The Bürgenstock Conference was the ninth o£ its kind, the previous ones having been held in various European countries and in the United States.
It is not the purpose of these conferences to attempt to make policy or to recommend action by governments. Their sole object is, by bringing together men of outstanding qualities and influence, in circumstances where discussions can be frank and where arguments not always med in public debate can be put forward, to reach a better undemanding of prevailing differences between the Western countries and to study those fields in which agreement may be sought. The discussions are so organized as to permit a broad and £rank exchange of views to take place. They are held in conditions or strict privacy and neither the press nor observers are admitted. No resolutions are passed and no statements have to be approved by the participants, who are free to draw their own conclusions.
Those invited to attend the Bilderberg Conferences are chosen from different nations and from all fields of public activity and include statesmen, diplomatists, business and professional men, intellectuals, and leaders of public opinion. All participants attend the meetings in a purely personal capacity and the views they express do not necessarily represent those of the organizations or parties to which they belong. The various topics on the agenda are introduced by rapporteurs who have prepared papers on these subjects. These documents are as far as possible circulated in advance of the meetings.
In the following text the views expressed during the debates are briefly summarized under headings which correspond to the different points of the agenda.
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I. STATE OF THE WORLD SITUATION AFTER THE FAILURE OF THE SUMMIT CONFERENCE
II. NEW POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS IN THE WESTERN WORLD
The economic organization of Europe
The attitude of the United States and problems of non-European countries
PRESS STATEMENT
ANNEX NO. I
ANNEX NO. II
ANNEX NO. III