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The Trial of Henry Kissinger
The Trial of Henry Kissinger

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Author: Christopher Hitchens
Publisher: Verso Books
Category: Book

List Price: £8.00
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 126820

Media: Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 161
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.5

ISBN: 1859843980
Dewey Decimal Number: 973.924092
EAN: 9781859843987
ASIN: 1859843980

Publication Date: April 10, 2002
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: New book. Due to problems with Standard Airmail delivery times from the USA, we have switched to using PRIORITY AIRMAIL ONLY. UK & European delivery is 7-10 days.

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 10
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5 out of 5 stars Sleaze.   October 5, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

There was a greasy used-car salesman who managed to get voted into the Whitehouse and become president of the United States. That was Richard Nixon; a man who had Chilean leader, Allende, murdered because he didn't like his politics. A leader, voted in with a free and fair election, was murdered by Nixon, and who did the Chileans get in his place? Pinochet, a mass murderer, dictator, and despotic devil.

Thanks Rich.

Kissinger was the architect of the murder. He sorted the details for his boss and Hitchens details his involvement in this crime and many others.

Kissinger is a very bad man.

For example, he ruined the peace talks in 1968 that could have ended the Vietnam war. This he did for political reasons, and, when you consider more than half of the US deaths in Vietnam came AFTER 1968, then you can begin to see just how much blood Kissinger has on his hands.

Kissinger is a very bad man.

Hitchens's book offers argument upon argument - backed up with official documents released under the frredom of information act - that show Kissinger was, to quote Joseph Heller: "An odius schlump who made war gladly."

One cannot be surprised by his actions, though. Kissinger just demonstrates the attitude held by many US administrations through the years, not least the Bush administration.

There is the idea that US foreign policy is dedicated to protecting the perfect recipe for Apple Pie and making sure Mickey Mouse has a decent place to live.

The truth of the US is a little more sinister, I think.




5 out of 5 stars A hatchet job that's well worth reading.   March 14, 2008
In the first paragraph of this book,Hitchens says openly that he is,and always has been,an opponent of Kissinger,so stop here if you want some objective study of US foriegn policy between 1969 and 1977.
Hitchens clearly loathes Kissinger(and what's wrong with that?),and this book is far from a complete critique of Kissinger-he notes in the introduction that the campaign against the Iraqi Kurds in 1975-76,partially caused by a switch in US policy,is not part of his case,and the massive cash payouts to the Italian Christian Democrats and other pro-US cliques in Europe aren't even mentioned.
There are five major charges in this book:
1-Genocide in Indochina
2-Genocide and assasinations in Bangladesh
3-Murder and conspiracy in Chile
4-Conspiracy to overthrow the Cypriot government.
5-Complicity in genocide in East Timor.
Hitchens produces a very strong casr for all of these allegations.The best news of all is in the introduction,where it is revealed that judges in France,Argentina and Chile are now trying to summon Kissinger to give evidence in human rights cases.Maybe it's time for Americans to demand a Truth Commission from the new president in 2009?Don't hold your breath.



5 out of 5 stars We are utterly futile in the face of determined and covert manipulation of democracy   January 24, 2008
The contents here are so chilling that they almost defy description. In particular, glimpses of the final days of Nixon's era. And in ignorance we thought the Cuban missile crisis was as close as we got to global annihilation. Yeah, right. This is a densely written book that despite the clarity of writing requires considerable concentration to try and determine, let alone come to terms with the implications.

My conclusion is that sad to report, that as individuals we are utterly futile in the face of determined and covert manipulation of democracy. Our votes it seems count for nothing. Literally nothing Meanwhile the man himself was interviewed on BBC Radio 4 recently talking about his major contribution to US/China relationships. I guess the interviewer had not read this book. This book should be compulsory reading for every student of politics and/or history in every school.

So I'm off to play the B52s `Cosmic Thing' because The Samaritans are engaged right now.



4 out of 5 stars The case for the prosecution   October 12, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

In The Trial of Henry Kissinger, Vanity Fair columnist and Professor of Liberal Studies Christopher Hitchens, presents the prosecution case for the charge that former Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger should stand trial alongside the likes of Slobodan Milosevic, Augusto Pinochet and Saddam Hussein for crimes of international aggression.

Such a charge against a Western politician seems outrageous, were one not acquainted with the gravity of the crimes and the substantial evidence of the complicity of a key figure in several presidential administrations. Indeed, Kissinger's crimes, according to Hitchens (and drawing primarily on Anthony Summers' and Robbyn Swan's superb biography of Richard Nixon, The Arrogance of Power), started from his involvement in the successful sabotage of the Johnson administrations' Vietnam peace talks of 1968. From there, the war crimes escalated through out Indochina with Kissinger's blessing and then on into genocide in Bangladesh, the overthrow of a democratically elected government and the installation and active support of an openly fascist regime in Chile, the support of a brutal dictatorship in Cyprus and the arming of a genocidal regime in Indonesia.

All of the above is substantially documented via internal declassified records and witness statements, both from the guilty, the guilt-ridden and the survivors of a such a terrible plague bestowed upon the innocent by such a cynical and aloof promoter of realpolitik.

Some might be tempted to dismiss this book summarily as "one-sided" - and indeed it is. This book does just what it says on the tin: it presents the charge against one of the most prominent of global citizens. Those who would speak in his defence can present their own case, as Kissinger himself undertook, in his three volumes of nostalgic apologia. If, as Professor Noam Chomsky has written, it is a basic moral truism that we should judge ourselves by the same standards that we apply to others (or if we are being completely honest, we should hold our selves to a higher standard), then Dr Kissinger should quite rightly be tried for war crimes in The Hague; as Hitchens phrases it: "...in the name of innumerable victims known and unknown, it is time for justice to take a hand."

This slim book, then, is reasonably provocative. What separates it from a normal piece of political analysis, is that Hitchens is quite rightly placing the responsibility on an individual: that laws cannot be broken by abstract theories, policies or administrations but by individuals; that monstrous and great though some crimes are, they are not beyond punishment. Were the laws established by the Nuremburg trials after the Second World War applied evenly, without discrimination, then it is quite possible that Henry Kissinger, amongst others, might have one day found himself swinging at the end of a (sturdy) rope - or if this is too absurdly, graphically obscene, then perhaps the lethal injection, the method preferred by his confidant George W. Bush, who has given the death sentence a green-light to those guilty of lesser offences.

What is not included in this book is this: this book was published in early 2001. After the obscene tragedy of 11th September 2001, Christopher Hitchens became perhaps the most unforeseen enthusiast of President George W. Bush. As recently revealed, Henry Kissinger has been a close advisor to this presidency, an administration that has shamed a nation, in the eyes of much of the world's population. Such was the closeness of Kissinger and Bush's relationship, that Kissinger was Bush's first choice to lead a blue ribbon investigation into these terrible events. However, the 9/11 Family Steering Committee interviewed Kissinger, seeking to reassure themselves that there was no conflict of interest betwixt Kissinger (and his consultancy business, Kissinger Associates) and any potential areas of investigation. Given the choice between serving his country or suffer a financial hardship (and possibly some loss of prestige) by revealing his client list - a list that could well have included Saudi clients, some by the name of Bin Laden - Kissinger patriotically opted to look after his business and let the families of the dead take their quest for justice elsewhere.

Written with clarity and elan, Christopher Hitchens never lets us forget that where there are victims, there are criminals and that where there is criminality there should be justice. Regardless of Hitchens' recent volte-face, this book will remain an enduring testament to the ageless concept of the need for power to be confronted with truth.



4 out of 5 stars Compelling...   March 8, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book is hard hittting and to the point. It is essentially a 150 page indictment of Kissinger for crimes, war crimes and crimes against humanity, and it makes compelling reading. Particularly in these days of 'Iraq has weapons of mass destruction' and 'Iran is waging a proxy war against us' this book gives us insight into the terrible and murky world of realpolitik and the murderous capacity of unscrupulous politicians in powerful nations, liberal or otherwise. One of the gems about this gem of a book is it opens up many new planes of investigation for those interested in further examining the claims he makes therein. Credit therefore to the author for substantiating his claims with clear sources and referenced materials. It is a refreshing, no-frills read; necessary reading for the counter-hegemonic.

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