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美国国务卿基辛格 贡献

(2023-12-01 05:22:58) 下一个

基辛格去世:曾主导美国对华开放,一生毁誉参半

DAVID E. SANGER  

基辛格,摄于1979年。他试图在危险而动荡的世界局势中实现并维持大国力量的平衡。

 

根据其官方网站上发布的声明,亨利·基辛格于周三去世,享年100岁。这位学者出身的外交官策划了美国对中国的开放,是美国从越南撤出的谈判人,在“冷战”最激烈之时,凭借狡黠、野心和智慧重塑了美国与苏联的权力关系,有时不惜为此践踏民主价值。

他在康涅狄格州的家中去世。
 
很少有外交官能像基辛格那样毁誉都如此强烈。他被认为是“二战”后权力最大的美国国务卿,时而被赞颂为一个为美国利益重塑外交政策的终极务实者,时而又被谴责在自认为有利于国家时会抛弃美国价值观,特别是在人权问题方面。
 
从肯尼迪到拜登,他为12任总统——占到美国迄今所有总统的四分之一以上——担任过顾问。凭借对外交历史的深刻理解,加之作为德国犹太裔难民在第二故乡出人头地的动力、内心充满的不安全感,以及有时为其发言平添难解元素的终生难改的巴伐利亚乡音,基辛格改变了几乎一切有他参与的全球关系格局。
 
在美国历史和外交的一个关键期,他的权力仅次于总统尼克松。他于1969年1月进入尼克松政府担任国家安全顾问,并在1973年被委任国务卿之后罕见地保留了这两个头衔。尼克松辞职后,他继续在总统福特手下任职。
 
基辛格与当时所谓“红色中国”的秘密谈判为尼克松最著名的外交政策成就奠定了基础。这一“冷战”时期的决定性举措目的是为了孤立苏联,它为全球最复杂的外交关系开辟了道路,到基辛格去世时,美中两国已是全球第一和第二大的经济体,它们在完全交织一处的同时,又在新“冷战”的阴影下龃龉不断。
 
1972年11月,时值越南战争期间,基辛格在纽约与尼克松总统会面,当时他刚从巴黎返回美国,在那里,他与北越代表黎德寿进行了秘密谈判。
1972年11月,时值越南战争期间,基辛格在纽约与尼克松总统会面,当时他刚从巴黎返回美国,在那里,他与北越代表黎德寿进行了秘密谈判。 
 
几十年来,在美国应对中国崛起及其带来的经济、军事和技术挑战的问题上,基辛格始终是最重要的声音。他是唯一一位与从毛泽东到习近平的每一位中国领导人都打过交道的美国人。今年5月,年逾百岁的他在北京与习近平和其他中国领导人会面,尽管中美关系已转向敌对,但他仍受到了尊贵礼遇。
 
他说服苏联加入了后来被称为“缓和政策”的谈判,促成了两国第一项重大核武器限制条约的签署。通过穿梭外交,他让莫斯科在中东失去了主导地位,但还是未能促成该地区更广泛的和平。
 
经过在巴黎的多年会谈,他促成了美国结束介入越南战争的和平协议,并因此同获1973年的诺贝尔和平奖。他称之为“光荣的和平”,但事实证明战争远未到终结之时,批评人士认为,他本可早几年达成同样的协议,挽救成千上万的生命。
在不到两年时间里,北越就吞并了美国支持的南越。这是令美国蒙羞的结果,而基辛格从一开始就曾对美国能否赢得这场冲突提出了质疑。
在他的批评者看来,共产党的胜利是一种损人利己政策的必然结果,该政策的目的是在美国从越南撤军后创造一些缓冲的空间,让局势不至于立刻急转。事实上,基辛格1971年秘密访华时曾在笔记空白处草草写道,“我们需要一个恰当的间歇期”,暗示他的目的不过是推迟西贡的陷落。
等到间歇期结束,美国人已经放弃了越南计划,不再相信美国的战略利益与越南的命运挂钩。
1973年1月,基辛格在巴黎与北越外交官黎德寿亮相。他们的谈判达成了美国在越南停火的协议,两人共同获得了1973年的诺贝尔和平奖。但黎德寿拒绝领奖。
1973年1月,基辛格在巴黎与北越外交官黎德寿亮相。他们的谈判达成了美国在越南停火的协议,两人共同获得了1973年的诺贝尔和平奖。但黎德寿拒绝领奖。 ASSOCIATED PRESS
正如越南发生的一切所揭示的那样,历史对基辛格“冷战”现实主义的评价比当时他得到的普遍描绘要更为严苛。由于着眼于大国竞争,他经常倾向于粗暴的马基雅维利主义,特别是在与小国打交道时,他总将这些国家视为更宏大斗争中的棋子。
他是尼克松政府推翻智利社会主义者、民选总统萨尔瓦多·阿连德的主谋。
他被指控违反国际法,下令在1969年至1970年对柬埔寨秘密进行了地毯式轰炸,这是对一个表面中立国家的不宣而战。
他的目的是铲除在柬埔寨边境的基地活动的越共军队,但轰炸本身是无差别攻击:基辛格告诉军方要打击“一切能飞能动的东西”。至少有5万平民被杀。
1971年,当美国支持的巴基斯坦军队在东巴基斯坦(现在的孟加拉国)发动种族灭绝战争时,基辛格和尼克松不仅无视了美国驻东巴基斯坦领事馆停止屠杀的请求,还批准向巴基斯坦运送武器,其中包括转交约旦的10架战斗轰炸机这一显然违法的举动。
基辛格和尼克松另有优先事项:支持巴基斯坦总统,让其成为基辛格当时向中国秘密示好的中间人。而这同样造成惨重伤亡:东巴基斯坦至少有30万人丧生,还有1000万难民被赶到印度。
1975年,基辛格和福特总统秘密批准让美国支持的印尼军队入侵前葡萄牙殖民地东帝汶。在输掉越战后,美国担心东帝汶的左派政府也将由共产党控制。
根据福特总统图书馆的解密文件,基辛格曾向印尼总统表示,行动必须迅速取得成功,并且“在我们回国之后进行会更好”。超过10万东帝汶人被杀或饿死。
基辛格对这些举措遭致的批评进行了反驳,称批评者并不像他那样需要面对无数糟糕选择。但他试图用嘲讽段子平息批评的努力适得其反。
“做违法的事我们不假思索,”他不止一次打趣道。“做违宪的事要稍微考虑一下。”
基辛格至少在一项可能造成灾难性后果的决策上扭转了原有的立场。
早在上世纪50年代中期还是一名年轻的哈佛大学教授的时候,他就提出了有限核战争的概念,即可以限制在特定区域的核交火。他在任职期间就核威慑问题投入了大量努力,例如让对手相信发动核打击必将付出不可接受的高昂代价。
但他后来承认,阻止有限核战争的升级或许是不可能任务。晚年的他有保留地接受了一项逐步消除所有核武器的新努力,在95岁那年,他又开始对人工智能武器崛起所引发的动荡发出警告。
“在人生所剩无几的时间里,我能做的就是提出这些问题,”他在2018年说,“我不假装自己知道答案。”
直到生命的最后,基辛格仍然保持了深远的影响力。在那些曾经追随他的国家安全助手的白宫西翼办公室书架上,仍能找到他关于应对中国崛起的最新著作,整整600页掺杂着自夸轶事的历史大作《论中国》(On China,2011年)。
举足轻重的九旬老人
在进入尼克松政府任职的50年后,共和党候选人仍在寻求基辛格的支持,总统们也都争取他的认可。哪怕是特朗普也会在痛斥共和党建制派之后,于2016年竞选期间拜访他,期盼仅凭征询基辛格建议的姿态就能彰显自己是个正经人物。(这让《纽约客》创作了一幅漫画,画中基辛格头上的台词框里写着:“我想念尼克松”。)
当《纽约时报》记者提及特朗普说不出他从此次会面汲取的任何新想法或举措时,基辛格对此一笑。“他不是第一个听不懂或不想听懂我在说什么的建议对象,”他说。尽管如此,特朗普在任内仍将基辛格视为与中国领导层接触的秘密渠道。
2017年5月,基辛格在白宫与特朗普总统会面。特朗普曾在2016年竞选期间拜访过他。
2017年5月,基辛格在白宫与特朗普总统会面。特朗普曾在2016年竞选期间拜访过他。 DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES
奥巴马总统则没那么倚仗他,基辛格进入白宫任职时奥巴马年仅8岁。奥巴马在即将卸任总统时指出,他任内的大部分时间都在致力于修复基辛格留下的世界。他将基辛格的失败视作一种警示。
“我们在柬埔寨和老挝投下的炮弹比欧洲在‘二战’经历的炮火还要多,”奥巴马在2016年接受《大西洋月刊》的采访时说,“但到最后,尼克松撤军了,基辛格去了巴黎,留给世界的只有混乱、屠杀和随着时间推移终于从地狱里爬出来的专制政府。”
奥巴马说,他在总统任内仍需努力帮助各国“拆除仍在炸断小孩双腿的炸弹”。
“这种战略怎么可能促进我国的利益呢?”他说。
美国现代史上很少有人物能像基辛格这样,在如此漫长的时间里保持着举足轻重的影响力。年近百岁的他仍在演讲和写作,并对向他咨询地缘政治分析的客户收取天价费用。
虽然出现在他演讲现场的抗议者减少了,但只要他的名字出现,就可能引发激烈争论。在仰慕者看来,他是“美利坚治世”(Pax Americana)的杰出设计师,是愿意颠覆棋局并为美国外交注入某种不可预测性的运筹高手。
对他的批评者,甚至还有一些友人和前雇员来说,他虚荣、阴险、傲慢且暴躁,能在赞美某位高级助手不可或缺的同时,反手就命令联邦调查局非法窃听此人的住宅电话,看他是否向媒体泄露了信息。
具有讽刺意味的是,两代记者都知道,如果他们想要寻找泄密者——通常是为了自身利益而泄密——基辛格这位泄密艺术的大师正是一个现成的来源。“如果本届政府中有人泄密,那就是我,”他说。他正是这样做的,而且泄密非常多。
基辛格在1957年写了一本充满赞美之词的书,分析了奥地利亲王克莱门斯·冯·梅特涅在后拿破仑时代领导奥地利帝国所创造的世界秩序,这本书某种程度上也是他的自我描述,尤其是在谈到一位领导人让各国服从自己意志的能力时。
“他擅长操纵,而不是构建,”基辛格这样评价梅特涅。“比起正面攻击,他更喜欢巧妙的策略。”
这种风格在尼克松时代的水门事件中得到了体现。日益孤立无援的尼克松经常向基辛格——这位他政府中永不褪色的明星——寻求安慰,并让他讲述自己最伟大的成就。
基辛格乐于效劳。水门事件录音带显示,基辛格好几个小时聆听总统的长篇大论,其中包括后者对这位犹太国务卿发表的反犹言论,这让基辛格感到丢脸。基辛格经常以奉承回应总统的话,然而回到办公室后,他向最亲密的同事讲述尼克松的奇怪行为时会翻白眼。
泄密和偏执
基辛格没有卷入水门事件。然而,白宫窃贼闯入民主党全国委员会办公室,以及政府试图掩盖罪行的行为,都源于一种怀疑和保密的文化,许多人认为,基辛格在这种文化的形成中起到了作用。
1969年春,上任后不久,他对时报一篇关于柬埔寨轰炸行动报道背后的泄密事件感到非常愤怒,下令联邦调查局窃听十几名白宫助手的电话,其中包括他自己的工作人员。录音中没有发现元凶。
1971年,《纽约时报》和《华盛顿邮报》公布了五角大楼文件,这同样让他感到愤怒。这些机密文件记录了政府在越南的战争政策和计划,在他看来,泄露这些文件危及了他那些面对面的秘密外交。他的不满促使白宫组建了私闯小组,也就是后来进入水门大厦民主党总部的那个负责封堵泄密消息的“管道工”小组。
 NEWSWEEK 1974
1974年8月,正在接受弹劾和辞职之间举棋不定的尼克松把基辛格拉进了白宫历史上最戏剧化的时刻之一。在告诉基辛格他打算辞职后,心急如焚的尼克松要求他的国务卿和他一起跪在林肯会客厅外默祷。
然而,随着尼克松在水门事件中陷得更深,基辛格获得了他的继任者很少能匹敌的全球声望。
助手们形容他的洞察力过人,脾气暴躁。他们讲述基辛格盛怒之下把书从办公室一头扔过来的故事,还有他的控制欲,这甚至导致他最忠实的同事也不信任他。
沃尔特·艾萨克森在1992年出版的传记《基辛格》(Kissinger)中写道,“在与他人打交道时,他会通过操纵他们的敌对情绪来建立联盟和阴谋关系。”
1971年访问北京期间,基辛格与助手温斯顿·洛德在起草公报途中消遣了一番。
1971年访问北京期间,基辛格与助手温斯顿·洛德在起草公报途中消遣了一番。 WHITE HOUSE PHOTO OFFICE COLLECTION
“他的对手对他有一种强迫性的吸引力,他会通过奉承、哄骗和挑拨对手来获得他们的认可,”艾萨克森观察到。“他特别擅长与有权势的人打交道,因为他可以调动这些人的思想。作为纳粹大屠杀受害者的后代和研究拿破仑时代治国方略的学者,他深知伟人和强大的力量才是塑造世界的关键,他也知道,人格和政策永远不可能完全分离。他很自然地把秘密作为一种控制手段。他对权力关系和平衡有着本能的感觉,无论是心理上的还是地缘战略上的。”
到了晚年,当他强硬的棱角已被磨平,旧日的竞争已经消退,或与他昔日的对手一起被埋葬,基辛格有时会谈论他所塑造的全球秩序的相对危险性,以及他的继任者面临的一个更加混乱的世界。
他所驾驭的超级大国之间的冲突从根本上说是简单的,虽然非常可怕;他从来没有处理过基地组织或伊斯兰国这样的恐怖组织,也没有处理过各国利用社交媒体操纵公众舆论、利用网络攻击破坏电网和通信的世界。
“冷战更加危险,”2016年,基辛格在纽约历史学会露面时说。“双方都不惜发动一场全面核战争。”但是,他补充说,“今天的情况更加复杂。”
与他试图策划的冷和平相比,大国冲突已发生了巨大变化。它不再关乎意识形态,而是纯粹关乎权力。他说,最让他担心的是与“崛起的大国”中国发生冲突的前景,因为中国正在挑战美国的实力。
相比之下,俄罗斯是“一个衰落的国家”,不再“有能力统治世界”,2016年他在康涅狄格州肯特接受时报采访时说。他在那里拥有第二个居所。
然而,他警告不要低估俄罗斯领导人普京。他在谈及希特勒那部自传式宣言时说:“要想理解普京,人们必须读陀思妥耶夫斯基,而不是《我的奋斗》。他认为俄罗斯被骗了,而我们一直在占俄罗斯的便宜。”
俄罗斯的威胁减小,对基辛格来说会有些成就感。毕竟,是他与莫斯科签署了第一份战略武器协议,并引导美国接受了1975年签署的《赫尔辛基协议》,这是一份关于欧洲安全的协议,为苏联集团的异见人士获得了一些表达权利。回想起来,这是一颗水滴,众多这样的水滴汇聚起来,成为冲垮苏联共产主义的江河。
社交界名人
在权力的巅峰时期,基辛格在华盛顿的形象是他之后的外交官中还没有可与之匹敌的。常有人在乔治城和巴黎看到这名戴着书呆子般黑框眼镜、个子又矮又胖的哈佛教授手臂上挽着年轻女演员,他曾开玩笑地说,“权力是最好的春药”。
在纽约的餐馆里与女演员吉尔·圣约翰一起吃饭时,基辛格会拉着她的手、或用手指梳理她的头发,让八卦专栏的作家们得以大显身手。但事实上,正如圣约翰告诉传记作者的那样,虽然两人的关系很亲密,但那是柏拉图式的。
与其他女性的关系也如此。一名曾与基辛格约会的女子和他一起回到他在华盛顿岩溪公园边上租的小公寓,公寓里有两张单人床,一张是睡觉用的,另一张上堆满了要洗的衣服,该女子对记者说,屋里非常乱,还有助手在场,“不是你能做任何浪漫事的地方,即使你非常想做。”
华盛顿的一个笑话是,基辛格大肆张扬自己的私生活,是为了隐瞒他在办公室里做的事情。
需要隐瞒的事情有很多,尤其是在北京进行的为尼克松访华开路的秘密会议。美国转向中国的做法最终公开后,不仅改变了美国的外交战略考量,也震惊了美国的盟友。
“如果没有亨利,几乎无法想象美国与世界上最重要的崛起大国的关系今天会是什么样子,”哈佛大学教授格雷厄姆·艾利森在2016年接受采访时说,他曾在基辛格手下工作。
基辛格的其他努力有好坏参半的结果。1973年的赎罪日战争结束后,他通过不懈的穿梭外交,成功说服了埃及与以色列开始直接谈判,为两国后来达成和平协议打开了契机。
但基辛格最重要的外交贡献,也许是他将莫斯科排除在中东事务之外长达40年,直到普京2015年下令俄罗斯空军介入叙利亚内战。
基辛格最大的失败之处是他对小国人民的民主斗争似乎漠不关心。一个小时候被纳粹的崛起赶出祖国的人,似乎对非洲、拉丁美洲、印度尼西亚以及其他地方的政府侵犯人权的行为漠不关心,这令人惊奇。尼克松的椭圆形办公室录音显示,基辛格更关心的是让盟友们留在反共阵营里,而不是他们如何对待自己的人民。
几十年来,他一直在为指责他对侵犯人权行为视而不见的指控辩护,但往往难以令人信服。最糟糕的指控是他发给巴基斯坦政府的信号让后者认为,可以用其认为合适的方式随便对付东巴基斯坦的孟加拉人。
普林斯顿大学的学者加里·巴斯2013年出版的《沾满鲜血的电报:尼克松、基辛格和一场被遗忘的种族灭绝》(The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide)一书中描述了基辛格无视即将发生种族灭绝的警告,包括来自美国驻东巴基斯坦总领事阿切尔·布拉德的警告,基辛格还以以不忠为由惩罚了布拉德。
巴斯写道,在椭圆形办公室的录音中,“基辛格嘲笑那些担心‘孟加拉人正在死去’的人‘可怜’。”
基辛格与安·弗莱舍的婚姻持续了15年,两人在1964年离婚。1974年与南希·马金尼斯结婚后,基辛格搬进了妻子位于曼哈顿的家。马金尼斯当时在纽约州前州长纳尔逊·洛克菲勒手下工作,洛克菲勒也是基辛格的朋友和盟友。
基辛格离开政府部门后再也没回大学教书。但他继续以令他以前的学术同事们尴尬的速度写作。
他写了共计3800页的三卷回忆录:《白宫岁月》(The White House Years)主要是讲尼克松的第一个任期(1969到1973年),《动乱年代》(Years of Upheaval)讲的是接下来的两年,最后一卷《复兴岁月》(Years of Renewal)覆盖了福特总统的任期。他2014年出版的《世界秩序》(World Order)可以说是对21世纪第二个十年地缘政治的告别评估。他在书中表达了对美国领导能力的担忧。
“在两代人的时间里撤出了三场战争之后,美国正在努力定义其(仍然庞大的)权力与其原则的关系,这三场战争每次都以理想主义的抱负和广泛的公众支持开始,但都以国家的创伤结束,”他写道。
基辛格继续对世界事务行使影响力,通过他的公司基辛格事务所为企业和高管提供有关国际趋势和即将出现的困难的建议。迪士尼试图说服中国领导层同意它在上海建一座投资55亿美元的游乐园时,基辛格接到了电话。
“亨利无疑是美国近代历史上最复杂的人物之一,”基辛格咨询公司的前董事总经理戴维·罗斯科普夫说。“我认为,他受到媒体和公众的注意是有理由的,不仅因为他非凡的才华和能力,也因为他明显的缺点。”
向中国敞开大门
1968年,基辛格为纳尔逊·洛克菲勒撰写竞选演讲稿时,他在其中写了一段话,设想“与共产主义中国和苏联的微妙三角关系”。他写道,这一战略将使美国“在检验中苏和平意愿时,改善与两国的关系”。
第二年,他得到了检验这一论断的机会。中苏军队在边界争端中发生冲突,苏联驻华盛顿大使阿纳托利·多勃雷宁在与基辛格会面时,坦率地谈到了“遏制”中国的重要性。尼克松指示基辛格向北京秘密示好。
这对尼克松来说是一个显著的转变。作为坚定的反共人士,长期以来,他与所谓的中国问题游说集团关系密切,该集团反对毛泽东在北京领导的共产党政府。他还认为,在与南越及其美国盟友的战争中,北越在很大程度上充当了中国的卫星国。
尼克松和基辛格秘密接触了巴基斯坦领导人叶海亚·汗,让他充当中间人。1970年12月,巴基斯坦驻华盛顿大使向基辛格转达了信使从伊斯兰堡捎来的信息,它来自中国总理周恩来:北京欢迎尼克松总统的特使。
这导致了后来著名的乒乓外交。美国乒乓球队的一名年轻队员在日本参加锦标赛时结识了一名中国选手。中国领导层显然认为,美国选手的姿态是基辛格发出的另一个信号。美国队被邀请到北京,在那里,周恩来告诉队员,“你们在中美两国人民的关系上打开了新篇章”,这让他们大吃一惊。
在接下来的两个月里,双方就总统访问的可能性交换了信息。然后,1971年6月2日,基辛格通过巴基斯坦的联系又收到了通知,邀请他到北京为尼克松的访问做准备。在白宫的晚宴上,基辛格把尼克松拉到一边,宣布:“这是‘二战’结束以来,美国总统收到的最重要的信件。”
总统找到了一瓶昂贵的白兰地,两个人举杯庆祝胜利。三年后,在同一间屋子里,他们痛苦地一同下跪。
1971年,基辛格与中国总理周恩来。在与周恩来进行了两天共17个小时的会谈后,他安排了尼克松总统历史性的访华行程。
1971年,基辛格与中国总理周恩来。在与周恩来进行了两天共17个小时的会谈后,他安排了尼克松总统历史性的访华行程。 HENRY KISSINGER ARCHIVES/LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
1971年7月,基辛格开始了所谓的亚洲调研之旅。在巴基斯坦,记者们获悉,国务卿身体不适,将在一处山间别墅休养几天。一支车队很快向山上出发了。但这是一个诱饵;基辛格实际上带着三名助手飞去了中国。
2014年,他在接受哈佛大学国务卿项目的采访时回忆说,在北京,他向周恩来做了情况介绍,最后说,作为美国人,“我们发现自己身处一片神秘之地”。周恩来打断了他。“我们有9亿人,”他说,“这对我们来说并不神秘。”
敲定细节花了三天时间,在基辛格用电报把暗号“尤里卡”发给尼克松之后,总统在没有任何预警的情况下,在电视上宣布了基辛格的安排。他的敌人——苏联人、北越人、民主党人、他的自由派批评者——都惊呆了。1972年2月21日,他成为第一位访问中国大陆的美国总统。
中国人也有点震惊。毛泽东在一个月内就把周恩来排挤到一边。“从那以后,没有哪个中国人再提起周恩来,”基辛格对哈佛大学的项目说。他推测,毛泽东担心他的二把手“对我个人过于友好”。
多年后,基辛格对这一成就的看法更加克制。
他在《论中国》一书中写道,“考虑到当时的必要性,中美将不可避免地找到一条走到一起的道路。”他指的是两国的国内冲突,以及抵制苏联推进的共同利益。但他也坚称,他并不是在寻求孤立俄罗斯,而是在进行一场权力均衡政治的大实验。“我们的观点是,”他写道,“三角关系的存在本身就是对各方的一种压力。”
历史学家仍在争论这种做法是否奏效。但毫无疑问,这让基辛格成为了国际名人。它也被证明是至关重要的,其原因是基辛格50年前从未考虑过的——中国将会崛起,成为美国唯一真正的经济、技术和军事竞争对手。

Michael T. Kaufman对本文有报道贡献。他于2010年去世,生前是时报记者和编辑。

David E. Sanger报道拜登政府和国家安全。他在时报任职超过40年,著有数本关于美国国家安全挑战的书。点击查看更多关于他的信息。

翻译:纽约时报中文网

 

Henry Kissinger Is Dead at 100; Shaped the Nation’s Cold War History

The most powerful secretary of state of the postwar era, he was both celebrated and reviled. His complicated legacy still resonates in relations with China, Russia and the Middle East.

 
 

A color portrait of Henry A. Kissinger in a dark suit jacket, white shirt and striped tie, his right hand pressed against his chin. A wall map of the world fills the space behind him.

Henry A. Kissinger in 1979. He sought to strike and maintain balances of power in a dangerously precarious world.Credit...Neil Leifer/Sports Illustrated, via Getty Images

By David E. Sanger

David E. Sanger covers the White House and national security. He interviewed Henry Kissinger many times and traveled to Europe, Asia and the Middle East to examine his upbringing and legacy.

Henry A. Kissinger, the scholar-turned-diplomat who engineered the United States’ opening to China, negotiated its exit from Vietnam, and used cunning, ambition and intellect to remake American power relationships with the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War, sometimes trampling on democratic values to do so, died on Wednesday at his home in Kent, Conn. He was 100.

His death was announced in a statement by his consulting firm.

Few diplomats have been both celebrated and reviled with such passion as Mr. Kissinger. Considered the most powerful secretary of state in the post-World War II era, he was by turns hailed as an ultrarealist who reshaped diplomacy to reflect American interests and denounced as having abandoned American values, particularly in the arena of human rights, if he thought it served the nation’s purposes.

He advised 12 presidents — more than a quarter of those who have held the office — from John F. Kennedy to Joseph R. Biden Jr. With a scholar’s understanding of diplomatic history, a German-Jewish refugee’s drive to succeed in his adopted land, a deep well of insecurity and a lifelong Bavarian accent that sometimes added an indecipherable element to his pronouncements, he transformed almost every global relationship he touched.

At a critical moment in American history and diplomacy, he was second in power only to President Richard M. Nixon. He joined the Nixon White House in January 1969 as national security adviser and, after his appointment as secretary of state in 1973, kept both titles, a rarity. When Nixon resigned, he stayed on under President Gerald R. Ford.

 

Mr. Kissinger’s secret negotiations with what was then still called Red China led to Nixon’s most famous foreign policy accomplishment. Intended as a decisive Cold War move to isolate the Soviet Union, it carved a pathway for the most complex relationship on the globe, between countries that at Mr. Kissinger’s death were the world’s largest (the United States) and second-largest economies, completely intertwined and yet constantly at odds as a new Cold War loomed.

 
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Mr. Kissinger with President Richard M. Nixon in New York in November 1972 after Mr. Kissinger returned from secret negotiations in Paris with the North Vietnamese negotiator, Le Duc Tho, during the Vietnam War.Credit...Associated Press

For decades he remained the country’s most important voice on managing China’s rise, and the economic, military and technological challenges it posed. He was the only American to deal with every Chinese leader from Mao to Xi Jinping. In July, at age 100, he met Mr. Xi and other Chinese leaders in Beijing, where he was treated like visiting royalty even as relations with Washington had turned adversarial.

He drew the Soviet Union into a dialogue that became known as détente, leading to the first major nuclear arms control treaties between the two nations. With his shuttle diplomacy, he edged Moscow out of its standing as a major power in the Middle East, but failed to broker a broader peace in that region.

Over years of meetings in Paris, he negotiated the peace accords that ended the American involvement in the Vietnam War, an achievement for which he shared the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize. He called it “peace with honor,” but the war proved far from over, and critics argued that he could have made the same deal years earlier, saving thousands of lives.

 

Within two years, North Vietnam had overrun the American-backed South. It was a humiliating end to a conflict that from the beginning Mr. Kissinger had doubted the United States could ever win.

To his detractors, the Communist victory was the inevitable conclusion of a cynical policy that had been intended to create some space between the American withdrawal from Vietnam and whatever came next. Indeed, in the margins of the notes for his secret trip to China in 1971, Mr. Kissinger scribbled, “We want a decent interval,” suggesting he simply sought to postpone the fall of Saigon.

But by the time that interval was over, Americans had given up on the Vietnam project, no longer convinced that the United States’ strategic interests were linked to that country’s fate.

 
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Mr. Kissinger with the North Vietnamese diplomat Le Duc Tho in January 1973 in Paris. Their negotiations led to a deal to end the American war in Vietnam, and both men shared the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize, though Mr. Tho declined to accept it.Credit...Associated Press

As was the case with Vietnam, history has judged some of his Cold War realism in a harsher light than it was generally portrayed at the time. With an eye fixed on the great power rivalry, he was often willing to be crudely Machiavellian, especially when dealing with smaller nations that he often regarded as pawns in the greater battle.

 

He was the architect of the Nixon administration’s efforts to topple Chile’s democratically elected Socialist president, Salvador Allende.

He has been accused of breaking international law by authorizing the secret carpet-bombing of Cambodia in 1969-70, an undeclared war on an ostensibly neutral nation.

His objective was to root out the pro-Communist Vietcong forces that were operating from bases across the border in Cambodia, but the bombing was indiscriminate: Mr. Kissinger told the military to strike “anything that flies or anything that moves.” At least 50,000 civilians were killed.

When Pakistan’s U.S.-backed military was waging a genocidal war in East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, in 1971, he and Nixon not only ignored pleas from the American consulate in East Pakistan to stop the massacre, but they approved weapons shipments to Pakistan, including the apparently illegal transfer of 10 fighter-bombers from Jordan.

Mr. Kissinger and Nixon had other priorities: supporting Pakistan’s president, who was serving as a conduit for Kissinger’s then-secret overtures to China. Again, the human cost was horrific: At least 300,000 people were killed in East Pakistan and 10 million refugees were driven into India.

 

In 1975, Mr. Kissinger and President Ford secretly approved the invasion of the former Portuguese colony of East Timor by Indonesia’s U.S.-backed military. After the loss of Vietnam, there were fears that East Timor’s leftist government could also go Communist.

Mr. Kissinger told Indonesia’s president that the operation needed to succeed quickly and that “it would be better if it were done after we returned” to the United States, according to declassified documents from Mr. Ford’s presidential library. More than 100,000 East Timorese were killed or starved to death.

Mr. Kissinger dismissed critics of these moves by saying that they did not face the world of bad choices he did. But his efforts to snuff out criticism with sarcastic one-liners only inflamed it.

“The illegal we do immediately,” he quipped more than once. “The unconstitutional takes a little longer.”

On at least one potentially catastrophic stance Mr. Kissinger later reversed himself.

Starting in the mid-1950s as a young Harvard professor, he argued for the concept of limited nuclear war — a nuclear exchange that could be contained to a specific region. In office, he worked extensively on nuclear deterrence — convincing an adversary, for instance, that there was no way to launch a nuclear strike without paying an unacceptably high price.

 

But he later conceded that it might be impossible to prevent a limited nuclear war from escalating. By the end of his life he had embraced, with reservations, a new effort to gradually eliminate all nuclear weapons and, at age 95, he began to warn of the instability posed by the rise of weapons driven by artificial intelligence.

“All I can do in the few years left of me is to raise these issues,” he said in 2018. “I don’t pretend to have the answers.”

Mr. Kissinger remained influential to the end. His latest writings on managing a rising China — including “On China” (2011), a 600-page book that mixed history with self-reverential anecdotes — could be found on the bookshelves of West Wing national security aides who followed him.

Fifty years after he joined the Nixon administration, Republican candidates still sought Mr. Kissinger’s endorsement and presidents sought his approval. Even Donald J. Trump, after lambasting the Republican establishment, visited him during his 2016 campaign in the hope that the mere image of his seeking Mr. Kissinger’s advice would convey gravitas. (It yielded a New Yorker cartoon in which Mr. Kissinger is shown with a thought-bubble above his head reading, “I miss Nixon.”)

 

Mr. Kissinger laughed about the fact that Mr. Trump could not name, when New York Times reporters asked, a single new idea or initiative that he had taken away from the meeting. “He’s not the first person I’ve advised who either didn’t understand what I was saying or didn’t want to,” he said. Still, once in office, Mr. Trump used him as a back channel to the Chinese leadership.

 
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Mr. Kissinger met with President Donald J. Trump at the White House in May 2017. Mr. Trump had visited him the previous year, during the presidential campaign. Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Barack Obama, who was 7 years old when Mr. Kissinger first took office, was less enamored of him. Mr. Obama noted toward the end of his presidency that he had spent much of his tenure trying to repair the world that Mr. Kissinger left. He saw Mr. Kissinger’s failures as a cautionary tale.

“We dropped more ordnance on Cambodia and Laos than on Europe in World War II,” Mr. Obama said in an interview with The Atlantic in 2016, “and yet, ultimately, Nixon withdrew, Kissinger went to Paris, and all we left behind was chaos, slaughter and authoritarian governments that finally, over time, have emerged from that hell.”

Mr. Obama noted that while in office he was still trying to help countries “remove bombs that are still blowing off the legs of little kids.”

“In what way did that strategy promote our interests?” he said.

Few figures in modern American history remained so relevant for so long as Mr. Kissinger. Well into his 90s he kept speaking and writing, and charging astronomical fees to clients seeking his geopolitical analysis.

 

While the protesters at his talks dwindled, the very mention of his name could trigger bitter arguments. To his admirers, he was the brilliant architect of Pax Americana, the chess grandmaster who was willing to upend the board and inject a measure of unpredictability into American diplomacy.

To his detractors — and even some friends and former employees — he was vain, conspiratorial, arrogant and short-tempered, a man capable of praising a top aide as indispensable while ordering the F.B.I. to illegally tap his home phones to see if he was leaking to the press.

The irony was not lost on two generations of reporters, who knew that if they were looking for leaks — usually self-interested ones — Mr. Kissinger, a master of the art, was a ready source. “If anybody leaks in this administration, I will be the one to leak,” he said. And he did, prodigiously.

To read Mr. Kissinger’s laudatory 1957 book analyzing the world order created by Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria, who led the Austrian empire in the post-Napoleonic era, is also to read something of a self-description, particularly when it came to the ability of a single leader to bend nations to his will.

“He excelled at manipulation, not construction,” Mr. Kissinger said of Metternich. “He preferred the subtle maneuver to the frontal attack.”

 

That style was demonstrated during the Nixon years as the Watergate scandal unfolded. Increasingly isolated, Nixon often turned to Mr. Kissinger, the undiminished star of his administration, for reassurance and a recitation of his greatest achievements.

He would oblige. The Watergate tapes revealed Mr. Kissinger spending humiliating hours listening to the president’s harangues, including antisemitic comments delivered to his Jewish secretary of state. Mr. Kissinger often responded with flattery. After returning to his office, he would roll his eyes as he told his closest colleagues about Nixon’s bizarre behavior.

Mr. Kissinger was not involved in the Watergate affair. Yet the break-in at the offices of the Democratic National Committee by a White House team of burglars and the administration’s attempts to cover up the crime emerged from a culture of suspicion and secretiveness that many argue he helped foster.

In the spring of 1969, soon after taking office, he was so enraged by the leaks behind a Times report on the Cambodia bombing campaign that he ordered the F.B.I. to tap the phones of more than a dozen White House aides, including members of his own staff. The recordings never turned up a culprit.

He was similarly infuriated by the publication of the Pentagon Papers in The Times and The Washington Post in 1971. The classified documents chronicled the government’s war policies and planning in Vietnam, and leaking them, in his view, jeopardized his secret face-to-face diplomacy. His complaints helped inspire the creation of the White House burglary team, the leak-plugging Plumbers unit that would later break into Democratic headquarters at the Watergate building.

 
 
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A cover of Newsweek magazine from June 1974, during the height of the Watergate scandal, portrayed Mr. Kissinger as a superhero. Credit...Newsweek 1974

In August 1974, as Nixon reconciled himself to the choice between impeachment and resignation, he drew Mr. Kissinger into one of the most operatic moments in White House history. Having told Mr. Kissinger that he intended to resign, a distraught Nixon asked his secretary of state to kneel with him in silent prayer outside the Lincoln Sitting Room.

Yet, as Nixon sank deeper into Watergate, Mr. Kissinger attained a global prominence few of his successors have matched.

Aides described his insights as brilliant and his temper ferocious. They told stories of Mr. Kissinger throwing books across his office in towering rages, and of a manipulative streak that led even his most devoted associates to distrust him.

“In dealing with other people he would forge alliances and conspiratorial bonds by manipulating their antagonisms,” Walter Isaacson wrote in his comprehensive 1992 biography, “Kissinger,” a book its subject despised.

 
 
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Mr. Kissinger and his aide Winston Lord took a break from negotiating the text of a communiqué during a visit to Beijing in 1971.Credit...White House Photo Office Collection

“Drawn to his adversaries with a compulsive attraction, he would seek their approval through flattery, cajolery and playing them off against others,” Mr. Isaacson observed. “He was particularly comfortable dealing with powerful men whose minds he could engage. As a child of the Holocaust and a scholar of Napoleonic-era statecraft, he sensed that great men as well as great forces were what shaped the world, and he knew that personality and policy could never be fully divorced. Secrecy came naturally to him as a tool of control. And he had an instinctive feel for power relationships and balances, both psychological and geostrategic.”

In old age, when the hard edges had been filed down and old rivalries had receded or been buried along with his former adversaries, Mr. Kissinger would sometimes talk about the comparative dangers of the global order he had shaped and a far more disorderly world facing his successors.

There was something fundamentally simple, if terrifying, in the superpower conflicts he navigated. He never had to deal with terrorist groups like Al Qaeda or the Islamic State, or a world in which nations use social media to manipulate public opinion and cyberattacks to undermine power grids and communications.

“The Cold War was more dangerous,” Mr. Kissinger said in a 2016 appearance at the New-York Historical Society. “Both sides were willing to go to general nuclear war.” But, he added, “today is more complex.”

 

The great-power conflict had changed dramatically from the cold peace he had tried to engineer. No longer ideological, it was purely about power. And what worried him most, he said, was the prospect of conflict with “the rising power” of China as it challenged the might of the United States.

Russia, in contrast, was “a diminished state,” and no longer “capable of achieving world domination,” he said in a 2016 Times interview in Kent, in northwest Connecticut, where he kept a second home. His primary residence was in Manhattan.

Yet he warned against underestimating Vladimir V. Putin, the Russian leader. Making reference to Hitler’s autobiographical manifesto, he said: “In order to understand Putin, one has to read Dostoyevsky, not ‘Mein Kampf.’ He believes Russia was cheated, that we keep taking advantage of it.”

Mr. Kissinger took some satisfaction in the fact that Russia was a lesser threat. After all, he had concluded the first strategic arms agreement with Moscow and steered the United States toward accepting the Helsinki Accords, the 1975 compact on European security that obtained some rights of expression for Soviet bloc dissidents. In retrospect, it was one of the droplets that turned into the river that swept away Soviet Communism.

At the height of his power, Mr. Kissinger cut a figure that no Washington diplomat has matched since. The pudgy, short Harvard professor with nerdy black glasses was seen in the Washington neighborhood of Georgetown and Paris with starlets on his arm, joking that “power is the greatest aphrodisiac.”

 

In New York restaurants with the actress Jill St. John, he would hold hands or run his fingers through her hair, giving gossip columnists a field day. In fact, as Ms. St. John told biographers, the relationship had been close but platonic.

So were others. One woman who dated him and returned to his small rented apartment on the edge of Rock Creek Park in Washington — with its single bed for sleeping and another that held a mass of laundry — reported that between the mess and the presence of aides, “you couldn’t do anything romantic in that place even if you were dying to.”

The joke in Washington was that Mr. Kissinger flaunted his private life to hide what he was doing at the office.

 
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Mr. Kissinger with the actress Jill St. John in 1973. He enjoyed being seen with Hollywood stars on his arm. Shirley MacLaine and Marlo Thomas were among the others. Credit...Associated Press

There was plenty to hide, notably the secret meetings in Beijing that carved out Nixon’s opening to China. When the turn toward China ultimately became public, it changed the strategic calculus of American diplomacy and shocked American allies.

 

“It’s almost impossible to imagine what the American relationship with the world’s most important rising power would look like today without Henry,” Graham Allison, a Harvard professor who once worked for Mr. Kissinger, said in an interview in 2016.

Other Kissinger efforts yielded mixed results. Through tireless shuttle diplomacy at the end of the Yom Kippur War in 1973, Mr. Kissinger was able to persuade Egypt to begin direct talks with Israel, an opening wedge to the later peace agreement between the two nations.

But perhaps the most important diplomatic contribution Mr. Kissinger made was his sidelining of Moscow in the Middle East for four decades, until Mr. Putin ordered his air force to enter the Syrian civil war in 2015.

Mr. Kissinger’s greatest failures came in his seeming indifference to the democratic struggles of smaller nations. Oddly, a man driven from his country as a boy by the rise of the Nazis seemed unperturbed by human rights abuses by governments in Africa, Latin America, Indonesia and elsewhere. Nixon’s Oval Office tapes showed that Mr. Kissinger was more concerned with keeping allies in the anti-Communist camp than with how they treated their own people.

For decades he would battle, often unconvincingly, accusations that he had turned a blind eye to human rights abuses. Perhaps the most egregious episode came in the signals to Pakistan that it was free to deal with Bengalis in East Pakistan as it saw fit.

 

In “The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide” (2013), the Princeton scholar Gary J. Bass depicts Mr. Kissinger ignoring warnings of an impending genocide, including those from the American consul general in East Pakistan, Archer Blood, whom he punished as disloyal.

In the Oval Office tapes, “Kissinger sneered at people who ‘bleed’ for ‘the dying Bengalis,’” Professor Bass wrote.

Divorced in 1964 after a 15-year marriage to Ann Fleischer, Mr. Kissinger married Nancy Maginnes in 1974 and moved to her home in Manhattan. Ms. Maginnes was then working for Nelson A. Rockefeller, the former New York governor and a friend and ally of Mr. Kissinger’s.

Mr. Kissinger never resumed teaching after leaving government service. But he continued to write at a pace that embarrassed his former academic colleagues for their relative slowness.

He produced three volumes of memoirs filling 3,800 pages: “The White House Years,” which focused on Nixon’s first term, 1969-73; “Years of Upheaval,” which dealt with the next two years; and finally “Years of Renewal,” which covered the Ford presidency. “World Order,” published in 2014, was something of a valedictory assessment of geopolitics in the second decade of the 21st century. In it, he expressed worry about America’s capacity for leadership.

 

“After withdrawing from three wars in two generations — each begun with idealistic aspirations and widespread public support but ending in national trauma — America struggles to define the relationship between its power (still vast) and its principles,” he wrote.

He continued to wield influence in world affairs, and through his firm, Kissinger Associates, he advised corporations and executives on international trends and looming difficulties. When Disney sought to navigate the Chinese leadership to build a $5.5 billion park in Shanghai, Mr. Kissinger got the call.

“Henry is certainly one of the most complex characters in recent American history,” said David Rothkopf, a former managing director of Mr. Kissinger’s consulting firm. “And he is someone who has, I think, justifiably been in the spotlight both for extraordinary brilliance and competence and, at the same time, clear defects.”

Heinz Alfred Kissinger was born on May 27, 1923, in the Bavarian town of Fürth. A year later, his parents, Louis Kissinger, a high school teacher, and Paula (Stern) Kissinger, the daughter of a prosperous cattle trader, had another son, Walter.

By all accounts young Heinz was withdrawn and bookish but passionate about soccer — so much so that he risked confrontations with Nazi toughs to see games even after signs had gone up at one stadium declaring “Juden Verboten.”

 

His parents raised him to be a faithful member of the orthodox Fürth synagogue, though in writing to them as a young adult he virtually rejected all religious practice.

Louis lost his job when the Nuremberg Laws were adopted in 1935; as a Jew he was barred from teaching in a state school. For the next three years Paula Kissinger took the initiative in trying to get the family out of the country, writing to a cousin in New York about immigrating.

In the fall of 1938, with war still a year away, the Nazi authorities permitted them to leave Germany. With little furniture and a single trunk, the Kissingers embarked for New York aboard the French ocean liner Ile de France. Heinz was 15.

 
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Heinz Kissinger, age 8, in his native Fürth, Germany, in 1931. Withdrawn and bookish, he was nevertheless passionate about soccer — so much so that he risked confrontations with Nazi toughs to see games.

It was not a moment too soon: At least 13 of the family’s close relatives perished in the Nazi gas chambers or concentration camps. Paula Kissinger recalled years later, “In my heart, I knew they would have burned us with the others if we had stayed.”

 

Mr. Kissinger played down the impact of those years on his worldview. He told an interviewer in 1971: “I was not consciously unhappy. I was not acutely aware of what was going on.” But in a Times interview several years ago he did relate painful memories — of the intimidation he felt in stepping into the street to avoid the Hitler Youth, and of the sadness of having to say goodbye to relatives, particularly his grandfather, whom he knew he would never see again.

Many of Mr. Kissinger’s acquaintances said his experiences in Nazi Germany had influenced him more than he acknowledged, or perhaps even knew.

“For the formative years of his youth, he faced the horror of his world coming apart, of the father he loved being turned into a helpless mouse,” said Fritz Kraemer, a non-Jewish German immigrant who was to become Mr. Kissinger’s first intellectual mentor. “It made him seek order, and it led him to hunger for acceptance, even if it meant trying to please those he considered his intellectual inferiors.”

Some have argued that Mr. Kissinger’s rejection of a moralistic approach to diplomacy in favor of realpolitik arose because he had borne witness to a civilized Germany embracing Hitler. Mr. Kissinger often cited an aphorism of Goethe’s, saying that if he were given the choice of order or justice, he, like the novelist and poet, would prefer order.

The Kissingers settled in Upper Manhattan, in Washington Heights, then a haven for German-Jewish refugees. His dispirited father got a job as a bookkeeper, but fell into depression and never fully adjusted to his adopted land. Paula Kissinger kept the family together, catering small parties and receptions.

 

Heinz became Henry in high school. He switched to night school when he took a job at a company making shaving brushes. In 1940, he enrolled in City College — tuition was virtually free — and racked up A’s in almost all his courses. He seemed headed to becoming an accountant.

Then, in 1943, he was drafted into the Army and assigned to Camp Claiborne in Louisiana.

 
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Mr. Kissinger, left, with his mentor Fritz Kraemer in Germany in 1945. Taking him under his wing, Mr. Kraemer had arranged for Mr. Kissinger to be reassigned there to serve as a translator as the war came to a close.

It was there that Mr. Kraemer, a patrician intellectual and Prussian refugee, arrived one day to give a talk about the “moral and political stakes of the war,” as Mr. Kissinger recalled. The private returned to his barracks and wrote Mr. Kraemer a note: “I heard you speak yesterday. This is how it should be done. Can I help you in any way?”

The letter changed the direction of his life. Taking him under his wing, Mr. Kraemer arranged for Private Kissinger to be reassigned to Germany to serve as a translator. As German cities and towns fell in the last months of the war, Mr. Kissinger was among the first on the scene, interrogating captured Gestapo officers and reading their mail.

In April 1945, with Allied victory in sight, he and his fellow soldiers led raids on the homes of Gestapo members who were suspected of planning sabotage campaigns against the approaching American forces. For his efforts he received a Bronze Star.

 

But before returning to the United States he visited Fürth, his hometown, and found that only 37 Jews remained. In a letter discovered by Niall Ferguson, his biographer, Mr. Kissinger wrote at 23 that his encounters with concentration camp survivors had taught him a key lesson about human nature.

“The intellectuals, the idealists, the men of high morals had no chance,” the letter said. The survivors he met “had learned that looking back meant sorrow, that sorrow was weakness, and weakness synonymous with death.”

Mr. Kissinger stayed in Germany after the war — fearful, he said later, that the United States would succumb to a democracy’s temptation to withdraw its weary forces too fast and lose the chance to cement victory.

He took a job as a civilian instructor teaching American officers how to uncover former Nazi officers, work that allowed him to crisscross the country. He became alarmed by what he saw as Communist subversion of Germany and warned that the United States needed to monitor German phone conversations and letters. It was his first taste of a Cold War that he would come to shape.

He returned to the United States in 1947, intent on resuming his college education, only to be rejected by a number of elite universities. Harvard was the exception.

 

Mr. Kissinger entered Harvard as a sophomore, a member of the class of 1950. It was the beginning of his two decades on the campus in Cambridge, Mass., where he would find fame as a professor before clashing with colleagues over Vietnam so sharply that he would vow never to return.

He arrived on campus with his cocker spaniel, Smoky, whom he was forever hiding from his proctors in Claverly Hall, where dogs were prohibited. Friends later said that Smoky’s presence in the dorm had been telling: Mr. Kissinger had felt like a friendless immigrant again. “Harvard was a new world to me then,” he wrote, looking back, “its mysteries hidden behind studied informality.”

But the outsider now had direction, and he found another mentor in William Yandell Elliott, who headed the government department. Professor Elliott guided Mr. Kissinger toward political theory, even as he wrote privately that his student’s mind “lacks grace and is Teutonic in its systematic thoroughness.”

 
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A 1950 Harvard yearbook photo of Mr. Kissinger. He graduated summa cum laude and went on to a distinguished teaching career at the university.Credit...Associated Press

Under Professor Elliott, Mr. Kissinger wrote a senior thesis, “The Meaning of History,” focusing on Immanuel Kant, Oswald Spengler and Arnold Toynbee. At a hefty 383 pages, it gave rise to what became informally known at Harvard as “the Kissinger rule,” which limits the length of a senior thesis.

 

Mr. Kissinger graduated, summa cum laude, in 1950. Days later, the Korean War broke out, with the newly created People’s Republic of China and the Soviet Union backing North Korea’s Communist forces. He soon accepted some modest consulting work for the government that took him to Japan and South Korea.

Returning to Harvard to pursue a Ph.D., he and Professor Elliott started the Harvard International Seminar, a project that brought young foreign political figures, civil servants, journalists and an occasional poet to the university.

The seminar placed Mr. Kissinger at the center of a network that would produce a number of leaders in world affairs, among them Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, who would become president of France; Yasuhiro Nakasone, a future prime minister of Japan; Bulent Ecevit, later the longtime prime minister of Turkey; and Mahathir Mohamad, the future father of modern Malaysia.

With Ford Foundation support, the seminar kept his family eating as Mr. Kissinger worked on his dissertation on the diplomacy of Metternich of Austria and Robert Stewart Castlereagh, the British foreign secretary, after the Napoleonic wars. The dissertation, which became his first book, both shaped and reflected his view of the modern world.

The book, “A World Restored,” can be read as a guide to Mr. Kissinger’s later fascination with the balancing of power among states and his suspicion of revolutions. Metternich and Mr. Castlereagh sought stability in Europe and largely achieved it by containing an aggressive revolutionary France through an equilibrium of forces.

 

Mr. Kissinger saw parallels in the great struggle of his time: containing Stalin’s Soviet Union.

“His was a quest for a realpolitik devoid of moral homilies,” Stanley Hoffmann, a Harvard colleague who later split with Mr. Kissinger, said in 2015.

Mr. Kissinger received his Ph.D. in 1954 but received no offer of an assistant professorship. Some on the Harvard faculty complained that he had not poured himself into his work as a teaching fellow. They regarded him as too engaged in worldly issues. In fact, he was simply ahead of his time: The Boston-to-Washington corridor would soon become jammed with academics consulting with the government or lobbyists.

The Harvard rejection embittered Mr. Kissinger. The Nixon tapes later caught him telling the president that the problem with academia was that “you are entirely dependent on the personal recommendation of some egomaniac.”

With the help of McGeorge Bundy, a Harvard colleague, Mr. Kissinger was placed in an elite study group at the Council on Foreign Relations, at the time a stuffy, all-male enclave in New York. Its mission was to study the impact of nuclear weapons on foreign policy.

Mr. Kissinger arrived in New York with a lot of attitude. He thought that the Eisenhower administration was wrongly reluctant to rethink American strategic policy in light of Moscow’s imminent ability to strike the United States with overwhelming nuclear force.

 

“Henry managed to convey that no one had thought intelligently about nuclear weapons and foreign policy until he came along to do it himself,” Paul Nitze, perhaps the country’s leading nuclear strategist at the time, later told Strobe Talbott, who was deputy secretary of state under President Bill Clinton.

Mr. Kissinger seized on a question that Mr. Nitze had begun discussing: whether America’s threat to go to general nuclear war against the Soviet Union was no longer credible given the commonly held view that any such conflict would invite only “mutually assured destruction.” Mr. Nitze asked whether it would be wiser to develop weapons to conduct a limited, regional nuclear war.

Mr. Kissinger decided that “limited nuclear war represents our most effective strategy.”

 
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Mr. Kissinger’s first best seller,Credit...National Book Foundation

What was supposed to be a council publication became instead a Kissinger book, and his first best seller: “Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy.” Its timing, 1957, was perfect: It played into a national fear of growing Soviet power.

And its message fit the moment: If an American president was paralyzed by fear of escalation, Mr. Kissinger argued, the concept of nuclear deterrence would fail. If the United States could not credibly threaten to use small, tactical weapons, he said, it “would amount to giving the Soviet rulers a blank check.” In short, professing a willingness to conduct a small nuclear war was better than risking a big one.

 

To his critics, this was Mr. Kissinger at his Cold War worst, weaving an argument that a nuclear exchange could be won. Many scholars panned the book, believing its 34-year-old author had overestimated the nation’s ability to keep limited war limited. But to the public it was a breakthrough in nuclear thinking. To this day it is considered a seminal work, one that scholars now refer to in looking for lessons to apply to cyberwarfare.

The improbable success of the book led Mr. Kissinger back to Harvard as a lecturer. Two years later, Ann gave birth to their first child, Elizabeth; in 1961, their son, David, was born.

Kissinger’s reputation had now been catapulted beyond academia; those who had never heard of Metternich wanted Mr. Kissinger involved in meeting the strategic threat of the era. He was called to a meeting organized by Mr. Rockefeller, then an assistant to President Dwight D. Eisenhower on international affairs. The patrician WASP and the Jewish immigrant formed an unlikely friendship, but one that gave Mr. Kissinger a patron with the resources of one of America’s greatest family fortunes, and gave Mr. Rockefeller someone to make him sound more credible on a global stage.

Mr. Kissinger said of Mr. Rockefeller, a future New York governor and vice president: “He has a second-rate mind but a first-rate intuition” about people and politics. “I have a first-rate mind but a third-rate intuition about people.”

Back at Harvard, his classes were popular, and the more Mr. Kissinger was interviewed on television, the bigger a star he became on campus. But he was soon immersed in the academic politics that he so despised, and his quest for tenure did not proceed smoothly. He and Zbigniew Brzezinski, who would become President Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser, were competitors, until Mr. Brzezinski left.

 

David Riesman, the sociologist and co-author of a seminal work on the American character, “The Lonely Crowd,” suggested that dinner with Mr. Kissinger was a chore. “He would not spend time chatting at the table,” Mr. Riesman said. “He presided.”

Leslie H. Gelb, then a doctoral student and later a Pentagon official and columnist for The Times, called him “devious with his peers, domineering with his subordinates, obsequious to his superiors.”

Tenure nonetheless arrived in 1959, an appointment announced by Mr. Bundy, who at 34 had become Harvard’s youngest dean of faculty. Mr. Kissinger later wrote that Mr. Bundy had treated him “with the combination of politeness and subconscious condescension that upper-class Bostonians reserve for people of, by New England standards, exotic backgrounds and excessively intense personal style.”

By 1961 Mr. Bundy was national security adviser to the newly elected president, John F. Kennedy, and Mr. Kissinger was swept up in the Harvard rush to the White House. But he was denied a senior job. He made end runs to see the president, but after a few sessions Kennedy himself cut them off. Mr. Kissinger said later, “I consumed my energies offering unwanted advice.”

At Harvard, he began organizing meetings on the emerging crisis of the day, Vietnam. He explored the link between military actions on the ground and the chances of success through diplomacy, seemingly convinced, even then, that the war could be ended only through negotiations.

 

After a long trip to Saigon and the front lines, he wrote that the American task was to “build a nation in a divided society in the middle of a civil war,” defining a problem that would haunt Washington not only in Southeast Asia but also in Afghanistan and Iraq.

 
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Mr. Kissinger, at 45, had been named President-elect Richard M. Nixon’s national security adviser when, in December 1968, he met with President Lyndon B. Johnson and Walt W. Rostow, left, Johnson’s special assistant for national security affairs, in the Oval Office.Credit...Associated Press

He also renewed his relationship with Mr. Rockefeller, a moderate Republican who seemed like a good presidential prospect for 1968. And he met a tall, 30-year-old junior Rockefeller aide, Ms. Maginnes, whom he would marry years later.

Mr. Kissinger began writing speeches for Mr. Rockefeller and denouncing his most likely Republican rival for the White House, Richard M. Nixon, describing him as a disaster who could never be elected. But when Rockefeller’s star fell and Nixon won the nomination, he was invited to join Nixon’s foreign policy board. He kept his advisory role quiet, but it nonetheless led to one of the first big public disputes involving Mr. Kissinger and accusations of double-dealing.

With Lyndon B. Johnson’s White House engaged in peace talks with the North Vietnamese in Paris, Mr. Kissinger was said to have used his contacts on his own trips to Paris to funnel inside information back to Nixon. “Henry was the only person outside the government we were authorized to discuss the negotiation with,” Richard C. Holbrooke, who went on to key positions in the Clinton and Obama administrations, told Mr. Isaacson for his Kissinger biography. “We trusted him. It is not stretching the truth to say that the Nixon campaign had a secret source within the United States negotiating team.”

 

Nixon himself referred in his memoirs to his “highly unusual channel” of information. To many who have since accepted that account, the back-channel tactic was evidence of Mr. Kissinger’s drive to obtain power if Nixon was elected. While there is no evidence that he supplied classified information to the Nixon campaign, there have long been allegations that Nixon used precisely that to give back-channel assurances to the South Vietnamese that they would get a better deal from him than from Johnson, and that they should agree to nothing until after the election.

Mr. Ferguson and other historians have rebutted that claim, though one of Nixon’s biographers found notes from H.R. Haldeman, one of Nixon’s closest aides, in which the presidential candidate ordered his staff to “monkey wrench” peace talks.

Whatever the truth, Mr. Kissinger was on Nixon’s radar. And after the election, a new president who had often expressed his disdain for Jews and Harvard academics chose, as his national security adviser, a man who was both.

Nixon directed Mr. Kissinger to run national security affairs covertly from the White House, cutting out the State Department and Nixon’s secretary of state, William P. Rogers. Nixon had found his man — a “prized possession,” he later called Mr. Kissinger.

While the post of national security adviser had grown in importance since Harry S. Truman established the role, Mr. Kissinger took it to new heights. He recruited bright young academics to his staff, which he nearly doubled. He effectively sidelined Mr. Rogers and battled the pugnacious defense secretary, Melvin R. Laird, moving more decision-making into the White House.

 
 
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Mr. Kissinger and Nixon in 1972. They often spent hours in rambling conversations, skipping from acute analysis of global forces to gossip-laden criticism of figures in and out of the administration.Credit...Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

He met constantly with Nixon, often eschewing the practice of having staff members present when discussing their areas of expertise. He went in alone, unwilling to share either the glory or the intimacy of such occasions.

His rages were legendary. When he angrily stamps one foot, you’re OK, a former aide told Mr. Isaacson. When both feet leave the ground, the aide said, you’re in trouble. When Lawrence S. Eagleburger, a Kissinger personal aide and later briefly secretary of state, collapsed from overwork and was wheeled out to an ambulance, Mr. Kissinger emerged from his office shouting, “But I need him!”

Staff turnover was high, but many of those who stayed came to admire him for his intellect and his growing list of achievements. Still, they were stunned by his secretiveness. “He was able to give a conspiratorial air to even the most minor of things,” Mr. Eagleburger, who admired him, said before his death in 2011.

Poking fun at himself in a way that some saw as disingenuous, he often told visiting diplomats that “I have not faced such a distinguished audience since dining alone in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles.”

 

Nixon had built much of his campaign around the promise to end the war on honorable terms. It was Mr. Kissinger’s task to turn that promise into a reality, and he made clear in a Foreign Affairs article, published as Nixon was preparing to take office, that the United States would not win the war “within a period or with force levels politically acceptable to the American people.”

In the 2018 interview, he said the United States had misunderstood the struggle from the start as “an extension of the Cold War in Europe.”

“I made the same mistake,” he said. “The Cold War was really about saving democratic countries from invasion.” Vietnam was different, a civil war. “What we did not understand at the beginning of the war in Vietnam,” he went on, “is how hard it is to end these civil wars, and how hard it is to get a conclusive agreement in which everyone shares the objective.”

By the time that he and Nixon took office, he argued, it was too late to just leave. “If you come into government and find 550,000 of your troops involved in the battle, how do you end that?” he asked. He and Nixon needed a way out, he said, that did not discredit “the 50,000 dead” or “the people who had relied on America’s word.”

Mr. Kissinger’s pursuit of two goals that were seen as at odds with each other — winding down the war and maintaining American prestige — led him down roads that made him a hypocrite to some and a war criminal to others. He had come to office hoping for a fast breakthrough: “Give us six months,” he told a Quaker group, “and if we haven’t ended the war by then, you can come back and tear down the White House fence.”

 

But six months later, there were already signs that the strategy for ending the war would both expand and lengthen it. He was convinced that the North Vietnamese would enter serious negotiations only under military pressure. So while he restarted secret peace talks in Paris, he and Nixon escalated and widened the war.

“I can’t believe that a fourth-rate power like North Vietnam doesn’t have a breaking point,” Mr. Kissinger told his staff.

 
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A delegation of Quakers outside the White House in 1969 protesting the war in Vietnam. Five of their leaders met with Mr. Kissinger. Credit...Charles Harrity/Associated Press

Mr. Kissinger called it “war for peace.” Yet the result was carnage. Mr. Kissinger had an opportunity to end the war in peace talks early in Nixon’s presidency on terms as good as those he ultimately settled for later. Yet he turned it down, and thousands of Americans died because he was convinced he could do better.

As Mr. Kissinger sat with his big yellow legal pads in his White House office, scribbling notes that have now been largely declassified, he designed a three-part plan. It consisted of a cease-fire that would also embrace Laos and Cambodia, which had been sucked into the fighting; simultaneous American and North Vietnamese withdrawals from South Vietnam; and a peace treaty that returned all prisoners of war.

 

His notes and taped conversations with Nixon are riddled with self-assured declarations that the next escalation of bombing, and a secret incursion into Cambodia, would break the North Vietnamese and force them into real negotiations. But he was also reacting, he later wrote, to a Vietcong and North Vietnamese offensive early in Nixon’s presidency that had killed almost 2,000 Americans and “humiliated the new president.”

Mr. Kissinger later constructed a narrative emphasizing the wisdom of the strategy, but the notes and phone conversations suggest that he had routinely overestimated his negotiating skills and underestimated his opponents’ capacity to wait the Americans out.

It was the bombing campaign in Cambodia — code-named “Operation Menu,” with phases named “Breakfast,” “Lunch” and “Dinner” — that outraged Mr. Kissinger’s critics and fueled books, documentaries and symposiums exploring whether the United States had violated international law by expanding the conflict into a country that was not party to the war. Mr. Kissinger’s rationale was that the North had created supply lines through Cambodia to fuel the war in the South.

Inevitably, reports of the bombing leaked out; it was simply too large an operation to hide. Nixon was certain that the leakers were liberals and Democrats whom Mr. Kissinger had recruited from academia. Thus began Mr. Kissinger’s relationship with J. Edgar Hoover, the powerful director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The two began reviewing conversations of Mr. Kissinger’s staff members.

As the internal wars raged in the White House, Le Duc Tho, the North Vietnamese negotiator, dug in. He rejected Mr. Kissinger’s call for a mutual withdrawal of forces; he insisted instead on a full American withdrawal and the formation of a “coalition” government in the South that the North would clearly dominate. Aware that Nixon was beginning to pull troops out, the North’s leadership saw little reason to give way.

 

It took until January 1973 for Mr. Kissinger to reach a deal, assuring the South Vietnamese that the United States would return if the North violated the accord and invaded. Privately, Mr. Kissinger was all but certain that the South could not hold up under the pressure. He told John D. Erlichman, a top White House aide, that “if they are lucky, they can hold out for a year and a half.”

That proved prescient: Saigon fell in April 1975, with the unconditional surrender of South Vietnam. Fifty-eight thousand Americans and more than three million North and South Vietnamese had died, and eight million tons of bombs had been dropped by the United States. But to Mr. Kissinger, getting it over with was the key to moving on to bigger, and more successful, ventures.

When Mr. Kissinger was writing campaign speeches for Nelson Rockefeller in 1968, he included a passage in which he envisioned “a subtle triangle with Communist China and the Soviet Union.” The strategy, he wrote, would allow the United States to “improve our relations with each as we test the will for peace of both.”

He got a chance to test that thesis the next year. Chinese and Soviet forces had clashed in a border dispute, and in a meeting with Mr. Kissinger, Anatoly F. Dobrynin, the Soviet ambassador to Washington, spoke candidly of the importance of “containing” the Chinese. Nixon directed Mr. Kissinger to make an overture, secretly, to Beijing.

It was a remarkable shift for Nixon. A staunch anti-Communist, he had long had close ties to the so-called China lobby, which opposed the Communist government led by Mao Zedong in Beijing. He also believed that North Vietnam was acting largely as a Chinese satellite in its war against South Vietnam and its American allies.

 

Nixon and Mr. Kissinger secretly approached Pakistan’s leader, Yahya Khan, to act as a go-between. In December 1970, Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington delivered a message to Mr. Kissinger that had been carried from Islamabad by courier. It was from the Chinese prime minister, Zhou Enlai: A special envoy from President Nixon would be welcome in Beijing.

That led to what became known as Ping-Pong diplomacy. A young member of the American table tennis team playing in a championship tournament in Japan had befriended a Chinese competitor. The Chinese leadership apparently concluded that the American player’s gesture was another signal from Mr. Kissinger. The American team was invited to Beijing, where Mr. Zhou surprised the players by telling them, “You have opened a new chapter in the relations of the American and Chinese people.”

Over the next two months, messages were exchanged concerning a possible presidential visit. Then, on June 2, 1971, Mr. Kissinger received one more communication through the Pakistani connection, this one inviting him to Beijing to prepare for a Nixon visit. Mr. Kissinger pulled Nixon aside from a White House dinner to declare: “This is the most important communication that has come to an American president since the end of World War II.”

The president found a bottle of expensive brandy, and the men toasted their triumph in the same room where, three years later, they would kneel together in agony.

 
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Mr. Kissinger with Prime Minister Zhou Enlai of China in Beijing in 1971. Over two days, in 17 hours of talks with Mr. Zhou, he arranged a historic presidential trip by Nixon.Credit...Henry Kissinger Archives/Library of Congress
 

In July 1971, Mr. Kissinger left on what was described as an Asian fact-finding trip. In Pakistan, reporters were told that the secretary was not feeling well and that he would spend a few days at a mountain retreat to recover. A motorcade soon set off for the hills. But it was a decoy; Mr. Kissinger was actually flying to China with three aides.

In Beijing he made a presentation to Mr. Zhou, ending with the observation that as Americans “we find ourselves here in what to us is a land of mystery,” he recalled in a 2014 interview for the Harvard Secretaries of State project. Mr. Zhou interrupted. “There are 900 million of us,” he said, “and it’s not mysterious to us.”

It took three days to work out the details, and after Mr. Kissinger cabled the code word “eureka” to Nixon, the president, without any advance warning, appeared on television to announce what Mr. Kissinger had arranged. His enemies — the Soviets, the North Vietnamese, the Democrats, his liberal critics — were staggered. On Feb. 21, 1972, he became the first American president to visit mainland China.

The Chinese were a little stunned, too. Mao sidelined Mr. Zhou within a month. After that, no Chinese ever mentioned Zhou Enlai again, Mr. Kissinger told the Harvard project. He speculated that Mao had feared that his No. 2 “was getting personally too friendly with me.”

Years later, Mr. Kissinger was more restrained about the achievement.

“That China and the United States would find a way to come together was inevitable given the necessities of the time,” he wrote in “On China,” referring to domestic strife in both countries and a common interest in resisting Soviet advances. But he also insisted that he had not been seeking to isolate Russia as much as to conduct a grand experiment in balance-of-power politics. “Our view,” he wrote, “was that the existence of the triangular relations was in itself a form of pressure on each of them.”

 

Historians still debate whether that worked. But there is no debating that it made Mr. Kissinger an international celebrity. It also proved vital for reasons that never factored into Mr. Kissinger’s calculus five decades ago — that China would rise as the only true economic, technological and military competitor to the United States.

Nixon’s announcement that he would go to China startled Moscow. Days later, Mr. Dobrynin called on Mr. Kissinger and invited Nixon to meet the Soviet leader, Leonid I. Brezhnev, in the Kremlin. The date was set for May 1972, just three months after the China trip. “To have two Communist powers competing for good relations with us could only benefit the cause of peace,” Mr. Kissinger noted later. “It was the essence of triangular strategy.”

To prepare for the summit, he flew to Moscow, again in secret. Nixon had agreed to let him go on the condition that Mr. Kissinger spend most of his time insisting that the Soviets restrain their North Vietnamese allies, who were mounting an offensive.

By then, however, Mr. Kissinger had changed his mind about how much control the Soviets had over the North Vietnamese, writing to his deputy, Alexander M. Haig, “I do not believe that Moscow is in direct collusion with Hanoi.”

Instead, he sought to reinvigorate negotiations, which had been stumbling along since late 1969, with the aim of limiting the number of ground-based and submarine-launched nuclear missiles that the two countries were pointing at each other and curbing the development of antiballistic missile systems. Mr. Kissinger achieved a breakthrough, writing to Nixon, “You will be able to sign the most important arms control agreement ever concluded.”

 

That may have been overstatement, but Mr. Brezhnev and Nixon signed what became the SALT I treaty in May 1972. It opened decades of arms-control agreements — SALT, START, New START — that greatly reduced the number of nuclear weapons in the world. The era known as détente had begun. It unraveled only late in Mr. Kissinger’s life. While Mr. Putin and Mr. Biden renewed New START in 2021, once the war in Ukraine started the Russian leader suspended compliance with many parts of the treaty.

 
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Mr. Kissinger, far left, joined other American and Soviet officials aboard the presidential yacht Sequoia on the Potomac River in June 1973 for a meeting between Nixon and the Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev (speaking to each other by the railing). Credit...Associated Press

To Mr. Kissinger, there were superpowers and there was everything else, and it was the everything else that got him into trouble.

He never stopped facing questions about the overthrow and death of Mr. Allende in Chile in September 1973 and the rise of Augusto Pinochet, the general who had seized power.

Over the next three decades, as General Pinochet came to be accused — first in Europe, then in Chile — of abductions, murder and human rights violations, Mr. Kissinger was repeatedly linked to clandestine activities that had undermined Mr. Allende, a Marxist, and his democratically elected government. The revelations emerged in declassified documents, lawsuit depositions and journalistic indictments, like Christopher Hitchens’s book “The Trial of Henry Kissinger” (2001), which was made into a documentary film.

 

The issues harked back to 1970, when Mr. Allende was running for Chile’s presidency. An Allende victory would represent the first by a Marxist in a democratic election, a prospect that concerned Mr. Kissinger.

Nixon, too, was alarmed, according to a White House tape that Peter Kornbluh, of the National Security Archive, cited in his book “The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability.” It quotes Nixon as ordering the U.S. ambassador in Santiago “to do anything short of a Dominican-type action” to keep Mr. Allende from winning the election. The reference was to the United States invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965.

Mr. Kissinger insisted, in a memoir and in testimony to Congress, that the United States “had nothing to do” with the military coup that overthrew Mr. Allende. However according to phone records that were declassified in 2004, Mr. Kissinger bragged that “we helped them” by creating the conditions for the coup.

That help included backing a plot to kidnap the commander in chief of Chile’s army, Gen. René Schneider, who had refused C.I.A. entreaties to mount a coup. The general was killed in the attempt. His car was ambushed, and he was fatally shot at point-blank range.

Mr. Kissinger, as national security adviser, presided over the 40 Committee, a secretive body that included the director of Central Intelligence and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. All covert actions were subject to the committee’s approval.

 

In 2001, General Schneider’s two sons filed a civil suit in the United States accusing Mr. Kissinger of helping to orchestrate covert activities in Chile that led to their father’s death. A U.S. federal court, without ruling on Mr. Kissinger’s culpability, dismissed the case, saying that foreign policy was up to the government, not the courts.

 
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The body of President Salvador Allende of Chile was carried out of the presidential palace in 1973 after he had shot himself as rebel troops closed in during a coup. Although there was no evidence of direct U.S. involvement, Mr. Kissinger bragged that the United States had created the conditions for the coup.Credit...Associated Press

Mr. Kissinger, in his defense, said his actions had to be viewed within the context of the Cold War. “I don’t see why we need to stand by and watch a country go Communist due to the irresponsibility of its people,” he said, adding half-jokingly: “The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves.”

Chile was hardly the only place Mr. Kissinger was accused of treating as a minor chess piece in his grand strategies. He and President Ford approved Indonesia’s invasion of East Timor in December 1975, leading to a disastrous 24-year occupation by a U.S.-backed military.

Declassified documents released in 2001 by the National Security Archive indicate that Ford and Mr. Kissinger knew of the invasion plans months in advance and were aware that the use of American arms would violate U.S. law.

 

“I know what the law is,” Mr. Kissinger was quoted as telling a staff meeting when he got back to Washington. He then asked how it could be in “U.S. national interest” for Americans to “kick the Indonesians in the teeth?”

The columnist Anthony Lewis wrote in The Times, “That was Kissingerian realism: the view that the United States should overlook brutalities by friendly authoritarian regimes because they provided ‘stability.’”

 
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East Timorese forces in October 1975 as they prepared for an invasion by Indonesia. (José Ramos-Horta, a future East Timor president, was at right.) Mr. Kissinger and President Ford secretly approved the invasion, leading to a quarter-century struggle that left more than 100,000 people dead.Credit...Ben Tweedie/Corbis, via Getty Images

It was a familiar complaint. In 1971, the slaughter in East Pakistan that Nixon and Mr. Kissinger had ignored in deference to Pakistan expanded into a war between Pakistan and India, a nation loathed by both China and the Nixon White House.

“At this point, the recklessness of Nixon and Kissinger only got worse,” Dexter Filkins, of The New Yorker, wrote in discussing Professor Bass’s account in The New York Times Book Review in 2013. “They dispatched ships from the Seventh Fleet into the Bay of Bengal, and even encouraged China to move troops to the Indian border, possibly for an attack — a maneuver that could have provoked the Soviet Union. Fortunately, the leaders of the two Communist countries proved more sober than those in the White House. The war ended quickly, when India crushed the Pakistani Army and East Pakistan declared independence,” becoming the new nation of Bangladesh.

 

Such events led to protests whenever Mr. Kissinger ventured onto college campuses.

So did his consulting ties: When President George W. Bush appointed him to lead a commission to investigate the government’s failures to detect and prevent the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Mr. Kissinger discovered that the appointment required that he disclose his firm’s clients. Rather than comply, Mr. Kissinger abruptly withdrew, saying he could not serve if it meant revealing his clients.

While Mr. Kissinger worked hard to shape the history of his own decisions, he found himself in the odd position of living so long that his own memorandums were declassified while he was still on the world stage. In 2004, responding to Freedom of Information requests, the State Department released thousands of pages of transcripts of Mr. Kissinger’s telephone calls during the Nixon administration. Some revealed chummy conversations with Washington journalists; others showed a president who in the midst of Watergate was too drunk to talk to the British prime minister.

Still more declassified documents revealed how Mr. Kissinger had used his historic 1971 meeting with Mr. Zhou in China to lay out a radical shift in American policy toward Taiwan. Under the plan, the United States would have essentially abandoned its support for the anticommunist Nationalists in Taiwan in exchange for China’s help in ending the war in Vietnam. The account contradicted one he had included in his published memoirs.

 
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Mr. Kissinger in 2006. In his last years, what worried him most, he said, was the prospect of conflict with “the rising power” of China.Credit...Derek Hudson/Getty Images

The emerging material also revealed the price of an American-interests-first realism. In tapes released by the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in 2010, Mr. Kissinger is heard telling Nixon in 1973 that helping Soviet Jews emigrate and thus escape oppression by a totalitarian regime was “not an objective of American foreign policy.”

 

“And if they put Jews into gas chambers in the Soviet Union,” he added, “it is not an American concern. Maybe a humanitarian concern.”

The American Jewish Committee described the remarks as “truly chilling,” but suggested that antisemitism in the Nixon White House may have partly been to blame.

“Perhaps Kissinger felt that, as a Jew, he had to go the extra mile to prove to the president that there was no question as to where his loyalties lay,” David Harris, the committee’s former executive director, said.

Mr. Kissinger is survived by his wife, Ms. Maginnes, and his children with Ms. Fleischer, David and Elizabeth. His younger brother, Walter B. Kissinger, a former chairman of the multinational company the Allen Group, died in 2021. Mr. Kissinger’s final book, “Leadership: Six Studies in World Strategy,” was published in 2022.

Mr. Kissinger was aware of his contentious place in American history, and he may have had his own standing in mind when, in 2006, he wrote about Dean Acheson, secretary of state under Truman, in The Times Book Review, calling him “perhaps the most vilified secretary of state in modern American history.”

 

“History has treated Acheson more kindly,” Mr. Kissinger wrote. “Accolades for him have become bipartisan.”

Thirty-five years after his death, he said, Acheson had “achieved iconic status.”

Mr. Kissinger clearly became an icon of a different kind. And he was acutely aware that the challenges facing the nation had changed. At age 96, he plunged into questions surrounding artificial intelligence, teaming up with Eric Schmidt, Google’s former chief executive, and the computer scientist Daniel Huttenlocher to write “The Age of AI: And Our Human Future” (2019), in which he discussed how the development of weapons controlled by algorithms, rather than directly by humans, would change concepts of deterrence.

After donating his papers to Yale, Mr. Kissinger reconciled with Harvard — the institution where he had made his name — but he made clear that he had not been welcomed back after Vietnam.

Mr. Allison, the Harvard professor, and Drew Faust, the university’s president at the time, were determined to heal the wound. Mr. Kissinger was enticed to return for a talk in which he was interviewed by a graduate student; a dinner at the president’s house followed. “I would not have guessed I would be back inside these walls,” he said.

One student asked him about his legacy. “You know, when I was young, I used to think of people of my age as a different species,” he said to laughter. “And I thought my grandparents had been put into the world at the age at which I experienced them.”

“Now that I’ve reached beyond their age,” he added, “I’m not worried about my legacy. And I don’t give really any thought to it, because things are so changeable. You can only do the best you’re able to do, and that’s more what I judge myself by — whether I’ve lived up to my values, whatever their quality, and to my opportunities.”

Michael T. Kaufman, a former correspondent and editor for The Times who died in 2010, contributed reporting.

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