Kissinger Associates

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Group.png Kissinger Associates OpenCorporates Powerbase SourcewatchRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Formation27 April 1982
FounderHenry Kissinger.jpg Henry Kissinger
HeadquartersNew York City
Membership• Henry Kissinger.jpg Henry Kissinger
• Paul Bremer.jpg L. Paul Bremer
• Nelson Cunningham.png Nelson Cunningham
• Lawrence Eagleburger 59-N-VS-274-89 (cropped).jpg Lawrence Eagleburger
•  Richard W. Fisher
• Timothy Geithner.jpg Timothy F. Geithner
• Roy Stapleton.jpg J. Stapleton Roy
• Brent Scowcroft.jpg Brent Scowcroft
•  Lord Carrington
• Pehr G. Gyllenhammar.JPG Pehr Gyllenhammar
• William D. Rogers.png William D. Rogers
• Eric Roll.jpg Eric Roll
• William E Simon.jpg William E. Simon
•  Saburo Okita
• Étienne Davignon.jpg Étienne Davignon
•  Gary Falle
• Mack McLarty f.jpg Mack McLarty
• Jami Miscik.jpg Jami Miscik
•  Alan R. Batkin
• Bill Richardson at an event in Kensington, New Hampshire, March 18, 2006.jpg Bill Richardson
• Robert D. Hormats.jpg Robert D. Hormats
•  Christine Vick
•  Alan Stoga
•  David Rothkopf
• JoshuaRamoJI1.jpg Joshua Cooper Ramo
• Richard Burt.jpg Richard Burt
• John O. Brennan.jpg John Brennan
•  Thomas Graham
•  Schuyler Schouten
•  Erik R. Peterson
•  Thomas Jefferson Cunningham III
•  Sergio Correa da Costa
• Robert O. Anderson.jpg Robert O. Anderson
•  Edward Palmer
•  Mario D'Urso
•  Nathaniel Samuels
•  Yuet-keung Kan

Kissinger Associates, Inc., founded in 1982, is a New York City-based international consulting firm and geopolitical fixing house, founded and run by Henry Kissinger. The firm helps clients to identify strategic partners and investment opportunities, and advises clients on government relations throughout the world.[1] It is an example of the revolving door, where contacts made in politics are used for private enrichment by the associates; and of private diplomacy, where private consultants with government connections can offer more corrupt deals than official diplomacy.

Kissinger Associates does not disclose its list of corporate clients, and reportedly bars clients from acknowledging the relationship.[2] However, over time details from proxy statements and the tendency of senior businessmen to talk about their relationship with Kissinger have leaked out and a number of major corporate clients have been identified (see list below).[3]

The secrecy of their corporate client list has caused problems where Kissinger or a member of his staff were called to public service. In 1989, George Bush nominated Lawrence Eagleburger as his Deputy Secretary of State. Congress required that Eagleburger disclose the names of 16 clients, some of which were his through his Kissinger Associates affiliation.[4]. More recently, Kissinger himself was appointed chairman of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States by George W. Bush. Congressional Democrats insisted that Kissinger disclose the names of clients. Kissinger and President Bush claimed that such disclosures were not necessary, but Kissinger ultimately stepped down, citing conflicts of interest.

In 1999, Mack McLarty, joined Kissinger to open Kissinger McLarty Associates, the firm's office on Eighteenth and K streets in Washington, D.C.[5]. McLarty was White House Chief of Staff under Bill Clinton. Kissinger McLarty is a corporate member of the Council of the Americas, the New York-based business organization established by David Rockefeller in 1965.[5] As of January 2008, the two firms have separated and McLarty Associates, headed by Mack McLarty, is an independent firm based in Washington.[6][7]

Kissinger Associates is located in River House on Park Avenue at Fifty-first Street, in a building also occupied by Peter Peterson's Blackstone Group. It was established in July, 1982 after loans had been secured from Goldman Sachs and a consortium of three other banks. These loans were paid out in two years; by 1987 annual revenues had reached $5 million.[8]

Associated organizations and individuals

Kissinger Associates has strategic alliances with several firms, including:

The company is secretive about who works there,the list is therefore incomplete, but prominent staff have included:

The list on the right was originally drawn from an EIR article.[15]

Directors have included:

Full article: Kissinger Associates Staff

Known corporate clients

A selected list of the more notable companies (from over two dozen in total) since 1982; his directorships where applicable; and some countries where known advice/contacts were used:

 

Known members

19 of the 36 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Robert O. AndersonTriple Bilderberg Big Oil exec who attended the 1973 Bilderberg
Paul BremerExecutive of Marsh & McLennan, a company whose offices were hit by a plane on 9/11, "Coordinator for Counterterrorism", Administrator of the Coalition Provisional Authority of Iraq ...
John BrennanDCIA, "terror expert", helped cover-up CIA/Torture
Richard BurtUS Deep state operative who took part in the discussion about "terrorism" at the 1986 Bilderberg. Founded Diligence
Nelson CunninghamWell-connected Kissinger associate
Étienne DavignonBelgian deep politician, EU commissioner, Bilderberg chairman, Egmont Institute president
Lawrence EagleburgerDiplomat, terror expert and US deep state operative
Timothy GeithnerMulti-Bilderberg central banker
Pehr G. GyllenhammarSwedish CEO, European Round Table of Industrialists, Banque Rothschild, with deep state ties
Robert D. HormatsDeep state connected vice Chairman of Kissinger Associates.
Henry KissingerUS deep politician, 40+ Bilderbergs, Nobel peace prize, war criminal
Jami MiscikCIA Deputy Director for Intelligence. In-Q-Tel, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the American Ditchley Foundation
Joshua Cooper RamoKissinger protegé
Bill RichardsonUS Bilderberger who went to Myanmar in 2021 "to speed the delivery of COVID-19 vaccines from the COVAX facility to Myanmar and to help mitigate a possible fourth wave of COVID-19." Pal of Jeffrey Epstein.
William D. RogersA protegé of Henry Kissinger.
Eric RollAttended 36 Bilderberg conferences - more than anyone else from UK.
J. Stapleton RoyUS diplomat interested in Asia
Brent ScowcroftBush family friend, twice National Security Advisor
William SimonWrote a working paper on U.S. Economic Performance and Prospects for the 1982 Bilderberg.
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References

  1. https://powerbase.info/index.php/Kissinger_Associates
  2. a b Kissinger Means Business Leslie H. Gelb, New York Times April 20th 1986
  3. Corporate clients identified - see Walter Isaacson, Kissinger: A Biography, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992, (updated 2005). (pp.730-51)
  4. Disclosure Sought From Policy Group Jeff Gerth, New York Times, May 20th, 1989
  5. a b Council of the Americas Member: Kissinger McLarty Associates Council of the Americas
  6. http://www.maglobal.com maglobal.com
  7. {{URL|example.com|optional display text}}
  8. Location and revenues - see Isaacson, Kissinger, op.cit. (p.732)
  9. Kissinger Associates, APCO Join in Strategic Alliance, October 12th, 2004, APCO Worldwide
  10. Strategic alliances the Blackstone Group
  11. Survey - Corporate Security: The top players in intelligence industry Financial Times Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson, April 10th, 2001
  12. Making an Alliance Official Judy Sarasohn, Washington Post October 2nd, 2003
  13. BCCI and Kissinger Associates, John Kerry & Hank Brown The BCCI Affair United States Congress
  14. [1]
  15. https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/1984/eirv11n49-19841218/eirv11n49-19841218_010-the_investment_bankers_behind_ki.pdf
  16. a b c Kissinger's New Team Don Oberdorfer Washington Post August 24th, 1982
  17. a b Gilpin Kenneth N. Eagleburger Is Joining Kissinger Associates New York Times June 1st, 1984
  18. Etienne Davignon delivers the plenary address on the third day of EITC 97 European Union Publications Office