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SECRETS.(The Trials of Henry Kissinger)

The New Yorker

| October 07, 2002 | Denby, David | COPYRIGHT 2002 All rights reserved. Reproduced by permission of The Condé Nast Publications Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

At the beginning of the documentary "The Trials of Henry Kissinger," the then national-security adviser to Richard Nixon grins broadly, his eyes shining behind the dark-framed glasses that became his signature. In his late forties, the statesman-professor has the bulk and the stiffness, but not the gloom, of a homely man; his smile exudes a sensual enjoyment of power which even a child would have noticed. When Kissinger ascends to the office of Secretary of State, in 1973, he glows like a newlywed. One of the many remarkable sights in the film, which was funded by the BBC and will be shown at Film Forum through October 8th, is the way that, in later years, Kissinger's bowlike lower lip hardens into an angry horizontal whenever anyone asks him a hostile question. The film is an expose of the corrosiveness of power; it claims that the retired diplomat, now a seventy-nine-year-old businessman, has a lot to be defensive about, that his enjoyment of power was not an innocent pleasure but a vice. "Trials," which premiered on British television last March, is an eighty-minute response to the most hostile question of all: At a time when Slobodan Milosevic and Augusto Pinochet have been arrested for crimes against humanity, shouldn't Kissinger also be held legally accountable for what his policies led to in Cambodia, in Chile, and in East Timor? Several former American officials, including Roger Morris, who worked under Kissinger at the National Security Council, think so, as do a number of American and British jurists and journalists.

The complaints against Kissinger have been around in one form or another for three decades. What precipitated the production of the film was the publication, in 2001, of Christopher Hitchens's "The Trial of Henry Kissinger," a book based on his two-part article in Harper's. In the documentary, Hitchens says of Kissinger, "I think he's a war criminal; I think he's a liar; I think he's responsible for kidnapping, for murder." Hitchens is notoriously fond of moral melodrama, but his charges are reinforced by the sombre British journalist William Shawcross, the author of "Sideshow" (an account of the American incursion into Cambodia), and by Seymour M. Hersh, who marvels at Kissinger's ability, year after year, to escape retribution. For Hersh, Kissinger is the big fish who has always wriggled out of the net. The essence of the journalists' complaints is that Kissinger was repeatedly indifferent to human suffering and democratic procedure during a long period of overzealous devotion to Cold War strategy; and that, personally, he was duplicitous and ruthless right from the beginning of his government career. In interviews with Kissinger's former aide Daniel Davidson and others, the film recounts how, in the fall of 1968, when the outgoing President, Lyndon Johnson, and the Democratic candidate, Vice-President Hubert Humphrey, were sponsoring peace negotiations with the North Vietnamese, Kissinger served as an unofficial adviser to the American negotiators. At the same time, however, he was sending information to Humphrey's opponent, Richard Nixon, a man he hated, whereupon Nixon used his own channels to convince President Nguyen Van Thieu, of South Vietnam, that the Republicans could get him a better deal. Three days before the American election, Thieu withdrew his approval from the developing peace plan, at which point the talks collapsed. Humphrey was discredited, Nixon was narrowly elected, and Kissinger, who until then had worked for Nelson Rockefeller, was made national-security adviser. Obsessed with American "credibility," Kissinger and Nixon secretly expanded the war into Cambodia. Four years passed from the time of Nixon's Inauguration, and another twenty thousand Americans and untold Vietnamese and Cambodians died before Kissinger worked out a peace deal with North Vietnam, which was almost identical to the arrangement he had helped sabotage in 1968.

This is serious stuff, and there's much more in a similar vein, a lot of which might be unfamiliar to younger audiences. I wish, however, that Eugene Jarecki and Alex Gibney, who wrote, directed, and produced "Trials," had gone beyond the usual mosaic style of film journalism, the brisk summary in which short interview and ...

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