Henry Kissinger’s genocidal legacy: Vietnam, Cambodia and the birth of American militarism
Henry Kissingers genocidal legacy: Vietnam, Cambodia and the birth of American militarism
Nixon introduced us to permanent, extrajudicial war in Southeast Asia, and it continues today in the Middle East
Greg Grandin, TomDispatch.com
In April 2014, ESPN published a photograph of an unlikely duo: Samantha Power, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, and former national security adviser and secretary of state Henry Kissinger at the Yankees-Red Sox season opener. In fleece jackets on a crisp spring day, they were visibly enjoying each others company, looking for all the world like a twenty-first-century geopolitical version of Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. The subtext of their banter, however, wasnt about sex, but death.
As a journalist, Power had made her name as a defender of human rights, winning a Pulitzer Prize for her book A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide. Having served on the National Security Council before moving on to the U.N., she was considered an influential liberal hawk of the Obama era. She was also a leading light among a set of policymakers and intellectuals who believe that American diplomacy should be driven not just by national security and economic concerns but by humanitarian ideals, especially the advancement of democracy and the defense of human rights.
The United States, Power long held, has a responsibility to protect the worlds most vulnerable people. In 2011 she played a crucial role in convincing President Obama to send in American air power to prevent troops loyal to Libyan autocrat Muammar Gaddafi from massacring civilians. That campaign led to his death, the violent overthrow of his regime, and in the end, a failed state and growing stronghold for ISIS and other terror groups. In contrast, Kissinger is identified with a school of political realism, which holds that American power should service American interests, even if that means sacrificing the human rights of others.
According to ESPN, Power teasingly asked Kissinger if his allegiance to the Yankees was in keeping with a realists perspective on the world. Power, an avid Red Sox fan, had only recently failed to convince the United Nations to endorse a U.S. bombing campaign in Syria, so Kissinger couldnt resist responding with a gibe of his own. You might, he said, end up doing more realistic things. It was his way of suggesting that she drop the Red Sox for the Yankees. The human rights advocate, Power retorted, referring to herself in the third person, falls in love with the Red Sox, the downtrodden, the people who cant win the World Series.
More:
http://www.salon.com/2015/11/10/henry_kissingers_genocidal_legacy_partner/
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