There have, in fact, been no legal consequences whatsoever to Kissinger for his actions in Chile, where three thousand people were murdered by Pinochet’s thugs, or for those in Vietnam and Cambodia, where he ordered large-scale aerial bombardments that cost the lives of countless civilians. One of his foremost critics was the late Christopher Hitchens, who in 2001 wrote a book-length indictment entitled “The Trial of Henry Kissinger.” Hitchens called for Kissinger’s prosecution “for war crimes, for crimes against humanity, and for offenses against common or customary or international law, including conspiracy to commit murder, kidnap, and torture.” ...
In Errol Morris’s remarkable 2003 documentary “The Fog of War,” we saw that McNamara, who was an octogenarian at the time, was a tormented man who was attempting to come to terms, unsuccessfully, with the immense moral burden of his actions as the U.S. defense secretary during Vietnam. McNamara had recently written a memoir in which he attempted to grapple with his legacy. Around that time, a journalist named Stephen Talbot interviewed McNamara, and then also secured an interview with Kissinger. As he later wrote about his initial meeting with Kissinger, “I told him I had just interviewed Robert McNamara in Washington. That got his attention. He stopped badgering me, and then he did an extraordinary thing. He began to cry. But no, not real tears. Before my eyes, Henry Kissinger was acting. ‘Boohoo, boohoo,’ Kissinger said, pretending to cry and rub his eyes. ‘He’s still beating his breast, right? Still feeling guilty.’ He spoke in a mocking, singsong voice and patted his heart for emphasis.”
PHOTOGRAPH BY STECHE / ULLSTEIN BILD VIA GETTY
DOES HENRY KISSINGER HAVE A CONSCIENCE?
The New Yorker | 20 August 2016
Last March, when President Obama travelled to Argentina to meet
with the country’s new President, Mauricio Macri, his public appearances were
dogged by protesters who noisily demanded explanations, and apologies, for U.S.
policies, past and present. There are few countries in the West where
anti-Americanism is as vociferously expressed as in Argentina, where a highly
politicized culture of grievance has evolved in which many of the country’s
problems are blamed on the United States. On the left, especially, there is
lingering resentment over the support extended by the U.S. government to
Argentina’s right-wing military, which seized power in March of 1976 and
launched a “Dirty War” against leftists that took thousands of lives over the
following seven years.
In the run-up to Obama’s trip, Susan Rice, the President’s
national-security adviser, had announced the Administration’s intention to
declassify thousands of U.S. military and intelligence documents pertaining to
that tumultuous period in Argentina. It was a good-will gesture aimed at
signalling Obama’s ongoing effort to change the dynamic of U.S. relations with
Latin America—“to bury the last remnant of the Cold War,” as he said in Havana, during that
same trip.
Last week, the first tranche of those declassified documents was
released. The documents revealed that White House and U.S. State Department
officials were intimately aware of the Argentine military’s bloody nature, and
that some were horrified by what they knew. Others, most notably Henry
Kissinger, were not. In a 1978 cable, the U.S. Ambassador, Raúl Castro, wrote
about a visit by Kissinger to Buenos Aires, where he was a guest of the
dictator, Jorge Rafael Videla, while the country hosted the World Cup. “My only
concern is that Kissinger’s repeated high praise for Argentina’s action in
wiping out terrorism may have gone to some considerable extent to his hosts’
heads,” Castro wrote. The Ambassador went on to
write, fretfully, “There is some danger that Argentines may use Kissinger’s
laudatory statements as justification for hardening their human rights stance.”
The latest revelations compound a portrait of Kissinger as the
ruthless cheerleader, if not the active co-conspirator, of Latin American
military regimes engaged in war crimes. In evidence that emerged from previous
declassifications of documents during the Clinton Administration, Kissinger was
shown not only to have been aware of what the military was doing but to have
actively encouraged it. Two days after the Argentine coup, Kissinger was
briefed by his Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, William
Rogers, who warned him, “I think also we’ve got to expect a fair amount of
repression, probably a good deal of blood, in Argentina before too long. I
think they’re going to have to come down very hard not only on the terrorists
but on the dissidents of trade unions and their parties.” Kissinger replied,
“Whatever chance they have, they will need a little
encouragement . . . because I do want to encourage them. I don’t
want to give the sense that they’re harassed by the United States.”
Under Kissinger’s direction, they certainly were not harassed.
Right after the coup, Kissinger sent his encouragement to the generals and
reinforced that message by expediting a package of U.S. security assistance. In
a meeting with the Argentine foreign minister two months later, Kissinger
advised him winkingly, according to a memo written about the conversation,
“We are aware you are in a difficult period. It is a curious time, when
political, criminal, and terrorist activities tend to merge without any clear
separation. We understand you must establish authority. . . . If
there are things that have to be done, you should do them quickly.”
Argentina’s military forces had launched their coup in order to
expand and institutionalize a war that was already under way against leftist
guerrillas and their sympathizers. They called their campaign the Process of
National Reorganization, or, simply, “el
proceso.” During the Dirty War, as it became
known, as many as thirty thousand people were secretly abducted, tortured, and
executed by the security forces. Hundreds of suspects were buried in anonymous
mass graves, while thousands more were stripped naked, drugged, loaded onto
military aircraft, and hurled into the sea from the air while they were still
alive. The term “los desaparecidos”—“the
disappeared”—became one of Argentina’s contributions to the global lexicon.
At the time of the coup, Gerald Ford was the caretaker U.S.
President, and Henry Kissinger was serving as both Secretary of State and
national-security adviser, as he had done under Nixon. Immediately after the
Argentine coup, on Kissinger’s recommendations, the U.S. Congress approved a
request for fifty million dollars in security assistance to the junta; this was
topped off by another thirty million before the end of the year.
Military-training programs and aircraft sales worth hundreds of millions of
dollars were also approved. In 1978, a year into Jimmy Carter’s Presidency,
mounting concerns about human-rights violations brought an end to U.S. aid.
Thereafter, the new Administration sought to cut the junta off from
international financial assistance. In early 1981, with Reagan coming into the
White House, however, the restrictions were lifted.
There have, in fact, been no legal consequences whatsoever to
Kissinger for his actions in Chile, where three thousand people were murdered
by Pinochet’s thugs, or for those in Vietnam and Cambodia, where he ordered
large-scale aerial bombardments that cost the lives of countless civilians. One
of his foremost critics was the late Christopher Hitchens, who in 2001
wrote a book-length indictment entitled “The Trial of Henry Kissinger.”
Hitchens called for Kissinger’s prosecution “for war crimes, for crimes against
humanity, and for offenses against common or customary or international law,
including conspiracy to commit murder, kidnap, and torture.”
While Argentina’s Dirty War was taking place, of course, its
generals habitually denied that anything untoward was occurring. Questioned
about los desaparecidos,
the coup leader, General Videla, explained with chilling vagueness, “The
disappeared are just that: disappeared. They are neither alive nor dead. They
are disappeared.” Other officers suggested that missing people were probably in
hiding, carrying out terrorist actions against the fatherland. In fact, the
vast majority were being brutalized in secret prisons by government-salaried
employees, and then, more often than not, executed. As happened in Germany
during the Holocaust, most Argentines understood what was really going on, but
kept silent out of a spirit of complicity, or fear. A see-no-evil national
refrain was adopted by those Argentines who witnessed neighbors being dragged
from their homes by plainclothes men, never to return: “Algo habrán hecho”—“they must have
done something.”
We have repeatedly reviewed evidence of Kissinger’s callousness.
Some of it is as inexplicable as it is shocking. There is a macho swagger in
some of Kissinger’s remarks. It could, perhaps, be explained away if he had
never wielded power, like—thus far—the gratuitously offensive Presidential
candidate Donald Trump. And one has an awareness that Kissinger, the
longest-lasting and most iconic pariah figure in modern American history, is
but one of a line of men held in fear and contempt for the immorality of their
services rendered and yet protected by the political establishment in
recognition of those same services. William Tecumseh Sherman, Curtis LeMay,
Robert McNamara, and, more recently, Donald Rumsfeld all come to mind.
In Errol Morris’s remarkable 2003 documentary “The Fog of War,”
we saw that McNamara, who was an octogenarian at the time, was a tormented man
who was attempting to come to terms, unsuccessfully, with the immense moral
burden of his actions as the U.S. defense secretary during Vietnam. McNamara
had recently written a memoir in which he attempted to grapple with his legacy.
Around that time, a journalist named Stephen Talbot interviewed McNamara, and
then also secured an interview with Kissinger. As he later wrote about his
initial meeting with Kissinger, “I told him I had just interviewed Robert
McNamara in Washington. That got his attention. He stopped badgering me, and
then he did an extraordinary thing. He began to cry. But no, not real tears.
Before my eyes, Henry Kissinger was acting. ‘Boohoo, boohoo,’ Kissinger said,
pretending to cry and rub his eyes. ‘He’s still beating his breast, right?
Still feeling guilty.’ He spoke in a mocking, singsong voice and patted his
heart for emphasis.”
McNamara died in 2009, at the same age Kissinger is
today—ninety-three—but his belated public struggle with his conscience helped
leaven his clouded reputation. Now that he is nearing the end of his life,
Kissinger must wonder what his own legacy is to be. He can rest assured that,
at the very least, his steadfast support for the American superpower project,
no matter what the cost in lives, will be a major part of that legacy. Unlike
McNamara, however, whose attempt to find a moral reckoning Kissinger held in
such scorn, Kissinger has shown little in the way of a conscience. And because
of that, it seems highly likely, history will not easily absolve him.
If Henry Kissinger would stand trial for crimes against humanity and be hung by his big nose than Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton and Obama Clinton would all have to go to trial for crimes against humanity. But no, we don't want them dead because they play a big role in the architect of this, New World Order. So stop your fussing and accept what UN is trying to establish for the good of all humanity even if more bombs needed to be dropped on the nations of disobedience.
ReplyDeleteSatan is above the Law, that was why he wanted to become god in his own image instead of being rule by the Order of his Creator. These people who work for the UN in high places are above law or exempted from wrongdoings. Because the need for disorders must happen to enable the New World Order to progress. Disorder brings progress - even if they have to pay organizers to create chaos. George Soro Clinton funding a lot of chaos here and abroad.
Where is the secret CIA operation is Laos where Henry also was involved? How many of you aware of what the Military Industrial Complex done in Lao? I thought Cambodia was the most bombed country until I came upon what the New World Order was up to in Laos.