At 100, Kissinger basks in praise, with no accountability

Published May 27, 2023
Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger arrives for a memorial service for late Social Democratic senior politician Egon Bahr at St. Mary’s Church in Berlin, Germany, September 17, 2015. — Reuters
Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger arrives for a memorial service for late Social Democratic senior politician Egon Bahr at St. Mary’s Church in Berlin, Germany, September 17, 2015. — Reuters

WASHINGTON: Henry Kissinger, whose very name is synonymous with US diplomacy, turns 100 on Saturday feted by the American elite as others seethe that the ruthless Cold War figure has never faced accountability.

From opening the door to China to plotting an endgame to the Vietnam war to unapologetically backing dictators who were anti-Soviet, Kissinger wielded influence like few before or after him, serving as both a top diplomat and security adviser to presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.

Instantly recognisable for his bookishly thick glasses and a sharp-witted monotone that never lost touch of his native German, Kissinger was first an academic and his intellectual gifts are acknowledged begrudgingly even by some of his harshest critics.

Since leaving office in 1977, Kissinger’s brand of realpolitik — the coldly cynical championing of power and national interests — has largely fallen out of favour as his successors preached moralism, but Kissinger himself has if anything enjoyed greater repute.

Ahead of his centennial, Kissinger blew candles on a cake at a celebratory luncheon at the Economic Club of New York, the city where he grew up after his Jewish family fled Germany.

Showing his worldview has not changed at the century mark, Kissinger cautioned for the United States to stay within the bounds of “vital interests”, telling the guests: “We need to be always strong enough to resist any pressures.”

Bucking the view of most US policymakers, Kissinger called for diplomacy with Russia on a ceasefire in Ukraine, arguing that Moscow has already suffered a strategic defeat.

‘He has gotten away with it’

An unlikely playboy in 1970s Washington, Kissinger lives in a tiny apartment on New York’s Park Avenue. He has grown wealthy consulting businesses through his relationships in China and has warned the United States against treating Beijing as a new Cold War-style adversary.

Long despised by the left, Kissinger has come into the good graces of the mainstream of the Democratic Party.

Hillary Clinton, after serving as secretary of state, called Kissinger “a friend” and said she “relied on his counsel”, while the incumbent, Antony Blinken, teased Kissinger about his stylishness when the elder statesman attended a State Department luncheon last year.

But for many, Kissinger was seen as an unindicted war criminal for his role in, among other events, expanding the Vietnam war to Cambodia and Laos, supporting military coups in Chile and Argentina, and green-lighting Indonesia’s occupation of East Timor in 1975.

“To me, there’s no doubt that his policies have caused hundreds of thousands of deaths and have destroyed democracy in many countries,” said Reed Kalman Brody, a veteran human rights lawyer whose cases have included working with victims of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.

“I’m bewildered that he has gotten away with it,” he said. Kissinger has never faced serious legal jeopardy, with a US judge in 2004 throwing out a lawsuit related to the assassination of Chile’s army chief and the United States boycotting the International Criminal Court.

But Brody said there would be a strong legal case on East Timor where Kissinger not only approved the invasion, but also ensured US weapons kept flowing to Indonesia.

Published in Dawn, May 27TH, 2023

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