RHODES-MILNER ROUND TABLE GROUPS


The 'Rhodes-Milner Round Table Groups', were founded in September 1909 in a conference at the Estate of Lord Anglesey, Plas Newydd in Wales. The framework of the organisation was devised by Lionel Curtis, but the overall idea was due to Lord Milner.
They were designed to promulgate the idea of the formation of a Federal World Government, based on the unification of the British Empire and the United States of America. How successful they were in acheiving this can be debated. Certainly they were successful in creating a central bank in the United States which increased British influence on US economic affairs because of the connections between the Bank of England and Wall Street banks. It can be argued that they set the blueprint for future organisations such as the Royal Institute of International Affairs, the Council on Foreign Relations, the United Nations, the Trilateral Commission, and The Bilderberg Group.
Some people believe that the Round table groups were connected to a secret society called the 'Society of the Elect', which South African diamond baron Cecil Rhodes is believed to have set up with similar goals. Rhodes, who was connected to the Freemasons, was believed by some to have formed this secret society in his lifetime. Others believe that his project failed to attract converts, and was still-born at its inception.
Rhodes first formalised his idea with William T Stead, editor of the ''Pall Mall Gazzette'' when he and Stead agreed on the structure of the secret society. Like Weishaupt's Illuminati, this proposed secret society had an elaborate hierarchical structure, based on that of the Jesuits, which comprised: at the top, the position of "General of the Society"—a position modelled on the General of the Jesuits—to be occupied by Rhodes, with Stead and Lord Rothschild as his designated successors; an executive committee called the "Junta of Three", comprising Stead, Milner and Reginald Baliol Brett (Lord Esher); then a "Circle of Initiates", consisting of a number of notables including Cardinal Manning, Lord Arthur Balfour, Lord Albert Grey and Sir Harry Johnston; and outside of this was the "Association of Helpers", the broad mass of the Society.
One of the puzzles surrounding this meeting is whether the "Society of the Elect" actually came into being. Carroll Quigley claims in ''Tragedy and Hope'' (1966) that Rhodes's "Society of the Elect" was not only "formally established" in 1891, but also that its "outer circle known as the 'Association of Helpers'" was "later organised by Milner as the Round Table".
In several of his wills, Rhodes left money for the continuation of the project. However in his later wills, Rhodes abandons the idea and instead concentrates on what became the Rhodes scholarships, which enabled American, German and English Scholars to study for free at Oxford university.
The groups are a collection of small discussion and lobbying groups in every major capital city of the world coordinated by a headquarters in London. In 1910, ''The Round Table Journal:A Quarterly Review of the Politics of the British Empire'' was founded by Lord Milner and members of Milner's Kindergarten (Lionel Curtis, Philip Kerr and Geoffrey Dawson) to unify the political thinking of the groups internationally. After World War II the journal was renamed ''The Round Table Journal:A Quarterly Review of British Commonwealth Affairs'' to reflect changing post war realities.
By 1915 Round Table groups existed in seven countries, including England, South Africa, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, and a rather loosely organized group in the United States (George Louis Beer, Walter Lippmann, Frank Aydelotte, Whitney Shepardson, Thomas W. Lamont, Erwin D. Canham and others).
Members of the Round table were important in securing the Union of South Africa and this was to be the prototype for the eventual federation of the British Empire. There was much disagreement about how this could best be done, and some historians believe that far from being a force of unification, the groups only served to hasten the breakup of the Empire.
Also there were many members of the round table who achieved high positions in Lloyd George's government in the United Kingdom, this has led Conspiracy theorists of the New World Order believe that the round table was instrumental in the formation and structure of the league of nations. This is only partly true as there was much disagreement as to the nature of the organisation. Philip Kerr for one, was dead set against the idea and tried to influence Lloyd George not to make any concessions to the idea.
It is worth noting that the Balfour Declaration of 1917 was actually drafted by Alfred Milner, and it was a letter to Lord Rothschild, making the Balfour Declaration, and thus British support for Zionism, a product of two people closely connected with the Round Table Groups whose goal was World Government.
Lionel Curtis founded the Royal Institute of International Affairs in June 1919. A year later its sister organisation the Council of Foreign Relations was formed in America. It is perhaps in such organisations that the legacy of the round table still lives on.
Although the round table still exists today, its position in influencing the policies of World leaders has been much reduced from its heyday during the First World War. Today it is largely a Commonwealth ginger group, designed to consider and influence Commonwealth policies. It also continues to run Round Table, a journal, and hold dinners and conferences.
Informally, the Round Table is known as 'The Moot'.
A list of the Round Table membership is below:

★ Pal Ahluwalia

★ Amitav Banerji

★ Terry Barringer

★ Richard Bourne (Chairman)

★ Stephen Chan

★ Stephen Cox

★ Alexander Evans

★ Paul Flather

★ David French

★ Amelia Hadfield

★ Meredith Hooper

★ Derek Ingram

★ David Jobbins

★ Alexandra Jones

★ Peter Lyon

★ Claire Martin

★ Sir Humphrey Maud

★ Alex May

★ James Mayall

★ Sir Michael McWilliam

★ Stuart Mole

★ Martin Mulligan

★ Alastair Niven

★ Mark Robinson

★ Prunella Scarlett

★ Victoria Schofield

★ Tim Shaw

★ Nicholas Sims

★ Tim Slack

★ Kayode Soyinka

★ Sir Robert Wade-Gery

★ Jennifer Welsh

★ Andrew J. Williams
International Advisory Board

★ Godfrey Baldacchino

★ Sir Zelman Cowen

★ Gajaraj Dhanarajan

★ Sir Henry Forde

★ Brenda Gourley

★ Cedric Grant

★ Wang Gungwu

★ Norman Hillmer

★ Sir Kenneth Keith

★ Wm. Roger Louis

★ D. A. Low

★ Don Markwell

★ Ali A. Mazrui

★ Richard Nile

★ M. Ohta

★ Ato Quayson

★ Mizanur Rahman Shelley

★ Gowher Rizvi

★ L. K. Sharma

★ K. M. de Silva

★ Farooq Sobhan

★ Sir Roger Tomkys

★ Bernard Wood

★ Ngaire Woods

Contents
External links

External links



Will Banyan, "A short history of the round table"'', NEXUS Magazine, (Parts 1-4)

'' The Round Table official web-site''

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