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Willem Oltmans
KISSINGER Nixon invited Nelson Rockefeller's foreign policy advisor, Henry Kissinger to join him at the White House. While much is known about the bloody hands of this man, the regular revelations about secret deals and new lies further tarnish his record. He turns out book after book to demonstrate that he sees himself as the greatest statesman Washington ever produced, a twentieth century reincarnation of Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898), the Prussian statesman and first chancellor of the German empire. He might even be quite right. Bismarck established empirical power through a series of wars. In 1878 he also presided over the Congress of Berlin, where decisions were made regarding stability on the Balkans and about the Middle-East following the Russo-Turkish War. Bismarck initiated in 1884 another Conference at which Africa was partitioned. Considering the effect of Bismarck's calls for German greatness it ought to be remembered that all this accumulated power led in a relatively short time, in 1914 and 1938, to two World Wars. Kissinger watchers around the globe view him in retrospect as indeed a first class warmonger, who with his Jewish German background might some day be written up as a first classic German politico made-in-usa. During a Florida vacation I picked up a JanuaryFebruary 2001 copy of Harpers, one of the last surviving important us monthly's in the us, thanks to editor Lewis Lapham. It contained part one of an article about Henry Kissinger's war crimes. These were the days he most respectable Foreign Policy figures of the twentieth century. But what was worse, he was lending unwarranted respectability to his malicious conduct of us Foreign Affairs. His phony probity fooled many unsuspecting victims. Recently, when Henry dropped in on the then Indonesian President Abdurachman Wahid to lobby on behalf of us firms, his host became so enchanted with Kissinger's soft words, that he appointed him special advisor on the spot. Hitchens described how Henry entered the halls of power in 1969 "from a mediocre and opportunistic academic to an international potentate to a life of sycophancy and duplicity." He continued: "Obsessed with Vietnamese intransigence Kissinger at one point contemplated using thermonuclear weapons to obliterate the pass through which ran the railway line from North Vietnam to China, and at another stage considered bombing the dikes that prevented North Vietnam's irrigation system from flooding the country." General Alexander Haig and his deputy Colonel Ray Sitton mapped the secret bombing of Cambodia. Kissinger oversaw this operation personally. His own collaborators joked at the time: "Henry is playing Bismarck again." Some of his aides like Anthony Lake and Roger Morris resigned from his staff in protest over what they considered us mass-murder of Asian civilians outside Vietnam as well. Kissinger would inquire if pilots knew where they were bombing, because he was worried that they would hit cia crews operating in enemy territory. As more articles about his war crimes are appearing in the media, the more enraged Henry becomes. To the troubled minds of Nixon and Kissinger, the truth has always been synonymous with treason. When The New York Times decided to print the Pentagon Papers, June 13, 1971, a telephone conversation between these two men became known years later. "It is treasonable, there is no question. It's action-able, I am absolutely sure this violates all sorts of security laws," Kissinger told his boss. They arranged for Attorney General John Mitchell to ask the courts to bar further publication. But the us Supreme Court rejected 6 to 3 the presidential request. Anthony Lewis recalled this tragic episode in the The Times, June 9, 2001, and reminded readers of the fact, that Congress in 2000 introduced a bill that would make publication of classified papers a crime. "The press paid little attention to the menacing legislation until it had gone through both the House and Senate and been sent to the White House. President Clinton then saved the day by vetoing the legislation." In the end, the casualty figures as a result of war crimes by five us heads-of-state and their errand boys - of whom Kissinger was the worst -became unacceptably high. They make Milosevic, Karadzic and Mladic look like small time operators. Between March 1969 and May 1970 alone Nixon and Kissinger approved no less than 3.630 secret missions above Cambodia and Laos, with 600.000 dead people in Cambodia and 350.000 in Laos. Sukarno and Sihanouk opposed this massmurder in South East Asia and were promptly removed for their refusal to cooperate with the us war criminals. The us Senate Subcommittee for Refugees estimated that between 1969 - when Nixon and Kissinger began to run the war - and 1972, three million Asians had been killed. During those four years the us dropped 4.500.000 tons of high explosives on the three countries, that once made up Indo-China. According to the Pentagon the us Air Force dropped about half this load during World War II above Germany. The notorious cia counter-guerrilla "Phoenix" program initiated by this murderous duo in the White House, killed an additional 35.708 Vietnamese civilians in the period 1969-1972. Chapter 8 of the Hitchens book dealt with East-Timor invaded on December 7, 1975 by the Suharto regime. That day, President Gerald Ford and Henry Kissinger left Jakarta after an official visit to the fascist junta, which the us and a dozen rich nations had kept in the saddle since 1965 with billions and billions of dollars. Later C. Philip Liechty, cia operations officer in Jakarta, confirmed that Ford and Kissinger had given Suharto the green light to invade Portuguese East-Timor. On August 11, 1995, Henry presented a new book in a New-York Hotel. Hitschens recalled that the first question was raised by Constancio Pinto, a former Timorese resistance fighter, who asked where Kissinger had been when 200.000 Timorese were killed by Suharto's Army. Henry improvised and said that the subject of Timor never came up during the visit to Suharto. They had only been informed upon leaving at the airport that Timor would be invaded. The next questioner, Allan Nairn, confirmed that former President Ford in an interview with him had said that Timor had indeed been discussed during the Ford-Kissinger talks with Suharto. Nairn even produced a State Department transcript of the Jakarta talks, further confirming that the invasion of East-Timor had been on the agenda. Kissinger was lying with a straight face. C. Philip Liechty went even further. He said, that without heavy us logistics support the Dili operation would not even have been possible, therefore it had been elaborately discussed in Washington as well. Hitchens presented further shocking details about the Nixon-Kissinger conspiracy to destroy Salvador Allende. In 1998 declassified documents showed how Henry had never before showed the slightest interest in Chili, but this time he intended to impress his boss with an efficient elimination plan. At cia headquarters in Langley a group was set up to map a two-track policy. "One the ostensible diplomatic one and the other - unknown to the State Department or the US ambassador to Chili, Edward Korry - a strategy of destabilization, kidnap and assassination, designed to provoke a military coup", wrote Hitschens on the basis of the documents. This is the standard scenario for cia operations. They were a carbon copy of the set-up for the Jakarta coup of 1965. It had worked in so many places, and it would once more work beautifully against Allende in Chili. It worked in Grenada, in Surinam, in Panama, in Pakistan, everywhere. December 2, 1998 some Chilean files were released, but as Hitchens warned, much of what Nixon, Kissinger, the visible or invisible Washington gangsters had done, would remain safely under seal. They are being held by the cia, the Defence Intelligence Agency, the State Department, the Pentagon, the National Security Council, the National Archives, the presidential libraries of Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter and other government agencies. No wonder. As long as the Chief White House mobster of those glorious Nixon years is still very much alive and kicking, and internationally revered and applauded, no-one is supposed to uncover the truth, until this shady character has left the earth for good. Nixon was carried to his grave two decades after Watergate as one of the greatest presidents in American history. Henry should get a mausoleum in Berlin. Lees meer: MILOSEVIC HUMAN RIGHTS
Who are the no.1 war criminals?
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