One of the major players in setting up a new global governance regime is the American “non-partisan” think-tank Stimson Center. It was founded in 1989 with the stated goal to “enhance global peace”. Stimson does, however, seem to be on a mission for world conquest on behalf of the global corporatocracy using the “climate crisis” as a weapon.

The name is taken from Henry Stimson, US Secretary of War during the Second World War. A lawyer to J.P. Morgan, and a protege of Elihu Root (the founding chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations), that oversaw the development of the A-bomb with the aid from the Rockefeller lawyer John McCloy (Assistant Secretary of War 1941-45).

Their agenda is a continuation of the work that was initiated by Andrew Carnegie and Elihu Root at the beginning of the 20th century and which led up to the creation of the League of Nations in 1920 and the United Nations in 1945.

The founders Barry Blechman and Michael Krepon were members of the Council on Foreign Relations and had previously been involved with Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and Brookings Institution. Initial funding came from the Carnegie Corporation and the Ford Foundation. Carnegie still remains the largest donor, with the US Department of Defense second (2022).

Stimson are now on a holy mission to upgrade the global system, and runs the Global Governance, Justice & Security Program for this very purpose. The program aims to:

…advance more capable global and regional institutions to better cope with existing and emerging global challenges and to create new opportunities through effective multilateral action, including with the global business community and civil society.

It is safe to say that it is the global corporatocracy that will benefit the most from their climate crusade.

The program builds directly on the recommendations from the Albright-Gambari Commission on Global Security, Justice & Governance’s report Confronting the Crisis in Global Governance, that was supported by The Hague Institute for Global Justice and the Stimson Center, and launched at Andrew Carnegies Peace Palace in The Hague on 16 June 2016.

Two of the projects included in the Global Governance, Justice & Security Program are the Climate Governance Commission and the Global Governance Innovation Network. Both of which work to improve the international global governance architecture by building partnerships with actors who can benefit from the proposed solutions.