Saturday, April 26, 2008

The Philosophers


History:

The Philosophers were a secret organization founded in the early 20th century, shortly after World War I. Little is known about those who founded the group other than that they were all highly influential people from three countries that were quickly growing in power at that point in history--the People's Republic of China, the Soviet Union, and the United States of America. At the head of the group were twelve key individuals referred to as the "Wisemen's Committee." Beneath them were an unknown number of "sleeper agents," trained in collecting information and using covert tactics to further the organization's agendas. According to EVA, The Philosophers had "charm schools" where children gathered from around the world were raised and trained specifically to be loyal agents.

The original goals of The Philosophers are somewhat hazy, but they clearly sought to influence politics on a global scale. To that end, they assembled a massive fund to finance their collective interests. Known as "The Philosophers' Legacy," this fund amounted to no less than one-hundred billion U.S. dollars, which was split into innumerable pieces hidden away in various banks and financial institutions throughout the world. (How the group managed to hoard such an immense amount of capital and where it all came from is unknown--though it likely involved some amazing acts of embezzlement.) This money was used to research and fund various "black" projects, such as the Cobra unit, nuclear weapons development, and rocket technology. Each branch of The Philosophers controlled a third of the Legacy, thus maintaining the balance of power between them.

However, as the 20th century progressed and the global balance of power began to shift, the internal balance of power within The Philosophers followed suit. All of the original members of the Wisemen's Committee were dead by the end of the 1930s, and their replacements were less interested in maintaining unity. During the chaos of World War II, a deep schism formed between the three branches of the Philosophers.

This split was triggered by one specific event: towards the end of WWII, The Philosophers' chief money-launderer--Volgin's father--used his knowledge of their collective finances to seize the entire Legacy for the Russian branch. He recorded the locations where the numerous pieces of the Legacy were hidden on microfilm, and passed the information on to Volgin upon his death several years later. Volgin used it to build the fortress of Groznyj Grad and fund the development of a number of new weapons.

Once the three branches of The Philosophers turned on one another, their original goal of world unity was completely lost. Each branch became concerned only with holding onto and increasing their own political power. The tool they used to accomplish this was, simply, war. According to The Boss: "The Philosophers of today have no sense of good or evil. Their influence extends to countries and organizations involved in every aspect of every war. They have become war itself. ...The sacrifices of war cause a shift in the times, which increases conflict and, in turn, triggers the next war. ...By consuming me, and you, The Philosophers intend to keep that cycle going forever."

Naturally, the American and Chinese branches of The Philosophers had no intention of allowing Volgin to do whatever he pleased with "their" money. The events of Metal Gear Solid 3 depict what transpired when the three divided branches clashed over possession of the Legacy: by sacrificing The Boss, the American branch was able to acquire half of the missing money (courtesy of their triple-agent, Ocelot). The Chinese branch got away with a fake copy of the Legacy and the Shagohod's test data, which they used to jump-start their country's nuclear and space-exploration programs. With the death of Volgin and the loss of half the Legacy, the Russian branch was greatly weakened--though this didn't stop one of its presumed members, Leonid Brezhnev, from ousting Krushchev and becoming General Secretary of the Soviet Union just a few months later (in October, 1964).

Little is currently known about what became of the Russian and Chinese Philosophers after the events of Operation: Snake Eater. We do know, however, that six years after Snake Eater, in December 1970, the American branch gained the rest of the Legacy and assumed a new name: The Patriots. The story of those events is told in Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops.


Speculation:



The Boss was the daughter of one of the original members of The Philosophers Wisemen's Committee. To hear her tell it, the group's original goal was to "make the world whole"... which sounds like a nice way of saying they wanted to implement one-world government. Whatever flowery rhetoric they may have used to obscure their motives, The Philosophers clearly weren't shy about using some pretty nasty tactics to steer the world in the direction they wanted it to go--from the very beginning, they were abducting and indoctrinating children to serve as future agents. They even stole away the newborn son of The Boss and raised him from childhood to serve them. That child was named Adamska... later known as Ocelot.


There's also the matter of a certain enigma that would haunt America's collective consciousness for the latter half of the 20th century: the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. On the official series timeline included on the Metal Gear Saga Vol. 2 DVD, 1961 is specifically mentioned as the year Kennedy "falls out of favor with The Philosophers." 1961 was the year of the Bay of Pigs debacle, a botched invasion of Cuba backed by the CIA. Though the invasion was based on faulty intelligence and likely would have failed anyway, the CIA blamed Kennedy because he held back the air support that had been promised to the troops who landed in Cuba (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_of_Pigs_Invasion). In fact, The Boss specifically mentions this to Big Boss at the end of MGS3: "Our weak-kneed President held back their air support. Defenseless, the exiles were annihilated by the Cuban army. All I could do was watch in silence."


As a result of the Bay of Pigs operation, the CIA was publically humiliated, and its founder, Alan Dulles, resigned in disgrace. We know that the CIA at that time was deeply involved with the American branch of The Philosophers. At the end of MGS3, Ocelot calls the director of the CIA to report on his success in obtaining the Legacy. Also, in Portable Ops, Gene refers to the Pentagon and CIA headquarters as "The Philosophers' twin lairs." Factor in Kennedy's famous threat to "splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it into the winds," and The Philosophers clearly had a motive to remove Kennedy from power to protect their own interests.


Two years later, in November 1963, Kennedy was assassinated during a visit to Dallas, Texas. Given the annoyance he had caused them already, it's more or less a given that The Philosophers had a hand his death. (If we didn't know for sure that Ocelot was in Russia at the time, I'd be willing to bet he was the legendary "second shooter on the grassy knoll.") Not only did this remove Kennedy as a political threat, it sent a strong message to future Presidents regarding the penalties of defying them.


Links for Further Reading:


Listed below are links to pages containing information on several real-life organizations that may have served as inspirations to Kojima in creating The Philosophers and The Patriots. All of these groups have been the focus of conspiracy theories in their own right. Some of those theories are pretty wacky, but I find it interesting to note the parallels between these groups and their fictional counterparts.


The Trilateral Commission:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trilateral_commission


http://www.trilateral.org/


The Bilderberg Group:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilderberg_Group


The Illuminati:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illuminati




3 comments:

Matthew "Sajon" Weise said...

What is the date that the original Wiseman's Committee is said to have made their pact? Was it before WWI or after? The Soviet Union did not really become a world power until the 30's under Stalin. Before WWI it was a pre-industrial society in complete disarray, which is why the Bolsheviks were able to take over. China I know less about, save that its rise as a Communist superpower took place mostly after WWII.

MGS3's version of history is a little weird. It's unclear to me whether Kojima and his writers are under the (mistaken) impression that both China and Russia were world powers before WWI. Both China and Russia went through drastic political and economic shifts after WWI which lead to their super power status by the mid-20th century.

I wonder if there's any way to reconcile this fact with what MGS3 says about the origin of The Philosophers.

Caleb said...

As far as I can tell, it's never specified exactly when the original Wisemen's Committee was formed. Volgin only refers to it in reference to WWII.

Volgin: "During the last great war, the most powerful men in America, China, and the Soviet Union had a secret pact. The pact was a blueprint for defeating the Axis powers and creating a new world order. To secure victory in the war, the three countries pooled their resources to conduct the most covert types of operations and research."

According to The Boss, though, The Philosophers existed well before WWII.

The Boss: "Early in the 20th century, the true holders of power in the United States, the Republic of China, and the newly-formed Soviet Union gathered together in a secret meeting that would later be known as the Wisemen's Committee. The secret pact they formed there marked the beginning of The Philosophers."

Unless MGS4 gives us a clearer date, those two accounts are all we have to go on. We also know that the last of the 12 original members of the Wisemen's Committee died by the end of the 1930s, and it seems like the overall organization was fairly well-established by that point. If I were to speculate, I'd say that the original Wisemen's Committee assembled shortly after WWI, in the late 1910s or early 1920s. The chaos of the recently-ended war seems like a plausible reason for them to decide that the world's balance of power needed to shift--and that they were the ones to choose the direction in which it should go.

As you say, neither the Soviet Union or China were world superpowers right after WWI. The U.S. was arguably just getting to that level itself. However, by the middle of the 20th century, all three nations had vastly increased their influence. Maybe that only proves how effective The Philosphers were? If The Philosophers set out to create a new world order near the beginning of the 20th century, then they clearly succeeded. The global balance of power shifted away from the labyrinthine monarchies and colonial empires of Europe for the first time in centuries, while Asia and North America gained more and more influence.

In other words, maybe it makes more sense not to consider which countries were superpowers before The Philosophers were founded, but after they were?

Matthew "Sajon" Weise said...

WARNING: What follows is an example of what happens when someone's ultra-geekly knowledge of Metal Gear collides with his ultra-geeky knowledge of Soviet history.

*ahem*

The "newly formed" Soviet Union bit gives us a pretty clear time window. The October Revolution was in 1917, and afterwards Russia immediately plunged into civil war which took years to stabilize. The Soviet Union was still floundering when Lenin died in 1924, and the resulting power vacuum would not resolve itself for another decade when Stalin finally consolidated absolute power in the 30's.

So, The Boss's statement is interesting. The Soviet Union was formed in the teens, but it didn't really settle into a coherent leadership until the 30's... and that seems too late by The Boss's timeline. The Boss's statement, to me, seems to suggest sometime in the early 20's. By then WWI was over and the Communists had decisively won the civil war in Russia. That's really when the bureaucratic wheels began to turn that would evolve into the Soviet System in its final form.

So the obvious question is: who was the "true holder of power" in Russia in the 20's? That is exactly when there was an incredible power struggle going on in the Soviet government, so it's quite rich to speculate. It would be easy to theorize that Trotsky or the other Bolsheviks who were murdered by Stalin in the late 30's were originally members of the Philosophers. However, as with The Patriots, I imagine that the Philosophers were shrewder people who had successfully made themselves invisible to history. Maybe they even manipulated Stalin into power? Stalin basically killed Lenin and Trotsky's idea of "world revolution" by focusing communism entirely in Russia, and maybe this is the way the Philosophers wanted it. Can't have competing one world governments now, can we?

In any case, it's clear that The Philosophers were not actual heads of government. They were not Stalin, Roosevelt, etc. They were... other people. The Metal Gear mythology basically posits that these three powers were always manipulated from behinds the scenes by shadow groups. I do think it makes more sense if we believe that these groups did not begin in the 20's with true power but were instead a group of like-minded individuals with special influence in their own respective governments... and only through their manipulation grew to power.