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Showing Original Post only (View all)David Corn: Henry Kissinger at 100: Still a War Criminal. [View all]
Forget the birthday candles, lets count the dead.https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2023/05/henry-kissinger-at-100-still-a-war-criminal/

Henry Kissinger is turning 100 this week, and his centennial is prompting assorted hosannas about perhaps the most influential American foreign policymaker of the 20th century. The Economist observed that his ideas have been circling back into relevancy for the last quarter century. The Times of London ran an appreciation: Henry Kissinger at 100: What He Can Tell Us About the World. Policy shops and think tanks have held conferences to mark this milestone. CBS News aired a mostly fawning interview veteran journalist Ted Koppel conducted with Kissinger that included merely a glancing reference to the ignoble and bloody episodes of his career. Kissinger is indeed a monumental figure who shaped much of the past 50 years. He brokered the US opening to China and pursued détente with the Soviet Union during his stints as President Richard Nixons national security adviser and secretary of state. Yet it is an insult to history that he is not equally known and regarded for his many acts of treacherysecret bombings, coup-plotting, supporting military juntasthat resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands.
Kissingers diplomatic conniving led to or enabled slaughters around the globe. As he blows out all those candles, lets call the roll.
Cambodia: In early 1969, shortly after Nixon moved into the White House and inherited the Vietnam War, he, Kissinger, and others cooked up a plan to secretly bomb Cambodia, in pursuit of enemy camps. With the perversely-named Operation Breakfast launched, White House chief of staff H.R. Bob Haldeman wrote in his diary, Kissinger and Nixon were really excited. The action, though, was of dubious legality; the United States was not at war with Cambodia and Congress had not authorized the carpet-bombing, which Nixon tried to keep a secret. The US military dropped 540,000 tons of bombs. They didnt just hit enemy outposts. The estimates of Cambodian civilians killed range between 150,000 and 500,000.

Bangladesh: In 1970, a political party advocating autonomy for East Pakistan won legislative elections. The military dictator ruling Pakistan, Gen. Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan, arrested the leader of that party and ordered his army to crush the Bengalis. At the time, Yahya, a US ally, was helping Kissinger and Nixon establish ties with China, and they didnt want to get in his way. The top US diplomat in East Pakistan sent in a cable detailing and decrying the atrocities committed by Yahyas troops and reported they were committing genocide. Yet Nixon and Kissinger declined to criticize Yahya or take action to end the barbarous assault. (This became known as the tilt toward Pakistan.) Kissinger and Nixon turned a blind eye toarguably, they tacitly approvedPakistans genocidal slaughter of 300,000 Bengalis, most of them Hindus.
Chile: Nixon and Kissinger plotted to covertly thwart the democratic election of socialist president Salvador Allende in 1970. This included Kissinger supervising clandestine operations aimed at destabilizing Chile and triggering a military coup. This scheming yielded the assassination of Chiles commander-in-chief of the Army. Eventually, a military junta led by Gen. Augusto Pinochet seized power, killed thousands of Chileans, and implemented a dictatorship, Following the coup, Kissinger backed Pinochet to the hilt. During a private conversation with the Chilean tyrant in 1976, he told Pinochet, My evaluation is that you are a victim of all left-wing groups around the world and that your greatest sin was that you overthrew a government which was going communist.

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