The Flawed Architect: Henry Kissinger and American Foreign Policy

The Flawed Architect: Henry Kissinger and American Foreign Policy

by Jussi M. Hanhimaki
The Flawed Architect: Henry Kissinger and American Foreign Policy

The Flawed Architect: Henry Kissinger and American Foreign Policy

by Jussi M. Hanhimaki

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Overview

Henry Kissinger dominated American foreign relations like no other figure in recent history. He negotiated an end to American involvement in the Vietnam War, opened relations with Communist China, and orchestrated détente with the Soviet Union. Yet he is also the man behind the secret bombing of Cambodia and policies leading to the overthrow of Chile's President Salvador Allende. Which is more accurate, the picture of Kissinger the skilled diplomat or Kissinger the war criminal? In The Flawed Architect, the first major reassessment of Kissinger in over a decade, historian Jussi Hanhimaki paints a subtle, carefully composed portrait of America's most famous and infamous statesman. Drawing on extensive research from newly declassified files, the author follows Kissinger from his beginnings in the Nixon administration up to the current controversy fed by Christopher Hitchens over whether Kissinger is a war criminal. Hanhimaki guides the reader through White House power struggles and debates behind the Cambodia and Laos invasions, the search for a strategy in Vietnam, the breakthrough with China, and the unfolding of Soviet-American detente. Here, too, are many other international crises of the period--the Indo-Pakistani War, the Yom Kippur War, the Angolan civil war--all set against the backdrop of Watergate. Along the way, Hanhimaki sheds light on Kissinger's personal flaws--he was obsessed with secrecy and bureaucratic infighting in an administration that self-destructed in its abuse of power--as well as his great strengths as a diplomat. We see Kissinger negotiating, threatening and joking with virtually all of the key foreign leaders of the 1970s, from Mao to Brezhnev and Anwar Sadat to Golda Meir. This well researched account brings to life the complex nature of American foreign policymaking during the Kissinger years. It will be the standard work on Kissinger for years to come.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199924042
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/09/2004
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Jussi Hanhimaki is Professor of International History and Politics at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland. An editor of the journal Cold War History, he is the author or co-author of five books, and won the 2002 Bernath Prize from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction: A Prize-Winning Performance?xiii
1The Aspiring Statesman1
2Kissinger, Nixon, and the Challenges of '6917
3Bombs and Back Channels32
4Progress and Promise55
5Negotiating in the Shadow of War68
6Crises and Opportunities92
7Breakthroughs116
8The First Test: Triangular Diplomacy and the Indo-Pakistani War154
9"The Week That Changed the World"185
10High Stakes: Triangulation, Moscow, and Vietnam201
11Exiting Vietnam228
12Highs and Lows260
13Secretary of State291
14Unilateral Advantage: The October War and Shuttle Diplomacy302
15Nixon's Farewell: Watergate, Kissinger, and Foreign Policy332
16Renewal? Ford, Vladivostok, and Kissinger359
17Not Our Loss: Exit from Vietnam382
18The Worst Hour: Angola and East Timor399
19"Worse Than in the Days of McCarthy": Kissinger and the Marathon of 1976427
20The Chairman "On Trial"457
Conclusion: The Flawed Architect485
Notes493
Selected Bibliography535
Index541
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