German Council on Foreign Relations

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Group.png German Council on Foreign Relations  
(Think tankWebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Dgap.png
Formation1955
HeadquartersBonn, Berlin, Germany
Sponsored byEuropean Commission, German Federal Foreign Office, Mercator Foundation, Open Society Foundations
SubpageGerman Council on Foreign Relations/President
Membership• Tom Enders.jpg Thomas Enders
•  Rolf Nikel
•  Georg Graf Waldersee
•  Jutta Freifrau von Falkenhausen
•  Thomas Bagger
•  Geraldine Schroeder
•  Marcus Wassenberg
•  Johann Voss
•  Daniela Schwarzer
•  Thorsten Klaßen
•  Martin Bialecki
•  Niels Annen
•  Stefanie Babst
•  Katarina Barley
• Elmar Brok Press conference Strasbourg European Parliament 2014-02-03 02.jpg Elmar Brok
• Henri de Castries.jpg Henri de Castries
•  Sawsan Chebli
•  Bijan Djir-Sarai
•  Katrin Gaertner
• Timothy J. Garton Ash.jpg Timothy Garton Ash
•  Stephan Goetz
•  Armin Grunwald
• Eric Gujer.jpg Eric Gujer
•  Jürgen Hardt
•  Christiane Hoffmann
•  Matthias Höhn
• MSC 2014 Ischinger2 Mueller MSC2014.jpg Wolfgang Ischinger
•  Christian Jacobs
• Eckart von Klaeden.jpg Eckart von Klaeden
• Lambsdorff, Alexander Graf.jpg Alexander Graf Lambsdorff
•  Joachim Lang
•  Anja Langenbucher
• Kurt Lauk.png Kurt Lauk
•  Antje Leendertse
•  Klaus Mangold
•  David McAllister
•  Claudia Nemat
•  Hannah Neumann
• Günther Oettinger.jpg Günther Oettinger
•  Christopher Freiherr von Oppenheim
•  Mikkel Vedby Rasmussen
•  Thomas Risse
• Röttgen Portrait Mai2021.jpg Norbert Röttgen
•  Herbert J. Scheidt
•  Frithjof Schmidt
•  Johann Wadephul
•  Natasha Wunsch
•  Joachim Krause
•  Thomas Risse
•  Michael Zürn
• Folkmar Stoecker.png Folkmar Stoecker
• James D. Bindenagel.png James Bindenagel
Think tank with deep state connections

German Council on Foreign Relations (German: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik; DGAP) is a network of political, economic and academic decision makers.

The model for the foundation was in many respects the Council on Foreign Relations in New York and the Chatham House in London. The first president of the newly founded DGAP was the CDU politician, diplomat and businessman Günther Henle.


“DGAP is an insupportable lobbying organization, especially insupportable because we co-finance it as taxpayers. Recently, one of these experts appeared in a television news program again, who are presented in order to (allegedly) disseminate a well-founded opinion. It was about more money for the military, and the quoted expert was Christian Mölling from the German Council on Foreign Relations. This is a lobbying organization that is funded to a considerable extent by us taxpayers and gives the impression that it represents the public interest and thus also the interest of all of us. Mölling is the head of the Center for Security and Defense at the DGAP. Typical for his publications is a DGAP memo with the title: "Defense Budget 2024: The budget is increasing – and not enough yet". The text speaks of a "gaping gap in defense spending". Propaganda for more armaments by publicly paid so-called experts.”
Albrecht Müller (November 30, 2023)  [1]


Members

The member list (see above) is collected from its board, advisory board, etc.[2]

Funding

Sponsors include the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Migration; the European Commission, Open Society Foundations, the Mercator Foundation, Friede Springer Foundation, and the Otto Wolff Foundation.[3]


 

Employee on Wikispooks

EmployeeJobAppointedEnd
Joachim KrauseDeputy Director19932001

 

Known members

14 of the 51 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Timothy Garton AshUK historian, Ditchley Governor with other connections. Presented a paper to the 1989 Bilderberg. Subsequently attended two more, over a span of 30 years.
James BindenagelUS Chargé d'affaires to Germany from 1996 to 1997,
Elmar Broklobbyist and European parliament politician, MSC regular
Henri de Castries"French President of Bilderberg"
Tom EndersAtlantik-Brücke, American Council on Germany/Young Leaders, Bilderberg/Steering committee, Munich Security Conference/Advisory Council ...
Eric GujerSpooky Swiss editor-in-chief of the Neue Zürcher Zeitung
Christiane HoffmannBerlin correspondent for Der Spiegel who then became government spokesperson.
Wolfgang IschingerSpooky German diplomat. Chaired the Munich Security Conference
Eckart von KlaedenTriple Bilderberg German politician
Joachim Krause
Kurt LaukBilderberg business executive and politician, neoliberal advisor to Angela Merkel, heavy Munich Security Conference habit
Günther OettingerAttended the 2018 Bilderberg as European Commissioner for Budget and Human Resources, while at the same time host for yearly lobbyist conference.
Norbert RöttgenBilderberg German politician who blamed people who declined vaccines for a divided society
Folkmar StoeckerAssistant to Walter Scheel who attended the 1981 and 1982 Bilderbergs

 

Sponsors

EventDescription
European CommissionThe executive body of the European Union, responsible for proposing legislation, implementing decisions, upholding the EU treaties and managing day-to-day business.
German Federal Foreign OfficeThe German Foreign Ministry
Mercator FoundationGerman 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.
Open Society FoundationsA NGO operating in more countries than McDonald's. It has the tendency to support politicians (at times through astroturfing) and activists that get branded as "extreme left" as its founder is billionaire and bane of the pound George Soros. This polarizing perspective causes the abnormal influence of the OSF to go somewhat unanswered.
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References


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