Kissinger Associates
Kissinger McLarty Associates
 
I have tried to ensure that all the information presented below is correct.
Much is written about Kissinger Associates, and not all of it can be proven. All of the sources given are corporate, governmental or from reliable media sources. If you find any errors, or indeed have more to contribute, please don’t hesitate to contact me. – JohnHorneUK@aol.com - otherwise, I hope this proves useful.
 
John Horne
 
***NEW*** Henry Kissinger has recently been appointed to head the 9-11 Commission. Everything else considered (like Kissinger being a war criminal & all) there is the serious question of his conflicts of interest. Take for example this exchange on CNN’s Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer:
 
BLITZER:  Let me 
then move on to a Los Angeles Times editorial which came up with a different 
criticism of you, and I'll put that up on the screen as well. It says, "His 
company, Kissinger Associates, is known for introducing U.S. firms looking for 
business overseas to leaders of foreign governments. The company has not 
disclosed all of its clients or detailed the work it does. There is the 
possibility of a conflict of interest in investigating foreign governments that 
can be beneficial to clients." What about that point, that your company, 
Kissinger Associates, does not disclose its clients and there could be 
potentially a conflict of interest?
 
KISSINGER: No law firm discloses its clients. I will discuss my clients fully with the counsel of the White House and with the appropriate ethics groups. And the possibility that the investigation of a commission that contains eight commissioners would be affected by any conceived commercial interests is outrageous. I have served six presidents, and I have never been accused of anything of this kind.
 
(end extract)
 
Keep reading & decide for yourself.
*** Kissinger has resigned from the commission(!). ***
Click 
here to read his letter to Bush
 
 
  
Before you go any further, I will direct you to the 
company's 
own site, which will explain why this site is necessary: 
  
  
Have you ever seen a company so bereft of information? All of 
the main sites for dispersing information about companies go dry when it comes 
to Kissinger Associates – believe me, I’ve been through them all. The best I 
mustered was this from Hoovers: 
  
Kissinger Associates, Inc. 
350 Park Avenue 
New York, NY 10022 
(212) 759-7919 
  
From that I did manage to compile a list of 
companies who share the same building as Henry. 
  
In short, very little is known about this “International 
Consulting Firm” other than a few press releases, or information culled from 
other companies and corporate reports. I have no idea whose the firm has as 
clients and have little idea of who works there. What follows is all I can find 
about the company.   
  
First, a small description, provided by David Rockefeller’s 
“Council of the Americas”, of 
which Kissinger Associates is a member: 
  
“Kissinger Associates and 
its affiliate, Kissinger McLarty Associates, provide strategic advisory and 
advocacy services to a select group of U.S. and multinational companies. The 
firms provide high-level intervention regarding special projects, assist their 
clients to identify strategic partners and investment opportunities, and advise 
clients on government relations throughout the world. KAI was founded in 1982 by 
former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. In 1999, former Clinton Chief of 
Staff and Special Envoy for the Americas Thomas F. McLarty joined KAI as 
Vice-Chairman, and established a Washington office of KAI known as Kissinger 
McLarty Associates (KMA).  The firm 
does not, however, lobby the United States government or engage in conduct that 
would require us to register as foreign agents under US law, nor do we accept 
fees from foreign governments.” (source) 
  
Since June 2001, we can also add Bill 
Richardson to the dynamic duo as he became a senior managing director 
following a three year tenure as U.S. Secretary of Energy. 
  
Writing for the New York Times Magazine on April 
20th, 1986, Leslie Gelb gave a small insight into the company: “[in] 
25 to 30 corporations paid KA between $150,000 and $420,000 each per annum for 
political influence and access. […] The superstar international consultants [at 
KA] were certainly people who would get their telephone calls returned from high 
American government officials and who would also be able to get executives in to 
see foreign leaders.”   
  
Back in 1989 it had five partners: Kissinger, 
Brent 
Scowcroft, Lawrence 
Eagleburger, Alan Stoga, T. Jefferson Cunningham III. Power elite, each and 
every one. We know this in part because of documents that were subpeonad by the 
Committee on Foreign Relations in 1991, relating to the BCCI scandal.   
  
For a comprehensive synopsis of Kissinger Associates and BCCI 
see here. 
(or here for the 
entire report) 
  
Kissinger Associates was also involved in the Banca Nazionale 
del Lavoro (BNL) scandal (also known as `Iraqgate’) which can pretty much be 
seen as another tentacle of the same illegal octopus. This scandal was 
particularly at the heart of Kissinger Associates because of the more intimate 
nature of the dealings that Kissinger, Scowcroft, Eagleburger and William Rogers 
had with the various companies and entities involved – not least because BNL 
hired Kissinger Associates. This scandal is perticularly pertinent given the 
current warmongering climate which seeks to launch an all out offensive in Iraq 
– these were the guys who armed the country in the first place. The best online 
information on this scandal comes from Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez (who died in 1998) 
in a series of presentations given to the House of Representatives in 
1991-2. 
  
The key testimonies relating to Kissinger Associates: April 
24th 1991, April 
25th 1991, May 
2nd 1991, April 
28th 1992  (for the 
rest: 1991, 1992) 
  
Some of the information in the April 
25th 1991 hearing may still be relevant. This concerns Volvo and 
its then CEO Pehr Gyllenhammar. I have confirmed that up until 1997 he was still 
a director of Kissinger Associates and it is quite possible that that 
relationship still exists. 
  
The investigation was 
stonewalled from the highest corridors of power, especially because the 
scandal went straight into the heart of the Bush Administration. Indeed, it 
would appear that much of the key 
evidence was shredded by the Department of Justice. In two speeches given in 
July (1 
2) 
Gonzalez explains the explicit foreknowledge that the USG had of US corporate 
interest in arming Iraq – the poiniant fact being therefore that Kissinger, 
Scowcroft et al operated under a blanket of protection. Only time will tell what 
Kissinger Associates have been doing in the past ten years – but the addition of 
McLarty is ominous. If the Republicans help their own you can be sure that 
Democrats will do similar.   
  
Back then, Lloyd 
Cutler, was (and may still be) the attourney for the company. He was also 
Presidential Counsel to Carter and Clinton. Fickle – maybe – but I rest my 
case. 
  
We also know that companies who have used (& may way 
still use) the services of Kissinger Associates include: 
  
American 
Express – Kissinger sits on the International Advisory Board 
Arco (aka Atlantic 
Richfield) 
ASEA Brown Boveri (ABB) 
the Banca Nazionale 
del Lavoro – see above for info on the BNL scandal 
Forstmann Little 
& Co – of which Kissinger is a Director 
Freeport McMoRan – 
Kissinger is now a `Director Emeritus’ of the company earning himself 
personally $400,000 in 1994. 
JP Morgan Chase – 
Kissinger also sits on its International Advisory Board 
Shearson Lehman Hutton 
Union Carbide – 
now merged with Dow Chemical Company – Union Carbide is the company responsible 
for the Bhopal disaster. Much more info on this here. 
  
(sources: Christopher 
Hitchens The Trial of Henry Kissinger (Verso, 2002) p.121-126; Walter 
Isaacson Kissinger: 
A Biography p.733-734;  
also Reuters 
release 5/31/02) 
  
Indeed, the small chapter in Christopher Hitchens book The 
Trial of Henry Kissinger just hints at the utterly power centric and 
compassionless nature of Kissinger Associates. An excerpt from the book, 
predeminately focussing on Kissingers role with Freeport McMoRan (but also his 
business interests in Iraq) can be found here. 
  
The company has also met the wrath of Larry Klayman of 
Judicial Watch: 
  
“The firm of Kissinger, 
McLarty & Richardson epitomizes Washington, D.C. at its worst – sleazy 
ex-administration officials, feeding off special influence and power and then 
pretending, with the help of their enablers, to be fine, upstanding and 
respected gentlemen. Judicial Watch will `watch’ closely their activities and 
take action whenever warranted. Today, we will be filing Freedom of Information 
Act requests to learn about their activities in the recent past,” stated 
Judicial Watch Chairman and General Counsel Larry Klayman. (source) 
  
This announcement was made 
in June 2001 – sadly there is no update of yet.   
  
Kissinger McLarty Associates has a “strategic alliance” with 
the Blackstone Group – seen by many as 
nothing more than another arm of the Carlyle Group. The Blackstone Group 
describes their relationship thus: 
  
“Blackstone's alliance with Kissinger McLarty Associates is 
designed to help provide financial advisory services to corporations seeking 
high-level strategic advice. The relationship was announced in 2000 and recently 
completed its first strategic advisory assignment on behalf of a NYSE-listed 
company.” (source) 
  
Infact the alliance also incorporates Maurice Greenberg’s American International Group, as per this press 
release on February 21st 2000: 
  
“American International Group, Inc. (AIG), The Blackstone 
Group L. P. and Kissinger Associates Inc. announced the establishment of a new 
venture to provide financial advisory services to corporations seeking 
high-level independent strategic advice. […] The venture will operate globally 
and will take advantage of the existing relationships between the partners: 
  
- AIG has an ownership 
interest in Blackstone and is an investor in several of Blackstone's private 
equity funds; 
- AIG and Blackstone have a 
joint venture, specializing in restructuring and M&A advisory services in 
selected Asian countries; 
- Henry Kissinger chairs 
both AIG's International Advisory Board and the advisory boards of several 
AIG-sponsored Infrastructure Funds. 
  
The AIG-Blackstone-Kissinger 
Associates venture recently completed its first advisory assignment on behalf of 
a New York Stock Exchange listed U.S. company.” (source) 
(note: “M&A” means “Mergers and Acquisitions”) 
  
Indeed: “In 
1998, American International Group ("AIG") acquired a 7% non-voting interest in 
The Blackstone Group for $150 million and committed to invest $1.2 billion in 
future Blackstone-sponsored funds.” (source) And Maurice 
Greenberg sits on Blackstone’s Domestic Advisory 
Board. 
  
In 
1999 Kissinger Associates signed on SGV 
& Co “Asia's largest accounting and consulting firm” to “further expand 
its reach”. On June 
6th 2002 SGV became an affiliate of Ernst & Young – prior to 
that it was “a member firm of Arthur Andersen” 
  
Kissinger McLarty has also worked / still works with Princeton Video Image to aid its expansion 
into Latin America: 
  
“Eduardo Sitt, Director of 
Presencia en Medios and member of Princeton Video Image's Board of Directors, 
said, "Publicidad Virtual has demonstrated to Latin America that Princeton Video 
Image's technology is a  viable 
means to generate revenue and gross profit dollars through virtual advertising, 
and we have just scratched the surface. We are taking our successful experience 
in Mexico and expanding into Latin America's other key markets. To help us in 
these efforts, we have retained the services of Kissinger McLarty 
Associates, whose strategic expertise will help us in our expansion.” – 
15th December 2000 (source) 
  
And provides/d similar services 
for GlobalNet: 
  
“GlobalNet, Inc., a fast 
growing telecommunications firm, today announced it has retained the strategic 
consulting firm of Kissinger McLarty Associates to help execute its further 
expansion into Latin America. GlobalNet currently provides customers in the 
United States and Latin America with high-quality voice, fax, and other 
value-added services through its growing internet-protocol based network. Bob 
Donahue, GlobalNet CEO, said, "as we quickly continue to build our network and 
customer base in Latin America, Kissinger McLarty Associates, with its political 
savvy and contacts, will help us establish relationships and avoid pitfalls as 
we enter new markets.''” - 31st July 2000 (source) 
  
“GlobalNet is leveraging its 
partnership model to expand into new areas of Latin America. It recently has 
contracted with the strategic consulting firm of Kissinger McLarty Associates to 
help establish alliances in new markets.” – January 2001 (source) 
  
There was also some speculation of a deal with Excite: 
  
“Kissinger McLarty 
Associates […] has approached Excite@Home about buying a majority stake in the 
company, The Wall St. Journal reports. The firm has been in discussions with 
Excite@Home since May, according to the report.” - August 29, 2001 (source) 
  
Another company is Prescott Enterprises (which is affiliated with the Business Strategy Group): 
  
“[a] DC-based hospitality management and trade consulting 
practice that provides strategic, technical, political counsel, and support 
services to help clients achieve their near and long-term political and economic 
objectives. Founded in 2001 by Tom Prescott, an experienced policy advisor with 
roots in both the hospitality industry and government, the firm specializes in 
addressing hospitality sector business challenges and provides international 
trade policy services in agriculture, other commercial trade, and general 
services. Prescott Enterprises facilitates and enables market expansion and 
provides specialized representation in the federal legislative and regulatory 
processes. The firm maintains a relationship with Kissinger McLarty Associates 
and has developed extensive relationships in the United States, particularly on 
Capitol Hill and within the executive branch, as well as in similar sectors of 
the European Union and a number of Asian nations.”   
  
To 
fulfill the reciprocal relationship, McLarty sits on the board of 
advisors for Prescott.   
  
Another curious company is Zemi Communications. Kissinger serves as its Chairman 
Emeritus, and the company cites `strategic relationships’ with both 
Kissinger Associates & Kissinger McLarty Associates. The company develops 
and manages “communications programs for clients--major corporations and 
governments--from around the world, particularly those who raise capital, sell 
goods and services, or are affected by developments in the United States.” It’s 
founder and President, Alan 
Stoga, used to be a managing director of Kissinger Associates and still 
serves as a director there. “He is currently Vice Chairman of the Americas Society and 
served as acting president and CEO from November 2001 through June 2002.” – That 
good old Council of the Americas strikes again! More on Stoga 
below. 
  
Of all of these associations, the most `troubling’ is 
the relationship between Kissinger Associates, the Blackstone Group and the 
American International Group (under the auspices of financial giant JP Morgan 
Chase and lobbying entity The Council of the Americas.) Indeed, as I intend to 
later show, the power brokers behind and within these five entities crop up so 
frequently it appears as one giant behomoth. This is not to ignore the role the 
companies have outside of the American trading bloc, but the total 
liberalisation of trade between North and South America is a jewel in the crown 
of Kissinger, Peter Peterson & Stephen Schwarzman of Blackstone, Maurice 
Greenberg of AIG, the ubiqutous David Rockefeller and others. Members of all 
also bathe in the corporate and governmental weight of The Council on Foreign 
Relations and The Trilateral Group.   
  
That said, the Kissinger-Blackstone-AIG combo may indeed 
have some far darker sides to its story. All have provided a home for Republican 
`Cold-War Warriors’, who have long been tight with the highest echelons of both 
United States government and its intelligence community. Many, many questions 
arise about foreknowledge of 9-11. Fingers pointed at this group may not simply 
be an erroneous product of a paranoid imagination. When 
7, World Trade Center 
fell, it was dwarfed by the far greater tragedy and suffering that occurred on 
that fateful day. But slowly some curious truths are emerging about that 
building. The Blackstone Group acquired the mortgage to the property back in 
2000. The building housed the CIA, the New York Office of Emergency Management 
and the Secret Service Electronic Crime Fighting Task Force. Citigroup `lost’ 
key documents relating to its dealings with Worldcom. The Greenberg 
family of business’ profiteered greatly from selling insurance against 
terrorist acts – which, if deemed `an act of war’ by Bush, they will never have 
to pay up anyway.   
  
Did any of the people have foreknowledge of 9-11? Did 
they Let It 
Happen On Purpose? Or could there have been more intimate knowledge and even 
planning? 
  
(* in the course of 
researching this web page I came across the following references for old news 
stories. If anybody has access to a library that holds back copies I would be 
eternally grateful for an electronic copy: Washington Post, Aug, 29, 
1989; New York Times, Apr. 30, 1989; Wall Street Journal, Sept. 
15, 1989) 
    
  
  
  
Chairman – 
 
Henry 
A Kissinger 
Vice Chairman -  
Thomas 
F. (Mack) McLarty, III 
Vice-Chairman –  
Alan 
R Batkin 
Vice-Chairman –  
William 
D Rogers 
Senior Managing Director –  
Bill 
Richardson 
Managing Partner -  
Richard 
W. Fisher 
Managing Director –  
Nelson 
W Cunningham 
Managing Director -  
Stephen 
Donehoo 
Managing Director -  
Richard 
L. Huber 
Managing Director -  
J. 
Stapleton Roy 
Senior Director -  
Maria 
Luisa Mabilangan Haley 
Director -  
Alan 
Stoga 
Director -  
Etienne 
Davignon 
Investing Principal -  
Ranch 
C Kimball 
Board of Counselors -  
Gordon 
D Giffin 
Director (unconfirmed) -  
Pehr 
Gyllenhammar 
  
The Rt Hon Lord Carrington and Lord Roll are also rumored to 
be directors, but I am yet to find confirmation of this.   
  
** 
  
  
Vice Chairman, Kissinger Associates, Inc.   
  
President & CEO, Orama Partners 
  
“[the Orama Group is] an investment bank that is the private 
placement arm of the IDB Group -- arguably the largest business enterprise in 
the private sector of the Israeli economy, comprising IDB Holdings, a stake in Israel Discount Bank, IDB Development, Discount Investment Corporation, Clal Israel (including Clal Industries and Investments, Clal Insurance, etc.) and more -- Orama can 
call on significant clout, both within and without the extensive IDB family. 
  
"In addition to the many IDB companies and institutions with 
whom we work on a regular basis, Orama has strategic partners throughout the 
world who do 
not merely cooperate with us they are minority owners in 
Orama," explains Gil Weiser, active vice chairman of Orama Ltd., the firm's 
Israel-based operation. Orama consists of Orama Ltd., headquartered in Tel Aviv, 
and subsidiary Orama Partners, incorporated in the US and based in New York. 
 
 
  
Among the prominent names that own minority interests in 
Orama are Compaq, Intel, Lucent, McCaw Cellular, Softbank, Silicon Graphics, 
Siemens, Silicon Valley Bank and the TDF agency of the government of Singapore.” 
[source] 
  
Director 
of Diamond Offshore Drilling 
(along with Bill 
Richardson) 
Director of  
Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc 
Director of  
Schweitzer-Mauduit International, 
Inc 
  
Corporate 
Advisory Board of the Pacific 
Council on International Policy (the Western Partner of the Council on Foreign Relations) 
  
Steering Committee of the  
Kissinger Chair in 
Foreign Policy and International Relations 
  
Member of the  
Inter-American Dialogue 
  
He 
was a managing director of Lehman 
Brothers. 
  
** 
  
  
Managing Director, Kissinger Associates, Inc 
  
** 
  
  
Managing Director, Kissinger McLarty Associates, 
Washington 
  
He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
  
** 
  
  
Director, Kissinger Associates (he WAS in 1997 – haven’t 
been able to confirm beyond that date) 
  
In 1959, Mr. Davignon joined the Belgian Ministry of Foreign 
Affairs and was Head of the Cabinets of Ministers Spaak and Harmel. From 1969 he 
was responsible for the Political Department of the Ministry until his departure 
in 1977 when he joined the EEC. 
  
During his career at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he was 
directly involved with Belgium's policies in Africa, the independence of Ruanda 
and Burundi and the solution to the Belgium and Zaïre conflict. 
  
He was also a key figure behind the report on the future of 
the Atlantic Alliance (Harmel report) and he presided the committee, which 
prepared the first proposals regarding political cooperation between EEC members 
(Davignon report): 1974- 1975. 
  
Following the oil crisis in 1973, Mr. Davignon chaired the 
International Conference, which established an oil sharing treaty. From 1974 to 
1977, he was the first President of the International Energy Agency created 
November 18, 1974. 
  
After leaving the civil service in 1977, Mr. Davignon was 
appointed Vice President of the EEC, in charge of industry, research and energy 
up until the end of 1984. During this period he was active in the restructuring 
of European industry (steel, textiles, synthetic fibres) and promoting new 
research cooperative ventures in Information Technology and Telecommunication 
(Esprit, Race). He negotiated on behalf of the EEC, key agreements with the US, 
Japan and China. 
  
In the beginning of 1985 he joined Société Générale de 
Belgique, Belgium's leading holding company of which he became Chairman on the 
11th April 1989. He serves as Vice- Chairman since 28th February 2001. 
  
Mr. Davignon is a member of the Board of Suez, BASF, ICL, 
Anglo American, Sofina, Solvay, Royal Sporting Club of Anderlecht and several 
S.G.B. group companies and is Vice- Chairman of Fortis and Tractebel. 
  
He became Chairman of the Association for the Monetary Union 
of Europe on May 30, 1991. 
  
He is a Chairman of the Paul-Henri Spaak Foundation, the 
Royal Institute for International Relations, the "Palais des Beaux-Arts" and the 
Bilderberg Meetings. 
  
He is Chairman of the “Advisory Board” of “CSR Europe”. 
  
Etienne Davignon is Chairman of Compagnie des Wagons- 
Lits,Sibeka,Socit Gnrale de Belgique and Union Minire (each of Belgium).He also 
serves as Vice President of Accor (France),Petrofina (Belgium),Fortis AG and 
Tractebel (both of Belgium)and Arbed (Luxembourg).He is a director of Sofina 
SA,Solvay SA and Compagnie Maritime Belge (each of Belgium);ICL (United 
Kingdom); Gilead,IDG and Foamex International (each of the United States).He is 
also a member of the supervisory board of BASF (Germany) and of Suez Lyonnais 
des Eaux (France).He can be contacted at 30,rue Royale,1000 Brussels (Belgium). 
 
 
  
** 
  
  
Managing Director, Kissinger McLarty Associates 
  
He is an associate of the 
 Inter-American Dialogue 
  
** 
  
  
Managing Partner, Kissinger McLarty Associates 
  
  
Richard Fisher is the managing partner of Kissinger McLarty Associates, an 
international consulting firm. He previously was managing partner of Fisher 
Family Fund, LP, a diversified fund invested in a wide range of securities, real 
estate, and oil and gas properties. He served during the Clinton administration 
as Deputy 
U.S. Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador and with primary 
responsibility for Asia, Latin America and Canada. During this period, 
Ambassador Fisher was the chief operating officer of the U.S. government for 
NAFTA. As such, he negotiated numerous high-profile issues throughout the 
hemisphere. Throughout his tenure as Deputy Trade Representative, Ambassador 
Fisher also served as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC). 
 
 
  
Earlier he was managing partner of Value Partners Ltd. and Fisher 
Capital Management; senior manager of Brown 
Brothers Harriman and Co.; and executive assistant to the Secretary of the 
Treasury in the Carter Administration. Ambassador Fisher is currently an adjunct 
professor at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at 
Austin, and was Texas' Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate in 1994. A member of the Council on Foreign Relations, he is a trustee of 
the Brookings Institution and a director of Stolt-Nielsen, S.A. He is a former 
chairman of the Institute of the 
Americas in San Diego and founding chairman of the Dallas Committee on 
Foreign Relations. 
  
He is a director of the 
 
Pacific Council on International 
Policy 
  
He is a director of the Atlantic Council of the United States.. 
  
“Former deputy U.S. trade representative and 1994 Democratic 
U.S. Senate nominee Richard Fisher is taking on several new projects. He is the 
new managing partner of Kissinger McLarty Associates, a firm headed by former 
Nixon Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former Clinton White House chief of 
staff 
Mack McLarty. Fisher and McLarty are also ponying up $50 
million in personal funds to start an investment firm called Fisher McLarty 
Capital. Finally, Fisher is joining the Latin American strategy board of the 
Dallas investment firm Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst.” June 14th 2002 
(source) 
  
** 
  
  
Board of Counselors of Kissinger-McLarty Associates 
  
Ambassador Gordon Giffin is the vice chairman and 
managing partner of Long Aldridge & 
Norman’s D.C. office and heads the firm’s International Transactions and 
Trade practice. 
  
Utilizing international trade, business and foreign affairs 
expertise, Ambassador Giffin assists clients in negotiating and managing 
international expansion and government affairs issues, with a particular focus 
on continental and hemispheric matters. He also practices in the administrative, 
regulated industries, government procurement and energy fields. 
  
As the U.S. Ambassador to Canada from August 1997 to April 
2001, he managed American interests in the largest bi-lateral trading 
relationship in the world. In this role, Ambassador Giffin was instrumental in 
resolving international disputes and forging agreements, including the Pacific 
salmon fishing rights, a Canadian exemption from U.S. export licensing rules and 
agreement on a decades-long dispute on Canadian advertising in U.S. magazines. 
He helped facilitate U.S. participation in the 2001 Summit of the Americas, a 
precursor to the negotiation of the Free Trade Area of the Americas. Ambassador 
Giffin became an expert on the operation of the North American Free Trade 
Agreement (NAFTA), an agreement that is the prototype for liberalized trade and 
is leading to further continental economic development and collaboration. 
  
Additionally, he served for four years as Director of 
Legislative Affairs and Chief Counsel to U.S. Senator Sam Nunn and served on the 
Board of Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation. 
  
Mr. Giffin is: 
  
Director 
- Canadian National Railway 
Company   
Director 
-  Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce 
Director - Canadian Natural Resources, Ltd 
  
Director 
–  
Metro-Atlantic Chamber of 
Commerce 
Chairman of the Board - Friends of the  
National Arts Centre 
  
Board of 
Counselors -  
Woodrow Wilson International 
Center for Scholars 
Advisory Board -  
Canadian-American Business Council 
Board of 
Trustees -  
Georgia Research Alliance 
Board of 
Trustees -  
The Carter Center 
  
He is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
  ** 
  
  
Senior Director, 
Kissinger McLarty Associates 
  
Ms. Haley was nominated 
by the President to become a director of the  Export-Import Bank Board and confirmed 
by the U.S. Senate in April 1994, filling out an unexpired term. Before 
accepting that position, she worked at the White House as Special Assistant to 
the President and Associate Director of Presidential Personnel for Economics, 
Commerce, and Trade. Ms. Haley played an integral part in the selection and 
approval of political appointments in three Cabinet departments and twelve 
independent agencies.   
  
Previously, Ms. 
Haley had worked for the State of Arkansas in various international capacities. 
She was in charge of international development for the state, focusing on export 
development and foreign investments. Ms. Haley has worked in international 
business for the past 25 years in sales, marketing and operations. 
 
 
  
The daughter of a 
diplomat, Ms. Haley was educated in India, Manila, Paris and Madrid. Her 
community interests range from the Filipino Youth Scholarship Foundation to 
memberships in the Sales and Marketing Executives Association both in Little 
Rock and Manila, the Arkansas Women Executives, and the Professional Women's 
Advisory Board of Worthen Bank and Trust.   
  
She is currently a director 
of the  Federal Home Loan Bank of 
Atlanta 
  
** 
  
  
Managing Director Kissinger McLarty Associates 
  
Mr Huber is CEO of Norte Sur, a private equity firm targeting 
Latin America.   
  
Mr. Huber joined Aetna as 
vice chairman in February 1995 and was named a director in September 1996. He 
has 37 years of banking, insurance and financial services experience in the 
United States, Japan and Latin America. In July 1997 he was named CEO of Aetna 
and in 1998 he became the Chairman of the board. During his time there, he was 
responsible for a number of strategic acquisitions such as NYLCare, PruCare and 
USHealthcare, making Aetna the largest healthcare insurer in the world. He left 
the company in February 2000. 
  
Immediately before joining Aetna, Mr. Huber was president and 
chief operating officer, Grupo Wasserstein Perella, responsible for developing 
investment and merchant banking activities throughout Latin America for 
Wasserstein Perella, a leading investment banking firm. Prior to that, in 1990 
he became vice chairman and a director of Continental Bank NA, Chicago, where he 
worked closely with the Chairman to return the institution to financial strength 
and profitability and negotiate its eventual sale to Bank of America. While at 
Continental, Mr. Huber had direct management oversight of the capital markets, 
risk management, direct equity, Latin America, securities and commodities and 
financial institutions areas.   
  
From 1988 to 1990, he was hired as executive vice president 
and head, capital markets and foreign exchange sector for Chase Manhattan Bank, 
charged with restructuring and restoring this sector to profitability. From 1973 
to 1988 he held various senior management positions with Citibank, including 
institutional banking head—Brazil; country head—Japan; group executive, Asia 
Pacific Banking Group; and group executive, Citicorp Investment Bank, overseeing 
its Latin American investment bank, global corporate finance and insurance 
businesses.   
  
A native of North Carolina, Mr. Huber graduated from Harvard 
College in 1958 with a bachelor’s degree in chemistry and subsequently served as 
an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard. He is a director of Capital Re Corp.; a 
member of the board of directors of the Hartford Ballet; trustee of the Mark 
Twain House; trustee of Trinity College; member of the Council on Foreign 
Relations, and Chairman of Citizens’ Committee for Effective Government. 
  
  
Mr. Huber serves as director of a number of firms and was a 
member of the Congressional International Financial Institutions Advisory 
Commission. He is also a director of Danielson Holdings Corporation and 
a director 
of OptiCare. 
  
He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
  
Alton G. Keel, Jr. 
http://www.ifpa.org/staff/consultants_bott.htm
 
 
  
** 
  
  
Investing Principal / Advisor of the legal consultant's 
office – Kissinger McLarty Associates 
  
  
** 
  
  
“Political satire became 
obsolete when Henry Kissinger was awarded the Nobel Peace 
Prize.” – Tom 
Lehrer 
  
Attempting a biography on a page such as this is an 
impossibility. The man has an eerie omnipresence in American & Global 
history. Instead, I will focus on a rather staccato list of his current 
affiliations & salient parts of his past. In 1977 he made this comment: “The 
Trilateral Commission was a government in exile.” He wasn’t lying. 
  
  
  
Dr. Kissinger was born in Fuerth, Germany, on May 27, 1923, 
came to the United States in 1938, and was naturalised a United States citizen 
on June 19, 1943. From 1943 to 1946 Dr. Kissinger served in the U.S. Army 
Counter-Intelligence Corps and from 1946 to 1949 was a captain in the Military 
Intelligence Reserve. He received the BA Degree Summa Cum Laude at Harvard 
College in 1950 and the MA and PhD Degrees at Harvard University in 1952 and 
1954 respectively. 
  
From 1954 until 1971 he was a member of the Faculty of 
Harvard University, both in the Department of Government and at the Center for 
International Affairs. He was Associate Director of the Center from 1957 to 
1960. He served as Study Director, Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy, for the 
Council of Foreign Relations from 1955 to 1956; Director of the Special Studies 
Project for the Rockefeller Brothers Fund from 1956 to 1958; Director of the 
Harvard International Seminar from 1951 to 1971, and Director of the Harvard 
Defense Studies Program from 1958 to 1971. (He was on leave of absence from 
Harvard from January 1969 to January 1971). 
  
Dr. Kissinger was sworn in on September 22, 1973, as the 56th 
Secretary of State, a position he held until January 20, 1977. He also served as 
Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs from January 20, 1969, 
until November 3, 1975. In July 1983, he was appointed by President Reagan to 
chair the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America until it ceased 
operation in January 1985, and from 1984-1990 he served as a member of the 
President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. 
  
The most objective biography of Henry Kissinger to date is 
Walter Isaacson’s Kissinger: 
A Biography. That such, much has come to light since Isaacson’s book, 
specifically connected to Kissingers criminality. The best book dealing with 
this is Christopher Hitchens The 
Trial of Henry Kissinger. 
  
  
Although there is a general sense of foreboding around 
anything that Henry Kissinger does, it is worth remembering the specific charges 
of conspiracy and criminality which are levied against him. An indictment of 
Henry Kissinger for genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes would 
include (but not be confined to) the following: 
  
VIETNAM: 
Kissinger scuttled peace talks in 1968, paving the way for Richard Nixon's 
victory in the presidential race. Half the battle deaths in Vietnam took place 
between 1968 and 1972, not to mention the millions of civilians throughout 
Indochina who were killed.   
  
CAMBODIA: 
Kissinger persuaded Nixon to widen the war with massive bombing of Cambodia and 
Laos. No one had suggested we go to war with either of these countries. By 
conservative estimates, the U.S. killed 600,000 civilians in Cambodia and 
another 350,000 in Laos.   
  
BANGLADESH: 
Using weapons supplied by the U.S., General Yahya Khan overthrew the 
democratically elected government and murdered at least half a million civilians 
in 1971. In the White House, the National Security Council wanted to condemn 
these actions. Kissinger refused. Amid the killing, Kissinger thanked Khan for 
his "delicacy and tact."   
  
CHILE: 
Kissinger helped to plan the 1973 U.S.-backed overthrow of the democratically 
elected Salvador Allende and the assassination of General René Schneider. 
Right-wing general Augusto Pinochet then took over. Moderates fled for their 
lives. Hit men, financed by the CIA, tracked down Allende supporters and killed 
them. These attacks included the car bombing of Allende's foreign minister, 
Orlando Letelier, and an aide, Ronni Moffitt, at Sheridan Circle in downtown 
Washington.   
  
EAST TIMOR: 
In 1975 President Ford and Secretary of State Kissinger met with Indonesia's 
corrupt strongman Suharto. Kissinger told reporters the U.S. wouldn't recognize 
the tiny country of East Timor, which had recently won independence from the 
Portuguese. Within hours Suharto launched an invasion, killing, by some 
estimates, 200,000 civilians.   
  
WASHINGTON: Personal 
involvement in a plan to kidnap and murder a journalist - Elias Demetracopoulos 
- living in Washington DC. 
  
More overall info at  
Christopher Hitchens own 
site 
  
In late August 2002, the State Department finally released a 
series of documents concerning Argentina, which further implicate Kissinger’s 
role as the Argentina military believed that the US (primarily Kissinger) had 
given the go ahead to their coup to “get the terrorist problem under control as 
quickly as possible”. 
  
The National Security Archive is hosting a selection of these 
documents: here and here. And 
once again, Kissinger has found himself in 
the news for all the wrong reasons. 
  
See also: Regarding Henry 
Kissinger: The Making of a War Criminal – transcript of a roundtable forum 
held in Washington on February 22nd 2001, discussing the background 
of Kissinger & how any criminal proceedings could begin.   
  
  
Chairman & Founder – Kissinger Associates Inc 
Director - ContiGroup Companies, Inc 
(previously Continental Grain Company) 
Director 
– Hollinger International, Inc – 
 
List of Hollinger’s media 
ownership 
Director -  
Freeport-McMoran Copper and Gold Inc 
International 
Advisor to the Board of Directors –  
American Express 
International 
Council –  
JP Morgan Chase 
Chairman, International Advisory Board – 
 American International Group 
Director – AIG Global  -- (a wholly owned subsiduary of AIG) 
Chairman, Advisory Board -- AIG Asian Infrastructure Fund, 
 
AIG Asian Infrastructure Fund 
II 
Board of 
Advisors -  
China National 
Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC) 
Europe 
Strategy Board - Hicks, Muse, 
Tate & Furst   
Director -  
Forstmann Little and Co 
Director – 
 
Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation 
  
Member – Council of Foreign Relations (well, he’s 
practically a saint there – eg.) 
Steering 
Committee (1982-98), member – The Bilderberg Conference 
Member, North American Group –  
The Trilateral Commission 
  
Chairman – 
America-China Society 
Council of Advisors - 
United States-Azerbaijan Chamber of 
Commerce  -- (see my site) 
Co-Chairman, Editorial 
Board – The National 
Interest (quarterly magazine on American Foreign Policy) 
  
Honorary Governor -  
Foreign 
Policy Association 
Chairman –  
The Eisenhower Exchange 
Fellowships 
Chairman 
–  
The American Academy in 
Berlin 
Director –  
The American Council on Germany 
Honorary 
Chairman –  
The Nixon Center 
Trustee – 
The Centre for Strategic and International 
Studies (CSIS) 
Director 
–  The International Rescue Committee 
Trustee –  
The Open Russia Foundation 
Trustee 
- Arthur F Burns Fellowship   
Member 
–  
International 
Olympic Committee 
Trustee 
–  Institute of International Education 
Honorary Trustee –  
International House 
Patron –  
The Atlantic Partnership 
Patron –  
The New Atlantic Initiative 
Director –  
The Centre for Democracy 
Chancellor –  
The College of William & Mary 
Trustee Emeritus –  
The 
Metropolitan Museum of Art 
  
Until recently he was also a director of Revlon. 
  
Son  - David 
Kissinger – President - USA 
Television Production Group 
  
And for the strong of stomach, there’s this 
interactive timeline. 
  
** 
  
  
I assume 
he is a research assistant for the firm. 
  
Dr. Peter Mandaville is Assistant 
Professor of Government and Politics at George Mason University, and was 
previously Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Kent at 
Canterbury in England. He is most recently the author of Transnational Muslim 
Politics (London: Routledge, 2001), and has also co-edited a volume of essays on 
non-Western approaches to international relations, The Zen of International 
Relations (New York: Palgrave, 2001), authored numerous book chapters, and 
contributed articles to journals such as Millennium and the Review of 
International Studies. His current research examines the impact of globalization 
on political activism, transnational social networks in the developing 
world. 
  
Paper 
(PDF) to a recent Carnegie 
Conference on  Globalization, State Capacity and Islamic Movements 
  
** 
  
  
President Clinton and Mack McLarty met in kindergarten in 
their native town of Hope, Arkansas. Since that time, they have stayed in touch, 
personally as well as professionally, and have always referred to each other as 
"my oldest friend."   
  
Student body president at the University of Arkansas at 
Fayetteville, McLarty, at age 23, was elected to the Arkansas House of 
Representatives. One of the youngest people ever to be elected to the Arkansas 
House, McLarty later went on to serve as chairman of the Arkansas State 
Democratic Party from 1974 through 1976. He was also treasurer in the successful 
gubernatorial elections of Senator David Pryor and President Clinton.   
  
McLarty became the youngest person ever elected to the Arkla board in 1974, and was named 
president of Arkansas Louisiana Gas Company in 1983. McLarty was named chairman 
and chief executive officer of Arkla, Inc. in 1985 and held this position until 
being asked to serve as White House Chief of Staff after the election of 
President Clinton in 1992. During McLarty's tenure, Arkla was recognized by 
Forbes and Financial World magazines, as well as the Wall Street Transcript, as 
one of the nation's most innovative companies in the natural gas industry. 
Additionally, he was personally recognized on several occasions as one of the 
natural gas industry's most outstanding chief executive officers.   
  
He was appointed by President George Bush to the National Petroleum Council and the National 
Council on Environmental Quality. He was a member of the St. Louis Federal 
Reserve Board from 1989 through 1992.   
  
Beginning in 1992, he served President Clinton in several key 
positions: Chief of Staff, Counselor to the President, and Special Envoy for the 
Americas, with over five years of service in the President's Cabinet and on the 
National Economic Council. He holds a degree in business administration from the 
University of Arkansas. 
  
Mr. McLarty is Vice Chairman and serves on the 
Board of Directors of Asbury Automotive 
Group, Inc., which is one of the largest automotive retailers in the United 
States. The McLarty Companies is comprised of 11 automotive dealerships located 
in two states that generate in excess of $600 million. Mr. McLarty began his 
career building the company his grandfather founded, McLarty Leasing Systems, 
into one of the nation's largest transportation companies. He is also Chairman 
and CEO of McLarty Companies, Inc, McLarty AutoMall and McLarty 
Management Company, Inc., of Little Rock, Arkansas, and is Vice Chairman of 
Kissinger McLarty Associates of Washington D.C.   
  
He is a board member of the Financial Times Advisory Board of 
London, England and the M.D. Anderson 
Cancer Center in Houston, TX.   
  
He also serves as: 
  
Director –  
Entergy 
Corporation 
Board of 
Directors -  
Fusion Telecommunications 
International 
Advisory 
Board –  
Edelman Public Relations 
Worldwide 
Consumer 
Advisory Board –  
Household Finance 
Corporation 
  
He is a member of the 
 Council on Foreign Relations 
Director – 
 
The Americas 
Society 
Member –  
Inter-American 
Dialogue 
  
Trustee –  
Center for the Study of Presidency 
  
** 
  
  
Senior Managing Director - Kissinger McLarty Associates 
  
His tenure with Kissinger McLarty Associates may be soon 
ending as he is running for Governor for New Mexico in the 
upcoming gubernational elections in November. Just what the country needs. On June 
5th 2002 he resigned from the boards of ten companies. These 
were: Diamond Offshore Drilling 
(of which Alan 
Batkin is still a director), Peregrine 
Systems, City National Corporation, American Energy Group Inc., Energy Investors Fund Group, Valero Corp., Venoco, Hispanic Radio Network, Intellibridge 
Expert Network (of which ex-Kissinger McLarty Associates managing director 
David 
Rothkopf is CEO) and TerraSolar. He 
has decided to stay with Kissinger McLarty Associates (for now at least). Given 
that half of these companies and oil and gas related, his 
post 9-11 article about the oil market and the war on terror – concluding: 
“We should understand the Realpolitik of the Middle East, realize that a diverse 
and competitive global oil market reduces our economic vulnerabilities and 
defend America's national security interests without fear of setting off an 
energy crisis” - comes as no great surprise. His closest ties are with Veneco. 
As the Albuquerque Journal reports: 
  
“However, he said he has had 
a long-standing relationship with Valero. He said he is good friends with Bill 
Greehey, Valero's chief executive officer and chairman of the board. Valero 
contributed to Richardson's congressional campaigns in the 1990s, and the 
company contributed $15,000 to his race for governor, according to documents 
filed with the Secretary of State's Office.” (source) 
  
In January 2002, he became 
co-chairman of the South Asia 
Regional Energy Coalition (SAREC), which “represents private sector 
interests in the South Asia Regional Initiative/Energy (SARI/Energy), which is a 
project of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).” We 
also know that he received money from Salomon Smith 
Barney (subsiduary of Citigroup & once housed in WTC7) – a disclosure which 
is listed as “financial services, investments”. 
  
Following his 
unanimous confirmation by the United States Senate, Bill Richardson spent nearly 
two-and-a-half years – from 1998 to 2001 - as Secretary 
of Energy. Prior to becoming Energy Secretary, Richardson served as U.S. 
Ambassador to the United Nations between 1997-1998. At the U.N., Richardson 
addressed numerous difficult international negotiating challenges and crises all 
over the world. 
  
Bill Richardson was born in Pasadena, Los Angeles County, 
California on November 15, 1947. He attended school in Mexico City, and in 1966 
he graduated from 
Middlesex School, in Concord, Massachusetts. He studied at 
Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, where he earned a B.A. degree (1970) 
and received an M.A. (1971) from its Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. 
During 1971 to 1978 he was a staff member of the Senate Foreign Relations 
Committee.   
  
In 1980 Richardson unsuccessfully challenged incumbent 
Congressman Manuel Luján. Following the creation of northern New Mexico's Third 
District, Richardson won the 1982 election with sixty-seven percent of the vote. 
He ran a successful campaign visiting small towns and pueblos, and was elected 
by a primarily Hispanic and Native American constituency. He has subsequently 
been reelected with large margins, averaging seventy percent of the vote. He 
served as the US Representative for New Mexico from January 3, 1983 to February 
13, 1997. 
  
During his first term in Congress, Richardson won a coveted 
seat on the Energy and Commerce Committee, which is of particular importance to 
New Mexico. He balanced his agenda between the interest of environmentalists and 
important oil, gas, and uranium industries in his state.   
  
In the 101st Congress, Richardson supported a plan to promote 
the use of non-gasoline cars, parts of which were included in the Clean Air Act 
re-authorization. As a member of the Interior and Insular Affairs Committee, he 
has supported expansion of national parks and the designation of wild and scenic 
rivers.   
  
By the 103rd Congress, Richardson had risen to the position 
of Chief Deputy Whip and led the fight in the House for the North American Free 
Trade Agreement (NAFTA). He wrote articles advocating NAFTA for important 
national newspapers and encouraged President Clinton to work with Mexico on 
improving the environmental portions of the agreement in order to gain support 
for NAFTA in Congress. Richardson also played a key role in passing President 
Clinton's 1993 Deficit Reduction package and the 1994 Crime Bill. In addition to 
his seat on the Energy and Commerce Committee, Richardson was the second-ranking 
Democrat on the Select Intelligence Committee and served on the Natural 
Resources Committee, where he chaired the Native American Affairs Subcommittee 
which was created in the 103rd Congress.   
  
In late 1994, Richardson travelled to North Korea to discuss 
a nuclear agreement. He arrived the same day a U.S. helicopter was shot down by 
the North Koreans and thereby was thrust into the position of negotiating for 
the release of two U.S. pilots. After five days of tense talks, Richardson left 
North Korea with the remains of one pilot and a promise that the surviving pilot 
would be released "very soon." He returned home the following week.   
  
Richardson's highly successful, but unexpected, foray into 
North Korea was actually his third high profile foreign affairs experience in 
1994. In July, he laid the groundwork for a peaceful resolution to the growing 
Haitian crisis when he held a five and a half hour meeting with Haitian leader 
General Raoul Cedras in Haiti. In February, Richardson travelled to Burma to 
meet with Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel laureate, and leader of the persecuted 
democracy movement, and then convinced military leaders to open talks about her 
release. Richardson was the first non-family member allowed to visit the 
dissident in her more than five years under house arrest.   
  
Director –  
National Alliance for Hispanic 
Health 
Trustee - 
 
Natural Resources Defense Council 
Chairman, Board of 
Trustees –  
Freedom House 
  
He is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
  
** 
  
  
Managing Director, Kissinger McLarty Associates 
  
Ambassador Roy graduated from Princeton University (B.A., 
1956). He was born June 16, 1935, in Nanjing, China.   
  
He is one of only 38 foreign-service officers to have 
achieved the rank of "career ambassador". In 1991, Roy was nominated to 
the position of US Ambassador to China, a position which he served until 1995. 
He then served as US 
Ambassador to Indonesia until late 1999. From November 1999 to January 
13th 2001 he served as Assistant Secretary of State 
for Intelligence and Research, resigning 
early in protest over his collegue’s dismissal over a lost 
laptop. In 
early 2000 he 
outlined to congress what he saw as emerging threats to America. 
  
From 1989 to 1991 Ambassador Roy served as Special Assistant 
to the Secretary and Executive Secretary of the Department of State in 
Washington, DC. Prior to this Ambassador Roy served as Deputy Assistant 
Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs at the Department of State, 1986 - 
1989; as U.S. 
Ambassador to Singapore, 1984 - 1986; as Deputy Chief of the U.S. Mission in 
Bangkok, Thailand, 1981 - 1984; as deputy chief of the U.S. mission in Beijing, 
China, 1979 - 1981; and as Deputy Chief of the U.S. liaison office in Beijing, 
China, 1978 - 1979. In addition, Ambassador Roy has served as Deputy Director of 
the Office of People's Republic of China and Mongolian Affairs at the Department 
of State, 1975 - 1978; studied at the National War College in Washington, DC, 
1974 - 1975; and served as a Deputy Director and international relations officer 
in the Office of Soviet Union Affairs at the Department of State, 1972 - 1974. 
Ambassador Roy served at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow as a political officer, 1979 
- 1972; as an administrative officer, 1978 - 1979; and as an international 
relations officer in the Office of European and Canadian Affairs and the Office 
of Soviet Affairs at the Department of State, 1965 - 1968. Ambassador Roy has 
also served in several U.S. Embassies and consulates, including: political 
officer in Taipei, 1962 - 1964; consular officer in Hong Kong, 1962; and 
political officer in Bangkok, 1959 - 1961. He served as an intelligence analyst 
at the State Department, 1957 - 1958. Ambassador Roy entered the Foreign Service 
in 1956.   
  
J. Stapleton Roy has been managing director of Kissinger 
Associates, Inc. since January 2001. Before that, he served as U.S. Ambassador 
to Singapore, Indonesia and the People's Republic of China. He is a director of Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc (a 
Kissinger Associates client & on whose board Kissinger 
also sits) and a director 
of Phillips Petroleum. The merger of 
Phillips with Conoco to create ConocoPhillips was created on August 
30th 2002 and it will begin trading on Sept. 3rd. As Roy 
was only made director of Phillips in August 2001 I would assume that he has 
been kept with the new company. 
  
  
He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
Executive Board 
Member –  
US-China Policy Foundation 
Chairman - Hopkins-Nanjing Center for Chinese and 
American Studies, Paul H. Nitze School of 
Advanced International Studies, John Hopkins 
University   
He is also a trustee of the Asia 
Foundation. 
  
** 
  
  
  
William Rogers is a senior partner 
in Arnold & Porter’s litigation and 
international practice groups. He concentrates on international financial and 
monetary matters, on international public law issues for several governments and 
international organizations, and on international arbitration. He has acted as 
both arbitrator and advocate at the International Chamber of Commerce and the 
International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes. 
  
Mr. Rogers joined Arnold & Porter in 1953 after 
graduation from Yale Law School and a term as Law Clerk to Supreme Court Justice 
Stanley Reed. He was Special Counsel and later Deputy U.S. Coordinator of the 
Alliance for Progress from 1961 until 1965, when he rejoined the firm and became 
first President of the Center for Inter-American Relations of New York. From 
1974 until 1977, he served again in the State Department, first as Assistant 
Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs and later as Undersecretary of 
State for Economic Affairs. After his second return to Arnold & Porter, he 
became active in the final Panama Canal Treaty negotiations in 1978, and was 
special emissary of President Carter to El Salvador in 1980, co-chairman of the 
Bilateral Commission on the Future of U.S. Mexican Relations, and Senior 
Counselor to the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America and lecturer 
on public international law on the Law Faculty of Cambridge University in 
1982–1983. Mr. Rogers has served as President of the American Society of 
International Law, is a three- term member of the Board of Directors of the 
Council on Foreign Relations in New York and is a member of the Board of 
Directors of the Cordell Hull Institute. He is Vice Chairman of Kissinger 
Associates Inc. and is the author of various publications on foreign 
relations. 
  
Mr. Rogers is admitted to the District of Columbia Bar. 
  
LL.B., Yale Law School, 1951 
A.B., Princeton University, 1948 
  
1999 
interview with Mr Rogers – talks about how he met Kissinger & ended up 
at Kissinger Associates.   
  ** 
  
  
Alan Stoga is President of Zemi, which he organized in 1996. Mr Stoga 
focuses on developing client strategies, on counseling top management, and on 
developing the firm’s resources. He is currently Vice Chairman of the Americas 
Society and served as acting president and CEO from November 2001 through June 
2002. 
  
From 1995 to 1998, Mr. Stoga managed Zemi Investments, a 
private equity company investing in small and medium size companies, primarily 
in Brazil and Mexico. 
  
Previously, Mr. Stoga was Managing Director of Kissinger 
Associates, from 1984 until 1996; he continues to be a Director and consultant 
to the firm. Previously, he was an executive of the First National Bank of 
Chicago and an official in the U.S. Treasury. 
  
He received an M.A. in International Relations from Yale 
University and a B.A. from Michigan State University. 
  
He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a director of the Council of the Americas. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
Robert Orville Anderson, petroleum executive, rancher and 
civic leader, has been active in the oil industry since his graduation from The 
University of Chicago in 1939 with a Bachelor of Arts degree.   
  
Mr. Anderson served Atlantic Richfield Company (formerly 
known as Atlantic Refining Company) as its Chief Executive Officer for 17 years. 
As Chairman of the Board for 21 years, and as a member of the Board of Directors 
for 23 years. Mr. Anderson retired from the company in 1986 to form an 
independent oil and gas company. He served as Chairman and Chief Executive 
Officer of Hondo Oil & Gas Company, Roswell, New Mexico, from September 1986 
to February 1994. He remains an active wildcatter for oil and gas, as well as 
other business interests. 
  
Mr. Anderson served as Chairman of the Board of the Federal 
Reserve Bank of Dallas from 1961 through 1964. He has served on the Board of 
Directors of Chase Manhattan Bank, New York, Columbia broadcasting System, New 
York; First National Bank of Chicago; Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, Washington; 
and Carter Hawley Hale Stores, Inc. of Los Angeles. In the past 55 years his 
business endeavors have included, - in addition to the exploration, production, 
refining and marketing of oil, - cattle raising and feeding operations, mining 
and milling, and general manufacturing. 
  
Mr. Anderson’s first full-time job in the oil business was in 
1939 with American Mineral Spirits Company, a subsidiary of Pure Oil Company, 
Chicago. In 1941, he acquired a substantial interest in a small refinery in 
Artesia, New Mexico, at which time he and his family moved to New Mexico. In the 
next 15 years he bought and expanded several refineries and purchased Wilshire 
Oil Company of California, which was subsequently sold to Gulf Oil 
Corporation. 
  
Mr. Anderson has served on the Board of Directors of national 
Petroleum Council since 1951 and is the recipient of numerous honorary degrees 
and awards, recognizing his extensive interest in public and charitable affairs. 
He was the first recipient of the Charles A. Lindbergh Award for Significant 
Achievement in 1978; inducted into Junior Achievement Business Hall of Fame in 
1986. He was the first recipient of The Dwight D. Eisenhower Medal of Excellence 
in 1989. He is Honorary Chairman of Aspen Institute, Aspen, Colorado; Chairman 
of Lovelace-Anderson Endowment Foundation, Albuquerque, New Mexico. He was the 
Founder of International Institute for Environment and Development, London; and 
is a Life Trustee of California Institute of Technology and of The University of 
Chicago, and is a member of the National Advisory Board of The University of New 
Mexico Anderson Schools of Management. Mr. Anderson is a former member of the 
Board of Regents of New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology from 1987 to 
1992, and in 1994 was named Distinguished Professor, Department of Petroleum and 
Natural Gas Engineering. He has lent his name to the Robert O. Anderson Schools of Management at New 
Mexico University. 
  
Mr. Anderson was born in Chicago on April 13, 1917. He has 
been active for many years in political affairs, having served as New Mexico 
Committeeman on the Republican National Committee. He and his wife, Barbara, 
have been married sixty years and have seven children, twenty grandchildren and 
one great-granddaughter. They maintain homes in Roswell and Picacho, New 
Mexico. 
  
He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
  ** 
  
  
On October 11th 2001, Ambassador Bremer became 
chairman and chief executive officer of the Crisis Consulting Practice of Marsh 
Inc., an operating company of Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. (MMC). 
Marsh's Crisis Consulting Practice provides services to corporations to help 
them plan for, manage and recover from a full range of crises such as natural 
disasters, product recalls, workplace violence and terrorism. Bremer also has 
been responsible for Marsh's political risk business since he joined the firm in 
October 2000. 
  
Prior to joining Marsh, Bremer had been managing director at 
Kissinger Associates, a strategic consulting firm headed by former 
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. He joined the Kissinger firm in 1989 after a 
23-year career in the diplomatic service, which he left after attaining the rank 
of ambassador-at-large. 
  
Ambassador Bremer joined the Diplomatic Service in 1966. His 
overseas assignments included service as political, economic and commercial 
officer at the American Embassies in Afghanistan and Malawi. From 1976 to 1979, 
he was the Deputy Ambassador and charge' d'affaires at the American Embassy in 
Oslo, Norway. During his Washington assignments Ambassador Bremer served as 
Special Assistant or Executive Assistant to six Secretaries of State. In 1981, 
Secretary Haig appointed him Executive Secretary of the State Department and 
Special Assistant to the Secretary of State. In this post, Ambassador Bremer 
directed, among other things, the State Department's 24-hour a day crisis 
management and emergency response center. 
  
President Reagan named Ambassador Bremer as the United States 
Ambassador to the Netherlands in 1983 where he served for over three years. In 
1986, the President appointed him Ambassador-at-Large for Counter Terrorism 
responsible for developing and implementing America's global policies to combat 
terrorism. He served as top advisor to the President and Secretary of State on 
terrorism for the next three years. 
  
In September 1999, Speaker of the House of Representatives 
Hastert appointed Ambassador Bremer Chairman of the National Commission on 
Terrorism. The Commission's mandate was to review America's counter-terrorism 
policies. The Commission reported its findings and recommendations to the 
President of the United States and to the Speaker in June 2000. 
  
Bremer is a director of Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., 
Akzo Nobel NV and The Netherland-America Foundation. He is a Trustee of the 
Economic Club of New York, serves on the Board of Advisors of the 
Russian-American Press and Information Center and is a member of The 
International Institute for Strategic Studies, and a member of The Council on Foreign Relations. He is the 
Founder and President of the Lincoln/Douglass Scholarship Foundation, a 
Washington-based non-profit organization that provides high school scholarships 
to inner city youths. He is also a member 
of the World Economic Forum. 
  
Ambassador Bremer received his BA from Yale University, a CEP 
from the Institut D'Etudes Politiques of the University of Paris, and an MBA 
from Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. His languages are 
French, Dutch and Norwegian. 
  
He is also a director of Air Products & Chemicals. 
  
Member 
of 1999 report to congress: “Countering 
the Changing Threat of International Terrorism” 
  
June 28th 2000: 
 Statement of Ambassador L. Paul 
Bremer, III, Chairman National Commission on Terrorism, Senate Committee on the 
Judiciary Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology, and 
Government Information 
  
January 2002 co-chaired a Heritage Foundation 
report entitled: "Defending the 
American Homeland" (source) 
  
On June 
14th 2002 he was appointed to be a member of the Homeland Security Advisory 
Council. 
  
“The former chairman of the State Department's National 
Commission on Terrorism, L. Paul Bremer, said he obtained classified government 
analyses early last year of bin Laden's finances confirming the assistance of 
affluent Middle Easterners.” –  
San 
Fran Chronicle, Sat 29th September 2001 
  
Bremer on 9-11: “"I am sort of agnostic at this point as to 
whether we knew enough to stop" Sept. 11, said L. Paul Bremer, former ambassador 
at large for counterterrorism during the Reagan administration. 
  
But "as they go through this in the intelligence committees, 
you're probably going to come up with other data points" like the Phoenix memo 
and information in the CIA's files on the two hijackers, said Bremer. 
  
"Then the question is, `Is there anybody who had access to 
all of these data points so that he could have had a broader picture and taken 
steps that actually would have made a difference?"' asked the former ambassador, 
who now heads a crisis consulting firm in Washington.” (source) 
  
Sept. 
17th 2001: transcript of Virginia Governor James Gilmore's news 
conference, with Jack Marsh, attorney and former congressman, on the work of the 
National Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism 
Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction. Bremer also gives a lengthy speech. 
  
Marsh & McLellan Companies’ CEO is Jeffrey Greenberg, son 
of Maurice who is the CEO of American International Group. (see small bio of Jeffrey here and Maurice here). 
  
** 
  
  
Mr. Cunningham is a director of M&T Bank and is a member and the 
chairman of M&T Bank's Directors Advisory Council-Hudson Valley Division. He 
assumed his positions with M&T Bank Corporation and M&T Bank upon 
M&T Bank Corporation's acquisition of Premier National Bancorp, Inc. 
(Premier) on February 9, 2001. From 1998 through February 9, 2001, Mr. 
Cunningham served as chairman of the board and chief executive officer of 
Premier and its bank subsidiary, Premier National Bank, and from 1994 to 1998 he 
was chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Premier's predecessor, 
Hudson Chartered Bancorp. Mr. Cunningham is a trustee of Pace University and Boscobel Restoration, Inc. and a member of 
the Greenway Economic Heritage Committee. He is also a director and vice 
president of the George Gale Foster Corporation.   
    
** 
  
  
Lloyd Cutler, one of the Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering’s founding 
partners, maintains an active practice in several fields, including 
international arbitration and dispute resolution, constitutional law, appellate 
advocacy, and public policy advice. 
  
Mr. Cutler served as Counsel to President Clinton and Counsel 
to President Carter. He also served as Special Counsel to the President on 
Ratification of the Salt II Treaty (1970-1980); President's Special 
Representative for Maritime Resource and Boundary Negotiations with Canada 
(1977-1979); and Senior Consultant, President's Commission on Strategic Forces 
(Scowcroft Commission, 1983-1984). He was a member and former Chairman of the 
Quadrennial Commission on Legislative, Executive and Judicial Salaries, and was 
a member of the President's Commission on Federal Ethics Law Reform (1989). 
  
  
Mr. Cutler is a graduate of Yale University (B.A. 1936; LL.B. 
1939) and was awarded a Yale honorary degree as Doctor of Laws in 1983. He also 
was awarded an honorary degree as Doctor of Laws from Princeton University in 
1994; the Jefferson Medal in Law at the University of Virginia in 1995; the 
Fordham-Stein Prize, Fordham University School of Law, 1995; and the 
Marshall-Wythe medal of the Law School of William and Mary.   
  
Mr. Cutler was a founder and Co-Chairman of the Lawyers 
Committee on Civil Rights Under Law. He has served as Chairman of the Board of 
the Salzburg Seminar; Co-Chairman of the Committee on the Constitutional System; 
a member of the Council of the American Law Institute; a trustee emeritus of 
The Brookings Institution and a member of 
its Executive Committee; and an Honorary Bencher of the Middle Temple. He also 
has served as a director of a number of national business corporations. In and 
out of government, he has written frequently and appeared often on television as 
a commentator and advocate in connection with a wide range of public policy 
matters.   
  
He is a member of the 
 Council on Foreign Relations 
  
** 
  
  
Prior to DotMedia, Ms David worked for Internet World/Penton 
Media as part of a Luce Scholarship. She worked for several years with Price 
Waterhouse Coopers Entertainment and Media Practice, Time Warner and Henry 
Kissinger in NY. Columbia MBA. (source) 
  
** 
  
  
First Lieutenant, United States Army, 1952-1954; Foreign 
Service, Tegucigalpa, Honduras, 1957; Political Analyst of Cuba, Bureau of 
Intelligence and Research, 1959; Assigned to the Economic Section of Embassy in 
Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1961; Assigned to First Secretarial Staff for European 
Affairs, 1965; Special Assistant to Mr. Dean Acheson on Franco-Nato Issues, 
March-July, 1966; Acting Director of Secretariat Staff, 1966; Member, National 
Security Council Staff, October, 1966 - October, 1967; Assistant to Dr. Henry 
Kissinger, 1968-1969; Political Advisor and Chief of Political, Section of U.S. 
Mission to NATO in Brussels, September, 1969; Deputy Assistant Secretary of 
Defense, August, 1971; Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for International 
Security Affairs, 1973; Deputy Assistant to President for National Security 
Operations, 1973; Executive Assistant to the Secretary of State, 1974; Deputy 
Under Secretary of State for Management, 1975; Appointed Ambassador to 
Yugoslavia, June, 1977-1980; Nominated to be Assistant Secretary of State for 
European Affairs, 1981; Appointed Under Secretary of State for Political 
Affairs, February, 1982; Deputy Secretary of State, March, 1989; Acting 
Secretary of State, August - December, 1992; U.S. Secretary of State, December 
1992-January, 1993; Senior Foreign Policy Advisor; Chairman, International 
Commission on Holocaust Era Insurance Claims, November 1998-Present. 
  
Senior 
Policy Advisor -  
Baker, Donelson, 
Bearman & Caldwell 
Director – Stimsonite 
Director - Universal Corporation 
Director - Corning Corp 
Director - COMSAT. 
Member –  
Council on Foreign Relations 
  
** 
  
  
Geithner has played a central role as a U.S. representative 
in negotiations during the Asian economic crises of 1997-98. Geithner has broad 
responsibility as an advisor to the Treasury Secretary, Deputy Secretary and 
Undersecretary for International Affairs on all aspects of economic, financial 
and monetary policy developments. 
  
Prior to this appointment, Geithner served as senior deputy 
assistant secretary for international affairs. In this role, he was a central 
participant in formulating U.S. exchange rate policy and U.S. policy toward 
Japan. Earlier, as deputy assistant secretary for international monetary affairs 
and financial policy, Geithner was responsible for U.S. exchange rate policy and 
operations, the G-7 policy cooperation process, financial market issues in the 
United States and the major financial centers, and U.S. policy with respect to 
the International Monetary Fund. Geithner was the U.S. negotiator for the 
Financial Services Agreement with Japan, concluded in January 1995. He played an 
important role in designating the reforms to the international financial system 
adopted at the June 1995 Halifax G-7 Economic Summit. When Geithner joined the 
U.S. Treasury in 1988, he served as special assistant to the undersecretary for 
international affairs and assistant financial attache in Tokyo. 
  
From 1985 to 1988, Geithner worked for Kissinger 
Associates, Inc. Geithner graduated from Dartmouth College in 1983 with a 
bachelor of arts degree in government and Asian studies. He obtained a master of 
arts degree in international economics and East Asian studies from Johns Hopkins 
University, The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, in 1985. 
(source) 
  
He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
  
** 
  
  
Appointed to the board of Commercial Union in 1997, becoming 
chairman of CGU at the time of the merger with General Accident in 1998. Former 
executive chairman of AB Volvo. Currently a managing director of Lazard Freres 
& Co, director of Aviva, chairman of the Trustees 
of Reuters Founders Share Company Limited and Swedish Ships Mortgage Bank and a 
member of the supervisory board of Lagardère SCA. 
  
He was previously a director of FMC Corp., Pearson plc, 
Kissinger Associates Inc and United Technologies Corporation and was founder of the Round Table of European Industrialists and 
chairman between 1983 and 1988. (source) 
  
** 
  
  
Ex-Middle East and oil expert, Kissinger Associates 
  
Ann-Louise Hittle is Research Director for CERA's Upstream 
Oil Service and a respected expert on oil markets and strategies. She has 
extensive experience analyzing oil markets and OPEC oil politics and economics 
and advises CERA clients on global and regional oil markets, geopolitics, and 
company strategies. Her recent CERA research includes analyses of the oil price 
outlook post- September 11, short-term geopolitical scenarios, and OPEC market 
strategy. Ms. Hittle is coauthor of the quarterly CERA World Oil Watch. She is 
co- author of CERA's World Oil Watch and World Oil: Scenarios to 2010. She 
directs CERA's World Oil Scenarios and is a contributor to the CERA Multiclient 
Study Beyond the Crisis and to the major CERA study Quiet Revolution: 
Information Technology and the Reshaping of the Oil and Gas Business on the 
present and future effect of technology on the energy industry. Ms. Hittle 
specialized in crude oil and natural gas supply, demand, and futures markets as 
Senior Oil and Gas Analyst at Shearson Lehman Brothers. Previously, she was a 
Middle East and oil expert at Kissinger Associates. She also served as a 
Market Analyst for the Crude Oil Trading Department of Gulf Oil Company. Ms. 
Hittle holds a BA from St. Lawrence University with highest honors and an MA 
from Harvard University. (source) 
  
  
She was also on the QuietRevolution research team. 
  
** 
  
  
Jeffrey A. Meyers is a member of the New Hampshire Bar 
Association, the American Bar Association, and the Merrimack County Bar 
Association. He is admitted to practice in Maine as well as in New Hampshire. He 
has appeared before all state and federal courts in New Hampshire. Jeff’s 
practice focuses on environmental and construction law, administrative law, 
personal injury, and general civil litigation. He has represented individuals 
and corporations in a wide range of complex litigation and regulatory 
proceedings.   
  
Attorney Meyers is a graduate of George Washington University 
(B.A., 1978) and Georgetown University Law Center (J.D., 1989). 
  
Prior to joining Bianco 
Professional Association, Jeff served as Assistant Attorney General of the 
State of New Hampshire from 1989 to1998 and was more recently associated with 
Verrill & Dana, LLP in Portland, Maine from 1998 to 2001. He was earlier 
associated with Kissinger Associates, Inc. in New York. 
  
Attorney Meyers is the co-author along with Sean Mahoney of 
New Hampshire Environmental Statutes Deskbook 2000 published by Tower 
Publishing. Jeff and his family are currently relocating from Maine to Concord, 
New Hampshire. (source) 
  
  
** 
  
  
“Andrea Mokros returned to 
Minnesota to do press for Jay 
Benanav after a stint in Washington D. C. working with Henry Kissinger 
and Mack McLarty at Kissinger McLarty Associates, a small government 
relations consulting firm. McLarty, a Bill Clinton friend from childhood, was 
instrumental in Mike Ross winning Jay Dickey's Congressional seat in Arkansas.” 
- 2001 (source) 
 
 
    
** 
  
  
Mr. Palmer is President of Mill Neck Group and a Director of 
the Devon Group, SunResorts, N.V., and Holmes Protection Group, Inc. He is also 
Chairman of Lloyd's North American Names Panel. Mr. Palmer was formerly Chairman 
of the Executive Committee, as a member of the three man Office of the Chairman, 
of Citibank. After retiring from Citibank in 1982, Mr. Palmer became Director 
of Kissinger Associates, where he served as a consultant until his 
retirement from that firm in 1995. Over his business career, Mr. Palmer has 
served as a director of numerous United States and foreign-based companies 
including Corning, Inc., Borg-Warner Corporation, Del Monte Corp., Monsanto 
Company, Electrolux A.B. and its U.S. subsidiaries, Union Pacific Corp., Adobe 
Resources Corp., Mutual Life Insurance Co. of NY, Phelps Dodge Corp., The 
Madison Fund, First Boston Corp., Grindlays Bank p.l.c. and Royal Insurance 
p.l.c. He is also a director of FondElec Group Inc. 
  
Mr. Palmer is a graduate of Brown University and served as a 
Lieutenant Commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve during World War II. 
  
** 
  
  
Ex-Director of Research at Kissinger Associates 
Senior Vice President and Director of Studies - 
 CSIS 
  
As senior vice president and director of studies at CSIS (the 
Centre for Strategic & International Studies), Erik Peterson oversees the 
development and implementation of the Center's  research agenda and publications 
program. He also holds the William A. Schreyer Chair in Global Analysis, an 
endowed position named in honor of the Merrill Lynch chairman emeritus and CSIS 
Executive Committee member. Peterson is director of the Seven Revolutions 
Initiative, an initiative to forecast key trends out to the year 2025. In 
addition, he directs the Center's Global Business Initiative. He is also the 
Acting Director of the Abshire-Inamori Leadership Academy, established in April 
2002 to foster thinking at CSIS on global leadership issues. 
  
Peterson came to the Center from Kissinger Associates, 
where he was director of research. He holds an M.B.A. in international finance 
from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, an M.A. in 
international law and economics from the School of Advanced International 
Studies at the Johns Hopkins University, and a B.A. from Colby College. He holds 
the Certificate of Eastern European Studies from the University of Fribourg in 
Switzerland and the Certificate in International Legal Studies from The Hague 
Academy of International Law in the Netherlands.   
  
Peterson has taught on emerging markets at the American 
University School of International Service and lectured on international 
economics and finance and geopolitical risk at other colleges and universities, 
including Chapman and George Mason Universities, Georgia Tech, and the Wharton 
School. He is a fellow 
of the World Economic Forum, a board 
member of the Center for Global Business Studies at the Pennsylvania State 
University, a member of the Advisory Board of the Global Capital Markets Center 
at Duke University, and a member of the Advisory Board of the Center for the 
Study of the Presidency. 
    
** 
  
  
Peter W. Rodman is Director of National Security Programs at 
the Nixon Center, and a Senior Editor of National Review. 
  
Mr. Rodman served as a Deputy Assistant to President Reagan 
for National Security Affairs (Foreign Policy) from March 1986 to January 1987 
and then, until September 1990, under Presidents Reagan and Bush, as Special 
Assistant for National Security Affairs and NSC Counselor. From April 1984 to 
March 1986, he was Director of the Department of State Policy Planning Staff, 
advising Secretary of State George P. Shultz. 
  
In the Nixon and Ford Administrations, from August 1969 to 
January 1977, Mr. Rodman was a member of the National Security Council staff and 
a special assistant to Dr. Henry A. Kissinger. From 1972 to 1977 he took part in 
nearly all of Dr. Kissinger's negotiations and missions. From January 1977 to 
March 1983, he was a Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International 
Studies. He was principal research and editorial assistant to Dr. Kissinger in 
the preparation of his memoirs, and was Director of Research for Kissinger 
Associates, Inc. 
  
He is a member of the Board of Trustees of Freedom House, 
Vice President and member of the Board of Directors of the World Affairs Council 
of Washington, DC, and a Fellow of the Johns Hopkins Foreign Policy Institute. 
(source) 
  
** 
  
  
Chief Executive Officer of Intellibridge, 
comes to Intellibridge after serving for two years as managing director of 
Kissinger Associates, Inc.  
  
Prior to his work at Kissinger Associates, Mr. Rothkopf served from 1993-1996 as Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for 
International Trade Policy. In this capacity, Mr. Rothkopf played a central role 
in developing the Clinton Administration's ground breaking Big Emerging Markets 
Initiative and chaired that inter-agency effort.  
  
Rothkopf came to the government 
after founding and serving as chairman and chief executive officer of 
International Media Partners, Inc., where he was editor and publisher of CEO 
magazine and Emerging Markets newspapers, and chairman of the CEO Institutes. He 
also currently serves as Adjunct Professor of International Affairs at Columbia 
University's School of International Affairs. 
  
Intellibridge has been seen as serving as a 
propaganda arm for Enron. (Well you knew that Enron had to figure here 
somewhere!) 
  
** 
  
  
Renato Ruggiero was born in Naples on 9 April 1930. After 
graduating with a law degree from the University of Naples in 1953, he entered 
the Italian diplomatic service. 
  
His first posting abroad was to the Italian Consulate in Sao 
Paolo, Brazil. In January 1959, he was assigned to the Italian Embassy in 
Moscow, where he worked towards the normalisation of cultural and trade 
relations between the Soviet Union and Italy during the years of 
destalinisation, the confrontation in Berlin and the emerging Sino- Soviet 
conflict. In 1962 he was posted to the Italian Embassy in Washington, where he 
monitored the last phase of the Kennedy Administration, the development of the 
Cuban Missile Crisis, East-West relations and the Vietnam War. 
  
In 1964 he returned to Rome as Head of the Political Affairs 
Secretariat of the Foreign Ministry. In 1966 he was assigned to the Italian 
Embassy in Belgrade, where he monitored developments in the Cold Wad and the 
events of the 1968 Prague Spring. 
  
After a short interval in Rome, he began the second phase of 
his diplomatic career in 1969. Posted to the Italian Mission to the European 
Community in Brussels, he negotiated a fundamental agreement on social security 
for migrant workers. In July 1970 he was appointed Chef de Cabinet of the 
President of the European Commission, Franco Malfatti. In this role, he 
participated in the negotiations that led to the accession of the United 
Kingdom, Denmark and Ireland to the EEC, and in the development of the first 
European Economic and Monetary Union project and in the official launch of the 
European Union project at the European Summit in Paris in 1972. 
  
After a brief period as Political Advisor to the President of 
the European Commission, Sicco Mansholt, he was appointed Director General for 
Regional Policy at the European Commission in Brussels. In this role he 
negotiated and created, with Commissioner George Thomson, the European Regional 
Development Fund, the most significant instrument of financial support for the 
less developed regions in Europe. 
  
In 1977 he was appointed Spokesman of the President of the 
European Commission, Roy Jenkins, whom he assisted in the negotiations that led 
to the launch of the European Monetary System. 
  
Between 1978 – the year he returned to the Foreign Ministry 
in Rome – and 1987 Ruggiero occupied several positions at the highest level of 
the Italian diplomatic service: he negotiated Italy’s entry into the European 
Monetary System, was the Diplomatic Advisor of the Prime Minister and the Chef 
de Cabinet of two Foreign Ministers. In 1980, he was appointed Ambassador and 
returned to Brussels as Italy’s Permanent Representative to the European 
Community. After four years in that position, he was appointed Director General 
for Economic Affairs at the Foreign Ministry in Rome (1984-1985) and then 
reached the highest position in the diplomatic service when he became Secretary 
General of the Foreign Ministry (1985- 1987). During this period he also was the 
Personal Representative of the Prime Minister for six G7 summits, and the 
Chairman of the Executive Committee of the OECD in Paris. 
  
In 1987, Ambassador Ruggiero was appointed Italian Minister 
for Foreign Trade, a post he held until 1991. During this period, he implemented 
the programme of liberalisation of Italy’s foreign trade and capital 
movements. 
  
After his service in government, Renato Ruggiero left the 
diplomatic service and joined the board of directors of FIAT and of several 
other Italian, European and American companies, either as a director or as an 
international consultant. 
  
In 1995, Ambassador Ruggiero was elected Director General of 
the World Trade Organisation in Geneva by its 130 member countries, and served 
in that role until 1999. During this period, he promoted the implementation of a 
trade dispute settlement system based on the rule of law and not on power. He 
also promoted the further inclusion of developing countries in trade flows, and 
the liberalisation of trade with the 48 least developed countries. In addition, 
Ambassador Ruggiero began an institutional dialogue with the Non – Governmental 
Organisations (NGOs). During his term at the WTO, telecommunications, 
information technology and financial services were liberalised on a global 
basis. 
  
Following his tenure at the WTO, Ambassador Ruggiero was 
appointed Chairman of ENI. He left that position in September 1999 and became 
Vice-Chairman of Schroder Salomon Smith Barney International and Chairman of 
Schroder Salomon Smith Barney Italy. He also served on the Board of Directors or 
Advisory Boards of several important companies in Italy and the rest of the 
world. [These included Kissinger Associates – the only 
sources I have on this are frustratingly in Italian] 
  
He has been appointed Minister for Foreign Affairs in the 
second Government of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on 11 June 2001. He 
resigned on January 6th 2002 following a 
disagreement with Berlusconi over the Euro. 
  
In recognition of his contributions to public life, the 
President of the Italian Republic made Ambassador Ruggiero a Knight of the Grand 
Cross. Foreign governments have also recognised his work in the cause of 
international trade and diplomacy. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II has bestowed 
upon him the honorary award of Knight Commander of the Order of St. Michael and 
St. George; His Majesty Emperor Hirohito of Japan has honoured him with the 
Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure; and His Holiness John Paul II 
has named him Knight Grand Cross of the equestrian order of St. Gregory the 
Great. (source) 
  
He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. 
  
** 
  
  
Possibly a consultant to Kissinger Associates – awaiting 
confirmation 
  
  
** 
  
  
He now has his own Washington based consultancy firm – The 
Scowcroft Group. Rife with conflicts of interests, it can easily be seen as 
another arm of Kissinger Associates.   
  
Click here for a 
comprehensive overview of it. 
  
** 
  
  
Christine Vick is a partner at the international government 
relations firm of Andreae, Vick & Associates, LLC, based in Washington, D.C. 
 
  
The firm was founded in 1996 when Ms. Vick was invited to join Andreae & 
Associates, LLC. Her strategic consulting work with multinational clients in 
fields such as energy, consumer products and pharmaceuticals involves close 
contact with senior levels of the U.S. government and governments abroad.  
  
She 
has particularly close contact with the national governments of China and 
Turkey, though her twenty-five year career in foreign affairs has sent her to 
over fifty countries. 
  
Chris’s involvement in foreign affairs dates back to 1971 
when she began serving at the U.S. Department of State, commencing her work with 
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger in 1973. In 1977 she joined Dr. Kissinger 
in the private sector and eventually culminated a 15-year association as vice 
president of Kissinger Associates.  
  
Her work bridging the public and private 
sectors in the international arena continued with a brief tenure as vice 
president of Koppel Communications Inc. and later as vice president of the 
government relations consulting firms, the Thompson Company. 
  
Prior to the formation of Andreae, Vick & Associates, 
Chris served as senior policy advisor at the international law firm of Powell, 
Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy and as the managing director of Powell Goldstein 
International Consulting. She consulted for clients in many sectors, including 
consumer products, pharmaceuticals, manufacturing, and energy involving 
operations in countries around the world. 
  
Chris has a strong personal interest in the confluence of 
policymaking, global business and international diplomacy. Chris also closely 
follows the U.S. Congress and its impact on foreign policy and international 
commercial operations.   
  
She has experience in a wide variety of trade issues in, 
most notably, Turkey and the Caucuses, and China and the rest of Asia. She 
serves on the Advisory 
Board for International and Area Studies for The University Center for International 
Studies at The University of North 
Carolina.   
  
In addition to her consulting work, Chris serves on the board 
of directors of the American Turkish Council and the Eisenhower Institute of 
World Affairs and on the advisory board of China OnLine, LLC. She resides in 
Alexandria, Virginia. 
  
** 
  
One to 
watch: 
  
Studying at Harvard Business school, just 
completed a Summer internship with Kissinger McLarty Associates. 
 
 
 
 
 
About Kissinger Associates, Inc
 
 
Who’s Who in Kissinger Associates
Alan R. 
Batkin
L. Paul Bremer
Nelson W Cunningham
Etienne Davignon
Stephen 
Donehoo
Richard W. Fisher
Gordon 
D Giffin
Maria Luisa Mabilangan Haley
Richard L. Huber
Ranch C 
Kimball
Henry A 
Kissinger
Brief Bio
Kissinger: War Criminal
Current positions, affiliations & work
Dr. Peter Mandaville
Thomas 
F. (Mack) McLarty, III
William B. Richardson
J. Stapleton Roy
William D. Rogers
Education  
Alan 
Stoga
 
 
Ex-Kissinger 
Associates
Robert O. Anderson
L. Paul Bremer III
T. Jefferson Cunningham III
Lloyd N 
Cutler
Diana David
Lawrence S. Eagleburger
Timothy Geithner
Pehr 
Gyllenhammar
Ann-Louise Hittle
Jeffrey A. Meyers
Andrea Mokros
Edward L. Palmer
Eric Peterson
Peter W. Rodman
David 
Rothkopf
Renato Ruggiero
George P. Shultz
Brent 
Scowcroft
Christine Vick
Arash Farin