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World of Espionage > Spy Files
The Bilderberg Group: Don’t Bother
To Apply
"Coil"
Based on Real-Life Shadow Group
About eight years ago during research, I stumbled upon one
of those paragraphs that are the lifeblood of a novelist.
It mentioned a yearly meeting of powerful world leaders that
called itself the Bilderberg Group. I was intrigued. Unlike
the VIP-bristling World Economic Forum, which usually gathers
in Davos, Switzerland, and Allen & Co., which is legendary
for its low-key, high-level summits in Sun Valley, Idaho,
the Bilderbergers were a complete unknown to me.
For good reason. As it turned out, the elite organization
not only shuns publicity, it forbids it. Or as the Toronto
National Post explained later, on May 24, 2001, "The
conferences are held under absolute secrecy and tight security,
with no media coverage allowed."
But back in 1995, I had no idea what I faced. I dove in,
setting up shop in the library, hunting through thousands
of U.S. newspapers, magazines, and books. I’m a researcher.
I know how to find the most arcane data, but I was stymied,
until I discovered Spotlight, a right-wing populist newsweekly
based in Washington, D.C., which claimed to have reported
Bilderberger’s annual assemblies for more than two decades.
Taking away Spotlight’s extreme political and emotional
spin, but figuring in its on-the-scene photos, lists of attendees,
and lists of yearly venues dating back to 1954, I began to
believe Bilderberg might not only be real but an idea for
a book.
The test came a year later, when Spotlight predicted the
group would hold its next covert confab at a luxury resort
outside Toronto. I ordered the Toronto Star and held my breath.
On June 6, 1996, I had confirmation at last from a mainstream
news source: "The Bilderberg Conference of 120 world
business and political leaders is unfolding in secrecy,"
the Star reported, "just as they planned" at the
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce’s leadership center
at the former King City Ranch.
That night, I celebrated with a large glass of excellent
pinot noir.

Over the years as I wrote other novels, I continued to research
the Bilderbergers, a hobby, perhaps an obsession. As a result,
my new thriller, The Coil, delves deeply into the Nautilus
Group, which is based loosely on the Bilderberg Group. Both
have headquarters in the Hague, both were named for the hotels
in which they first officially met, and both employ extreme
security, color-coded badges, and sniffer dogs. But after
that, the facts diverge. For instance, I have no information
or knowledge that a diabolical inner circle such as the Coil
exists within Bilderberg.
I’m pleased to report that because of the doggedness
of some journalists and protesters and the vast resources
of the Internet, news coverage of Bilderberg is widening at
last. In fact, London’s Sunday Times jokes that Bilderberg
meetings are "the world’s greatest networking opportunity,"
while Portugal’s The News refers gravely to the group’s
members and guests as "the world’s unelected leaders."
In a tongue-in-cheek article, The Guardian of England and
Wales points out, "It is, according to some, a sinister
shadow world government dedicated to seizing control of the
levers of the global economy. So why . . . put Lord Carrington’s
picture at the top of this column? He runs [Bilderberg] along
with Henry Kissinger and David Rockefeller, billionaire owner
of New York’s Chase Manhattan Bank. . . . What will
they discuss? Don’t know. There are no statements, no
sound bites, no photo calls. . . ."
The Atlanta Constitution seems to have a better handle on
the situation: ". . . the Bilderbergers say the required
pledge of delegates not to discuss what goes on at their meetings
is simply to provide a private, informal environment in which
those who influence national policies and international affairs
can get to know each other and discuss, without commitment,
their common problems."
Still, with media giants like Donald Graham of The Washington
Post and billionaire bankers like Edmond de Rothschild and
auto tycoons like Jurgen Schrempp of DaimlerChrysler and politicians
with global clout like James D. Wolfensohn of the World Bank
and Donald Rumsfeld of the U.S. Department of Defense in attendance
. . . the Bilderbergers continue to hold my interest.
They may just be talking shop, but the clandestine nature
of their gatherings continues to provoke. As The Financial
Times once pointed out, "If the Bilderberg group is not
a conspiracy of some sort, it is conducted in such a way as
to give a remarkably good imitation of one."
Its current secretary-general, Martin Taylor of WH Smith,
says he’s done his best to increase its openness, according
to The Sunday Times. But then, the minutes of its meetings
have been secret for the past half century, which likely hinders
that goal. When Time magazine analyzed the top six "Business
Power Camps" in its July 20, 1998, issue, it awarded
exclusivity ratings. Ten meant the most exclusive. Only one
group rated it — the Bilderbergers.
You’ll learn all about the fictional Nautilus Group,
the high chamber of the high priests of capitalism, in The
Coil.
For further reading, try http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3031717.stm

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