Difference between revisions of "Transatlantic Policy Network"
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Latest revision as of 01:21, 10 November 2022
The Transatlantic Policy Network (TPN) is a US organisation dedicated to influencing EU policy while describing it as a 'partnership'.[1]
For example, the document "The new trans-Atlantic agenda of December 1995" states "The Agenda's content reflects input from TPN's report "A European Strategy to the US" - the network's concise analysis of what Europeans needed to do to put relations with the US on a new, stronger footing".
Contents
Overview
From a small original base of support in the European Parliament and the US Congress, TPN has grown into a broadly-based multi-party group of EU and US politicians, corporate leaders, influential think-tanks, civil society stakeholders, and academics. Through regular informal dialogue and the maintenance of close personal relationships, TPN participants keep the two administrations focused on the indispensable goal of a strengthened Transatlantic Partnership.[2]
TPN helps to frame the debate on how governments should anticipate challenges, measure risks and adopt the necessary policies for global economic and political stability.[3] It promotes the closest possible partnership between the Governments & the peoples of the European Union & the United States.
The group is not only a lobbyist for big multinational corporations, but also a tool for the military complex, "focusing on the security challenges facing the transatlantic partners, NATO and defense policy", and looking at.."geopolitical changes and challenges, in particular, from Asia".[4]
How the lobbying operates
Transatlantic Week private conference
The Transatlantic Week brings together a critical mass of legislators, US Administration and EU institution officials as well as representatives from the business, academic, civil society, and trade association communities from both sides of the Atlantic. The annual multi-day conference looks at key issues in US-EU cooperation. In addition to developing practical recommendations for near-term action and responses to policy challenges, Transatlantic Week also aims to raise the profile of the Transatlantic Partnership and its potential in managing key challenges more effectively through joint action.[5]
Outreach Roundtables
Outreach roundtables are informal, high level discussions that enable TPN to make practical recommendations for improving transatlantic co-operation in a number of key areas. Under political leadership, these meetings in Brussels and Washington DC generate balanced conclusions reflecting the views of members on both sides of the Atlantic, including those working closely with the European and American administrations.
Political and Educational Exchanges
Members of the United States Congress and of the European Parliament regularly exchange visits so as to encourage a common understanding of the themes currently dominating the transatlantic relationship. Through time, TPN-organised meetings have forged friendships and broadened support for the Network’s goals, also facilitating staff exchanges organised by cooperating institutions.
Member companies
Businesses become members of TPN to work for a strong transatlantic partnership in the best interests of their companies...[6]
The TPN website lists member companies per 2020[7] as:
an older list mentions[8]:
- ABB
- Deutsche Bank
- Pechiney
- Accenture
- Dow Chemical
- Pfizer International
- AOL Time Warner
- EDS
- Philips BASF
- Ford Motor Company SAP
- Bertelsmann AG
- AG General Electric SAS
- Boeing
- Honeywell
- Siemens AG
- BP
- IBM
- Unilever BT
- Merck
- United Technologies Corporation
- Caterpillar
- Michelin
- UPS
- Coca-Cola
- Microsoft
- Xerox
- DaimlerChrysler
- Nestlé [1]
The TPN website also lists "cooperating institutions" as being a part of the "TPN network" as some very central power organizations, including the CIA (German Marshall Fund) and NATO (Atlantic Council). [2]
- Aspen Institute - Berlin
- Aspen Institute - Italy
- The Atlantic Council of the United States
- Brookings Institution
- Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
- Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
- Congressional Economic Leadership Institute (CELI)
- Council on Foreign Relations
- Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
- European Policy Centre (EPC)
- The European Round Table of Industrialists (ERT)
- European-American Business Council
- EC Committee of the American Chamber (Brussels)
- European Institute (Washington)
- German Marshall Fund of the United States
- Institut Francais des Relations Internationales (IFRI)
- Trans European Policy Studies Association (TEPSA)
- UNICE
- U.S. Chamber of Commerce
- US Council on Competitiveness
Known members
33 of the 114 of the members already have pages here:
Member | Description |
---|---|
AT&T | The world's largest telecommunications company and the largest provider of mobile telephone services in the USA |
Allianz | |
Apple | A tech company, in a corrupt duopoly with Microsoft, its effective social engineering of children during the 2010s and 2000s and its adaption of youth culture made it the most valuable company in the world. PRISM-member. Throws activists or anyone not a WEF-member of their platform in geopolitical dilemmas. Fashion industry and wage slavery promoter. |
Bertelsmann | |
Boeing | US based arms manufacturer which also makes civilian aircraft that since the 1990s have became known for their sometimes dubious reliability. |
Elmar Brok | lobbyist and European parliament politician, MSC regular |
Reinhard Bütikofer | German politician, regular at the Brussels Forum, also attends WEF AGMs |
Coca-Cola | Beverage company. It forces poor people to use them as replacement for polluted water supplies... that CC caused. |
Deutsche Bank | German bank |
Dow Chemical | Big chemical corporation and producer of Agent Orange during the Vietnam war. Also known for the Bhopal explosion. |
Eli Lilly | Psychiatric drugs,Prozac, MKUltra... |
James Elles | A member of the European Parliament |
The world's most popular social network, with over 1,000,000,000 users in 2014. | |
Ford Motor Company | American multinational automobile manufacturer |
IBM | |
Intel | Biggest US Tech company, its owner warned its main products would become a casus belli for WW3. |
JPMorgan Chase | A multinational banking and financial services holding company. Deep state power for more than a century. |
Merck | Big pharma with a long rap sheet of unethical practices |
Microsoft | Started in 1975 with Paul Allen, Bill Gates developed Microsoft from a operating system maker of computers into one of the most prolific companies of all time, valued over $1 trillion, 3rd most valuable in the world. MS has over a billion in fines from corruption, mass surveillance violations & tax evasion. MS has market shares in dozens of markets, leading in the Platformization-epidemic of the 2010s started by big tech. It was the first partner in the NSA-PRISM program. |
Sven Mikser | Estonian politician. Munich Security Conference Young Leader |
Nestlé | Swiss Big Food multinational |
Oracle | Tech company with significant connections to the national security industry |
Pfizer | A multinational big pharma company. Made a killing during COVID |
Philips | An electric company which was a major funder of Le Cercle. |
Procter & Gamble | Huge multi-billion dollar multinational corporation; specialising in consumer goods. |
Pat Roberts | |
James Sensenbrenner | One of Sibel Edmonds' "Dirty Dozen" |
Siemens | |
Robert Strauss | US lawyer and deep state operative |
Peter Sutherland | A deep politician who held some key posts including Chairman of Goldman Sachs, WTO head, Attorney General of Ireland ... |
Unilever | Multinational specialized in providing people the illusion of choice in local supermarkets. Targeted by Operation Gladio-agents in the Netherlands with blackmail. |
Joseph Wilson | US diplomat husband of Valerie Plame |
Xerox |
References
- ↑ https://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Transatlantic_Policy_Network
- ↑ https://www.tpnonline.org/
- ↑ https://www.tpnonline.org/
- ↑ https://www.tpnonline.org/strengthening-and-renewing-the-transatlantic-agenda/
- ↑ https://www.tpnonline.org/how-we-work/
- ↑ https://www.tpnonline.org/business-members/
- ↑ https://www.tpnonline.org/business-members/
- ↑ https://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Transatlantic_Policy_Network