Is Trump’s
“Friend” Kissinger Steering Him From Calm To Storm?
Henry Kissinger, seemingly returned from oblivion,
has been in the ear of “old friend” Trump since
mid-primary season, just after Trump declared
himself open to negotiation with North Korea. Since
that moment, Trump’s stance and rhetoric have veered
inexorably toward war.
By Whitney Webb
October 13,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
President Donald Trump
met with top defense officials Tuesday morning —
including Secretary of Defense James Mattis and the
Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair General Joseph Dunford —
in the White House Situation Room, to discuss
potential options for responding to any North Korean
“aggression” as well as how to prevent North Korea
from threatening the United States with nuclear
weapons.
The meeting, which was later confirmed by the
State Department and a White House press release,
came a day after Mattis
instructed the U.S. Army to stand ready if North
Korea diplomacy fails, and less than a week after
Trump’s cryptic
“calm before the storm” comments about a
previous meeting with top military commanders. Some
have noted that the decision to have the meeting
in the Situation Room, sometimes called the War
Room, was significant, as it is often used to hold
secure meetings regarding disasters, military
conflicts, and other major crises both domestic and
global.
While most reporting gave some context to Trump’s
most recent meeting with top defense officials on
tensions with Pyongyang, hardly any mentioned that
the meeting
had been immediately preceded by another. This
meeting, also on the topic of North Korea, was held
between the president and former Secretary of State
and unindicted war criminal Henry Kissinger.
In his
post-meeting remarks, Trump praised Kissinger’s
‘immense talent.’ “Henry Kissinger has been a friend
of mine,” he added. “I’ve liked him. I’ve respected
him. But we’ve been friends for a long time, long
before my emergence into the world of politics,
which has not been too long.” Kissinger is also
a long-time advisor and
confidante of Trump’s former rival for the
presidency, Hillary Clinton.
Tuesday’s meeting was not the first occasion
Trump has met with Kissinger since becoming a
fixture in American politics. The pair’s first
meeting after Trump’s rise to political prominence
took place in May of 2016. That meeting
occurred a day after then-candidate Trump said he
would open dialogue with North Korean leader Kim
Jong-un if elected President. Since that initial
meeting, Kissinger and Trump met
last November and have already met
twice
this year.
After their November meeting, Kissinger remarked
that Trump would likely
not be keeping all his campaign promises, as he
was undergoing “the transition from being a
campaigner to being a national strategist.” This
apparently included his promise of opening dialogue
with North Korea.
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Despite overseeing such actions, Kissinger ended
up being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, in the same
year as the Chilean coup, for his role in bringing
“peace” to Vietnam and ending the Vietnam war,
though he had actually
worked to extend it. The choice of Kissinger was
so outrageous that several members of the Nobel
committee resigned in protest. Kissinger
is also credited with transforming U.S. foreign
policy into one of perpetual, undeclared war – a
policy that continues today and one that Trump has
embraced since becoming President.
Given Trump’s bellicose rhetoric and threats
towards North Korea – as well as
his rejection of diplomacy in resolving the
crisis despite
both Pyongyang’s and his own State Department’s
apparent willingness to attempt it – Kissinger’s
timely guidance to the President during “the calm
before the storm” should give the American public
considerable cause for concern.
Watch | Henry Kissinger on his 2016
meeting with Donald Trump
This
article was originally published by Mint Press
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