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Now more than ever, it's time to ask 'what would Kissinger do?'

Kissinger would seek to talk with Putin and his ministers directly says Dominic Green

March 4, 2022 14:34
GettyImages-137583645 putin Kissinger
A picture taken on January 20, 2012, shows Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin (R) shaking hands with visiting former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, during their meeting in Moscow. AFP PHOTO/ RIA-NOVOSTI POOL/ ALEXEY DRUZHININ (Photo credit should read ALEXEY DRUZHININ/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

American politics are usually domestic politics, or as domestic as they can be in a country so vast and various as to render its people strangers to one another. Foreign affairs only intrude in times of disaster or war. This being one of those times, most American politicians have no idea what to do about Ukraine, other than rattle a sabre and preach about freedom. But they should be asking: “What would Kissinger do?”

Freedom is an ideal. Foreign policy is about the national interest. Ideals tend towards morality, the national interest to amorality. The US was founded by idealists; so, in its fashion, was the EU. The insults of reality are often insufficient to break the faith of the idealist.

Bismarck, who fixed the peace of Europe with Disraeli, was once asked what the secret of foreign policy was. His reply? “First, make a good Russia treaty.” The West failed to achieve a good Russia treaty after 1990. This was an American-led failure, conducted on American terms and ideals: it was a bipartisan foul-up of triumphalism.

George Kennan, the realist architect of the “containment” policies that helped win the Cold War, was aghast when the Clinton administration pushed NATO’s borders up against Russia’s. But Henry Kissinger, the realist architect of the foreign policy that also helped win the Cold War, favoured NATO expansion. This may be surprising in retrospect, but such was the excitement of victory in the 1990s that it was possible for Francis Fukuyama to make a career out of declaring that liberal democracy was the last word and that history as a battle of ideas was over.