FINAL WARNING: The Illuminati Influence on International Affairs
representatives, but independently to discuss “basic proposals on
which global agreement is both essential and possible.” Willy Brandt,
the former West German Chancellor was asked to chair the
commission.
On September 28, 1977, Brandt announced his intention to launch the
Independent Commission on International Development Issues, and
said that it “would not interfere with ongoing international
negotiations, and would make recommendations to help improve the
climate of North-South relations.” Brandt wanted the Commission,
consisting of 18 members, to represent many views, and to be
politically and regionally balanced, with a majority coming from
developed countries. Their initial meeting was in December, 1977.
There was two phases to what is more commonly referred to as
Brandt’s Commission. The funding for the first ($750,000) in 1980,
producing North-South: A Program for Survival, was provided by the
Dutch Government, as well as Denmark, Finland, India, Japan,
Republic of Korea, Norway, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, United Kingdom,
the Commission of the European Communities, OPEC Special Fund,
German Marshall Fund of the United States, the Ford Foundation,
Friedrich-Ebert and Friedrich-Naumann Foundations of the Federal
Republic of Germany, and the International Development Research
Center of Canada.
Subsequent funding was provided by the governments of Denmark,
the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom, and the OPEC
Special Fund.
The funding for the second phase ($350,000), which produced the 1983
report Common Crisis: North-South Cooperation for World Recovery,
came from the governments of Canada, the Federal Republic of
Germany, the Netherlands, Kuwait, the Commission of the European
Communities, and the German Marshall Fund of the United States.
In short, the Brandt Reports “called for a full-scale restructuring of the
global economy,” and the purpose of the Commission was “to
influence public opinion to help change government attitudes, as well
as to make proposals for revitalizing North-South negotiations.”