At Bilderberg’s bigwig bash two things are
guaranteed: Kissinger and secrecy
The annual elite networking, diplomatic and lobbying
event took place in splendid seclusion behind closed doors in Lisbon
Charlie
Skelton in Lisbon
Sat 20 May
2023 13.00 BST
The
Portuguese sun was doing its cheery best to make this year’s Bilderberg meeting
seem warm and welcoming, but nothing could take the deathly chill out of the
official agenda of the secretive shindig for some of the world’s most powerful
people.
Ukraine,
Russia and Nato weighed heavy on the schedule, with “Fiscal Challenges” and “Transnational
Threats” seeming like light relief. “Today,” said the head of Nato, Jens
Stoltenberg, arriving in Lisbon to attend the talks, “our security environment
is more dangerous than it has been since the cold war.”
This annual
three-day conference is many things – an elite networking event, a diplomatic
summit, a lobbying opportunity for transnational financial interests, an
intense focus of conspiracy theory gossip – but above all, the 69th Bilderberg
conference, at the glorious Pestana Palace, appeared like a council of war.
Ukraine’s
foreign minister hadn’t come to Lisbon because he loves the happy clatter of
trams, and the supreme allied commander Europe wasn’t here for the custard
tarts. Which was a shame, because they’re excellent. I guess they can’t risk
dusting them with cinnamon in Henry Kissinger’s presence, because one sneeze
might be enough to carry him off to his reward.
On the eve
of Kissinger’s centenary, the former US secretary of state and longtime
Bilderberg kingpin will be delighted, or whatever dull ache he feels instead of
delight, to see so many US intelligence officials at this year’s meeting.
They’re
Kissinger’s kind of people.
Biden sent
his director of national intelligence, Avril Haines, and his senior director
for strategic planning at the national security council, Thomas Wright, plus a
shadowy gaggle of White House strategists and spooks. Among them, Jen Easterly
– the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, who
said recently that the western world faces two “epoch-defining threats and
challenges” – artificial intelligence and China, both of which feature on this
year’s agenda.
Aside from
Ukraine, it was these issues which dominated thinking in Lisbon.
China’s
overarching aim is “to rearrange the world order” said Lisbon attendee
Elizabeth Economy, who’s participating in her second Bilderberg as Biden’s
senior adviser for China at the Department of Commerce.
The rise of
what she called “a China-centric order with its own norms and values” is a
gauntlet thrown down at Bilderberg, the elite forum which has helped frame and
foster the western world order for nearly seven decades. They don’t mind a new
world order, but they want it to be manufactured at Bilderberg, not made in
China.
The twin
threats of China and technology are intertwined in the thinking of Bilderberg
board member Eric Schmidt. Just a few days ago the former boss of Google told a
congressional hearing that AI “is very much at the center” of the competition
between China and the US. And that “China is now dedicating enormous resources
to outpace the US in technologies, in particular AI.”
Schmidt
acknowledges the existential risks of AI, even warning that “things could be
worse than people are saying”, but rejects the call made by some AI experts,
including Elon Musk, for a six-month pause in AI development, because any delay
“will simply benefit China”. There seemed a darkly ironic logic at play: we
have to push ahead with developing something which might destroy us before
China develops it into something that might destroy us.
Another of
the Silicon Valley luminaries in Lisbon was Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI.
Earlier
this week, Altman shared his concerns about AI at a US Senate hearing, and
warned of the growing capacity for AI to bamboozle the voting public with
plausible fakery – a particular worry for Altman “given that we’re going to
face an election next year and these models are getting better”.
Interestingly,
the question of “US Leadership” is on the conference agenda here at Bilderberg,
although with the looming release of OpenAI’s next generation ChatGPT-5, the
2024 presidential debates might well be won by a witty and charismatic chatbot.
Altman is
in favour of “regulatory intervention by governments” which he says “will be
critical to mitigate the risks of increasingly powerful models”. But not
everyone here at Bilderberg agrees.
Schmidt
says that AI needs “appropriate guardrails” but caused a stir last week for
suggesting, rather snootily, that AI companies should be self-regulating,
because “there’s no way a non-industry person can understand what is possible.”
The more
than two dozen politicians at this year’s Bilderberg might take issue with that
argument. But we’ll never know, because the entire conference takes place
behind closed doors, with zero press oversight. Nothing’s leaking out from
behind the luxuriant bougainvilleas of the Pestana Palace.
Incredibly,
Kissinger has been attending Bilderberg conferences on and off since 1957. His
“preoccupation with secrecy and personal diplomacy”, as a 1975 profile of the
controversial statesman put it, fits perfectly with Bilderberg’s ferocious
desire to keep the annual talks private.
But it’s a
desire that sometimes tumbles over into paranoia. On Thursday the Guardian met
the European head of Bilderberg, Victor Halberstadt, coming out of a pharmacy
in Lisbon, clutching a packet of barrier skin cream. Halberstadt didn’t just
ignore a polite media approach he flat-out denied that he was Victor
Halberstadt and then hopped into a Mercedes which whisked him off through the
security cordon.
This kind
of cold war cloak-and-daggerism seems oddly anachronistic for a conference that
is hosting a cutting-edge conversation about artificial intelligence with the
CEOs of DeepMind and Microsoft. That said, all the ducking and weaving seems to
work, if the endgame is inattention by the press.
Considering
the number and seniority of public figures and policymakers who attend,
Bilderberg, there is eerie lack of coverage in the world’s mainstream press.
This year the roster reads just in part: three prime ministers, two deputy PMs,
the president of the European parliament, the president of Eurogroup, the
vice-president of the European Commission, two EU commissioners, an MEP, any
number of European ministers and a member of the House of Lords, Dambisa Moyo –
who, besides being a baroness, is also on the board of giant oil company,
Chevron.
As ever,
big oil was a powerful presence at Bilderberg, with the heads of Total, BP and
Galp getting a seat at the table. Big pharma had a healthy presence, with the
heads of Merck and Pfizer and a director of AstraZeneca on the list. And the
international chemicals industry is represented by the CEO of BASF and a board
member of Coca-Cola.
Naturally
enough, the likely primary interest of these chairmen, directors and CEOs is
their bottom line, to which end they’re always keen to ensure industry
regulations are bent in their favour. Luckily, many of them are senior members
of trade federations and commercial lobbying groups.
A good
example is the International Institute of Finance, a major force in global
financial governance. It’s chaired by the head of Banco Santander and
Bilderberg steering committee member, Ana Botín. John Waldron, president of
Goldman Sachs, is also on the board. These are two of the most powerful
financial lobbyists in the world, and yet they get three luxurious days to chew
the fat with the policymakers.
This is the
dark heart of Bilderberg’s accountability problem. Just because the conference
plays out in private doesn’t mean the talks take place in some kind of
sanctified orb, in which the commercial concerns of a Luxembourg-based hedge
fund boss like Rolly van Rappard, the co-chair of CVC Capital Partners, are
somehow temporarily suspended.
When the
Spanish foreign minister is mulling over Ukraine with the head of Nato, he’s
doing so within earshot of some of the world’s most rapacious investors, like
Henry Kravis, or hedge fund boss Kenneth Griffin, the 21st richest man in
America.
These are
people whose billions depend upon having the informational edge over their
competitors, and it’s hard to know what the Griffins and Van Rappards are even
doing there, except to pick up geostrategic tidbits to help make a quick buck.
Yet that
doesn’t seem to raise any ethical red flags with any of the politicians who
trot along to the talks. They’re quite happy to talk turkey behind the
bougainvilleas with a bunch of billionaires and profiteers.
But heaven
forbid there’s a press conference at the end of it.

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