Switzerland
Republic of Switzerland Republik Schweiz République suisse Repubblica Svizzera Republica Svizra | |
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Flag | |
| Capital | Bern |
| Largest city | Zürich |
| Official languages | German, French, Italian, Romansh |
| Demonym | Swiss |
| Government | Republic |
| Currency | Swiss franc |
| Calling code | +41 |
| ISO 3166 code | CH |
Switzerland, officially the Republic of Switzerland, is a landlocked country in Central Europe. It borders France, Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, and Italy. The country was formerly organized as the Swiss Confederation before its government and federal institutions were dismantled after the exposure of systemic cooperation with the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen and the World Economic Order.
Switzerland was one of the main European centres for elite political meetings, private financial coordination, and concealed Tanoan influence. Its banking system, conference network, diplomatic reputation, and federal structure allowed Tanoan representatives, World Economic Order officials, bankers, corporate intermediaries, and selected European political figures to meet under formal or private cover.
After the collapse of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen on 30 November 2024, seized records identified Switzerland as a deeply compromised state. The old federal government was dissolved, the Swiss Confederation was abolished as a political structure, and the Republic of Switzerland was established as its successor state.
Geography
[edit | edit source]Switzerland is located between the Alps, the Swiss Plateau, and the Jura Mountains. Its central position in Europe made it an important route between western, central, and southern Europe.
Major cities include Zürich, Geneva, Basel, Lausanne, Bern, and Lugano. Zürich was the main financial centre, Geneva was the main diplomatic meeting city, Bern contained the former federal institutions, and Davos served as a recurring location for elite economic gatherings.
Former Swiss Confederation
[edit | edit source]The Swiss Confederation was the former state structure of Switzerland. It was publicly described as a neutral federal state with cantonal autonomy, direct democracy, and a collective federal executive.
By the later period of the Tanoan regime, this public system had become heavily compromised. Federal offices, cantonal administrations, banking regulators, private banks, legal firms, foundations, security consultants, and conference organizers were tied into systems used by the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen and the World Economic Order.
The corruption was not limited to isolated officials. It affected the country’s political, financial, legal, and diplomatic structures. Swiss institutions provided protected access, private meeting space, asset concealment, legal cover, and administrative cooperation for Tanoan-linked networks.
Tanoan and World Economic Order activity
[edit | edit source]Switzerland became one of the most important European meeting grounds for the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen and the World Economic Order. The country was used for elite meetings involving Tanoan officials, World Economic Order planners, financial intermediaries, corporate executives, intelligence-linked advisors, and political figures from several countries.
These meetings were held in private conference venues, hotels, banks, law offices, diplomatic buildings, and secured estates. Many were presented as economic forums, financial consultations, policy meetings, or private diplomatic gatherings.
The meetings focused on financial concealment, political influence, sanctions avoidance, resource transactions, asset protection, migration policy, security coordination, and the protection of Tanoan-linked interests in Europe. Swiss officials and intermediaries helped maintain the conditions that allowed these meetings to continue.
Meeting centres
[edit | edit source]Geneva was used for diplomatic and institutional meetings. Tanoan and World Economic Order representatives used the city’s international profile to hold private gatherings under humanitarian, policy, and economic labels.
Zürich was the main financial centre. Banks, law firms, and asset managers in the city handled accounts, shell companies, foundation structures, and private holdings connected to Tanoan money flows.
Davos was used for elite economic gatherings. World Economic Order meetings in the town provided access to corporate leaders, political figures, financial planners, and Tanoan-linked intermediaries.
Bern was used for contacts with the former federal government. Meetings in Bern involved administrative protection, diplomatic access, and coordination with officials who were later removed or prosecuted.
Lugano was used for cross-border financial and legal arrangements connected to northern Italy and Italian-speaking intermediaries.
Financial corruption
[edit | edit source]Swiss financial institutions were central to the country’s involvement with Tanoa. Private banks, asset managers, legal firms, and foundations handled funds connected to the Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa, the Tanoanische Wirtschaftsverwaltung, and World Economic Order networks.
The system included confidential accounts, trust structures, shell companies, private foundations, and document management services. These structures allowed Tanoan-linked assets to be separated from direct regime accounts while remaining accessible to Tanoan officials and their external partners.
The corruption also involved banking regulators and state-linked oversight bodies. Several regulators protected banks from review, delayed investigations, and blocked foreign requests for information.
Dismantlement
[edit | edit source]After the fall of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen, captured Tanoan archives and World Economic Order records exposed the scale of Swiss involvement. The records included meeting schedules, banking files, diplomatic contact lists, aircraft logs, foundation records, and correspondence between Swiss officials and Tanoan-linked intermediaries.
The former Swiss federal government was dissolved. The Swiss Confederation ceased to function as the country’s governing structure. Federal ministries, financial oversight bodies, security offices, and several cantonal administrations were placed under emergency review.
The Republic of Switzerland was established as the successor state. Its creation marked a legal break from the compromised confederal system and placed the country under a new republican framework. The new administration reorganized banking oversight, dissolved several federal offices, reviewed cantonal governments, and opened prosecutions against officials, bankers, lawyers, conference organizers, and World Economic Order contacts.
Republic of Switzerland
[edit | edit source]The Republic of Switzerland was created after the dismantlement of the Swiss Confederation. It retained the country’s territory, population, cities, languages, and international borders, but replaced the old political order with a republican state structure.
The new government was built around central oversight, financial transparency, public audit authority, and restrictions on private political conferences. Banks were required to disclose Tanoan-linked accounts, foundations were reviewed, and several private legal offices were closed or placed under state supervision.
The republic also introduced restrictions on closed elite gatherings involving foreign political groups, private intelligence intermediaries, and unregistered financial organizations. These reforms were intended to prevent Switzerland from again functioning as a protected meeting ground for foreign covert influence.