Description of Henry Kissinger's Years Of Renewal
Perhaps the best-known American diplomatist of
this century, Henry Kissinger is a major figure in world history, winner of the Nobel
Peace Prize, and arguably one of the most brilliant minds ever placed at the service of
American foreign policy, as well as one of the shrewdest, best-informed, and most
articulate figures ever to occupy a position of power in Washington.
The eagerly awaited third and final volume of his memoirs completes a major work of
contemporary history. It is at once an important historical document and a brilliantly
told narrative of almost Shakespearean intensity, full of startling insights, unusual (and
often unsparing) candor, and a sweeping sense of history. It begins with the resignation
of Richard Nixon -- including Kissinger's final assessment of Nixon's tortured personality
and the self-inflicted tragedy that ended his presidency and made Kissinger, for a time,
the most powerful man in American government, as well as an intimate and definitive
portrait of the man whom Kissinger knew perhaps more closely than anyone -- and then takes
the reader through the years of Gerald Ford's administration, in which Kissinger continued
to play a decisive role, both as Secretary of State and as the symbol of the continuity of
American foreign policy. It shows us a moving and admiring picture of President Ford as a
man of decency, shrewd judgment, courage, and decisiveness who led the country through a
period of renewal. Kissinger details the agony of the final U.S. extrication from Vietnam
-- with the rise of an increasingly hostile Congress determined to micromanage American
foreign policy and the evisceration of the American intelligence community and its
consequences for American power -- and takes us inside the White House to show our leaders
in a time of crisis.
Indeed, crisis is what this book abounds in: the fall of Cambodia and South Vietnam, the
Mayaguez incident and the conflict between Greece and Turkey over Cyprus, the origins of
the war in Lebanon -- above all the continuing crisis of the Cold War at its perilous
height. Here are brilliant scenes, as only an insider could write them, of the shaping of
American foreign policy in the Ford era: the famous shuttle diplomacy by which Kissinger
brought a wary Yitzhak Rabin and Anwar Sadat together to begin the return of the Sinai to
Egypt and usher in the final reconciliation of Egypt and Israel, the Vladivostok meeting
with Leonid Brezhnev that advanced the process of nuclear limitation, the uneasy dialogue
with China, the tragedy of the Kurds, the search for European security and freedom -- all
the major decisions, conferences, and crises that shaped the world we live in, and that
still, in many cases, remain major areas of engagement for the United States.
Kissinger recounts in detail his visits to Africa, which led to major initiatives in
Southern Africa, including the historic decision of the white settler government of
Rhodesia to accept majority rule, and tells the story of U.S. policy in the Americas,
including revealing accounts of policies toward Cuba and Chile in the 1970s.
Above all, here are intimate, candid, and sharply intelligent portraits of world leaders,
from Mao Zedong teasing Kissinger with a characterist mixture of brutality and acerbic
subtlety, to Leonid Brezhnev, confused, unwell, desperately trying to conceal the Soviet
Union's growing difficulties with a facade of blustering bravado, as well as a galaxy of
European, Middle Eastern, Asian, Latin American, and African leaders.
Here is a work of scholarship, wisdom, and history, written not by desk-bound academic
historian, but by the man who shaped much the history about which he writes, and who
perhaps more than any other helped to form the post-Cold War world in which we live, and
define America's relationship to the world as the last superpower.
No work of history about the Cold War or the inner workings of government and diplomacy is
as revealing, thought-provoking, and far-reaching as this. Years of Renewal is the
triumphant conclusion of a major achievement and a book that will stand the test of time
as a historical document of the first rank.
From Kirkus Reviews,
With this volume Kissinger concludes what may be the greatest memoir
ever written by an American statesman (White House Years, 1979; Years of Upheaval, 1982).
It is a tribute to the quality of his narrative that the reader is often entranced by the
personalities and diplomatic maneuverings of the Ford administration, a quarter of a
century ago. Of course, Kissinger does not always resist the temptation to be more
prescient than he was at the time. Thus the statesman, who discerned in 1977 that we faced
the stark reality that the [communist] challenge is unending, reports on going to Moscow
several years earlier that one could not but gain the impression that the whole
elaborately constructed stage set was precarious and might collapse at any moment. Not
surprisingly, we also see more of the good Henry, charitable in his judgments, even of
bureaucratic enemies, and open in his methods, than the bad Henry (Trust does not come to
me spontaneously). But the performance is always a bravura one: there is hardly a page
without a wise observation or maxim of statecraft, or a characterization full of insight,
including masterful sketches of Nixon, Ford, Mao, Helmut Schmidt, and a host of other
leaders. There is just one point at which the tone, wise, avuncular, witty, and
epigrammatic changes dramatically, and that is on the withdrawal of the US from Vietnam.
Kissinger argues with anguished passion that those in Congress who called for US
withdrawal welshed on their commitment to provide aid to the South Vietnamese when the US
left; that the US abandonment was shameful; that it led to genocide and tragedy in Vietnam
and Cambodia; and that it deeply injured the reputation and the interests of the US
throughout the world. Enough time may now have elapsed for the truth of these observations
to be more widely acknowledged. A brilliant, masterly, even seminal book.
-- Copyright ©1919, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
The New York Times Book Review, John Lewis Gaddis
...Kissinger has produced the memoirist's equivalent of a battleship,
intimidating in appearance, heavy with armor and bristling with armaments, equipped to
fire salvos at past critics while launching pre-emptive strikes against histories as yet
unwritten. It is, by any standard, a remarkable achievement.
The Wall Street Journal, Josef Joffe
Years of Renewal is an engrossing book, truly hard to put down, at
least for aficionados of U.S. foreign policy. That is one excellent reason for reading it.
The second is precisely the 25-year hiatus. Time has improved the product in subtle ways.
The New York Times, Richard Bernstein
...a distinguished and important work.... Kissinger's history of his
own time in office is a work whose breadth, clarity of vision and historical scope amply
justify its size. It is an event, a likely classic of its genre.
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