Congress for Cultural Freedom/Founding Conference
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Date | 26 June 1950 - 29 June 1950 |
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Participants | Franz Borkenau, Karl Jaspers, John Dewey, Ignazio Silone, Jacques Maritain, James Burnham, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Bertrand Russell, Ernst Reuter, Raymond Aron, A. J. Ayer, Benedetto Croce, Arthur Koestler, Richard Löwenthal, Tennessee Williams, Irving Brown, Sidney Hook, James T. Farrell, Robert Montgomery, David Lilienthal, Sol Levitas, Carson McCullers, George Schulyer, Max Yergan, Herman Muller, Nicolas Nabokov, Julian Amery, A.J. Ayer, Herber Read, Harold Davis, Christopher Hollis, Peter de Mendelsohn, David Rousset, Rémy Roure, André Philip, Claude Mauriac, André Malraux, Jules Romains, Georges Altman, Guido Piovene, Altiero Spinelli, Franc Lombardi, Muzzio Mazzochi, Bonaventura Tecchi, Lawrence de Neufville, Melvin Lasky |
Perpetrators | Michael Josselson, CIA |
Description | Founded the Congress for Cultural Freedom |
Known Participants
17 of the 93 of the participants already have pages here:
Participant | Description |
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Julian Amery | MI6, deep politician who chaired Le Cercle for several years. |
Raymond Aron | French sociologist who attended 3 Bilderbergs from 1957 to 1966 |
Irving Brown | US Trade unionist and and consigliere for the CIA who attended the 1956 Bilderberg |
James Burnham | "The first neoconservative", spooky propagandist philosopher |
Sidney Hook | American philosopher and anti-communist activist. |
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. | |
Melvin Lasky | US journalist, intellectual, with suspected CIA ties |
Haakon Lie | powerful party secretary for the Norwegian Labour Party from 1945 to 1969. A CIA collaborator, he was the most prominent organizer of McCarthyism in the 1950s, and set up an extensive surveillance apparatus in the Labour movement and unions. |
Richard Löwenthal | A Jewish exile from Nazi Germany, he soon was attached to US and UK intelligence services. After the war became a major intellectual in the Social Democratic Party of Germany, and often consulted by the SPD’s leaders, especially Willy Brandt and Ernst Reuter. He attended the 1968 Bilderberg conference. |
Fritz Molden | Austrian journalist, publisher, diplomat who attended 2 Bilderbergs in the 1950s |
Malcolm Muggeridge | |
Lawrence de Neufville | OSS agent, recruited by John Baker into the CIA |
Denis de Rougement | Attended the first 4 Bilderbergs. Promoted European federalism |
Bertrand Russell | UK philosopher and pacifist |
Carlo Schmid | Founder member of the Bilderberg Steering committee |
Altiero Spinelli | Italian politician, referred to as one of the founding fathers of the European Union. |
Hugh Trevor-Roper |
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