UNI88 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 30, 2023 12:44 pm
kalm wrote: ↑Thu Nov 30, 2023 12:18 pm
Yeah…the Timothy McVeigh comparison was useless.
I haven’t taken a deep dive. I would imagine his legacy to be complicated similar to others in his position or governments like ours with FP. But it seems he was responsible for an awful lot of shitty things.
Have you come across any obits that are more fair?
Henry Kissinger, diplomat who helped to reshape the world, dies at 100
“Kissinger personified human complexity — his characteristics ranging from brilliance and wit to sensitivity, melancholy, abrasiveness and savagery,” Stanley Karnow wrote in “Vietnam: A History.” “As he adapted to Nixon’s court, with its arcane and unsavory intrigues, he was able to acquire a talent for duplicity.”
One of the ironies is that many of the people calling Kissinger a war criminal venerate/defend other war criminals like Stalin, Mao, Che or Chavez.
Indeed. Kissinger, and his legacy, are complicated. That in and of itself is difficult for politics of today to understand as we seem to only like simplistic, glossed-over political statements that work well in meme format. I generally dismiss any political commentary that includes comparisons to Hitler and declaring people to be burning in hell. Those tend not to be intellectually thought about enough.
You can see the issue with Kissinger and how he's viewed today just based on who doesn't like him - Reagan Republicans didn't like him because they thought arms control treaties with the Soviet Union was going soft on communism. Jimmy Carter Democrats (and Biden was this then) didn't like him because he worked with Nixon - no other reason needed. Bill Clinton Democrats, including Hillary, did like him because he was obviously extremely intellectual and a bit of a realist. However, since the Progressive Left has become the mainstream left today, being associated with Hillary Clinton is not a good thing and hence the current left didn't like him. And the current right is dominated by the Trump MAGA's and just knowing that Kissinger was part of opening up China just makes him persona non grata as well. So basically, there's a lot of hate from both the right and the left. And none of this even gets into the fact that Kissinger was Jewish and how his working at the highest levels of government and power play into those vile tropes of antisemitism that unfortunately plague both the left and the right.
Kissinger's legacy is complicated, like I said. You have to question the wanton bombing and loss of life in Cambodia that happened under his watch. He and Nixon didn't start the Vietnam quagmire, but they probably could've done better. As for turning a blind eye to the atrocities carried out by strongmen that the US either supported or didn't oppose, you need to look at each and every case and determine 1) if we could've really done anything different to deter those events and 2) also make a determination that if the Marxist-forces in those countries we were indirectly opposing would have been even worse. The Cold War was not a simple time, and even with our benefit of hindsight I'm not sure there were always better options. But it is interesting that other folks in administrations that came before and after the one Kissinger worked in aren't subject to the same wishes for eternal damnation in a hell they may or may not believe in. Again, don't discount the antisemitism angle to this.