Writings
His writings include Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy (1957), The Necessity for Choice (1961), The Troubled Partnership (1965), and Diplomacy (1994). Also, several memoirs: The White House Years (1979), Years of Upheaval (1982), and Years of Renewal (1999). Biographies by S. R. Graubard (1973) and W. Isaacson (1992); study by B. and M. Kalb (1974).
Accusations Against Henry Kissinger
In The Trial of Henry Kissinger (2001), Christopher Hitchens accuses Kissinger of conspiracy to commit murder and war crimes. The February and March 2001 issues of Harper's Magazine feature a series by Hitchens on the case for charging Kissinger with war crimes. Hitchens presents an argument that 1) on at least one occasion, Henry Kissinger conspired to commit murder, and 2) on numerous other occasions, Kissinger was the primary force behind certain acts that could quite plausibly be considered war crimes.
The primary charges against Kissinger:
- As National Security Advisor to President Nixon, directed the first phase of US bombings in Cambodia (1969-1975) and thus masterminded the murder of an estimated 600,000 peasants there;
- helped engineer and then protect the Augusto Pinochet coup of 1973 and subsequent regime of torture and murder;
- under President Ford, Secretary of State Kissinger gave the go-ahead to Indonesia's invasion of East Timor and subsequent massive war crimes there.
Regarding East Timor, previously secret documents released in late 2001 revealed that Kissinger indeed gave Suharto his support for the invasion of East Timor during a visit to Indonesia in 1975, thus refuting his claim in a 1999 interview that he had not discussed the matter in advance and only found out about it as he was leaving the country. As many as 200,000 people may have died as a result of the invasion. Although it was illegal for the arms that the US supplied to Indonesia to be used for offensive purposes, the documents revealed that Kissinger was unconcerned over the illegality of their use; his primary concern was over manipulating the public perception of what happened. "We would be able to influence the reaction in America if whatever happens, happens after we return", he was quoted as saying.
Kissinger has refused to respond point by point to Hitchens's charges. However, in a speech before the National Press Club he was asked about these charges and his response was that in the cause of world peace, serious people can have legitimate disagreements about the means. Kissinger claims that in attempting to create a war crimes charge, Hitchens is using selected quotations and documents without taking into account the context and the situation that those documents existed in and that Hitchens ignores the significant advances in world peace that were taken under his tenure, such as the Anti-Ballistic Treaty, detente and arms reduction treaties with the Soviet Union, the opening to China, and the withdrawal from Vietnam. Kissinger stated that this is nothing more than the politics of revenge and vendetta and that it cheapens and makes a mockery of the concept of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Kissinger stated that this mockery of the concept of war crimes is an obstacle to creating the just and peaceful world that Hitchens claims to wish to create, and as a result, he will not respond to Hitchens.
It is worth noting that Hitchens is not the first person to accuse Kissinger of war crimes. As of May 2002, he is wanted for questioning in Chile (related to the Pinochet coup) and Spain.
Hitchens' book inspired a feature-length documentary, "The Trials of Henry Kissinger", directed by Eugene Jarecki, which also highlighted the charges against Kissinger.
A suit was filed September 10, 2001 by the family of Gen. Rene Schneider, once head of the Chilean general staff, accusing Kissinger of arranging his 1970 murder for opposing a miltary coup. [1]
Quotes by Kissinger
- "The absence of alternatives clears the mind marvelously."
- "Foreign Policy is not missionary work."
- "Power is the greatest aphrodisiac."
- "Ninety percent of the politicians give the other ten percent a bad reputation."
External links