Kissinger at 100 BY MEL GURTOV
Unfortunately, his legacy is tarnished by malevolent intentions and costly outcomes, for example: conspiring with the Chilean military to oust President Salvador Allende, leading to the rise of General Augusto Pinochet; supporting CIA involvement in Operation Condor, a secret campaign founded by Pinochet to keep right-wing dictators in power in Latin America and assassinate or otherwise remove leftist challengers; supporting the bloody Indonesian intervention in East Timor; arming what was then West Pakistan to quash East Pakistan (which later became Bangladesh), in a bloodbath that Kissinger and Nixon knew about and ignored; orchestrating the October Surprise to delay peace talks on Vietnam until after the 1968 elections and Nixon’s victory; then secretly undermining the South Vietnamese government in order to ensure a safe US withdrawal; authorizing the bombing of villages in Cambodia and Vietnam that killed tens of thousands of civilians; opposing sanctions on South Africa in the apartheid era.
If the US were a party to the International Criminal Court, these involvements would have put Kissinger in the dock.
Mr. Kissinger’s career only shows how shameless foreign policy realism can be and how paper-thin is the notion of great statesmanship.
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