The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kissinger, former adviser to U.S. presidents, turns 100

Ex-diplomat known for role in American politics of ’60s, ’70s.

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Former diplomat and presidenti­al adviser Henry Kissinger marked his 100th birthday Saturday, outlasting many of his political contempora­ries who guided the United States through one of its most tumultuous periods including the presidency of Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War.

Born in Germany on May 27, 1923, Kissinger remains known for his key role in American foreign policy of the 1960s and 1970s including eventual attempts to pull the U.S. out of Vietnam, but not before he became inextricab­ly linked to many of the conflict’s most disputed actions.

David Kissinger, writing in The Washington Post on Thursday, said his father’s centenary “might have an air of inevitabil­ity for anyone familiar with his force of character and love of historical symbolism. Not only has he outlived most of his peers, eminent detractors and students, but he has also remained indefatiga­bly active throughout his 90s.”

The elder Kissinger will celebrate this week with visits to New York, London and his hometown of Fürth, Germany, David Kissinger wrote.

In recent years Kissinger has continued to hold sway over Washington’s power brokers as an elder statesman. He has provided advice to Republican and Democratic presidents, including the White House during the Trump administra­tion, while maintainin­g an internatio­nal consulting business through which he delivers speeches in the German accent he has not lost since fleeing the Nazi regime with his family when he was a teenager.

During eight years as a national security adviser and secretary of state, Kissinger was involved in major foreign policy events including the first example of “shuttle diplomacy” seeking Middle East peace, secret negotiatio­ns with China to defrost relations between the burgeoning superpower­s and the instigatio­n of the Paris peace talks seeking an end to the Vietnam conflict and the U.S. military’s presence there.

Kissinger, along with Nixon, also bore the brunt of criticism from American allies when North Vietnamese communist forces took Saigon in 1975 as the remaining U.S. personnel fled what is now known as Ho Chi Minh City.

Kissinger additional­ly was accused of orchestrat­ing the expansion of the conflict into Laos and Cambodia, enabling the rise of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime that killed an estimated 2 million Cambodians.

Among his endorsemen­ts, Kissinger was recognized as a central driver in the period of detente, a diplomatic effort between the U.S. and the Soviet Union beginning in 1967 through 1979 to reduce Cold War tensions with trade and arms negotiatio­ns including the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks treaties.

Kissinger remained one of Nixon’s most trusted advisers through his administra­tion from 1969 to 1974, his power only growing through the Watergate affair that brought down the 37th president.

Gerald Ford, who as vice president ascended to the Oval Office following his predecesso­r’s resignatio­n, awarded Kissinger the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 1977, saying Kissinger “wielded America’s great power with wisdom and compassion in the service of peace.”

 ?? AP 2017 ?? Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, now a centenaria­n, has outlasted many of his political contempora­ries and has continued to hold sway over Washington’s power brokers as an elder statesman.
AP 2017 Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, now a centenaria­n, has outlasted many of his political contempora­ries and has continued to hold sway over Washington’s power brokers as an elder statesman.

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