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Post by Admin on Nov 30, 2023 2:54:34 GMT
Bloomberg): Former US Secretary of State Kissinger, who served as secretary of state in the Nixon and Ford administrations and played a key role in determining US foreign policy in the 1970s, has died at his home in Connecticut. He was 100 years old. This was revealed by a relative of the former Secretary of State.
As a presidential aide, Kissinger helped make President Nixon's surprise visit to China in 1972 possible, and laid the foundation for the establishment of diplomatic relations between the United States and China in 1979.
Kissinger stands among the 20th century’s most commanding figures in U.S. foreign policy.
While he left his mark on history for contributing to the realization of détente (ease of tension) and the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty with the former Soviet Union during the Cold War, he was also criticized for supporting large-scale air strikes against Vietnam and Cambodia.
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Post by Admin on Dec 3, 2023 5:09:01 GMT
The controversial former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has died at a time when relations between the US and China are rapidly deteriorating. There are widespread reactions in China that are nostalgic for the past and express gratitude to Kissinger.
"You are a friend of the Chinese people forever, rest in peace." Such posts have received many likes on China's social media platform Weibo.
Within hours after news of Kissinger's death broke, a related hashtag became the most searched trend in China. It has been viewed millions of times.
Another post, which received many likes, said: "It's the end of an era." Another user asked, "He has seen ups and downs over the decades. What does he think about the current China-US relations?"
Mr. Kissinger was one of the best-known Americans among Chinese people. His name is still taught in history classes across China. As a result, many people see him as the epitome of a friendly Westerner, which is now far rarer.
Throughout his decades-long career, Kissinger considered engagement with China one of his major achievements.
"China is the country I have been associated with the longest and most deeply. China has become a very important part of my life." Kissinger said this in a 2011 interview with China's state-run newspaper ``Reference News.''
Kissinger is also one of the few foreign leaders to have met five generations of Chinese Communist Party leaders, from Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping. State broadcaster CCTV called him a "living fossil" who has witnessed the evolution of Sino-American relations in a post on Weibo.
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Post by Admin on Dec 4, 2023 11:55:20 GMT
(CNN) His life, as improbable as it was, had important consequences for society. Henry Kissinger was born in a small ghetto in the small German town of Fürth. His grandparents were murdered by the Nazis, but he managed to escape. He, his parents, and younger brother moved to New York in late 1938. Although he had no desire to leave Germany, the family had no choice.
Photo feature: Looking back on the life of Henry Kissinger
Like many other refugees, the family was unprepared for their new life. Henry, a 15-year-old boy with a slender build, could not speak a word of English and had little hope for the future. He attended a public high school in Manhattan and worked nights to help make ends meet. At the same time, he was also preparing to become an accountant. It was a reasonable goal for a Jewish immigrant living in New York.
He joined the army. For the first time, he left his family, where the Orthodox Jewish faith was deeply rooted, and set foot on German soil again as a member of the U.S. occupation forces. This was the true beginning of his career. He then established himself as a cosmopolitan savant and pursued power throughout his life. Furthermore, it will decide the fate of the United States and the world. In a controversial manner that will have consequences.
What U.S. leaders at the time desperately needed were talented young people who were familiar with German society but also had a strong attachment to the United States. Mr. Kissinger perfectly fit this condition. Although he looked and felt German (and remained so throughout his life), his Jewish upbringing meant that he never sympathized with the Nazis. Gaining the trust of the Americans, he remained in the Army for a year after the war and worked to create a new Germany under American influence. It became the foundation of the postwar order in Europe.
At Harvard, Mr. Kissinger forged relationships with a new generation of students and scholars who had immigrated from Europe. They were determined to help the United States lead the world and to stop a new totalitarian regime from destroying civilization. The regime here refers to the Soviet Union.
For Mr. Kissinger, his life's mission was to: Use force to elevate America (and yourself) to a position of bulwark or light against the abyss. This light is nothing but a presence that illuminates the darkness that is gradually creeping up on you. His pessimism about threats to humanity led him to long for a situation in which the United States had the upper hand. This was especially true in a world with nuclear weapons. By demonstrating its strength, the United States will prevent another disaster from occurring. Although he did not work in the State Department's Bureau of Foreign Affairs, Kissinger focused on the intersection of diplomacy and military affairs. What happened there had a long-lasting impact on the situation that followed.
Mr. Kissinger worked tirelessly to pursue this mission. As a scholar who studies war and diplomacy, he worked to strengthen the alliance of Western countries led by the United States. Under this alliance in Europe, the major leaders of each country fostered military, economic, and diplomatic cooperation.
As secretary of state in the Nixon and Ford administrations, he expanded his policy focus to many other regions, including China and the Middle East. He paved the way for the United States and Communist China to establish direct relations for the first time. This made it clear that the United States had an advantage over the Soviet Union in Asia. This was because relations between the Soviet Union and the Asian region deteriorated at the time. After the 1973 war between Israel and its Arab neighbors, the United States became an important external power in the Middle East, helped by Kissinger. The United States provided the largest amount of aid and military support to countries such as Israel and Egypt, which were willing to work with Washington but sideline the Soviet government.
Mr. Kissinger has always known himself to be a refugee, having come to the United States fleeing mass atrocities. He then criticized those who believed that the United States could somehow make humans perfect. He dismissed the idealistic impulses of former President Wilson as naive and dangerous. Hatred and violence always shadowed his perspective on society.
Mr. Kissinger wanted to use American power as a better option, a better option. The goal is to rescue the best in humanity while limiting the damage caused by human weaknesses and shortcomings. Such reasoning drove him into a dark place. In exactly the same way he tried to justify the heavy bombing of Vietnam and Cambodia during the Vietnam War. The bombing, which also killed innocent people, was, he claimed, intended to prevent what he saw as far greater suffering. It is said that such hardships come with communist dictatorships.
Similar explanations were given when the United States supported repressive regimes in South America, including Chile, Argentina, and Brazil. Additionally, he has used similar reasoning when providing diplomatic support to authoritarian regimes in Iran, Egypt, South Korea, Indonesia, and Pakistan. The argument was that these dictatorships brought stability, not social chaos or conflict. In his view, the societies in these countries were not yet ready for democracy.
The worthy mission he was founded on has been overstepped, and in Vietnam, Latin America, and Iran, he has unleashed the very kind of nightmares he sought to prevent. Excessive US power and excessive support for an anti-communist dictator brought disasters of their own.
Mr. Kissinger's life is therefore both a parable of progress and a tragedy of arrogance. He lived the American dream with pride. He made the world safer for millions of people like himself. On the other hand, they embraced self-righteousness and became obsessed with power, thereby misjudged the outlook. For all his intelligence, he had no idea how serious a threat American power could be. It never understood how deeply it could hurt those who stood in its path.
For better or worse, Mr. Kissinger's life was a story of American power over the last century. That is why he is so important. His death provides an opportunity to reflect on what American power has done and what it might do in the future.
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