
All right, we would like to bring in our two other guests - men who
have written a book on the Trilateral Commission. You may be familiar
with Mr. Antony Sutton and Mr. Patrick Wood?
Franklin:
I have not met them, but
I do know their names, yes.
Commentator:
Mr. Sutton and Mr. Wood, would you care to ask Mr. Franklin a
question?
Sutton:
Well, I certainly would. This is Tony Sutton. You have 77 members of
which 18 are in the Carter Administration. Do you
believe that the only able people in the United States are
Trilateralists?
Franklin:
Of course not, and
incidentally, the 18 are no longer members of the Commission because
this is supposed to be a private organization and as soon as anybody
joins the government they no longer are members of the Commission.
Sutton:
Yes, but they are members of the Commission when they join.
Franklin:
That is correct.
Sutton:
Do you believe that the only able people in the United States are
Trilateralists?
Franklin:
Of course not.
Sutton:
Well, how come the heavy percentage?
Franklin:
Well, when we started to
choose members, we did try to pick out the ablest people we could and
I think many of those that are in the Carter Administration
would have been chosen by any group that was interested in the foreign
policy question.
Sutton:
Would you say that you have an undue influence on policy in the United
States?
Franklin:
I would not, no.
Sutton:
I think any reasonable man would say that if you have 18
Trilateralists out of 77 in the Carter Administration
you have a preponderant influence.
Franklin:
These men are not
responsive to anything that the Trilateral Commission might advocate.
We do have about two reports we put out each year and we do hope they
have some influence or we would not put them out.
[Ed:
The Trilateral Commission puts out considerably more than two reports
each year. In 1974 and 1976, it was four in each year plus four issues
of "Trialogue"]
Sutton:
May I ask another question?
Franklin:
Yes.
Sutton:
Who financed the Trilateral Commission originally?
Franklin:
Uhh.
. .The first supporter of all was a foundation called the Kettering
Foundation. I can tell you who is financing it at the present time,
which might be of more interest to you.
[Ed:
This is what Franklin
said in another
interview: "In the meantime, David
Rockefeller and the
Kettering Foundation had provided transitional funding."]
Sutton:
Is it not the Rockefeller Brothers' Fund?
Franklin:
The Rockefeller Brothers'
Fund? The North American end of the Commission needs $1.5 million over
the next 3 years. Of this amount, $180,000 will be contributed by the Rockefeller
Brother's fund and $150,000 by David Rockefeller.
Commentator:
Does that mean that most of it is being financed by the Rockefellers?
Franklin:
No, it means that about
one fifth of the North American end is being financed by the Rockefellers
and none of the European and Japanese end.
Commentator:
Do you have any further questions, Mr. Sutton?
Sutton:
No, I do not.
Commentator:
Do you have a question, Mr. Wood?
Wood:
Yes, I have one question. In reading your literature and reports,
there is a great deal of mention of the term
"Interdependence".
Franklin:
Right.
Wood:
While we can see that there is some need for the world to cooperate in
many areas, this system of interdependence seems to have some very
profound effect on the United States structure as it is today. For
instance, our national structure versus the interdependent structure
in the world. Now, do you feel that this interdependent structure has
been properly presented to the American public for approval or
disapproval?
Franklin:
Well, I don't think that
it is a question of approval or disapproval altogether. For example,
we get a great deal of our natural resources from abroad. Everybody
knows that we get a great deal of oil from abroad. So, whether we like
it or not, we are much more dependent on other nations that we used to
be. Now, this does not mean that they make our decisions for us on
what our policies are going to be and our energy policies are made
here by the President and Congress. Now, they do consult others about
them because they have to, because unfortunately we are forced to
become interdependent.
[Ed:
The term "interdependent" is a key word in Trilateralism.
Think for a moment: The known world has always been more or less
interdependent. Trilateralists use "interdependence" in a
manner analogous to the propaganda methods of Goebbels: if you repeat
a phrase often enough people will begin to accept it automatically in
the required context. The required context for Trilaterals is to get
across the idea that "one-world" is inevitable."]
Commentator:
Does that answer your question, Mr. Wood?
Wood:
Well, perhaps not completely, let me phrase that another way. Do you
feel that your policy - that is, those who represent the Trilateral
policy as well as interdependence - do you feel that that philosophy
is in accord with the typical American philosophy of nationalism and
democracy and so on?
Franklin:
Well, I think I would
answer that this way. First, we are in fact interdependent. I say,
unfortunately, we depend on much more that we used to. Therefore, we
have to cooperate far more than we used to. But, that does not mean
that we are giving other people the right to determine our policy and
we do not advocate that. You will not find that in any of our reports.
[Ed:
Notice how Franklin ducks
around the key issue presented by Wood, i.e., whether the concept as
used by Trilaterals is inconsistent with generally accepted American
ideals. Wood said nothing about "...giving other people the right
to determine our policy." This is a straw man erected by Franklin
to duck the issue.]
Wood:
Do you feel that the Trilateral Commission position has been
publicized really at all around the country?
Franklin:
We try to publicize it,
we do not altogether succeed because there are so many other people
who also want publicity, but we do try. Anything we do is open to
public scrutiny.
[Ed:
The August Corporation had recently commissioned a thorough search
of the massive New York Times computerized data base. We came up with
a very meager list of references to Trilateralism. Only
71 references in the past six years in all major U.S. and foreign
publications. Many of these were no more than short paragraphs.
We know that the Trilateral Commission mailing list has only 4,000
names including all its 250 members, 600 or so Congressmen and
elitists. In brief, media coverage has been - and is - extremely
small. The 71 citations by the way include mostly critical articles
from independent authors. It also includes such efforts as the Time
front-page promotion of Jimmy Carter for
President - probably the key effort on Carter's
behalf. Hedley Donovan was then
Editor-in-Chief of Time.]
Commentator:
Mr. Sutton?
Sutton:
Paul Volcker was a member of the Trilateral
Commission and has just been appointed Chairman of the Federal Reserve
Board. Does Paul Volcker have any connection with
Chase Manhattan which is dominated by Rockefellers?
Franklin:
He was, quite a long
time ago, on the staff of [Chase] Manhattan.
[Ed:
Paul Volcker has
twice worked for Chase Manhattan Bank. In the 1950's as an economist
and again in the 1960's as Vice President for Planning. We cannot deny
that Volcker "knows
about (Trilateral) financial policies" as stated by Franklin.]
Sutton:
Don't you think that this is quite an unhealthy situation, where you
have a man connected with Chase who is now Chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board? Doesn't this give some credence to the criticism of
elitism?
Franklin:
Conflict of interest?
Sutton:
Yes.
Franklin:
It does give some
credence to it. On the other hand, it is very important that the
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank know about our financial policies
and, therefore, will certainly have been connected to some financial
institution. This has not always been the case. I think that anyone
who knows Paul Volcker,
knows that he is an extraordinarily objective person. I think if you
would notice, that the editorial comments on his appointments were
almost uniformly favorable, there must have been some that were
unfavorable, but I have not seen them.
Sutton:
May I ask another question?
Commentator:
Go Ahead.
Sutton:
Mr. Donovan, of Time-Life, has just been appointed
Special Assistant to President Carter. Mr. Donovan
is a member of your Commission.
Franklin:
That is correct.
Sutton:
Does this not emphasize the fact that the Carter Administration
is choosing its administration from an extremely a narrow range. In
other words, the Trilateral Commission?
Franklin:
I do not think that that
needs any confirmation. That is a matter of fact that he has chosen
most of his main foreign policy people, I would have to say, from the
people he got to know while he was on the Trilateral Commission.
[Ed:
Franklin admits
that the "Carter
Administration is
choosing its administration from an extremely narrow range."]
Sutton:
Well, I can only make the statement that this leaves any reasonable
man with the impression that the Carter Administration
is dominated by the Trilateral Commission with your specific ideas
which many people do not agree with.
Franklin:
Well, I would certainly
agree that people who were members of the Commission have predominant
places in the foreign policy aspects of the Carter Administration.
They are not, because they are members of the Commission, controlled
in any sense by us. I do think that they do share a common belief that
is very important that we work particularly with Europe and Japan or
we are all going to be in trouble.
Sutton:
But this common belief may not reflect the beliefs of the American
people. How do you know that it does?
Franklin:
I do not know that it
does. I am no man to interpret what the people think about.
Sutton:
In other words, you are quite willing to go ahead [and] establish a
Commission which you say does not necessarily reflect the views of the
people in the United States? It appears to me that you have taken over
political power.
Franklin:
I do not think this is
true at all. Anybody who forms a group for certain purposes obviously
tries to achieve these purposes. We do believe that it is important
that Europe, Japan, and the United States get along together. That
much we do believe. We also chose the best people we could get as
members of the Commission. Fortunately, nearly all accepted. The
President was one of them and he happened to have thought that these
were very able people indeed, and he asked them to be in his
government, it is as simple as that. If you are going to ask me if I
am very unhappy about that, the answer is no. I think that these are
good people.
Wood:
May I ask a little bit more pointedly, if Carter got
his education from the Trilateral Commission, was not his dean of
students, so to speak, Mr. Brzezinski?
Franklin:
I cannot tell you
exactly what role Brzezinski had, but certainly he
did have considerable effect on the education Carter received
on foreign policy.
Wood:
Mr. Brzezinski is on record in more than one of his
books as being a proponent of rejuvenating or redesigning the U.S.
Constitution, is this correct?
Franklin:
I have not read all his
books, I have not seen that statement, and I have worked with him very
closely for three years and he has not said anything of that sort to
me.
Wood:
As a matter of fact, he is on record and in one of his books as
indicating that the U.S. Constitution as it is today is not able to
lead us into an interdependent world and that it should be redesigned
to reflect the interdependence that we must move ahead towards.
Franklin:
As I say, if you tell me
that, I must believe it, and I have not read that book and I have
never got any inkling of that between 1973 and 1976.
[Ed:
Here is what Brzezinski writes in one of his books "Between Two
Ages: America's Role in the Technetronic Era":
"Tension
is unavoidable as man strives to assimilate the new into the framework
of the old. For a time the established framework resiliently
integrates the new by adapting it in a more familiar shape. But at
some point the old framework becomes overloaded. The new input can no
longer be redefined into traditional forms, and eventually it asserts
itself with compelling force. Today, though, the old framework of
international politics - with their spheres of influence, military
alliances between nation-states, the fiction of
Sovereignty,
doctrinal conflicts arising from nineteenth century crises - is
clearly no longer compatible with reality."
(Emphasis added)
and
specifically on changing the U.S. Constitution:
"The
approaching two-hundredth anniversary of the Declaration of
Independence could justify the call for a national constitutional
convention to re-examine the nation's formal institutional framework.
Either 1976 or 1989 - the two-hundredth anniversary of the
Constitution – could serve as a suitable target date culminating a
national dialogue on the relevance of existing arrangements...
Realism, however, forces us to recognize that the necessary political
innovation will not come from direct constitutional reform, desirable
as that would be. The needed change is more likely to develop
incrementally and less overtly ... in keeping with the American
tradition of blurring distinctions between public and private
institution." (Emphasis added)
Obviously
Franklin is either unaware of the writing of his "close"
associate Brzezinski or is evading the question.
Commentator:
I would like to interject a question if I could. Mr. Franklin,
within the Trilateral Commission, are there any Trilateralists who
have control of the energy resources in this world?
Franklin:
No. We have no major oil
companies represented on the Commission.
Commentator:
I mean stockholders in oil companies.
Franklin:
I am sure that David
Rockefeller must have some stock in an oil company. I do not
know.
Commentator:
Doesn’t David Rockefeller have stock in Chase National Bank?
Franklin:
Definitely
Commentator:
Doesn't Chase National Bank have stock in Exxon?
Franklin:
Honestly, I do not know.
Commentator:
Standard Oil? Mobil?
Sutton:
Well, I do.
Franklin:
I would be certain that
some of their pension trusts and some of the trusts that they hold for
individuals, undoubtedly do.
Commentator:
So, the Trilateral Commission has no effect at all in the energy field
at all?
Franklin:
Yes, the Trilateral
Commission has written a report on energy. There were three authors,
there were always three authors. The American author was John
Sawhill, who was formerly head of the Energy Administration
and is now presently of New York University.
Commentator:
I have read where the oil and gas world is dominated by seven major
firms, do you agree with that?
Franklin:
I do not have expertise
in this field, but I think it sounds reasonable.
Commentator:
Well, a listing of controlling ownership in these major oil and gas
companies by banks - by Trilateral Commissioners - is listed as
Manufacturer's Hanover, Chase Bank, Wells Fargo Bank, First National
Bank of Chicago, and First Continental of Illinois. And these all
supposedly are of Trilateral
representation. Is that true, sir?
Franklin:
No, sir, it is not true.
Give me the list again. I think I can tell you which are and which are
not.
Commentator:
Manufacturer's Hanover.
Franklin:
No, sir, it is not.
Commentator:
There are no stockholders in that, who are members of the Trilateral
Commission?
Franklin:
Wait a minute. I cannot
tell you whether there are no stockholders in Manufacturer's Hanover.
I might even be a stockholder in Manufacturer's Hanover. I am not.
Commentator:
Chase Manhattan figures prominently.
Franklin:
Chase Manhattan
certainly.
Commentator:
..which is David Rockefeller's Bank!
Franklin:
There is no question
about that.
Commentator:
So there is some connection with the energy field.
Franklin:
Well, yes.
Commentator:
So, if Chase Manhattan has stock in Exxon, Mobil, and Standard Oil,
then there is a direct connection there?
Franklin:
Well, yes.
Commentator:
So, if Chase Manhattan has stock in Exxon, Mobil, and Standard Oil,
then there is a direct connection there?
Franklin:
I am sure that is true.
Every bank runs pension trusts, so it must have some of its trust
money in some of those companies.
Commentator:
I have read, and I do not know if it is true, you may answer this,
that Chase Manhattan is a number one stockholder in Exxon, number
three in Mobil, and number two in Standard Oil.
Franklin:
I just would not know.
Commentator:
Do you have any questions, Mr. Sutton?
Sutton:
Yes, the figures you have just quoted about Chase Manhattan stock
ownership in the oil companies: these were published by the U.S.
Senate some years ago. There is a series of these volumes. One, for
example, is entitled "Disclosure of Corporate Ownership."
[Ed:
Any reader investigating further should note that the ownership is
heavily disguised by use of nominee companies. For example "Cudd
& Co." is a ficticious nominee
name for Chase Manhattan Bank.
A
partial list of nominees which have been used by Chase Manhattan Bank
includes the following:
|
Andrews
& Co.
|
Elzay
& Co.
|
Reeves
& Co.
|
|
Bedle
& Co
|
Gansel
& Co.
|
Ring
& Co.
|
|
Bender
& Co.
|
Gooss
& Co.
|
Ryan
& Co.
|
|
Chase
Nominees Ltd.
|
Gunn
& Co.
|
Settle
& Co
|
|
Clint
& Co.
|
Kane
& Co.
|
Taylor
& Witt
|
|
Cudd
& Co.
|
McKenna
& Co.
|
Timm
& Co.
|
|
Dell
& Co.
|
Padom
& Co.
|
Titus
& Co.
|
|
Egger
& Co.
|
Pickering
Ltd. & Co.
|
White
& Co.
|
|
Ehren
& Co.
|
|
|
Franklin: I am sure that
these banks could run billions of dollars through trusts and some of
the trusts must be invested in some of these major oil companies.
Commentator:
Then the Trilateral Commission member who has stock in the bank and
who is also a high-ranking Trilateral Commission member, would have
some jurisdiction over energy?
Franklin:
No, not really. I know
some of the management of these companies. They are not controlled by
the stockholders the way they used to be.
Wood:
Let's put that question another way if we might. It perhaps would be
erroneous to say Chase Manhattan Bank controlled Exxon, because in
fact, they do not. However, Chase Manhattan Bank is the largest single
shareholder that Exxon has. Considering the discussion going on about
the major oil companies, and their part in this energy crisis, don't
you think that it would be possible to exercise control from Chase
Manhattan Bank to put pressure on Exxon to help alleviate the energy
crisis?
Franklin:
Well, I think you could
answer that kind of question just as well, as I can. Everybody has
their own views on these things.
Commentator:
You must be familiar with the members of your Commission, especially
with Mr. Rockefeller and his various holdings?
Franklin:
I am extremely familiar
with Mr. Rockefeller, I
have known him for nearly 50 years.
Commentator:
... and his holdings?
Franklin:
I am not at all familiar
with his holdings.
Commentator:
I think everybody is familiar with his holdings. I thought everybody
was familiar with his holdings, I know he owns Chase Manhattan Bank.
Franklin:
No, that is not true.
Commentator:
I mean, he is the largest stockholder.
Franklin:
That, I would agree to.
I would say that he has about five percent, I am not sure.
Commentator:
Five percent? Would you agree with that, Mr. Sutton?
Sutton:
Yes, plus he is chairman of the board.
Franklin:
Yes, that is correct. I
have no doubt that he does control Chase Manhattan Bank.
Commentator:
You have no doubt about that?
Franklin:
No, basically, no.
Directors are important.
Commentator:
Do you have any doubt that as chairman, he controls the bank and Chase
Manhattan also controls or at least partly controls the American
Electric Power [the utility company]?
Franklin:
I do not know anything
about it.
Commentator:
You are not sure about that?
Franklin:
I just don't know. These
things do not ever really enter into consideration. If you look at our
energy report that will tell you whether you think this is an
objective or effective document or not.
[Ed:
Chase Manhattan Bank owns 1,646,706 shares of American Electric
Power Company through two nominees, <Kane & Co. (1,059,967
shares) and Cudd & Co. (586,739
shares)>. This gives it a direct 2.8 percent of the total. However
numerous other holding in American Electric Power are maintained by
banks and firms where Chase has some degree of control. For example,
Morgan Guaranty has almost 500,000 shares and is dominated by J.P.
Morgan; the second largest stockholder in J.P. Morgan is Chase
Manhattan Bank.]
Commentator:
Mr. Sutton?
Sutton:
Can we go off energy for a while?
Commentator:
Yes.
Sutton:
I have a question for Mr. Franklin. Who chooses the
members of the Trilateral commission?
Franklin:
The Trilateral
Commission's Executive Committee.
Sutton:
Who comprises the committee?
Franklin:
Who is on that
committee?
Sutton:
Yes.
Franklin:
Okay. William
Coleman, former Secretary of Transportation, who is a lawyer;
Lane Kirkland, who is Secretary-General of the
American Federation of Labor; Henry Kissinger, who
does not need too much identification; Bruce McLaury,
who is president of the Brookings Institution; David
Rockefeller; Robert Ingersoll, who was
formerly Deputy Secretary of State and Ambassador to Japan; I.
W. Able, who was formerly head of United Steelworkers; and William
Roth, who is a San Francisco businessman and was chief trade
negotiator in the previous Kennedy trade round.
Sutton:
May I ask a question? How many of these have a rather intimate
business relationship with Mr. Rockefeller?
Franklin:
Henry Kissinger is
chairman of Mr. Rockefeller's Chase Advisory
Committee.
Sutton:
Coleman?
Franklin:
Coleman, I don't think
has any business relationship with him, he is a lawyer.
[Ed:
In fact William Coleman is a Director of
Chase Manhattan Bank which Franklin has
already admitted to be controlled by David Rockefeller.]
Sutton:
Mr. Ingersoll?
Franklin:
Mr. Ingersoll,
I don't think has any business relationship.
Sutton:
Isn't he connected with First Chicago?
Franklin:
He is vice chairman of
the University of Chicago.
Sutton:
No, what about the First Bank of Chicago? [First Chicago Corp.]
Franklin:
I don't believe that
Ingersoll has any relationship with banks in Chicago, but I don't know
for certain on that.
[Ed:
Robert Stephen Ingersoll before joining the
Washington "revolving door" was a director of the First
National Bank of Chicago, a subsidiary of First Chicago Corp. The
largest single shareholder in First Chicago is David
Rockefeller's Chase Manhattan Bank. Ingersoll
has also been a director of Atlantic Richfield and
Burlington Northern. Chase Manhattan is also the largest single
stockholder in these two companies. Thus, Ingersoll has
a long standing relationship with Rockefeller interests.]
Commentator:
We are adding another man to the interview,
his name is Mr. John Rees, a very fine writer from
the Review of the News, Washington, D.C., who is in the area right at
this time to make some speeches.
Sutton:
Mr. Franklin, do you believe in freedom of the press
in the United States?
Franklin:
Definitely, of course.
Sutton:
Let me quote you from a book "Crisis In
Democracy," written by Michel Crozier, who is a
Trilateral member.
Franklin:
Correct.
Sutton:
I am quoting from page 35 of his book: "The media has thus become
an autonomous power. We are now witnessing a crucial change with the
profession. That is, media tends to regulate itself in such a way as
to resist the pressure from financial or government interests."
Does that not mean that you want to restrict the press in some way?
Franklin:
I can't quite hear you.
Sutton:
Let me paraphrase this for you. I think I will be clear in my
paraphrasing. The Trilateral Commission is unhappy with the press
because it resists the pressure from financial or government
interests. That is one of your statements.
Franklin:
Now, let me say
something about our book. The book that we put out, the report,
is the responsibility of the authors and not of the Commission itself.
You will find that in the back of a number of them, and that book is
one of them, that other members of the Commission will hear dissenting
views, and you will find dissenting views in the back of that book on
the press question.
Sutton:
I would like to quote a further statement from the same book and leave
the questions at that point: "The media deprives government and
to some extent other responsible authorities of the time lag and
tolerance that make it possible to innovate and to experiment
responsibly." What the book recommends is something like the
Interstate Commerce Commission to control the press. This seems to me
to be a violation of the Constitution.
Franklin:
I would agree with you
that we do not want something like the Interstate Commerce Commission
to control the press.
[Ed:
Michel Crozier, et al, in Crisis In
Democracy make the following statements with reference to the
"Interstate Commerce Act and the Sherman Anti-trust Act":
"Something
comparable appears to be now needed with respect to the media....
there is also the need to assure to the government the right and the
ability to withhold information at the source" (page 182).
The
authors go on to argue that if journalists do not conform to these new
restrictive standards then "The alternative could well be
regulation by the government."]
Sutton:
I fail to understand why the Trilateral Commission would associate
itself with such a viewpoint.
Franklin:
As I just mentioned to
you. We hired three authors for each report. The authors are allowed
to say what they think is correct. What the Trilateral Commission does
is this: It says we think this report is worthwhile for the public to
see. This does not mean that all the members of the Commission agree
with all the statements in the report and, in fact, a majority of them
might disagree with certain things. Now, where a statement is one that
many Commissioners seem to disagree with we then do put in the back a
summary of the discussion. That book does have a summary of the
discussion of our meeting which questions various things in the book,
in the back of it.
Sutton:
Would you say Mr. Franklin that the members of the
Commission do have a common philosophy?
Franklin:
Yes. I think a common
philosophy. I think that all of them believe that this world will work
better if the principal industrial powers consult each other on their
policies and try to work them out together. This does not mean that
they will agree on everything. Of course, they won't. But, at least
they will know what the other countries feel, and why they feel it.
Sutton:
The Financial Times in London -- the editor is Ferdy
Fisher, a Trilateralist. He fired a long time editorial
writer, Gordon Tether, because Tether wanted to write articles
criticizing the Trilateral Commission. Do you have any comments?
Franklin:
I didn't know that at
all. It sounds terribly unlikely, but if you say that it is so,
probably it is.
[Ed:
See Chapter Seven "Trilateral Censorship: the case of C.
Gordon Tether" in Trilaterals Over Washington. Trilaterals see
the media as the "gatekeeper" and comment as follows:
"Their
main impact is visibility. The only real event is the event that is
reported and seen. Thus, journalists possess a crucial role as
gatekeepers of one of the central dimensions of public life."]
Rees:
Frankly, Mr. Martin, with Antony Sutton on the line, I feel absolutely
a novice, because Antony is a real expert on the Trilateral.
Sutton:
Well, I am looking for information.
Commentator:
Are you getting information?
Sutton:
Yes, I am very definitely getting information.
Commentator:
Do you have any other questions?
Sutton:
Not at the moment. I'd rather hear someone else.
Commentator:
Alright.
Wood:
I do have one question, if I might. You mentioned earlier that as you
decided to issue a report, whether it reflected Trilateral policy or
not, you felt that it was worthy to be shared with the public. Is that
correct?
Franklin:
We do not have a
Trilateral policy, except for the very broad policy [which] is that
each of these major areas ought to know what the other countries are
doing and why and try to work things out as much as possible. That is
our only Trilateral policy, I would say. We
don't have a policy on energy and a policy on monetary reform and a
policy on, etc.
[Ed:
The latest issue of Trialogue (Summer 1979) has an opening
paragraph as follows:
"The
draft report presented in Tokyo by the Trilateral Task Force on
Payments Imbalances analyzes the extreme payments imbalances which
have marked the world economy throughout the 1970's and offers a
series of broad policy recommendations...”
Part
II of the same issue has the following opening paragraph:
"The
draft report presented in Tokyo by the Trilateral Task Force on
Industrial Policy... reviews the desirable aims and criteria of
trilateral industrial policies and their international
implications."
Yet
Franklin asserts
"We don't have a policy on energy and a policy on monetary
reform, etc."]
Wood:
Okay, let me ask a question. Based on that then, what efforts have you
made, if any, to publish these articles or these studies so they might
be reviewed by the general American public? For instance, I have never
seen one study published in any major popular magazine, whether it be
Time Magazine, a newspaper -- in fact, there have been very few
references. Over a period of six years now, there have been few
mentions of the name "Trilateral Commission" in the nations
press. This is backed up by the New York Times data base, which is one
of the most extensive in the world. Now if these are made public, can
you tell me how these are made public?
Franklin:
Yes. What we do is, that
we have a list of about 4,000 people, some of whom request them and
some of whom we thought would be interested if we sent them -- and we
send them free -- and we would be glad to send them to you, for
example, if you would like to have them. Now we
also, when we publish, when we send them out to a considerable list of
press correspondents. We also have press lunches and things.
Because of the nature of this thing, it can't be printed in full,
because they are just too long. No newspaper wants to print a 40- or
50-page study. But, there have been mentions of one or two of the
studies in Newsweek. We would like to get more published, frankly,
very much more than we have been getting. Now in Japan, for example,
we have done much better. At our last plenary session in Tokyo,
members of the Commission who were there,
gave over 90 separate interviews to members of the Japanese press who
were present. In fact, there were many more requests than that which
we could not honor because there was not time. We have not done
anything like as well in this country.
Wood:
Allow me to ask you this. This takes specifically one case, the case
of Time Magazine. Hedley Donovan is the former
editor-in-chief of that magazine. I understand he is recently retired,
and also you have as a member of your Commission, Sol Linowitz,
also a director of Time. Now, Time-Life books, of course, you have
Time Magazine, Fortune, Money and People. Now I would ask you --
considering the special advantage you have by having such a giant as Hedley
Donovan and Sol Linowitz as well, both
connected to Time -- don't you feel that if you really wanted to
publicize these "position papers" that it would only take a
scratch of the pen by Mr. Donovan?
Franklin:
No, I don't, and I will
tell you why. Hedley Donovan is not only a member of
the Commission, but he is one of my close personal friends. Hedley
Donovan is also a person of great integrity. He will not
publish anything we do because he is connected with it. He looks out
for the interest of Time, and he does not feel we were worth Time
publicity, and I am sure he will be exactly the same way in the White
House. He is going to be loyal to his President and to his job.
Wood:
But Time Magazine is the largest news magazine in the country?
Franklin:
Right. We only had a
little publicity, but we had only what Hedley would
have given, whether or not he was a member of the Commission.
Wood:
So, he basically thinks that the Commission really does not matter.
Franklin:
No. He does not, or he
would not be a member of the Commission at all. Time Magazine does
give us some money, not very much, but $2,500 a year to be exact. But,
his editorial judgment is not biased by the fact that he is a member
of the Commission.
Commentator:
Mr. Rees, would you like to ask a question?
Rees:
Yes, Mr. Franklin, I noticed that you were saying
that the Trilateral Commission takes no responsibility for the use of
the publisher's imprimatur, but I would be interested to know about
how you go about selecting your writers to put out the various
positions.
Franklin:
Well that is a very
interesting question. We have a meeting with the chairmen. The way the
situation is organized is this. There are three chairmen, one from
each of the three areas. Three secretaries, one from each of the three
areas, and I, have got an intermediate staff job called
"coordinator." Now, the chairmen and secretaries meet with
what they have jointly, will discuss not only topics they think will
be useful to have, but also authors for these topics. The topics are
then discussed by the whole Commission and approved or changed
slightly. The authors are chosen by members of the staff and
consultation with the chairmen.
Rees:
So, although you do not take responsibility for the finished product
you are responsible for the selection of the writers.
Franklin:
Very much. No question
about that.
Rees:
So it does have your imprimatur stamp of approval each time?
Franklin:
In that sense. We
certainly choose the writers, and we choose them because we think they
are very good, obviously. So far, every single report that has been
written by the authors has, in fact, been accepted for publication by
the Commission.
Rees:
Then the report on the news media was accepted?
Franklin:
It was accepted, but
there was a lot of disagreement with that. It was felt that it was an
important statement, with quite a lot of interesting new ideas in it.
It was also a very strong opposition which was reflected in the back
of the report in a section, I think it is
entitled, "Summary of Discussion."
Commentator: