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Józef Retinger

Józef Hieronim Retinger (World War II noms de guerre Salamandra, "Salamander", and Brzoza, "Birch Tree"; 17 April 1888 – 12 June 1960) was a Polish politician, scholar, international political activist with access to some of the leading power brokers of the 20th century, a publicist and writer.

Józef Hieronim Retinger
Józef Retinger, circa 1944
Born(1888-04-17)17 April 1888
Died12 June 1960(1960-06-12) (aged 72)
NationalityPolish
CitizenshipPolish
Known forBilderberg Group, European Movement International
AwardsNobel Peace Prize Nomination 1958
Scientific career
FieldsEconomics, international relations, politics
InstitutionsSorbonne University Phd, London School of Economics, Polish government-in-exile

Already as a gifted student in Paris and London he mixed with the leading lights of music and literature. Most notably, he became a friend of compatriot Joseph Conrad.[1] During World War I, the young Retinger became politically active in Austria-Hungary and Russia on behalf of the Polish independence movement. Following a failed attempt to broker peace between Austria-Hungary and the Allies of World War I, he had to retreat to Central America, where he became an economic adviser.

After the outbreak of World War II, he was principal adviser to the Polish government-in-exile. Early in 1944, a daring mission into Occupied Poland by parachute, with the help of British intelligence, added to his air of mystery and subsequent controversy.[2] A Freemason with a reputation as a grey eminence, after World War II he went on to cofound the European Movement, which led to the establishment of the European Union, and was instrumental in forming the secretive Bilderberg Group.[3] In 1958, he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Early life edit

 
Emilian Czyrniański, Retinger's maternal grandfather, 1878 photo by Walery Rzewuski
 
Władysław Zamoyski (1853-1924)
 
Misia Godebska Sert, Retinger's Parisian cousin

Józef Retinger was born in Kraków, Poland (then part of Austria-Hungary), the youngest of five children: his father had a daughter, Aniela, from a first marriage to Helena Jawornicka.[4] His mother was Maria Krystyna Czyrniańska, daughter of a Greek Catholic Lemko professor of chemistry at the Jagiellonian University. His father, Józef Stanisław Retinger, was the personal legal counsel and successful adviser to French-born Count Władysław Zamoyski. Retinger's great-grandfather, Filip Rettinger, was a Jewish tailor from Tarnów who with his family converted to Catholicism in 1827.[5] When his lawyer grandson died, Count Zamoyski took the promising youngster, Józef, into his household and paid for him to attend the Bartłomiej Nowodworski High School in Kraków. Retinger's eldest brother, Emil, became a commander in the Polish Navy, while his son, Witold Retinger [pl], was stationed in the United Kingdom during World War II (1943–45), as a member then leader of Squadron 308 of the Polish Air Force.[6] Retinger's brother, Juliusz, taught physiological chemistry at the University of Chicago and University of Wilno.[7] Retinger himself initially considered a career in the priesthood, but three months in the Jesuit novitiate in Rome confirmed he would not be suited to the life.[2]

Further financed by Count Zamoyski in 1906, Retinger entered simultaneously the Ecole des sciences politiques and the Sorbonne in Paris and two years later, aged twenty, became the youngest person ever to earn a Ph.D. in literature from there.[2] While in the French capital, armed with introductions from Zamoyski and his own relative, the salonnière and pianist Misia Sert, he moved in intellectual circles and was befriended by among others, André Gide, François Mauriac, Bernard Grasset [fr], Jean Giraudoux, Erik Satie and Maurice Ravel. His early literary ambitions were stopped in their tracks when he presented his first novel, Les Souffleurs, to André Gide for his opinion. Gide told him: "Joseph, you will never be a writer."[1]: 11–13 

He next went to Munich to study comparative psychology for a year. From there, encouraged by Zamoyski, in 1910 he moved to England, where he entered the London School of Economics for a year's study and began a lobbying operation on behalf of the Polish cause and its populations scattered across three ailing empires. Formally he became Director of the London Office of the Polish National Committee (1912–1914).[8][9] During this time he continued to move in élite circles and thanks to an introduction by Arnold Bennett whom he had met in Paris, Retinger developed a close friendship with his older Polish compatriot, the already well established novelist, Joseph Conrad.[9] Retinger urged Conrad to visit Poland, and on 28 July 1914, the day World War I broke out, Retinger, his wife Otolia, and Conrad, his wife, and their two sons arrived in Kraków, the two men's childhood stamping grounds (they were alumni of the same secondary school). Due to the closeness of the Russian border (Russia was then allied to Great Britain), the Conrads soon sought greater safety in the Tatra Mountains resort of Zakopane.[10] Retinger would write about Conrad in his 1943 book, Conrad and His Contemporaries. Historian Norman Davies suggests that it was probably Conrad who introduced the "polyglot and polymath" Retinger to the British intelligence services.[11] Later Retinger became a personal friend of Major-General Sir Colin Gubbins, wartime head of SOE, and after the war an MI6 "asset".[12][13]

World War I edit

 
Joseph Conrad

With war clouds closing in, the project of writing a play together with Conrad based on the latter's novel, Nostromo, had to be abandoned as both men hurriedly left Austria-Hungary. Retinger would have been eligible for military call-up in Galicia (no mention of this is made by his biographers).

He put aside literary endeavours and once more assumed the role of a political lobbyist for Poland, publishing pamphlets and travelling between London, Paris, and New York, aided by Conrad in London.[4]: 10  In the first years of the war, this was not on the agenda of the major powers.

Retinger looked instead for other potential alliances and political leverage, which led to meetings with leading Zionists of the time, including Chaim Weizmann, Vladimir Zhabotinski, and Nahum Sokolow, who were seeking international recognition and rights for the Jewish diaspora.[4]: 11 

In 1916, guided by Zamoyski and with the approval of H. H. Asquith, David Lloyd George, and Georges Clemenceau with his old Parisian connections, Sixtus and Xavier de Bourbon Parme, the Duchess of Montebello and Marquis Boni de Castellane, as well as Zamoyski's friend the Polish General of the Jesuits, Włodzimierz Ledóchowski, Retinger became a "courier" in the secretive European dynastic negotiation suing for peace with Austria.[14] It became known as the Sixtus Affair and was a failure, due to Germany's refusal to cooperate, thus making Austria more dependent on Germany.[15][16]

In 1917 Retinger met Arthur "Boy" Capel, the half-French dilettante, polo player, and "sponsor" of Coco Chanel. Capel is said to have planted in Retinger's mind the idea of a world federal government based on an Anglo-French alliance.[17]

After concerns for his personal safety due to his "political meddling" in Austria-Hungary and in the emergent Soviet Union, in 1918 Retinger was banned from France, and for several months sought sanctuary in Spain.[4]: 12 

Mexican years edit

 
US journalist Jane Anderson, 1917

Retinger travelled on to Cuba and then to Mexico, where he became an unofficial political adviser to union organizer Luis Morones, whom he had fortuitously met crossing the Atlantic, and to President Plutarco Elías Calles.[4][2]

A glimpse of Retinger, newly divorced and lovelorn for the American journalist Jane Anderson, appears in the biography of another American woman, the communist sympathiser Katherine Anne Porter, a member of the Morones circle. In it he is described as a "Polish intriguer" and "British Marxist". In 1921, while on an obscure mission to the United States to buy saddles, Retinger was arrested and imprisoned in Laredo, and Porter was dispatched from Mexico to get him released.[18] That same year Retinger had proposed that Katherine Porter and her friend Mary Doherty accompany him to Europe to do "collaborative work", an offer that was spurned.[18]: 94–95 

Retinger helped advance Mexico's nationalization of its oil industry in 1928.[19] His activities in Mexico lasted almost seven years and only ended with Calles' fall from power in 1936. They inspired Retinger to write three volumes on the tumultuous events in that Latin American republic.[4] The Mexican years were punctuated by trips back to Europe, where he took on the role of representative in the United Kingdom of the Polish Socialist Party (1924–1928).

In 1926 he married his second wife, Stella, with whom he travelled to Mexico on one occasion. After her death in 1933 his two daughters were left in the care of their maternal grandmother and were estranged from him until the 1950s.

In the rest of the interwar period, he published many contributions in periodicals such as the Polish Wiadomości Literackie (Literary News), on literary and political subjects.[2][20]

Building blocks on the table edit

 
Władysław Sikorski, Polish prime minister in 1923

During World War II, Retinger, who was in London, was involved in arranging for Polish troops to be evacuated to Britain from France. He was asked by Winston Churchill personally to escort Władysław Sikorski by plane to England from France, which had just capitulated to the invading Germans.[4]: 16 

Retinger became principal adviser and confidant to the Prime Minister of the Polish Government-in-Exile now established in London.[19]: 95 [21] Their political relationship actually went back to 1916 and had been strengthened during Sikorski's earlier brief stint as prime minister, 1922-23, in newly independent Poland.[22]

Sikorski's dependence on Retinger was the greater as Sikorski had no mastery of the English language. Retinger was dispatched to talk with other exiled government representatives in London, who included Marcel-Henri Jaspar, Paul Van Zeeland, and Paul-Henri Spaak, in preparation for a postwar geopolitical landscape.[23] He went on to posit a "Sikorski Plan" consisting of two stages, the first of which was signed in January 1942 and proposed a Polish-Czech confederation.[24] The idea was to expand it into a Central European confederation with Poland and Lithuania, Czechoslovakia as its nucleus around which would be grouped Romania, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and Greece.[25] The agenda behind this was to create a common political blueprint for smaller countries abutting larger European powers and became the basis of a Belgian-Dutch union which would mirror the Polish-Czech arrangement.[26]

This scheme of Retinger's caused problems between London and Moscow. In order not to tread on Soviet toes, the British altered their position and refused to back Sikorski's negotiations with the eight smaller European states. In his speech on the Council of Europe, Winston Churchill BBC radio broadcast on 21 March 1943 referred to the necessity of smaller nations forming groupings, but that it was too early to go into detail. The most Retinger was able to achieve was to push through the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement, signed on 30 July 1941, which provided for the formation of the Anders' army, thus ridding Stalin of the immediate human problem posed by the hundreds of thousands of Polish POWs and deportees from the Soviet occupied Kresy regions of the former Second Polish Republic, who after an arduous odyssey across thousands of miles would eventually end up as the United Kingdom's human problem.[27][28] This trade-off adumbrated the Tehran and Yalta Conferences.[29]

Brushes with death edit

Retinger just avoided perishing at Gibraltar with Władysław Sikorski, in July 1943, when he was not needed in the Premier's Near East troop inspection and was thought better employed in London. The spare seat on the plane went to Sikorski's daughter, who died with her father.[2]

Retinger was devastated by this turn of events. His relations with Sikorski's successor, Stanislaw Mikolajczyk, were much more ambivalent, but he obtained the latter's consent to go on a special SOE mission to Poland in April 1944.[30][31]

With an SOE brief and without prior training, Retinger, aged 56, parachuted into German-occupied Poland with 2nd Lt. Tadeusz Chciuk-Celt in Operation Salamander to meet with Polish underground figures, to deliver money to the Polish underground, and to "explain to his fellow Poles in the homeland 'how we are going to lose this war'".[32]: 16–22  [1]: 265 [19] Following at least one assassination attempt on him, Retinger expressed his frustration:

You know why I came. The [Underground] Delegate knows as well.... They know that I only want to convince them that it will be necessary in the future to cooperate with the Communists, because no English are coming here, only Russians. If we do not get along with them somehow, it will be a terrible tragedy, because we well know what Stalin and the NKVD are. And it's about trying to make people here understand this fact. And they want to murder me![19]

 
Retinger recovering from poisoning, ca. 1944

The latter reference was to elements in the Polish underground Home Army who were convinced Retinger was not acting in the interests of his country and should therefore be "removed". One apparent attempt to liquidate him was allegedly based on a "death sentence" sanctioned by General Kazimierz Sosnkowski. It was foiled by the intervention of an old friend and Home Army member, Tadeusz Gebethner.[33] During his visit in Poland, there was also a failed attempt to kill him with poison.

On return to London, he spent some time in the Dorchester Hotel in London's Park Lane, recovering from his trip ordeal, which left him lame in one leg for the rest of his life, possibly due to polyneuritis brought on by the poison. His first visitor at the Dorchester was Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden.[11][32]

Immediately after the war, in 1945-46, Retinger travelled to Warsaw with emergency aid for the capital's population. It consisted largely of tons of British and US army surplus, such as equipment, blankets, and field kitchens.[14] When his erstwhile military escort from Operation Salamander, Tadeusz Chciuk, and his new wife Ewa were arrested as subversives by the Polish communist security service, Retinger allegedly appealed to Vyacheslav Molotov in Moscow to have them released. Apparently the personal intervention succeeded. In 1948 the Chciuks became refugees in Germany.[34][35]

Unwanted intrusion edit

Dark days followed World War II when tensions rose between former Western and Eastern allies and in April 1946 Retinger's flat in Bayswater, West London, was broken into and his and his secretary's files ransacked by persons unknown. He reported the matter to Scotland Yard, but the Metropolitan Police were not overly bothered. Retinger escalated his complaint and ended up being interviewed by the British security services. His view was that the newly-established communist embassy of the Polish People's Republic was responsible for the break-in.[36]

From the moment that Churchill made his "Iron Curtain" speech in Fulton, Missouri, in April 1946, Retinger turned his efforts to a modified European project he had harboured for decades.[37][14]

Vision for Europe edit

 
Kraków plaque commemorating Retinger, "great pioneer of European unity".

After World War II, Retinger feared another devastating war in Europe, this time fought between "Russia" and "the Anglo-Saxons".[19] He became a leading advocate of European unification as a means of securing peace.[38] He helped found both the European Movement and the Council of Europe, somewhat to the dismay of the philosopher Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, the post-World War I anti-bolshevist founder of the Paneuropean Union movement.[12]: 227–228 [39]

Retinger, with his connections in Holland, Belgium, and Switzerland (he was a friend of Denis de Rougemont), took his cue from Winston Churchill's 1946 Zürich speech and found fertile ground with thirteen British Conservative members of Parliament who backed the idea of a loose European association of states. Retinger was the driving force in the creation of the European League for Economic Cooperation (initially called the Independent League of Economic Cooperation).

He subsequently approached Duncan Sandys, Churchill's son-in-law and chairman of the United Europe Movement, about improving cooperation among the various organisations pursuing European unity. They agreed to organise a small meeting of their two organisations with the Nouvelle Equipes Internationales and the European Union of Federalists. This was held in Paris on 20 July 1947, when it was agreed to establish the Committee for the Coordination of the International Movements for European Unity. In December 1947 this was renamed the International Committee of the Movements for European Unity, with Sandys as Executive Chairman and Retinger as its Honorary Secretary.

They organised the 1948 Hague Congress which brought together the two camps of those for a unified Europe and those in favour of a federal Europe.[40][41][22]

During the congress, Retinger networked assiduously among the delegates, who included the Vatican diplomat Giovanni Montini, future Pope Paul VI. Ensuing discussions led eventually to the formation in 1951 of a European Coal and Steel Community.[2]

Creator of Bilderberg edit

Retinger was the initiator and architect of the informal Bilderberg conferences in 1952-54 and was their permanent secretary until his premature death in London in 1960. The original group which met in the eponymous Dutch hotel in 1954 was gathered by Retinger and included David Rockefeller, Denis Healey with Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, as chairman. The purpose was to stimulate understanding between Europe and the US as the Cold War developed by bringing together financiers, industrialists, politicians and opinion formers. All discussions were to be strictly under Chatham House Rules.[42] A founding member of the group, later British Labour Foreign Secretary, Healey, described the secretive Bilderberg meetings as the "brainchild" of Retinger.[43][44]

 
Grave, North Sheen Cemetery, London

Despite eschewing any distinctions or medals throughout his life, in 1958 he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.[45] He died in poverty of lung cancer.[46] He was buried at North Sheen Cemetery in the presence of five British cabinet ministers as well as of his two younger daughters who were finally reconciled with him.[32]: 16–22  According to the oration of Sir Edward Beddington-Behrens, Retinger not only had special access to 10 Downing Street but also to the White House.[2]

Retinger's long-time personal assistant and the editor of his posthumous memoirs, John Pomian, actually Jan Pomian-Bławdziewicz [pl], was another Polish emigré in London, later a director of the Heim gallery in London's St James's, owned by the influential Polish art historian and philanthropist, Andrzej Ciechanowiecki.[47][40]

Personal life edit

Retinger married twice. In 1912 he wed the well-born Otolia Zubrzycka (divorced 1921, died 1984), with whom he had a daughter, Malina (later Puchalska). In 1926 he wed Stella Morel (died 1933) – daughter of French-born pacifist and Dundee member of Parliament, E.D. Morel, and Mary, née Richardson – with whom he had two daughters, Marya (later Fforde) and Stasia (later French). Among his grandchildren are David French – translator into English of Andrzej Sapkowski's Witcher Saga – and fantasy novelist Jasper Fforde.

During World War I and after, Retinger appears to have fallen under the spell of several women, especially the American journalist Jane Anderson, a supposed lover of Joseph Conrad.[48][49] Retinger's own liaison with Anderson brought about the breakdown of Retinger's marriage to Otolia and drove a wedge between him and his friend Conrad.[48]: 293  However, Conrad biographer John Stape gives an alternative version for the cooling of relations between the two men, suggesting that as Retinger's enthusiasms were not shared by the novelist, shortly after the war – without Retinger's charming wife Otolia by his side – Retinger's proneness to exaggeration and tactlessness made him less socially acceptable.[50]

Controversy edit

Over the decades since his 1960 death, the left-leaning Retinger continues to draw fascination and controversy with his political skill, his apparently selfless single-mindedness, and his lasting institutional legacy in Europe and beyond.[51] Adam Pragier, a notable Polish exile and trenchant political commentator (and a secondary-school contemporary of Retinger's), has described him as "a sort of adventurer, but in the good sense of the word".[52] On the other hand, detractors impugn his influence due to alleged connections, with deeply secret and malign factions, for which there is so far no reliable evidence.[53][54] He remains an enigma, and probably the one substantial contributor to postwar European peace who has no physical monument.[46]: 60 

In 2000 The Daily Telegraph's Ambrose Evans-Pritchard revealed, from declassified US Government records, that:

The leaders of the European Movement – Retinger, the visionary Robert Schuman and the former Belgian prime minister Paul-Henri Spaak – were all treated as hired hands by their American sponsors. The US role was handled as a covert operation. ACUE's funding came from the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations as well as business groups with close ties to the US government.[55]

This revelation touching on Cold War circumstances was subsequently analysed in greater detail in 2003 by Le Figaro commentator Rémi Kauffer [fr].[56] However, as professor Hugh Wilford shows, the initiative to win American backing for a "United States of Europe" came neither from Allen Dulles, deputy chief, then chief of the CIA, nor from Senator William Fulbright, chairman of the American Committee on United Europe, but from European lobbyists of disparate motivation, namely Coudenhove-Kalergi and Retinger, the latter eclipsing the former due to Retinger's close connection with Winston Churchill on European matters.[12]

Retinger's plan was that the United States should be integral to political and economic support for a war-damaged Western Europe. As "head of casting" for his project, he set about finding key Americans to collaborate with him, among them Charles Douglas Jackson, Time-Life publisher in the 1940s and one-time head of propaganda at the Eisenhower White House.[57]

Retinger has inspired disparate opinions. He was a figure whose allegiances, like his roots, remain obscure and whose accounts of himself varied according to his audience, thus undercutting his reliability – as reflected in various Joseph Conrad biographies and numerous other sources, including the considered, annotated review, by Norbert Wójtowicz of Poland's Institute of National Remembrance, of Marek Celt's 2006 posthumously published Z Retingerem do Warszawy i z powrotem. Raport z podziemia 1944, [To Warsaw with Retinger and Back. A Report from the Underground 1944] edited by Wojciech Frazik.[58] The disparity in views on Retinger, despite the perception of some personality flaws, does not alter Retinger's mature postwar European legacy.[59]

Selected works edit

By J. H. Retinger:

  • Le conte fantastique dans le romantisme français [Fantastical Tales in the French Romantic Tradition] (in French). Genève: Slatkine Reprints, 1973. 1908.
  • Histoire de la littérature française du romantisme à nos jours [The History of French Literature from Romanticism to the Present Day] (in French). Paris: B. Grasset. 1911.
  • The Poles and Prussia. London. 1913.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) available at University of Leeds Library
  • La Pologne et l'Équilibre européen [Poland and the Stability of Europe] (in French). Paris. 1916.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Morones of Mexico; a history of the labour movement in that country. London: The Labour Pub. Co. Ltd. 1926.
  • Tierra mexicana; the history of land and agriculture in ancient and modern Mexico. London: N. Douglas. 1928.
  • Polacy w cywilizacjach zagranicznych [Poles in Foreign Civilizations] (in Polish). Warsaw. 1934.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • "Historja i polityka: Nowy czynnik w dyplomacji międzynarodowej" [History and Politics: A new factor in international diplomacy]. Wiadomości Literackie (50) (in Polish). 4 December 1938.
  • "Historja i polityka: Zastój w międzynarodowej działalności Rosji" [History and Politics: Suspension of Russian activity in international relations]. Wiadomości Literackie (51) (in Polish). 11 December 1938.
  • All about Poland: facts, figures, documents. London: Minerva Pub. Co. 1941.
  • Conrad and His Contemporaries. New York: Roy. 1942 [First published by Minerva, London, 1941].
  • The European Continent? Address given to the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London (PDF). London. 7 May 1946.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • The Bilderberg Group. Hertfordshire, UK. 1959.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Under Polish eyes. United Kingdom: Joseph Conrad Society. 1975.

About Retinger:

  • Poraj, Stanisław (19 June 1938). "The knight among nations". Tydzień Literacki Polski Zbrojnej, 2 (24) (in Polish).
  • de Rougemont, Denis (1961). Retinger, J.H. (ed.). A Biographical Sketch. In Tribute to a Great European. Geneva: Centre Europeén de la Culture. pp. 20–50.
  • Siemaszko, Zbigniew Sebastian (1967). "Retinger w Polsce 1944 r.". Zeszyty Historyczne, 12 (in Polish). Paris.
  • Pomian, John, ed. (1972). Józef Retinger: Memoirs of an Eminence Grise. Sussex University Press/Chatto & Windus. ISBN 0-85621-002-1. OCLC 844436367..
  • Nowak, Jan (1978). Kurier z Warszawy (in Polish). London: Odnowa. ISBN 0-903705-37-0.
  • Józef Hieronim Retinger (1888-1960) (in Polish). Vol. XXXI. Polski Słownik Biograficzny. 1988–1989.
  • In remembrance of Joseph Retinger 1988-1960, Initiator of the European League for Economic Cooperation. Brussels: European League for Economic Cooperation. 1996.
  • Grosbois, Thierry (1999). "L'action de Józef Retinger en faveur de l'idée européenne 1940-46". Revue Européenne d'Histoire (in French). 6 (34).
  • Kalicki, Włodzimierz (2010). "Gracz, który budował Europę" [The Player who built Europe]. Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish) (219).
  • Marek Celt; Jan Chciuk-Celt (2013). Parachuting into Poland, 1944: Memoir of a Secret Mission with Jozef Retinger. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-03384.
  • Podgórski, Bogdan (2013). Józef Retinger – prywatny polityk [Józef Retinger - a private politician] (in Polish). Universitas. ISBN 97883-242-2351-0.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c John Pomian, ed. (1972). Joseph Retinger - Memoirs of an Eminence Grise. Sussex University Press/ Chatto & Windus.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Oleksiak, Wojciech (14 December 2016). "The Most Mysterious Man in 20th-Century Politics". Culture.pl. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  3. ^ Pieczewski, Andrzej (11 August 2010). "Joseph Retinger's conception of and contribution to the early process of European integration". European Review of History. 17 (4): 581–604. doi:10.1080/13507486.2010.495766. S2CID 159818413.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Podgórski, Bogdan. "Józef Hieronim Retinger (1888-1960)" (PDF) (in Polish). p. 5. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  5. ^ Sypek, Antoni (2013). "Żydowskie konwersje na chrześcijaństwo w Tarnowie, w latach 1785-1900" [Jewish conversions to christianity in Tarnów in 1785-1900]. Rocznik Tarnowski: 128.
  6. ^ "History of No.'s 300–318 Squadrons at RAF Web". Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  7. ^ Polish Biographical Dictionary (in Polish). Vol. 127. p. 152.
  8. ^ "Jozef Retinger - cv". 23 August 2019. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  9. ^ a b Roszkowski, Wojciech; Kofman, Jan (2016). "Retinger Józef". Biographical Dictionary of Central and Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-47593-4. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  10. ^ Zdzisław Najder, Joseph Conrad: A Life, Rochester, New York, Camden House, 2007, ISBN 978-1-57113-347-2, pp. 459–63.
  11. ^ a b Davies, Norman (2003). Rising '44: The Battle for Warsaw. London: Pan Books. p. 53. ISBN 0-333-90568-7.
  12. ^ a b c Wilford, Hugh (2013). The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War: Calling the Tune? Studies in Intelligence. Routledge. p. 242. ISBN 978-1-135-29477-9.
  13. ^ Dorril, Stephen (2010). "A Critical Review: MI6: Fifty years of special operations. Doctoral thesis" (PDF). University of Huddersfield. p. 27.
  14. ^ a b c Jeleński, K.A. (1961). "Prekursor anachroniczny" [Anachronistic Precursor (Obituary)] (PDF). Kultura Paryska (in Polish). Paris: 190–193.
  15. ^ Gijswijt, Thomas W. (2018). "Józef Retinger - Informal diplomat". Informal Alliance: The Bilderberg Group and Transatlantic Relations during the Cold War, 1952-1968. Routledge Studies in Modern History. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-3511-8102-0.
  16. ^ Demblin, August; Demblin, Alexander (1997). Minister gegen Kaiser: Aufzeichnungen eines österreichisch-ungarischen Diplomaten über Aussenminister Czernin und Kaiser Karl [Minister versus Kaiser: The designs of an Austro-Hungarian Diplomat to outwit Foreign Minister Czernin and Kaiser Charles] (in German). Vienna: Böhlau. ISBN 3-205-98762-4.
  17. ^ Biskupski, M. B. (1998). "Spy, Patriot or Internationalist? The Early Career of Józef Retinger, Polish Patriarch of the European Union". The Polish Review. 43 (1): 23–67.
  18. ^ a b Stout, Janis P. (1995). Katherine Anne Porter: A Sense of the Times - Minds of the new South. University of Virginia Press. pp. 47–51. ISBN 978-0-813915685.
  19. ^ a b c d e Ethridge, Marcus E. (2019). "Review of M.B.B. Biskupski, "War and Diplomacy in East and West: A Biography of Józef Retinger", London, Routledge, 2017, ISBN: 978-1-138-21845-1". The Polish Review. 64 (1): 95. doi:10.5406/polishreview.64.1.0094. Ethridge's full review is on pp. 94–95
  20. ^ Retinger, J.H. (12 March 1939). "Hitleryzm czyli bolszewizm" [Hitlerism equals Bolshevism]. Wiadomości Literackie (in Polish) (11 (803), year 16).
  21. ^ "London Gazette" (PDF). 4 December 1942. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  22. ^ a b Lane, Thomas; Wolanski, Marian (2009). Poland and European Integration: The Ideas and Movements of Polish Exiles in the West, 1939–91. Springer. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-2302-71784.
  23. ^ Dorril, Stephen (2002). MI6: Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty's Secret Intelligence Service. Simon and Schuster. p. 455. ISBN 978-0-7432-1778-1.
  24. ^ Walter Lipgens (1985). Documents on the history of European integration: Plans for European union in Great Britain and in exile, 1939–1945 (including 107 documents in their original languages on 3 microfiches). Walter de Gruyter. p. 648. ISBN 978-3-11-009724-5. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  25. ^ Schmidt, Andrea (2019). Bogdanova, Olga; Makarychev, Andrey (eds.). From Intermarium to the Three Seas Initiative: The Implications of the Polish Orientation Over the Central and Eastern European Region on Hungarian Policy in Baltic-Black Sea Regionalisms: Patchworks and Networks at Europe's Eastern Margins. Springer Nature. p. 157. ISBN 978-3-0302-48789.
  26. ^ Jakubec, Pavol (2019). "Together and Alone in Allied London: Czechoslovak, Norwegian and Polish Governments-in-Exile, 1940–1945". International History Review. 42 (3): 465–484. doi:10.1080/07075332.2019.1600156.
  27. ^ Anders, Lt.-General Władysław (1949). An Army in Exile. MacMillan & Co. Ltd. p. 73.
  28. ^ Peszke, Michael Alfred (2015). The Polish Underground Army, the Western Allies, and the Failure of Strategic Unity in World War II. McFarland. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-4766-10276.
  29. ^ Sword, Keith (1996). Identity in Flux. The Polish Community in Britain (PDF). London: School of Slavonic and East European Studies - SSEES Occasional Papers No. 36. pp. 24–30. ISBN 0-903425-60-2. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  30. ^ Bułhak, Władysław. "The Foreign Office and the Special Operations Executive and the Expedition of Józef Hieronim Retinger to Poland, April–July 1944", The Polish Review, vol. 61, no. 3, 2016, pp. 33–57.
  31. ^ "Members of the Polish Government, Prime Minister's Office" (PDF). Edinburgh: the Gazette. 21 April 1944. p. 184. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  32. ^ a b c Eringer, Robert. The Global Manipulators. Pentacle Books. ASIN B00546KTEM. OCLC 26551991.
  33. ^ "The story of Tadeusz Gebethner". sprawiedliwi.org.pl. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  34. ^ Chciuk-Celt, Jan. "Jozef Retinger (1888-1960)" (PDF). Retrieved 3 March 2020. Jan Chciuk-Celt, younger son of Tadeusz Chciuk, Retinger's military courier during Operation Saamander, co-authored and edited his father's war memoirs.
  35. ^ Marek Celt; Jan Chciuk-Celt (2013). Parachuting into Poland, 1944: Memoir of a Secret Mission with Jozef Retinger. McFarland. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4766-03384.
  36. ^ Moss, Eloise (2019). Night Raiders: Burglary and the Making of Modern Urban Life in London, 1860-1968. Oxford University Press. pp. 186–87. ISBN 978-0-1925-7677-4.
  37. ^ Churchill, Winston. . Churchill Centre. Archived from the original on 7 February 2007. Retrieved 26 February 2007.
  38. ^ Retinger, J. H. (7 May 1946). "The European Continent? Address given to the Royal Institute of Foreign Affairs in London" (PDF). CVCE. Retrieved 27 March 2020. Correction: although the original states Royal Institute of Foreign Affairs, it should read Royal Institute of International Affairs, known today as "Chatham House", this is likely a copyediting error at CVCE (ed.).
  39. ^ Dorril, Stephen (2002). MI6: Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty's Secret Intelligence Service. Simon and Schuster. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-7432-1778-1.
  40. ^ a b Retinger, J. H. (1972). Joseph Retinger--memoirs of an eminence grise;. John Pomian. [Brighton]: Sussex University Press. ISBN 0-85621-002-1. OCLC 495575.
  41. ^ Mayne, Richard (1990). Federal Union : the pioneers: a history of Federal Union. John Pinder, John C. de V. Roberts. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-41995-2. OCLC 26163180.
  42. ^ Bunting, Madeleine (25 May 2001). "Weekend break for the global elite". The Guardian.
  43. ^ "Denis Healey on Bilderberg". worldsocialism.org. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  44. ^ Aubourg, Valerie (2003). "Organizing Atlanticism: the Bilderberg group and the Atlantic institute, 1952–1963". Intelligence and National Security. 18, (2) (2): 92–105. doi:10.1080/02684520412331306760. S2CID 153892953.
  45. ^ Nobelprize.org. "Nomination for Nobel Peace Prize: Joseph Retinger". Nomination Database. Nobel Media AB 2014. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
  46. ^ a b Podgórski, Bogdan. "Józef Hieronim Retinger (1888-1960)" (PDF) (in Polish). p. 53. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  47. ^ "Jan Pomian-Bławdziewicz" [Obituary of Jan Pomian-Bławdziewicz]. Wyborcza.pl (in Polish). 2015. Retrieved 28 October 2016.
  48. ^ a b Meyers, Jeffrey (2001). Joseph Conrad: A Biography. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 361. ISBN 978-0-8154-11123.
  49. ^ Wilkes, Donald E. (18 May 1995). "Jane Anderson: The Nazi Georgia Peach". The Athens Observer: 5. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
  50. ^ Stape, John (2010). The Several Lives of Joseph Conrad. Random House. pp. 187–188. ISBN 978-1-4090-0682-4.
  51. ^ Wisnewski, Gerhard (2014). The Bilderbergers Puppet-Masters of Power?: An Investigation into Claims of Conspiracy at the Heart of Politics, Business and the Media [Drahtzieher der Macht (2010)]. Translated by J. Collis. West Sussex: Clairview Books. pp. 63–66. ISBN 978-1-90557075-1.
  52. ^ Pragier, Adam (2018) [First published by B. Świderski in London 1966]. Friszke, Andrzej; Pejaś, Ewa (eds.). Czas przeszły dokonany - Czasy i ludzie [The Past Perfect - Lives and Times]. volume 7 of 100-lecie Niepodległości - 100th anniversary of Polish independence. Warsaw: Museum of Polish History. p. 852. ISBN 978-8-3652-4829-9. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  53. ^ Kęder, Wojciech (2016). "Recenzje: Bogdan Podgórski, Józef Retinger prywatny polityk, Universitas, Kraków 2013, ss. 417" [Review of Bogdan Podgórski, Józef Retinger private politician. Kraków: Universitas. 2013, pages 417.] (PDF). Studia Sandomierskie 23 (in Polish): 303–314.
  54. ^ Cornell, Svante E (2018). "Erbakan, Kısakürek, and the Mainstreaming of Extremism in Turkey". Hudson Institute. Retrieved 3 April 2020. see fn. 19.
  55. ^ Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (18 September 2000). "Euro-federalists financed by US Spy Chief". The Daily Telegraph.
  56. ^ Kauffer, Rémi (12 June 2019). "Quand la CIA finançait la construction européenne - Par Rémi Kauffer, Source: Historia 2003" [When the CIA financed the construction of Europe by Rémi Kauffer, source: Historia 2003] (in French). Comité Valmy. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  57. ^ Jeffers, H. Paul (2012). "1". The Bilderberg Conspiracy: Inside the World's Most Powerful Secret Society. Kensington Publishing Corp. ISBN 978-0-8065-3595-1.
  58. ^ Norbert Wójtowicz. "Recenzja: Marek Celt, Z Retingerem do Warszawy i z powrotem. Raport z Podziemia 1944, red. Wojciech Frazik, Wydawnictwo LTW, Łomianki 2006" [Review of Marek Celt, To Warsaw with Retinger and Back. A Report from the Underground 1944, ed. Wojciech Frazik pub. LTW. Łomianki, 2006] (PDF) (in Polish). www.polska1918-89. Retrieved 31 March 2020. The book was subsequently translated into English by Jan Chciuk-Celt and published by McFarland in 2013 as Parachuting into Poland, 1944: Memoir of a Secret Mission with Jozef Retinger, ISBN 978-1-4766-03384 "Marek Celt", the pseudonym of Tadeusz Chciuk, was the military courier who accompanied Retinger on his parachute mission to Poland in 1944. A bond of friendship developed between the two men and they collaborated again on supplying aid to Warsaw from London in 1945-6.
  59. ^ "Józef Retinger". bilderbergmeetings.co.uk. Retrieved 3 March 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Pragier, Adam (22 May 1955). "Nie było kłopotu z Polakami" [There was no Problem with the Poles]. Wiadomości, Rok 10, Nr 21 (477) (in Polish). London.
  • Bines, Jeffrey (2018). Poland's S.O.E: A British Perspective: the Story of the Polish Country Section of the Special Operations Executive 1940-1946 Including the British Military Mission Number Four to Poland 1939. London: Polish Underground Movement Study Trust. ISBN 978-0-9928-03056.
  • Biskupski, M.B. (1998). "Spy, Patriot or Internationalist? The Early Career of Józef Retinger, Polish Patriarch of European Union". The Polish Review. 43 (1): 23–67.
  • Bułhak, Władysław (2016). "The Foreign Office and the Special Operations Executive and the Expedition of Józef Hieronim Retinger to Poland, April–July 1944". The Polish Review. 61 (3): 33–57. doi:10.5406/polishreview.61.3.0033.
  • Dorril, Stephen (2002). MI6: Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty's Secret Intelligence Service. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-1778-1.
  • Pieczewski, Andrzej (2000). "Józef H. Retinger – pomysłodawca i współtwórca Grupy Bilderbergu" [Joseph Retinger: Visionary Co-founder of the Bilderberg Group]. Studia polityczne (in Polish). 10. ISP PAN.
  • Pieczewski, Andrzej (2000). "Działalność J.H. Retingera na rzecz zjednoczonej Europy" [Joseph Retinger's Work for a United Europe]. Studia Europejskie (in Polish). 16. Centrum Europejskie Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego.
  • Pieczewski, Andrzej (2008). Działalność Józefa Hieronima Retingera na rzecz integracji europejskiej [Joseph Retinger's Work for European Integration] (in Polish). Toruń: Wydawnictwo Adam Marszałek. ISBN 978-83-7611-184-1.
  • Hampson, Robert (2012). Conrad's Secrets. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-2305-0783-8.
  • Pieczewski, Andrzej (2015). "Joseph Retinger's Vision of [a] United Europe After World War II: Central and Eastern European Question". The Polish Review. 60 (4): 49–66. doi:10.5406/polishreview.60.4.0049.
  • Wisnewski, Gerhard (2014). The Bilderbergers Puppet-Masters of Power?: An Investigation into Claims of Conspiracy at the Heart of Politics, Business and the Media [Drahtzieher der Macht (2010)]. Translated by J. Collis. West Sussex: Clairview Books. pp. 63–66. ISBN 978-1-90557075-1.
  • Gijswijt, Thomas W. (2018). Informal Alliance: The Bilderberg Group and Transatlantic Relations during the Cold War, 1952-1968. Routledge Studies in Modern History. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-3511-8102-0.

External links edit

  • Polish Soviet Relations During The Second World War, photographs held by the Imperial War Museum with Józef Retinger (extreme left) at the signing of the Sikorski-Maiski agreement at the FO on 30.07.1941
  • Photograph of Retinger flanking Churchill at the Hague 1948, on Retinger's grandson's website
  • Chapter 4, European Unity, from Memoirs of An Eminence Grise ed. John Pomian
  • Bilderberg website on Retinger's life in brief

józef, retinger, józef, hieronim, retinger, world, noms, guerre, salamandra, salamander, brzoza, birch, tree, april, 1888, june, 1960, polish, politician, scholar, international, political, activist, with, access, some, leading, power, brokers, 20th, century, . Jozef Hieronim Retinger World War II noms de guerre Salamandra Salamander and Brzoza Birch Tree 17 April 1888 12 June 1960 was a Polish politician scholar international political activist with access to some of the leading power brokers of the 20th century a publicist and writer Jozef Hieronim RetingerJozef Retinger circa 1944Born 1888 04 17 17 April 1888Krakow Kingdom of Galicia and LodomeriaDied12 June 1960 1960 06 12 aged 72 London United KingdomNationalityPolishCitizenshipPolishKnown forBilderberg Group European Movement InternationalAwardsNobel Peace Prize Nomination 1958Scientific careerFieldsEconomics international relations politicsInstitutionsSorbonne University Phd London School of Economics Polish government in exileAlready as a gifted student in Paris and London he mixed with the leading lights of music and literature Most notably he became a friend of compatriot Joseph Conrad 1 During World War I the young Retinger became politically active in Austria Hungary and Russia on behalf of the Polish independence movement Following a failed attempt to broker peace between Austria Hungary and the Allies of World War I he had to retreat to Central America where he became an economic adviser After the outbreak of World War II he was principal adviser to the Polish government in exile Early in 1944 a daring mission into Occupied Poland by parachute with the help of British intelligence added to his air of mystery and subsequent controversy 2 A Freemason with a reputation as a grey eminence after World War II he went on to cofound the European Movement which led to the establishment of the European Union and was instrumental in forming the secretive Bilderberg Group 3 In 1958 he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize Contents 1 Early life 1 1 World War I 2 Mexican years 3 Building blocks on the table 4 Brushes with death 4 1 Unwanted intrusion 5 Vision for Europe 5 1 Creator of Bilderberg 6 Personal life 7 Controversy 8 Selected works 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Emilian Czyrnianski Retinger s maternal grandfather 1878 photo by Walery Rzewuski nbsp Wladyslaw Zamoyski 1853 1924 nbsp Misia Godebska Sert Retinger s Parisian cousinJozef Retinger was born in Krakow Poland then part of Austria Hungary the youngest of five children his father had a daughter Aniela from a first marriage to Helena Jawornicka 4 His mother was Maria Krystyna Czyrnianska daughter of a Greek Catholic Lemko professor of chemistry at the Jagiellonian University His father Jozef Stanislaw Retinger was the personal legal counsel and successful adviser to French born Count Wladyslaw Zamoyski Retinger s great grandfather Filip Rettinger was a Jewish tailor from Tarnow who with his family converted to Catholicism in 1827 5 When his lawyer grandson died Count Zamoyski took the promising youngster Jozef into his household and paid for him to attend the Bartlomiej Nowodworski High School in Krakow Retinger s eldest brother Emil became a commander in the Polish Navy while his son Witold Retinger pl was stationed in the United Kingdom during World War II 1943 45 as a member then leader of Squadron 308 of the Polish Air Force 6 Retinger s brother Juliusz taught physiological chemistry at the University of Chicago and University of Wilno 7 Retinger himself initially considered a career in the priesthood but three months in the Jesuit novitiate in Rome confirmed he would not be suited to the life 2 Further financed by Count Zamoyski in 1906 Retinger entered simultaneously the Ecole des sciences politiques and the Sorbonne in Paris and two years later aged twenty became the youngest person ever to earn a Ph D in literature from there 2 While in the French capital armed with introductions from Zamoyski and his own relative the salonniere and pianist Misia Sert he moved in intellectual circles and was befriended by among others Andre Gide Francois Mauriac Bernard Grasset fr Jean Giraudoux Erik Satie and Maurice Ravel His early literary ambitions were stopped in their tracks when he presented his first novel Les Souffleurs to Andre Gide for his opinion Gide told him Joseph you will never be a writer 1 11 13 He next went to Munich to study comparative psychology for a year From there encouraged by Zamoyski in 1910 he moved to England where he entered the London School of Economics for a year s study and began a lobbying operation on behalf of the Polish cause and its populations scattered across three ailing empires Formally he became Director of the London Office of the Polish National Committee 1912 1914 8 9 During this time he continued to move in elite circles and thanks to an introduction by Arnold Bennett whom he had met in Paris Retinger developed a close friendship with his older Polish compatriot the already well established novelist Joseph Conrad 9 Retinger urged Conrad to visit Poland and on 28 July 1914 the day World War I broke out Retinger his wife Otolia and Conrad his wife and their two sons arrived in Krakow the two men s childhood stamping grounds they were alumni of the same secondary school Due to the closeness of the Russian border Russia was then allied to Great Britain the Conrads soon sought greater safety in the Tatra Mountains resort of Zakopane 10 Retinger would write about Conrad in his 1943 book Conrad and His Contemporaries Historian Norman Davies suggests that it was probably Conrad who introduced the polyglot and polymath Retinger to the British intelligence services 11 Later Retinger became a personal friend of Major General Sir Colin Gubbins wartime head of SOE and after the war an MI6 asset 12 13 World War I edit nbsp Joseph ConradWith war clouds closing in the project of writing a play together with Conrad based on the latter s novel Nostromo had to be abandoned as both men hurriedly left Austria Hungary Retinger would have been eligible for military call up in Galicia no mention of this is made by his biographers He put aside literary endeavours and once more assumed the role of a political lobbyist for Poland publishing pamphlets and travelling between London Paris and New York aided by Conrad in London 4 10 In the first years of the war this was not on the agenda of the major powers Retinger looked instead for other potential alliances and political leverage which led to meetings with leading Zionists of the time including Chaim Weizmann Vladimir Zhabotinski and Nahum Sokolow who were seeking international recognition and rights for the Jewish diaspora 4 11 In 1916 guided by Zamoyski and with the approval of H H Asquith David Lloyd George and Georges Clemenceau with his old Parisian connections Sixtus and Xavier de Bourbon Parme the Duchess of Montebello and Marquis Boni de Castellane as well as Zamoyski s friend the Polish General of the Jesuits Wlodzimierz Ledochowski Retinger became a courier in the secretive European dynastic negotiation suing for peace with Austria 14 It became known as the Sixtus Affair and was a failure due to Germany s refusal to cooperate thus making Austria more dependent on Germany 15 16 In 1917 Retinger met Arthur Boy Capel the half French dilettante polo player and sponsor of Coco Chanel Capel is said to have planted in Retinger s mind the idea of a world federal government based on an Anglo French alliance 17 After concerns for his personal safety due to his political meddling in Austria Hungary and in the emergent Soviet Union in 1918 Retinger was banned from France and for several months sought sanctuary in Spain 4 12 Mexican years edit nbsp US journalist Jane Anderson 1917Retinger travelled on to Cuba and then to Mexico where he became an unofficial political adviser to union organizer Luis Morones whom he had fortuitously met crossing the Atlantic and to President Plutarco Elias Calles 4 2 A glimpse of Retinger newly divorced and lovelorn for the American journalist Jane Anderson appears in the biography of another American woman the communist sympathiser Katherine Anne Porter a member of the Morones circle In it he is described as a Polish intriguer and British Marxist In 1921 while on an obscure mission to the United States to buy saddles Retinger was arrested and imprisoned in Laredo and Porter was dispatched from Mexico to get him released 18 That same year Retinger had proposed that Katherine Porter and her friend Mary Doherty accompany him to Europe to do collaborative work an offer that was spurned 18 94 95 Retinger helped advance Mexico s nationalization of its oil industry in 1928 19 His activities in Mexico lasted almost seven years and only ended with Calles fall from power in 1936 They inspired Retinger to write three volumes on the tumultuous events in that Latin American republic 4 The Mexican years were punctuated by trips back to Europe where he took on the role of representative in the United Kingdom of the Polish Socialist Party 1924 1928 In 1926 he married his second wife Stella with whom he travelled to Mexico on one occasion After her death in 1933 his two daughters were left in the care of their maternal grandmother and were estranged from him until the 1950s In the rest of the interwar period he published many contributions in periodicals such as the Polish Wiadomosci Literackie Literary News on literary and political subjects 2 20 Building blocks on the table edit nbsp Wladyslaw Sikorski Polish prime minister in 1923During World War II Retinger who was in London was involved in arranging for Polish troops to be evacuated to Britain from France He was asked by Winston Churchill personally to escort Wladyslaw Sikorski by plane to England from France which had just capitulated to the invading Germans 4 16 Retinger became principal adviser and confidant to the Prime Minister of the Polish Government in Exile now established in London 19 95 21 Their political relationship actually went back to 1916 and had been strengthened during Sikorski s earlier brief stint as prime minister 1922 23 in newly independent Poland 22 Sikorski s dependence on Retinger was the greater as Sikorski had no mastery of the English language Retinger was dispatched to talk with other exiled government representatives in London who included Marcel Henri Jaspar Paul Van Zeeland and Paul Henri Spaak in preparation for a postwar geopolitical landscape 23 He went on to posit a Sikorski Plan consisting of two stages the first of which was signed in January 1942 and proposed a Polish Czech confederation 24 The idea was to expand it into a Central European confederation with Poland and Lithuania Czechoslovakia as its nucleus around which would be grouped Romania Hungary Yugoslavia and Greece 25 The agenda behind this was to create a common political blueprint for smaller countries abutting larger European powers and became the basis of a Belgian Dutch union which would mirror the Polish Czech arrangement 26 This scheme of Retinger s caused problems between London and Moscow In order not to tread on Soviet toes the British altered their position and refused to back Sikorski s negotiations with the eight smaller European states In his speech on the Council of Europe Winston Churchill BBC radio broadcast on 21 March 1943 referred to the necessity of smaller nations forming groupings but that it was too early to go into detail The most Retinger was able to achieve was to push through the Sikorski Mayski Agreement signed on 30 July 1941 which provided for the formation of the Anders army thus ridding Stalin of the immediate human problem posed by the hundreds of thousands of Polish POWs and deportees from the Soviet occupied Kresy regions of the former Second Polish Republic who after an arduous odyssey across thousands of miles would eventually end up as the United Kingdom s human problem 27 28 This trade off adumbrated the Tehran and Yalta Conferences 29 Brushes with death editRetinger just avoided perishing at Gibraltar with Wladyslaw Sikorski in July 1943 when he was not needed in the Premier s Near East troop inspection and was thought better employed in London The spare seat on the plane went to Sikorski s daughter who died with her father 2 Retinger was devastated by this turn of events His relations with Sikorski s successor Stanislaw Mikolajczyk were much more ambivalent but he obtained the latter s consent to go on a special SOE mission to Poland in April 1944 30 31 With an SOE brief and without prior training Retinger aged 56 parachuted into German occupied Poland with 2nd Lt Tadeusz Chciuk Celt in Operation Salamander to meet with Polish underground figures to deliver money to the Polish underground and to explain to his fellow Poles in the homeland how we are going to lose this war 32 16 22 1 265 19 Following at least one assassination attempt on him Retinger expressed his frustration You know why I came The Underground Delegate knows as well They know that I only want to convince them that it will be necessary in the future to cooperate with the Communists because no English are coming here only Russians If we do not get along with them somehow it will be a terrible tragedy because we well know what Stalin and the NKVD are And it s about trying to make people here understand this fact And they want to murder me 19 nbsp Retinger recovering from poisoning ca 1944The latter reference was to elements in the Polish underground Home Army who were convinced Retinger was not acting in the interests of his country and should therefore be removed One apparent attempt to liquidate him was allegedly based on a death sentence sanctioned by General Kazimierz Sosnkowski It was foiled by the intervention of an old friend and Home Army member Tadeusz Gebethner 33 During his visit in Poland there was also a failed attempt to kill him with poison On return to London he spent some time in the Dorchester Hotel in London s Park Lane recovering from his trip ordeal which left him lame in one leg for the rest of his life possibly due to polyneuritis brought on by the poison His first visitor at the Dorchester was Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden 11 32 Immediately after the war in 1945 46 Retinger travelled to Warsaw with emergency aid for the capital s population It consisted largely of tons of British and US army surplus such as equipment blankets and field kitchens 14 When his erstwhile military escort from Operation Salamander Tadeusz Chciuk and his new wife Ewa were arrested as subversives by the Polish communist security service Retinger allegedly appealed to Vyacheslav Molotov in Moscow to have them released Apparently the personal intervention succeeded In 1948 the Chciuks became refugees in Germany 34 35 Unwanted intrusion edit Dark days followed World War II when tensions rose between former Western and Eastern allies and in April 1946 Retinger s flat in Bayswater West London was broken into and his and his secretary s files ransacked by persons unknown He reported the matter to Scotland Yard but the Metropolitan Police were not overly bothered Retinger escalated his complaint and ended up being interviewed by the British security services His view was that the newly established communist embassy of the Polish People s Republic was responsible for the break in 36 From the moment that Churchill made his Iron Curtain speech in Fulton Missouri in April 1946 Retinger turned his efforts to a modified European project he had harboured for decades 37 14 Vision for Europe edit nbsp Krakow plaque commemorating Retinger great pioneer of European unity After World War II Retinger feared another devastating war in Europe this time fought between Russia and the Anglo Saxons 19 He became a leading advocate of European unification as a means of securing peace 38 He helped found both the European Movement and the Council of Europe somewhat to the dismay of the philosopher Count Richard Coudenhove Kalergi the post World War I anti bolshevist founder of the Paneuropean Union movement 12 227 228 39 Retinger with his connections in Holland Belgium and Switzerland he was a friend of Denis de Rougemont took his cue from Winston Churchill s 1946 Zurich speech and found fertile ground with thirteen British Conservative members of Parliament who backed the idea of a loose European association of states Retinger was the driving force in the creation of the European League for Economic Cooperation initially called the Independent League of Economic Cooperation He subsequently approached Duncan Sandys Churchill s son in law and chairman of the United Europe Movement about improving cooperation among the various organisations pursuing European unity They agreed to organise a small meeting of their two organisations with the Nouvelle Equipes Internationales and the European Union of Federalists This was held in Paris on 20 July 1947 when it was agreed to establish the Committee for the Coordination of the International Movements for European Unity In December 1947 this was renamed the International Committee of the Movements for European Unity with Sandys as Executive Chairman and Retinger as its Honorary Secretary They organised the 1948 Hague Congress which brought together the two camps of those for a unified Europe and those in favour of a federal Europe 40 41 22 During the congress Retinger networked assiduously among the delegates who included the Vatican diplomat Giovanni Montini future Pope Paul VI Ensuing discussions led eventually to the formation in 1951 of a European Coal and Steel Community 2 Creator of Bilderberg edit Retinger was the initiator and architect of the informal Bilderberg conferences in 1952 54 and was their permanent secretary until his premature death in London in 1960 The original group which met in the eponymous Dutch hotel in 1954 was gathered by Retinger and included David Rockefeller Denis Healey with Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands as chairman The purpose was to stimulate understanding between Europe and the US as the Cold War developed by bringing together financiers industrialists politicians and opinion formers All discussions were to be strictly under Chatham House Rules 42 A founding member of the group later British Labour Foreign Secretary Healey described the secretive Bilderberg meetings as the brainchild of Retinger 43 44 nbsp Grave North Sheen Cemetery LondonDespite eschewing any distinctions or medals throughout his life in 1958 he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize 45 He died in poverty of lung cancer 46 He was buried at North Sheen Cemetery in the presence of five British cabinet ministers as well as of his two younger daughters who were finally reconciled with him 32 16 22 According to the oration of Sir Edward Beddington Behrens Retinger not only had special access to 10 Downing Street but also to the White House 2 Retinger s long time personal assistant and the editor of his posthumous memoirs John Pomian actually Jan Pomian Blawdziewicz pl was another Polish emigre in London later a director of the Heim gallery in London s St James s owned by the influential Polish art historian and philanthropist Andrzej Ciechanowiecki 47 40 Personal life editRetinger married twice In 1912 he wed the well born Otolia Zubrzycka divorced 1921 died 1984 with whom he had a daughter Malina later Puchalska In 1926 he wed Stella Morel died 1933 daughter of French born pacifist and Dundee member of Parliament E D Morel and Mary nee Richardson with whom he had two daughters Marya later Fforde and Stasia later French Among his grandchildren are David French translator into English of Andrzej Sapkowski s Witcher Saga and fantasy novelist Jasper Fforde During World War I and after Retinger appears to have fallen under the spell of several women especially the American journalist Jane Anderson a supposed lover of Joseph Conrad 48 49 Retinger s own liaison with Anderson brought about the breakdown of Retinger s marriage to Otolia and drove a wedge between him and his friend Conrad 48 293 However Conrad biographer John Stape gives an alternative version for the cooling of relations between the two men suggesting that as Retinger s enthusiasms were not shared by the novelist shortly after the war without Retinger s charming wife Otolia by his side Retinger s proneness to exaggeration and tactlessness made him less socially acceptable 50 Controversy editOver the decades since his 1960 death the left leaning Retinger continues to draw fascination and controversy with his political skill his apparently selfless single mindedness and his lasting institutional legacy in Europe and beyond 51 Adam Pragier a notable Polish exile and trenchant political commentator and a secondary school contemporary of Retinger s has described him as a sort of adventurer but in the good sense of the word 52 On the other hand detractors impugn his influence due to alleged connections with deeply secret and malign factions for which there is so far no reliable evidence 53 54 He remains an enigma and probably the one substantial contributor to postwar European peace who has no physical monument 46 60 In 2000 The Daily Telegraph s Ambrose Evans Pritchard revealed from declassified US Government records that The leaders of the European Movement Retinger the visionary Robert Schuman and the former Belgian prime minister Paul Henri Spaak were all treated as hired hands by their American sponsors The US role was handled as a covert operation ACUE s funding came from the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations as well as business groups with close ties to the US government 55 This revelation touching on Cold War circumstances was subsequently analysed in greater detail in 2003 by Le Figaro commentator Remi Kauffer fr 56 However as professor Hugh Wilford shows the initiative to win American backing for a United States of Europe came neither from Allen Dulles deputy chief then chief of the CIA nor from Senator William Fulbright chairman of the American Committee on United Europe but from European lobbyists of disparate motivation namely Coudenhove Kalergi and Retinger the latter eclipsing the former due to Retinger s close connection with Winston Churchill on European matters 12 Retinger s plan was that the United States should be integral to political and economic support for a war damaged Western Europe As head of casting for his project he set about finding key Americans to collaborate with him among them Charles Douglas Jackson Time Life publisher in the 1940s and one time head of propaganda at the Eisenhower White House 57 Retinger has inspired disparate opinions He was a figure whose allegiances like his roots remain obscure and whose accounts of himself varied according to his audience thus undercutting his reliability as reflected in various Joseph Conrad biographies and numerous other sources including the considered annotated review by Norbert Wojtowicz of Poland s Institute of National Remembrance of Marek Celt s 2006 posthumously published Z Retingerem do Warszawy i z powrotem Raport z podziemia 1944 To Warsaw with Retinger and Back A Report from the Underground 1944 edited by Wojciech Frazik 58 The disparity in views on Retinger despite the perception of some personality flaws does not alter Retinger s mature postwar European legacy 59 Selected works editBy J H Retinger Le conte fantastique dans le romantisme francais Fantastical Tales in the French Romantic Tradition in French Geneve Slatkine Reprints 1973 1908 Histoire de la litterature francaise du romantisme a nos jours The History of French Literature from Romanticism to the Present Day in French Paris B Grasset 1911 The Poles and Prussia London 1913 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link available at University of Leeds Library La Pologne et l Equilibre europeen Poland and the Stability of Europe in French Paris 1916 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Morones of Mexico a history of the labour movement in that country London The Labour Pub Co Ltd 1926 Tierra mexicana the history of land and agriculture in ancient and modern Mexico London N Douglas 1928 Polacy w cywilizacjach zagranicznych Poles in Foreign Civilizations in Polish Warsaw 1934 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Historja i polityka Nowy czynnik w dyplomacji miedzynarodowej History and Politics A new factor in international diplomacy Wiadomosci Literackie 50 in Polish 4 December 1938 Historja i polityka Zastoj w miedzynarodowej dzialalnosci Rosji History and Politics Suspension of Russian activity in international relations Wiadomosci Literackie 51 in Polish 11 December 1938 All about Poland facts figures documents London Minerva Pub Co 1941 Conrad and His Contemporaries New York Roy 1942 First published by Minerva London 1941 The European Continent Address given to the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London PDF London 7 May 1946 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The Bilderberg Group Hertfordshire UK 1959 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Under Polish eyes United Kingdom Joseph Conrad Society 1975 About Retinger Poraj Stanislaw 19 June 1938 The knight among nations Tydzien Literacki Polski Zbrojnej 2 24 in Polish de Rougemont Denis 1961 Retinger J H ed A Biographical Sketch In Tribute to a Great European Geneva Centre Europeen de la Culture pp 20 50 Siemaszko Zbigniew Sebastian 1967 Retinger w Polsce 1944 r Zeszyty Historyczne 12 in Polish Paris Pomian John ed 1972 Jozef Retinger Memoirs of an Eminence Grise Sussex University Press Chatto amp Windus ISBN 0 85621 002 1 OCLC 844436367 Nowak Jan 1978 Kurier z Warszawy in Polish London Odnowa ISBN 0 903705 37 0 Jozef Hieronim Retinger 1888 1960 in Polish Vol XXXI Polski Slownik Biograficzny 1988 1989 In remembrance of Joseph Retinger 1988 1960 Initiator of the European League for Economic Cooperation Brussels European League for Economic Cooperation 1996 Grosbois Thierry 1999 L action de Jozef Retinger en faveur de l idee europeenne 1940 46 Revue Europeenne d Histoire in French 6 34 Kalicki Wlodzimierz 2010 Gracz ktory budowal Europe The Player who built Europe Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish 219 Marek Celt Jan Chciuk Celt 2013 Parachuting into Poland 1944 Memoir of a Secret Mission with Jozef Retinger McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 03384 Podgorski Bogdan 2013 Jozef Retinger prywatny polityk Jozef Retinger a private politician in Polish Universitas ISBN 97883 242 2351 0 See also editEuropean Movement European Union List of governments in exile during World War II List of Poles Politics DiplomacyNotes edit a b c John Pomian ed 1972 Joseph Retinger Memoirs of an Eminence Grise Sussex University Press Chatto amp Windus a b c d e f g h Oleksiak Wojciech 14 December 2016 The Most Mysterious Man in 20th Century Politics Culture pl Retrieved 3 March 2020 Pieczewski Andrzej 11 August 2010 Joseph Retinger s conception of and contribution to the early process of European integration European Review of History 17 4 581 604 doi 10 1080 13507486 2010 495766 S2CID 159818413 a b c d e f g Podgorski Bogdan Jozef Hieronim Retinger 1888 1960 PDF in Polish p 5 Retrieved 20 March 2020 Sypek Antoni 2013 Zydowskie konwersje na chrzescijanstwo w Tarnowie w latach 1785 1900 Jewish conversions to christianity in Tarnow in 1785 1900 Rocznik Tarnowski 128 History of No s 300 318 Squadrons at RAF Web Retrieved 31 March 2020 Polish Biographical Dictionary in Polish Vol 127 p 152 Jozef Retinger cv 23 August 2019 Retrieved 27 March 2020 a b Roszkowski Wojciech Kofman Jan 2016 Retinger Jozef Biographical Dictionary of Central and Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century London Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 47593 4 Retrieved 25 July 2017 Zdzislaw Najder Joseph Conrad A Life Rochester New York Camden House 2007 ISBN 978 1 57113 347 2 pp 459 63 a b Davies Norman 2003 Rising 44 The Battle for Warsaw London Pan Books p 53 ISBN 0 333 90568 7 a b c Wilford Hugh 2013 The CIA the British Left and the Cold War Calling the Tune Studies in Intelligence Routledge p 242 ISBN 978 1 135 29477 9 Dorril Stephen 2010 A Critical Review MI6 Fifty years of special operations Doctoral thesis PDF University of Huddersfield p 27 a b c Jelenski K A 1961 Prekursor anachroniczny Anachronistic Precursor Obituary PDF Kultura Paryska in Polish Paris 190 193 Gijswijt Thomas W 2018 Jozef Retinger Informal diplomat Informal Alliance The Bilderberg Group and Transatlantic Relations during the Cold War 1952 1968 Routledge Studies in Modern History London Routledge ISBN 978 1 3511 8102 0 Demblin August Demblin Alexander 1997 Minister gegen Kaiser Aufzeichnungen eines osterreichisch ungarischen Diplomaten uber Aussenminister Czernin und Kaiser Karl Minister versus Kaiser The designs of an Austro Hungarian Diplomat to outwit Foreign Minister Czernin and Kaiser Charles in German Vienna Bohlau ISBN 3 205 98762 4 Biskupski M B 1998 Spy Patriot or Internationalist The Early Career of Jozef Retinger Polish Patriarch of the European Union The Polish Review 43 1 23 67 a b Stout Janis P 1995 Katherine Anne Porter A Sense of the Times Minds of the new South University of Virginia Press pp 47 51 ISBN 978 0 813915685 a b c d e Ethridge Marcus E 2019 Review of M B B Biskupski War and Diplomacy in East and West A Biography of Jozef Retinger London Routledge 2017 ISBN 978 1 138 21845 1 The Polish Review 64 1 95 doi 10 5406 polishreview 64 1 0094 Ethridge s full review is on pp 94 95 Retinger J H 12 March 1939 Hitleryzm czyli bolszewizm Hitlerism equals Bolshevism Wiadomosci Literackie in Polish 11 803 year 16 London Gazette PDF 4 December 1942 Retrieved 3 March 2020 a b Lane Thomas Wolanski Marian 2009 Poland and European Integration The Ideas and Movements of Polish Exiles in the West 1939 91 Springer p 18 ISBN 978 0 2302 71784 Dorril Stephen 2002 MI6 Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty s Secret Intelligence Service Simon and Schuster p 455 ISBN 978 0 7432 1778 1 Walter Lipgens 1985 Documents on the history of European integration Plans for European union in Great Britain and in exile 1939 1945 including 107 documents in their original languages on 3 microfiches Walter de Gruyter p 648 ISBN 978 3 11 009724 5 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Schmidt Andrea 2019 Bogdanova Olga Makarychev Andrey eds From Intermarium to the Three Seas Initiative The Implications of the Polish Orientation Over the Central and Eastern European Region on Hungarian Policy in Baltic Black Sea Regionalisms Patchworks and Networks at Europe s Eastern Margins Springer Nature p 157 ISBN 978 3 0302 48789 Jakubec Pavol 2019 Together and Alone in Allied London Czechoslovak Norwegian and Polish Governments in Exile 1940 1945 International History Review 42 3 465 484 doi 10 1080 07075332 2019 1600156 Anders Lt General Wladyslaw 1949 An Army in Exile MacMillan amp Co Ltd p 73 Peszke Michael Alfred 2015 The Polish Underground Army the Western Allies and the Failure of Strategic Unity in World War II McFarland p 70 ISBN 978 1 4766 10276 Sword Keith 1996 Identity in Flux The Polish Community in Britain PDF London School of Slavonic and East European Studies SSEES Occasional Papers No 36 pp 24 30 ISBN 0 903425 60 2 Retrieved 21 March 2020 Bulhak Wladyslaw The Foreign Office and the Special Operations Executive and the Expedition of Jozef Hieronim Retinger to Poland April July 1944 The Polish Review vol 61 no 3 2016 pp 33 57 Members of the Polish Government Prime Minister s Office PDF Edinburgh the Gazette 21 April 1944 p 184 Retrieved 31 March 2020 a b c Eringer Robert The Global Manipulators Pentacle Books ASIN B00546KTEM OCLC 26551991 The story of Tadeusz Gebethner sprawiedliwi org pl Retrieved 7 March 2020 Chciuk Celt Jan Jozef Retinger 1888 1960 PDF Retrieved 3 March 2020 Jan Chciuk Celt younger son of Tadeusz Chciuk Retinger s military courier during Operation Saamander co authored and edited his father s war memoirs Marek Celt Jan Chciuk Celt 2013 Parachuting into Poland 1944 Memoir of a Secret Mission with Jozef Retinger McFarland p 17 ISBN 978 1 4766 03384 Moss Eloise 2019 Night Raiders Burglary and the Making of Modern Urban Life in London 1860 1968 Oxford University Press pp 186 87 ISBN 978 0 1925 7677 4 Churchill Winston Sinews of Peace Iron Curtain Churchill Centre Archived from the original on 7 February 2007 Retrieved 26 February 2007 Retinger J H 7 May 1946 The European Continent Address given to the Royal Institute of Foreign Affairs in London PDF CVCE Retrieved 27 March 2020 Correction although the original states Royal Institute of Foreign Affairs it should read Royal Institute of International Affairs known today as Chatham House this is likely a copyediting error at CVCE ed Dorril Stephen 2002 MI6 Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty s Secret Intelligence Service Simon and Schuster p 165 ISBN 978 0 7432 1778 1 a b Retinger J H 1972 Joseph Retinger memoirs of an eminence grise John Pomian Brighton Sussex University Press ISBN 0 85621 002 1 OCLC 495575 Mayne Richard 1990 Federal Union the pioneers a history of Federal Union John Pinder John C de V Roberts Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire Macmillan ISBN 0 333 41995 2 OCLC 26163180 Bunting Madeleine 25 May 2001 Weekend break for the global elite The Guardian Denis Healey on Bilderberg worldsocialism org Retrieved 20 March 2020 Aubourg Valerie 2003 Organizing Atlanticism the Bilderberg group and the Atlantic institute 1952 1963 Intelligence and National Security 18 2 2 92 105 doi 10 1080 02684520412331306760 S2CID 153892953 Nobelprize org Nomination for Nobel Peace Prize Joseph Retinger Nomination Database Nobel Media AB 2014 Retrieved 9 October 2014 a b Podgorski Bogdan Jozef Hieronim Retinger 1888 1960 PDF in Polish p 53 Retrieved 20 March 2020 Jan Pomian Blawdziewicz Obituary of Jan Pomian Blawdziewicz Wyborcza pl in Polish 2015 Retrieved 28 October 2016 a b Meyers Jeffrey 2001 Joseph Conrad A Biography Rowman amp Littlefield p 361 ISBN 978 0 8154 11123 Wilkes Donald E 18 May 1995 Jane Anderson The Nazi Georgia Peach The Athens Observer 5 Retrieved 24 August 2013 Stape John 2010 The Several Lives of Joseph Conrad Random House pp 187 188 ISBN 978 1 4090 0682 4 Wisnewski Gerhard 2014 The Bilderbergers Puppet Masters of Power An Investigation into Claims of Conspiracy at the Heart of Politics Business and the Media Drahtzieher der Macht 2010 Translated by J Collis West Sussex Clairview Books pp 63 66 ISBN 978 1 90557075 1 Pragier Adam 2018 First published by B Swiderski in London 1966 Friszke Andrzej Pejas Ewa eds Czas przeszly dokonany Czasy i ludzie The Past Perfect Lives and Times volume 7 of 100 lecie Niepodleglosci 100th anniversary of Polish independence Warsaw Museum of Polish History p 852 ISBN 978 8 3652 4829 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Keder Wojciech 2016 Recenzje Bogdan Podgorski Jozef Retinger prywatny polityk Universitas Krakow 2013 ss 417 Review of Bogdan Podgorski Jozef Retinger private politician Krakow Universitas 2013 pages 417 PDF Studia Sandomierskie 23 in Polish 303 314 Cornell Svante E 2018 Erbakan Kisakurek and the Mainstreaming of Extremism in Turkey Hudson Institute Retrieved 3 April 2020 see fn 19 Ambrose Evans Pritchard 18 September 2000 Euro federalists financed by US Spy Chief The Daily Telegraph Kauffer Remi 12 June 2019 Quand la CIA financait la construction europeenne Par Remi Kauffer Source Historia 2003 When the CIA financed the construction of Europe by Remi Kauffer source Historia 2003 in French Comite Valmy Retrieved 20 March 2020 Jeffers H Paul 2012 1 The Bilderberg Conspiracy Inside the World s Most Powerful Secret Society Kensington Publishing Corp ISBN 978 0 8065 3595 1 Norbert Wojtowicz Recenzja Marek Celt Z Retingerem do Warszawy i z powrotem Raport z Podziemia 1944 red Wojciech Frazik Wydawnictwo LTW Lomianki 2006 Review of Marek Celt To Warsaw with Retinger and Back A Report from the Underground 1944 ed Wojciech Frazik pub LTW Lomianki 2006 PDF in Polish www polska1918 89 Retrieved 31 March 2020 The book was subsequently translated into English by Jan Chciuk Celt and published by McFarland in 2013 as Parachuting into Poland 1944 Memoir of a Secret Mission with Jozef Retinger ISBN 978 1 4766 03384 Marek Celt the pseudonym of Tadeusz Chciuk was the military courier who accompanied Retinger on his parachute mission to Poland in 1944 A bond of friendship developed between the two men and they collaborated again on supplying aid to Warsaw from London in 1945 6 Jozef Retinger bilderbergmeetings co uk Retrieved 3 March 2020 Further reading editPragier Adam 22 May 1955 Nie bylo klopotu z Polakami There was no Problem with the Poles Wiadomosci Rok 10 Nr 21 477 in Polish London Bines Jeffrey 2018 Poland s S O E A British Perspective the Story of the Polish Country Section of the Special Operations Executive 1940 1946 Including the British Military Mission Number Four to Poland 1939 London Polish Underground Movement Study Trust ISBN 978 0 9928 03056 Biskupski M B 1998 Spy Patriot or Internationalist The Early Career of Jozef Retinger Polish Patriarch of European Union The Polish Review 43 1 23 67 Bulhak Wladyslaw 2016 The Foreign Office and the Special Operations Executive and the Expedition of Jozef Hieronim Retinger to Poland April July 1944 The Polish Review 61 3 33 57 doi 10 5406 polishreview 61 3 0033 Dorril Stephen 2002 MI6 Inside the Covert World of Her Majesty s Secret Intelligence Service Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 1778 1 Pieczewski Andrzej 2000 Jozef H Retinger pomyslodawca i wspoltworca Grupy Bilderbergu Joseph Retinger Visionary Co founder of the Bilderberg Group Studia polityczne in Polish 10 ISP PAN Pieczewski Andrzej 2000 Dzialalnosc J H Retingera na rzecz zjednoczonej Europy Joseph Retinger s Work for a United Europe Studia Europejskie in Polish 16 Centrum Europejskie Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego Pieczewski Andrzej 2008 Dzialalnosc Jozefa Hieronima Retingera na rzecz integracji europejskiej Joseph Retinger s Work for European Integration in Polish Torun Wydawnictwo Adam Marszalek ISBN 978 83 7611 184 1 Hampson Robert 2012 Conrad s Secrets Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 2305 0783 8 Pieczewski Andrzej 2015 Joseph Retinger s Vision of a United Europe After World War II Central and Eastern European Question The Polish Review 60 4 49 66 doi 10 5406 polishreview 60 4 0049 Wisnewski Gerhard 2014 The Bilderbergers Puppet Masters of Power An Investigation into Claims of Conspiracy at the Heart of Politics Business and the Media Drahtzieher der Macht 2010 Translated by J Collis West Sussex Clairview Books pp 63 66 ISBN 978 1 90557075 1 Gijswijt Thomas W 2018 Informal Alliance The Bilderberg Group and Transatlantic Relations during the Cold War 1952 1968 Routledge Studies in Modern History London Routledge ISBN 978 1 3511 8102 0 External links editIllustrated biography of Jozef Retinger assembled by Jan Chciuk Celt Polish Soviet Relations During The Second World War photographs held by the Imperial War Museum with Jozef Retinger extreme left at the signing of the Sikorski Maiski agreement at the FO on 30 07 1941 Photograph of Retinger flanking Churchill at the Hague 1948 on Retinger s grandson s website Chapter 4 European Unity from Memoirs of An Eminence Grise ed John Pomian Bilderberg website on Retinger s life in brief Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jozef Retinger amp oldid 1216642082, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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