The Mercury News

Tributes pour in for Brzezinski

Foreign policy expert, national security adviser dies at 89

- By Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON — Well before he went to the White House in 1977, Jimmy Carter was impressed by the views of foreign policy expert Zbigniew Brzezinski. That Carter immediatel­y liked the Polish-born academic advising his campaign was a plus.

“He was inquisitiv­e, innovative and a natural choice as my national security adviser when I became president,” Carter said in a statement following Brzezinski’s death Friday.

“He helped me set vital foreign policy goals, was a source of stimulatio­n for the department­s of defense and state, and everyone valued his opinion,” Carter said. “He played an essential role in all the key foreign policy events of my administra­tion.”

Earnest and ambitious, Brzezinski helped Carter bridge wide gaps between the rigid Egyptian and Israeli leaders, Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin, leading to the Camp David accords in September 1978. Three months later, U.S.-China relations were normalized, a priority for Brzezinski.

He also had a hand in two other controvers­ial agreements: the SALT II nuclear weapons treaty with the Soviet Union and the Panama Canal treaties ceding U.S. control of the waterway.

“He was brilliant, dedicated and loyal,” said Carter, who awarded Brzezinski the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom days before leaving office in 1981.

Brzezinski’s death at age 89 was announced on social media Friday night by his daughter, MSNBC host Mika Brzezinski. She called him “the most inspiring, loving and devoted father any girl could ever have.” Also surviving Brzezinski were his wife, Emilie, and their sons Ian and Mark.

“His influence spanned several decades,” former President Barack Obama said in a statement Saturday, “and I was one of several presidents who benefited from his wisdom and counsel. You always knew where Zbig stood, and his ideas and advocacy helped shape decades of American national security policy.”

To former President George H.W. Bush, Brzezinski’s “command of foreign affairs made him both an instrument­al architect of key policies — and an influentia­l voice in key policy debates.”

In Poland, Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykow­ski said the world “has lost an outstandin­g intellectu­al, an experience­d and effective diplomat who was also a noble person and a proud Pole.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVE ?? President Jimmy Carter shakes hands with his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, as he presents Brzezinski with the Medal of Freedom in 1981.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVE President Jimmy Carter shakes hands with his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, as he presents Brzezinski with the Medal of Freedom in 1981.

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