Diplomacy by Henry Kissinger

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: January 1994
  • 912pp
  • Sales Rank: 23,054
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 1994
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 912pp
    • Sales Rank: 23,054

    Synopsis

    THE SEMINAL WORK ON FOREIGN POLICY AND THE ART OF DIPLOMACY

    Moving from a sweeping overview of history to blow-by-blow accounts of his negotiations with world leaders, Henry Kissinger describes how the art of diplomacy has created the world in which we live, and how America's approach to foreign affairs has always differed vastly from that of other nations.

    Brilliant, controversial, and profoundly incisive, Diplomacy stands as the culmination of a lifetime of diplomatic service and scholarship. It is vital reading for anyone concerned with the forces that have shaped our world today and will impact upon it tomorrow.

    Annotation

    In a brilliant, controversial, and profoundly incisive book, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger explains the art of diplomacy and reveals why Americans have historically repudiated both the style and substance of diplomacy as it is practiced throughout the world. 30 pages of photos. QBPC Alternate.

    Publishers Weekly

    Kissinger maintains that the United States cannot dominate the emerging new world order but should rely instead on a balance of power built on security pacts and economic alliances. In this magisterial political history, the former National Security Advisor and Secretary of State draws lessons from the statecraft of Richelieu, Napoleon, Bismarck and Metternich, then shrewdly reappraises the foreign policy blunders and the failures of moral nerve and vision that led in our century to the mass carnage of two world wars, genocide, Cold War and a nuclear arms race. He limns striking portraits of Hitler craving war to fulfill his global ambitions, of Stalin, a ``supreme realist'' in international affairs, and of Franklin D. Roosevelt courageously steering an isolationist people into war. Kissinger defines Nixon's achievement as a refusal to abdicate America's global role, and he gives Reagan a large measure of credit for the collapse of the Soviet empire. While urging support for Russian liberalism, he stresses that the U.S. should simultaneously bolster obstacles to Russian expansionism, which neither Bush nor Clinton has done. Photos. BOMC and History Book Club main selections. (Apr.)

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    Biography

    Henry A. Kissinger has served as National Security Adviser and as Secretary of State and has received the Nobel Peace Prize, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the Medal of Liberty, among other awards. A former professor at Harvard and the author of many books, he lives in New York City.

    Customer Reviews

    Insightful and Worth the Timeby Anonymous

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    January 16, 2009: Written at the opening to the post-Cold War world, Henry Kissinger?s Diplomacy seeks to explore the coming of George H. W. Bush?s ?New World Order.? Official Washington in 1994, busy with an historic change in Congress, probably skipped to the book?s final chapter ?The New World Order Reconsidered? for insight by one of America?s most ?assertive, arrogant, and disdainful? people to lead the foreign service. Had they skipped ahead, they would have missed a master?s class on statecraft.

    The first half of Diplomacy is the story of how France, once an unrivaled leader in European affairs, transformed into the irrelevant actor most Americans recognize today.

    "Insecure about his purposes and indeed his legitimacy, [Napoleon III] relied on public opinion to bridge the gap. Napoleon conducted his foreign policy in the style of modern political leaders who measure their success by the reaction of the television evening news. Like them, Napoleon made himself a prisoner of the purely tactical, focusing on short-term objectives and immediate results, seeking to impress his public by magnifying the pressures he has set out to create. For in the end, it is reality, not publicity, that determines whether a leader has made a difference (136)."

    Napoleon III started France?s slide into irrelevance. By World War II, her foreign policy has become nearly schizophrenic. France feared a strong Germany. She was obsessed at the notion. And despite her best efforts to contain it, all of her moves made German unification all-the-more easy. Reduced to a protectorate of Great Britain and later NATO, France was psychologically incapable of standing alone.

    The second half of Diplomacy deals with Russia?s rise as a Super Power, and America?s policy of containment. Kissinger delivers tremendous, first-hand insight into Cold War policy, and Nixon?s intercourse with China.

    The most interested aspect of Kissinger?s work is the frequent lectures on foreign affairs. Throughout Diplomacy, Kissinger will deliver tremendous analysis on the subjects. Sometimes they are just quips, such as this one about Adolph Hitler?s real objectives.

    "In the 1930s, British leaders were too unsure about Hitler?s objectives and French leaders too unsure about themselves to act on the basis of assessment which they could not prove. The tuition fee for learning about Hitler?s true nature was tens of millions of graves stretching from one end of Europe to the other. On the other hand, had the democracies forced a showdown with Hitler early in his rule, historians would still be arguing about whether Hitler had been a misunderstood nationalist or a maniac bent on world domination (294)."

    Although thick, and at times dense, Diplomacy is worth the investment it takes to read 850 pages.

    An excellent read for the general reader...by Anonymous

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    September 26, 2008: Others seem to think Diplomacy hard to read because of the diction, but I don't find this to be true at all. Kissinger's premise, and it's one I find hard to fault, is that power relationships are ignored at your peril. Initially, I approached this book with a grain of salt, for I remember the author being at the heart of the decision to bomb Cambodia during the Vietnam War, with the catastrophic consequences that country suffered as a result [see 'Side-Show: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia' by William Shawcross 1979 EAN: 9780671426828] and frankly, I'm interested in what Kissinger has to say on that, if anything. In retrospect, it seems an impossible decision to defend, and in the context of our relations with Pakistan these days, relevant. However, I find Diplomacy to be thought-provoking and am thoroughly enjoying the read. Lots of good, solid substance to mull over in every chapter.


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