The Ultimate Centralized Control Mechanism
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), established in 1930, represented the culmination of a century-long effort to create a global financial control architecture operating entirely beyond democratic oversight.
While officially presented as a mechanism for managing German war reparations, the BIS was designed by the same banking interests that controlled private central banks - creating a self-perpetuating international financial elite.
The Undemocratic Architecture
- •Extraterritorial Immunity: BIS operates with diplomatic immunity in Switzerland, beyond any national jurisdiction
- •Private Ownership: Controlled by the same banking families that dominate private central banking
- •Secret Governance: Decisions made in private meetings with no public accountability
- •Global Coordination: Enables synchronized monetary policies across nations
The Network of Control
- •Interlocking Directorships: Same individuals rotate between BIS, central banks, and private financial institutions
- •Policy Coordination: Ensures national policies serve global financial interests
- •Wealth Protection: Safeguards elite assets across political and economic crises
- •Crisis Management: Coordinates responses to protect the system, not the public
The 1932 Turning Point: Global Political Elimination
In a stunningly coordinated pattern across continents, three key figures were eliminated within weeks in 1932, clearing the path for centralized control and militarism: Aristide Briand (European reconciliation), Ivar Krueger (independent finance), and Inukai Tsuyoshi (Japanese democracy).
🇫🇷Aristide Briand
French Foreign Minister and architect of European reconciliation through the Briand-Kellogg Pact.
- •Champion of European federalism and peaceful cooperation
- •Opposed centralized financial control mechanisms
- •Died March 7, 1932 under mysterious circumstances
🇸🇪Ivar Kreuger
The "Match King" - controlled global match monopolies and extensive independent financial networks.
- •One of Europe's most powerful independent financiers
- •Potential rival to emerging BIS financial authority
- •Died March 12, 1932 in apparent suicide
🇯🇵Inukai Tsuyoshi
Japanese Prime Minister who opposed military expansion and defended democratic institutions.
- •Opposed seizure of Manchuria and military control
- •Last defender of pre-war Japanese democracy
- •Assassinated May 15, 1932 by right-wing naval officers
The Coordinated Pattern
The simultaneous removal of political visionaries across Europe and Asia created a power vacuum that enabled the rapid consolidation of centralized financial control and militarism.
- •European Federalism Eliminated: Briand's vision of peaceful cooperation removed
- •Independent Finance Neutralized: Krueger's rival financial empire eliminated
- •Asian Democracy Destroyed: Inukai's resistance to militarism eliminated
- •Path Cleared: For BIS financial control and global military expansion
The Stage Was Set
With political obstacles removed across continents, the conditions were perfect for the implementation of global financial control through the BIS and the escalation toward worldwide military conflict.
- •No political resistance to centralized financial architecture
- •Military-industrial complexes empowered globally
- •Debt saturation managed through war financing
- •BIS positioned to coordinate cross-border finance throughout coming conflict
The Obvious Pattern
The coordinated elimination of three key figures across different continents and sectors - politics, finance, and military restraint - within weeks of each other reveals a deliberate strategy to remove obstacles to centralized control. The stage was being set for both global financial domination through the BIS and the military conflicts that would follow.
The WWII Nazi Gold Controversy
During World War II, the BIS became the central clearinghouse for Nazi gold transactions, facilitating the movement of looted assets while maintaining the facade of neutrality.
Thomas McKittrick: The American President
As President of the BIS during WWII, American banker Thomas McKittrick maintained close relationships with both Allied and Axis financial elites, demonstrating how the international banking network operated above the conflict.
- •Allen Dulles Connection: Close associate of OSS (later CIA) director Allen Dulles
- •Wallenberg Protege: Mentored by Marcus Laurentius Wallenberg of Sweden's powerful banking dynasty
- •Cross-Border Banking: Facilitated financial transactions across war lines
- •Post-War Continuity: Ensured banking networks survived political changes
The Financial Continuity
The BIS demonstrated that while nations fought wars, the international financial network maintained its operations, proving that banking interests transcended national loyalties.
- •Looted gold from occupied countries processed through BIS
- •German Reichsbank maintained BIS membership throughout war
- •Allied central bankers continued BIS board participation
- •Post-war financial architecture built on BIS foundations
The Wallenberg Network: Banking Across Borders
Marcus Laurentius Wallenberg
As one of Europe's most powerful bankers and mentor to Thomas McKittrick, Wallenberg represented the epitome of international financial coordination that operated above national politics.
- •Head of Sweden's Enskilda Bank and financial empire
- •Key BIS founding figure and ongoing influence
- •Maintained banking relationships across all warring nations
- •Demonstrated how financial networks survive political upheavals
The Pattern Revealed
The BIS-Wallenberg-McKittrick-Dulles network demonstrated a fundamental truth: international finance operates as a continuous system that transcends temporary political conflicts.
The Real Power Structure
While governments rise and fall, and nations go to war, the international banking network maintains continuity, proving that financial control represents the true center of power in the modern world system.
Legacy: The Blueprint for Global Control
The BIS established the operational model for all subsequent international financial institutions - undemocratic, unaccountable, and designed to serve elite financial interests rather than public welfare.
IMF & World Bank
Built on BIS principles of conditionality and structural adjustment that transfer wealth from nations to creditors
Basel Accords
BIS-coordinated banking regulations that protect large financial institutions while restricting credit to the real economy
Digital Currency
BIS research into CBDCs represents the next phase of centralized monetary control and surveillance