German Institute for International and Security Affairs
German Institute for International and Security Affairs | |
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Abbreviation | SWP |
Formation | 1962 |
Headquarters | Berlin, Germany |
Leader | German Institute for International and Security Affairs/Director |
Member of | European Policy Centre |
Sponsored by | Mercator Foundation |
Subpage | •German Institute for International and Security Affairs/Director |
The German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) is the semi-official advisor for the Bundestag (the German parliament) and the federal government on foreign and military policy issues. SWP also advises decision-makers in international organizations relevant to Germany, above all the European Union, NATO and the United Nations.
It was founded in 1962.[1]
Contents
Projects
“The Day After” Syria Regime Change Planning
As part of the project “The Day After”, the SWP together with the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) gathered Syrian intellectuals and representatives of various Syrian political movements, including the Syrian National Council, to discuss their ideas for the political, constitutional and economic development of Syria following the NATO-planned replacement of Bashar al-Assad's government. The results of the project were made public in Syria and internationally via the report “The Day After. Supporting a Democratic Transition in Syria”.
The “New Power, New Responsibility” War Project
A paper co-produced with the German Marshall Fund (a CIA front organization) entitled “New Power, New Responsibility” (November 2012 – September 2013) called on Germany to use its military more, to show responsibility for dealing with “those who disrupt the international order”. It argued that Germany and the EU need to show more willingness to act on international security issues, recommending that “Europe and Germany need to develop formats for NATO operations that make them less dependent on US support."
Integrity Initiative Cooperation
A leaked II document termed it a "major national think tank" alongside IFRI and Clingendael), where they wanted the think tanks to "launch their own programmes on disinformation and malign influence", similar to the Integrity Initiative efforts, with "Political warfare workshops, Information Literacy Course, Political Warfare Network, 'Information Warfare and Security' Modules".[2]
Employees on Wikispooks
Employee | Job | Appointed | End | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hannes Adomeit | Research Fellow | 1979 | 1989 | |
Hannes Adomeit | Research Fellow | 1997 | 2007 | |
Hannes Adomeit | Academic | 2007 | 2017 | Also headed the German cluster of the Integrity Initiative. |
Joachim Krause | Scientific worker | 1993 | 2001 |
Known members
14 of the 48 of the members already have pages here:
Member | Description |
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Allianz | |
Peter Altmaier | German politician who was Head of the Chancellery 2013-2018. |
Deutsche Bank | German bank |
Géza Andreas von Geyr | German diplomat with heavy MSC habit |
Wolfgang Ischinger | Spooky German diplomat. Chaired the Munich Security Conference |
Hans-Peter Keitel | German industrial manager Bilderberger. President of the Federation of German Industries |
Eckart von Klaeden | Triple Bilderberg German politician |
Lufthansa | |
Philipp Mißfelder | Super-transatlantic German politician, YGL/2014, who died of a pulmonary embolism in 2015 |
Omid Nouripour | German Green politician involved in many transatlantic influence networks. |
Volker Perthes | German double Bilderberger businessman, TLC |
Siemens | |
Thomas Silberhorn | MSC regular lawyer, politician |
Volkswagen | German multinational corporation and industrial powerhouse, which after it's 2015 emissions scandal, is about to be cut down. |
Sponsor
Event | Description |
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Mercator Foundation | German foundation financing projects of deep state interest and buying control over the narrative, especially on "climate change" and pro-migration. Frequently connected to censorship initiatives. |