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Click Here: <A HREF="aol://5863:126/alt.conspiracy:617734">NATIONAL SECURITY
ADVISOR REMARKS TO THE BILDERBERG STEERING COMMITTEE - And My Comments</A>
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Subject: NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISOR REMARKS TO THE BILDERBERG STEERING
COMMITTEE - And My Comments
From: <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>
Date: Fri, May 26, 2000 10:00 AM
Message-id: <8gmaim$ec7$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Global Citizens:

As far as I know, this is the first official mention of the "Bilderberg"
in the White House.

Now, you would think that the Bilderberg would eventually become the
subject of a White House press conference or mainstream news coverage.
You would think that responsible reporters would inquire as to the who
the "Bilderberg" are and why they are being addressed by Mr. Samual
Berger, National Security Advisor.

I have searched the media news continually and have no mention of the
"Bilderberg" - "no matches" is my response to "Bilderberg";
"Bilderberger"; or "Bilderbergers".

I have never heard representation for the People in Congress or the
address to the People in Congress in the name of a "Bilderberg" Senator
or a "Bilderberg" Congressman or a "Bilderberg" Congresswoman.

I find these self-evident facts to be an egregious error of a
irresponsible press and body politic.

I ask that the press and America's body politic verify my searches on
the lack of recognition of the "Bilderberg" influence in globalization
and, for the benefit of Global Citizens, I ask that the the press and
America's body politic reveal for us who the "Bilderberg" are and what
their secret agenda is - an agenda, which I contend, influences all of
lives in ways in which we do not know.

Philip "Rick" Henika


( whitehouse.gov/WH/EOP/NSC/html/speeches/19991104.html )

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
November 11, 1999
As Prepared for Delivery


SAMUEL R. BERGER

NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISOR REMARKS TO THE BILDERBERG STEERING COMMITTEE

November 4, 1999

Strengthening the Bipartisan Center: An Internationalist Agenda for
America

       Two weeks ago, I gave a speech in New York at the Council on
Foreign Relations about the unique and paradoxical position in which
America finds itself today. Some of you may have read a few articles
about it in the op-ed pages. Come to think of it, some of you may have
written a few of those articles!

       In the speech, I pointed out that we are at the height of our
power and prosperity. We face no single, overriding threat to our
existence. The ideals of democracy and free markets which we embrace are
ascendant through much of the world. After 50 years of building
alliances for collective defense, common prosperity, and wider freedom,
we now have an unparalleled opportunity to shape, with others, a better,
safer, more democratic world.

       Most Americans are ready to seize that opportunity, though we
sometimes differ about how. Yet there are also some who question whether
we need to seize it at all. They believe America can and should go it
alone -- either by withdrawing from the world and relying primarily on
our military strength to protect us from its dangers . . . or by
imposing our will on the world, even if it means alienating our closest
allies. There are elements of isolationism in that view; for whatever
its intent, its effect is to isolate America from its
friends and to define America's interests in the narrowest of terms.
There are clearly elements of unilateralism in it as well.

       I made these arguments in my speech to stimulate a discussion
about America's appropriate role in the world. It appears that I've
succeeded. This is a discussion Americans need to be having -- before
decisionsre made that do real harm to our capacity to lead. And I'm
pleased to have the opportunity to move that dialogue forward this
evening with you.

       First, let me make one crucial point. I have made it explicitly
clear that the view with which I take issue is rejected by serious
people in both political parties. Over the last six and a half years,
the Administration has worked with Republicans and Democrats in the
Congress to enlarge NATO and bolster democracy in central Europe, to
approve aid to dismantle former Soviet weapons, to extend NAFTA to
Mexico and create the WTO, to ratify START II and the Chemical Weapons
Convention, to support our troops inengagements from the Balkans to the
Persian Gulf, and to launch a host of other international initiatives.
This week, we are working with a bipartisan coalition in the Congress to
pass trade bills for Africa and theCaribbean Basin. Along the way, most
of our critics have disagreed with the means we have used topursue
America's goals in the world; they have not questioned the need to
pursue the goals themselves.

       In some respects, the debate over the Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty was no different. Many opponents of the Treaty were motivated by
serious and legitimate concerns. Most also understood that an outright
rejection of the Treaty would hurt America. They urged the Senate to
delay the vote, seeking time and a process that might address their
questions. Yet they were thwarted by a small group of Senators who
showed little concern for the will of most of their colleagues or the
consequences to America of voting the Treaty down.

       That same small but increasingly powerful group is responsible
for the steady decline in our international affairs budget -- to the
point where the gulf between America's aspirations in the world and our
ability to realize them is growing.

       Eight years ago, led by Senators Nunn and Lugar, the Congress
initiated our effort to help safeguard nuclear weapons and expertise in
the former Soviet Union. Now Congress is forcing us to choose
betweencutting back that effort, which is vital to our security, or
slashing our support for programs to help Russians, Ukrainians, and
others build more democratic societies, which is just as critical to our
long term interests. For years, Congress has recognized our interest in
spurring growth in poor countries that are committed to economic reform.
Now it is refusing to fund a historic debt relief initiative that will
do just that, an initiative we and all our G-7 partners embraced because
it is morally right and economically smart. For years, Congress has
supported America's partners in the Middle East peace process. Yet this
year, as that process enters a critical and hopefully final stage, it
has so far refused to fund the commitments we made to the Israelis and
Palestinians at the Wye negotiations. Now, there are indications they
may restorethose funds. That is good. But not good enough. America's
global leadership is not divisible.

       What is more, Congress is still not meeting our obligations to
the World Bank and IMF, and stillconditioning the payment of our UN
arrears on unrelated issues. It has cut by 60% our request for
peacekeeping. Right now, from Kosovo to East Timor to Sierra Leone, the
welcome advent of peace hasproduced the need for peacekeeping to secure
it. In each place, the UN is launching missions that will save lives and
prevent future crises, missions to implement agreements we in many cases
helped broker and for which others will provide most of the troops. We
must support these missions, not only with our UNvote, but by bearing
our share of their costs. That's the only acceptable position for the
world's wealthiest and most powerful nation.

       I have argued that these Congressional actions do not result from
simple differences over policy, or from partisanship. They reflect the
coherent philosophy of a dominant minority -- which sees international
spending as inherently disconnected to America?s interests, views most
multilateral enterprises with suspicion and considers most difficult
international endeavors -- from supporting democracy in Russia to peace
in the Balkans to growth in poor countries -- as likely to fail and
therefore not worth trying.

       That way of thinking has been with us in the United States for a
long time. In recent times, we faced it inthe 1950's when Senator Robert
Taft challenged the internationalist wing of the Republican party,
arguingat we should rely less on our allies and more on our own
defenses. We saw it in the 1970's, when Congressional Democrats voted to
bring our troops home from Europe, twisting legitimate concerns about
Vietnam into a call to pull America out of the world.

       But it is even more dangerous today -- because the need for
American leadership has only grown with the end of the Cold War. America
and its allies still face many dangers: some as old as ethnic conflict,
some asnew as cyberterrorism, some as fundamental as the risk that the
democratic transitions which made thisnew era possible will not survive
the strains of economic turmoil and political strife. That is why it
isurgent that internationalists find common ground around a common
agenda of our own. We must learn to recognize when our beliefs are being
threatened. And we must defend them together.

       What does it mean to be an internationalist in America at the
turn of this century? It is to study the lessons of this century and
reach the  peace; that our own well-being is dependent on the well-being
of other nations, far away." We believe that our way of life cannot
thrive in a world dominated by violence, misery, tyranny and corruption.
We believe Americans benefit when nations coalesce to deter aggression,
to resolve conflicts, to promotedemocracy, to open markets, to raise
living standards, to prevent the spread of dangerous weapons, and to
meet other dangers no nation can meet alone. And we believe that one key
to forging such coalitions is American leadership.

       The bipartisan center that believes America must play an active
role has often disagreed about how we ought to play our role -- from
Central America in the 1980s to Bosnia in the 1990s. But even when we
differ over policy, we do not differ over purpose. And we share a
conviction that America must have the means and the will to lead.

       With that in mind, and to advance the critical discussion of
America's role, let me suggest some of the principles that
internationalists should be able to agree upon. Every one of them is
being challenged today.

       First, we should agree that America must have the strongest, best
trained, best equipped military in the world, to deter potential
adversaries and if need be defeat them. That's why the President has
worked with Congress to reverse the decline in military spending over
the last decade.

       But we should also agree that it is just as vital to reverse the
decline in spending on international affairs that began more than a
decade ago. We need to invest in the programs that keep our soldiers out
of war -- that prevent conflicts, promote freedom, boost prosperity,
fight terrorism and drugs, meet our share of globalesponsibilities, and
bring friends and allies to our side. We not only need a Defense
Department that has the resources to respond to more than one major
crisis at the same time; we need a State Department with that ability as
well. Otherwise, our military will no longer be our last resort in times
of crisis. It will be our only resort.

       Second, we should agree that while America cannot and should not
respond to every outbreak of violence and injustice around the world,
neither can it afford never to respond. For local conflicts can affect
our national interests and have global consequences.

       Americans have long recognized this would be true of a renewed
conflict in the weapon-rich and tolerance-poor Middle East, or in Korea.
It could be true of a war in South Asia between nuclear-armed states. It
was true of the war in the Balkans, which would have spread beyond
Bosnia and Kosovo had welet it boil. It can be true when mass killing
and displacement threaten to throw whole regions into chronic turmoil.
Internationalists can question whether our national interests in each
case justifies a particular kind of involvement -- unilateral or
multilateral; military, economic, or humanitarian. But they should not
question whether these interests exist.

       After all, virtually every big war started as a small war that
the world did not care enough to do something about. Sometimes, not
acting is the right choice. But not acting must be a conclusion, not a
conviction.

       That puts an extra premium on a third principle we should be able
to agree upon: America must be willing to act alone when our interests
demand it, as we have many times in the last six and a half years. But
we should also support the institutions and arrangements through which
other countries help us bear the burdens of leadership. That's why we
must pay our dues and our debts to the UN, and do our part when others
take responsibility for making peace: whether Europeans in the Balkans
or Asians in East Timor orAfricans in Sierra Leone. Otherwise we will be
left with a choice in future crises between doing everything ourselves
and doing nothing at all.

       Fourth, all internationalists agree that it was imperative for
America to fight the Cold War against stifling, expansive oppression and
that we always will be ready to resist threats to our freedom and way of
life and that of our allies. At the same time, we should agree that
America doesn't need a great enemy to be a great country. And if the end
of the Cold War has given us a chance to weave our former adversaries
Russia andChina into the global community as stable, peaceful, open, law
abiding states, we should do everything in our power to seize it.

       To do that, we need to see both Russia and China with a sense of
realism.

       The question we face about Russia is no longer whether we will be
threatened by its strength, but whether it will become too weak. Will it
become unable to maintain stability and achieve prosperity at home, or
tocontrol the flow of people, weapons and technology across its borders?
Will it become trapped, as it seemsto be now, in cruel, unending cycles
of violence in the North Caucasus that claim innocent lives andundermine
the confidence of its friends? Realism tells us the road ahead is full
of such obstacles for Russia and that only Russians can travel it. But
it also tells us Russia has overcome enormous obstacles in ten years --
from an empire to a nation-state, from totalitarianism to democracy,
from communism to a flawed but free market economy.

       Internationalists can differ about the best strategies for
encouraging that transformation. But we should notlose faith in our
capacity, despite all the difficulties, to help achieve it, nor can we
abdicate ourresponsibility to try. In fifty years, I seriously doubt
anyone will say we did too much to support the emergence of a stable,
democratic Russia. They are more likely to say we did too little.

       As for China, realism cautions us to be prepared for a future in
which this emerging power emerges as a threat. But we should not
presuppose that outcome, or make it more likely by acting as if it has
already happened. Realism also tells us to see China in all its
complexity: As a country that has lifted hundreds ofmillions of its
citizens from poverty and expanded personal freedoms, but whose progress
is constrained by resistance to political reforms vital to its long-term
growth and stability. The best way to promote the right outcome is to
protect our security, while continuing a policy of principled,
purposeful engagement with China's leaders and its people.

       A fifth principle internationalists ought to agree upon is that
while we should not rely on treaties alone to protect our security, it
is in America's interest to establish standards of international conduct
that reflect our values and play to our strengths.

       More than 30 years ago, when we signed the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, pessimists were sure that despite its provisions, there would be
dozens of nuclear-armed nations by the year 2000. That hasn't happened,
inpart because of the restraint and deterrence that comes from global
rules with global backing. In 1975, wesigned the Helsinki Accords with
the Soviet Union, a country we couldn't trust that was in violation of
every article in the treaty. Yet the U.S.S.R.'s embrace of human rights,
however disingenuous at the time,gave its people a powerful tool in
their struggle for change.

       In particular, we do not tie our hands by getting others to
accept standards we already have chosen to liveby ourselves. That is
part of our argument for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, which would
help freeze the development of nuclear weapons around the world at a
time when we have an overwhelming military advantage. Now, one of the
great challenges for internationalists in both parties is to find the
common ground on this treaty that the truncated debate in the Senate
prevented. I hope we can have aprocess of quiet consultation in the
months ahead. We must also find a way in the coming year to move forward
with defenses against missile attack, while working to preserve the ABM
treaty. A missile defense can be part of a sound national security
strategy. But it cannot be the sum total of a strategy.

       Many other ambitious tasks demand American leadership and
engagement in the coming year. Most reflectthe opportunities of the
post-Cold War peace: forging a comprehensive peace in the Middle East
and securing the peace in the Balkans; helping Russia stabilize its
economy as it conducts its first democratic transfer of power; bringing
China into the WTO while speaking plainly about human rights; building
on hopeful developments between Greece and Turkey to make progress in
the Aegean, particularly on Cyprus; securing new energy routes from the
Caspian Sea that will allow newly independent states in the
Caucasus to prosper; supporting extraordinarily hopeful and important
democratic transitions from Nigeria to Indonesia; launching a new global
trade round; enacting the African and Caribbean trade bills; pressing
ahead with debt relief for countries finally embracing good government.

       Others reflect new dangers and new challenges: easing tensions
between India and Pakistan; helpingColombia defeat the narcotraffickers
who threaten its democracy; fighting proliferation, terrorism and
thenexus between them; restraining North Korea's missile program and
Iran's; containing Iraq; reversing global climate change.

       That is an agenda which reflects America's interests and deserves
bipartisan support. The President will work hard with the Congress to
make it our common agenda. And he will make the case once again that we
can seize the challenges ahead only if we have the resources to match
our interests, only if America remains a builder of coalitions, only if
we remember that few of our hopes will be realized if we cannot convince
others to embrace them as well.

       Perhaps the most important principle every internationalist
should agree upon is that there is a differencebetween power and
authority. Power is the ability to compel by force and sanctions; there
are times we must use it, but as a final, not a first resort. Authority
is the ability to lead, and we depend on it for virtually everything we
try to achieve. Our authority is built on very different qualities than
our power: on the attractiveness of our values, on the force of example,
the credibility of our commitments and our willingness to work with and
stand by others.

       Historians tell us that this moment of predominance for America
may be fleeting. That's hard for many people to imagine, in part because
there is no threat to our power in the world today. But there is a
threat toour authority. It lies in the impulse of some to stand alone in
the world in a way that would squander our advantages, alienate our
friends, diminish our credibility, betray our values, and discredit our
example. We cannot let that happen.

       The Administration has an obligation to reach out to critics who
share our belief that America must lead and not stand alone. I hope
they, too, will defend the common ground we share, so that the
bipartisan centerill hold, and America's tradition of leadership will be
preserved for generations to come. I will dedicate my very best efforts
to that task in the months ahead.

Philip "Rick" Henika


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