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Reckless: Henry Kissinger and the Tragedy of Vietnam

Page 33

by Robert K. Brigham


  in secret Cambodia bombings, 36–42

  Lake, Tony, 71, 74

  Lam. See Hoang Xuan Lam

  Lam Son 719, 136–145

  Nixon’s and Kissinger’s finger-pointing over, 145–148

  Laos

  ARVN attack into, 136–145

  Kissinger’s desire for military operations inside, 34

  map of, xviii (fig.)

  Nixon’s and Kissinger’s finger-pointing over, 145–146

  protests against invasion of, 149

  Le Duan, 55, 60–61

  in Easter Offensive of 1972, 168–169

  1970 January war assessment by, 86

  Le Duc Tho, 59, 61

  in Easter Offensive of 1972, 168–169

  Kissinger’s description of, 91

  1970 April meeting with, 107–109

  1970 February meeting with, 91, 93, 95–100

  1970 March meeting with, 100–107

  1971 talks with, 148–159

  1972 May talks with, 179–187

  1972 September talks with, 200–212

  1972 summer talks with, 189–199

  peace agreement finalization by, 209–221, 227–233, 239–241

  response to Nixon’s 1970 October standstill cease-fire speech, 135

  Le Loi, 141

  Lien-Hang Nguyen, 168

  Life, Kissinger feature in, 165

  Linebacker, 182, 184–186

  Congress opposition to, 187–189

  Linebacker II, 234–238

  linkages, Kissinger’s attempted use of, 45–57

  Lodge, George, 15

  Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr.

  Bruce’s replacement of, 122–125

  Kissinger’s 1965 report on Vietnam to, 15–21

  at Paris peace talks, 68

  Lon Nol, Nixon’s support of, 111–120

  Lord, Winston, 151, 217

  MACV. See Military Assistance Command in Vietnam

  Mai Van Bo, 58, 63

  Mansfield, Mike, 188, 237

  Mansfield Amendment, 157

  Mao Zedong, 54

  Dong’s 1970 meeting with, 131

  interest in rapprochement with US, 131–132

  McCain, John S., 173

  McCord, James, 189

  McGovern, George, 118, 167, 183

  McNamara, Robert S., 9, 11–12, 58, 157

  McNaughton, John, 11–12, 18–19

  Menu, 38–39, 116

  Metternich, Klemens von, 43–44

  Military Assistance Command in Vietnam (MACV)

  Nixon’s and Kissinger’s blaming of, 144–146

  Nixon’s anger with, 182

  See also Abrams, Creighton; Westmoreland, William

  military escalation

  domestic politics interactions with, 72–74, 78, 120, 146–147, 149, 175, 237–238

  Kissinger’s use for, 33–34, 41–42, 70–77, 85, 109, 137–138, 182, 233–235, 244

  Laird’s opposition to, 34, 74, 76

  in 1972 December, 231–238

  Nixon’s 1972, 174–177, 179–187

  Tho’s use of, 168–169

  Minh. See Duong Van Minh

  mining, Haiphong, 183–186

  misrepresentation, Kissinger’s habit of, 91–95

  Mitchell, John, 7, 76, 189

  MOBE. See National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam

  Moorer, Thomas, 142–143

  Easter Offensive response of, 171–173

  Moratorium, 78

  Morris, Roger, 71, 74

  Moscow. See Soviet Union

  Muskie, Edmund, 160–161, 167, 183

  My Tho, 224

  Napoleon, 44

  National Liberation Front (NLF)

  DRV insistence on control of South Vietnam by, 48, 51–52, 102, 107, 125–128, 153–155, 203–204

  Ten-Point Overall Solution of, 51–52, 59–60

  Thieu’s 1968 refusal to negotiate with, 3–5

  National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (MOBE), 73–74

  national security adviser, Kissinger as new, 7–10

  National Security Council (NSC)

  documents leaked from, 163

  inclusion in The Senior Review Group, 68

  Kissinger’s expansion of, 68

  1969 January 25 session of, 27–28

  Nixon’s structuring of, 6–10

  National Security Decision Memorandums (NSDM 1, 2, and 3), 10

  National Security Study Memorandum 1 (NSSM 1), 33

  National Security Study Memorandum 36, 32

  Nazi Germany, Kissinger’s childhood experiences in, 92–93

  negotiations

  domestic politics affecting, 30–32, 41–42, 85–86, 204

  keys to successful, 66, 83

  Kissinger’s desire to conduct alone, 201

  Kissinger’s failings in, 66–70, 83–86, 218, 243–244

  Kissinger’s general framework for, 24–25

  Kissinger’s 1965 meeting with Harvard colleagues on, 16–18

  Kissinger’s optimum moment for, 82–83, 86–91

  Nixon’s doubts about, 88–89, 129–130, 157, 195

  as path to peace, 165–166

  troop withdrawals affecting, 32–33, 41–42, 60–63, 68–69, 98–99, 120

  See also peace talks

  Negroponte, John, 215

  New York Times

  criticisms of Nixon’s 1972 military escalations, 183

  Pentagon Papers published by, 157–158

  Newsweek, Kissinger feature in, 165

  Ngo Dinh Diem, 111, 154

  Nguyen, Lien-Hang, 168

  Nguyen Cao Ky

  Kissinger’s failure to look for alternatives to, 83–84

  See also Thieu-Ky-Khiem

  Nguyen Duy Trinh, 218

  Nguyen Khanh, 154

  Nguyen Thi Binh

  1970 eight-point peace program by, 57, 126–128

  response to Nixon’s 1970 October standstill cease-fire speech, 135

  Nguyen Van Thieu, 30, 61

  acknowledgement of finalized peace agreement, 240

  DRV’s insistence on removal of, 51–52, 102, 107, 125–128, 153–156, 193–195, 203–206, 209–211, 214

  Easter Offensive response of, 187

  Kissinger’s contempt for, 99–100

  Kissinger’s failure to look for alternatives to, 83–84

  Kissinger’s 1972 meeting with, 196–199

  Kissinger’s 1973 letter to, 94

  Kissinger’s shutting out of, 65, 67, 99–100, 152, 201, 223, 244

  Kissinger’s support for, 67, 83–84, 99–100, 155–156, 191–192, 203–206

  in Laos invasion, 140–144

  mistrust of Kissinger by, 100

  in 1971 South Vietnam presidential elections, 154–156, 158

  1972 October meetings with Haig, 211–214

  Nixon’s 1972 December letter to, 236–237

  Nixon’s 1972 November letter to, 226–227

  peace agreement objections of, 221–231

  rejection of Johnson’s 1968 October peace talks, 3–5

  response to late 1972 peace talks, 207–208, 211–214

  See also Thieu-Ky-Khiem

  Niebuhr, Reinhold, 44

  Nixon, Richard

  bureaucracy dislikes of, 7–10

  China’s interest in meeting with, 131–132

  Congress opposition to, 187–189

  depressed moods of, 89–90, 129

  doubts of Kissinger by, 88–89, 129–130, 157, 161–164, 195

  Duck Hook response of, 71–78, 112

  Easter Offensive response of, 168–180

  finger-pointing by, 145–148

  Kissinger’s announcement of finalized peace agreement to, 220–221

  Kissinger’s comments on, 2

  Kissinger’s false peace talk claims to, 93, 97–100, 107–108, 128, 153, 194–195

  Laos invasion by, 136–145

  Laos invasion protests response of, 149


  May 1970 protests response of, 117

  National Security Council set up by, 6–10

  1968 presidential campaign of, 2–5

  1969 decision to bomb Cambodia by, 34–36

  1969 Vietnam policy of, 80–81

  1970 April standstill cease-fire speech of, 109–111

  1970 Cambodia military offensive of, 109–120

  1970 October speech on standstill cease-fire, 133–136

  1972 exposure of peace talks by, 164–168

  1972 North Vietnam bombing by, 174–177, 179–186, 234–238

  1972 North Vietnam port mining by, 183–186

  1972 presidential election of, 160–161, 177–178, 200, 204, 226

  1972 September warnings to Thieu by, 208

  1972 visit to China by, 168

  Pakistan support by, 161–163

  peace agreement announcement by, 241–243

  Pentagon Papers response of, 157–158

  in Pierre Hotel meeting with Kissinger, 1–2, 6–7

  refusal to select policy option for ending Vietnam War, 27–28

  secrecy important to, 8, 10, 47, 102–103

  secret back-channel of, 57–70

  secret Cambodia bombings by, 36–42, 116

  Silent Majority speech of, 78–81, 86

  Soviet cooperation plan of, 45–57

  troop withdrawal under. See troop withdrawal

  victory declarations of, 238

  Watergate issues of, 189

  worries over Kissinger’s emotional eruptions, 75–76

  Nixon Doctrine, 69, 78

  NLF. See National Liberation Front

  Nobel Peace Prize

  Kissinger and Tho negotiations leading to, 91

  Kissinger’s nomination for, 242

  Norodom Sihanouk, 111–113

  North Vietnam. See Democratic Republic of Vietnam

  North Vietnamese Army. See People’s Army of Vietnam

  NSC. See National Security Council

  NSDM 1, 2, and 3. See National Security Decision Memorandums

  NSSM 1. See National Security Study Memorandum 1

  Operation Duck Hook, 70–78, 112

  Operation Lam Son 719, 136–145

  Nixon’s and Kissinger’s finger-pointing over, 145–148

  Operation Linebacker, 182, 184–186

  Congress opposition to, 187–189

  Operation Linebacker II, 234–238

  Operation Menu, 38–39, 116

  Operation Pocket Money, 183–186

  Operation Rolling Thunder, 3

  pacification programs, 18–19, 82, 110

  Padelford, Norman, 17

  Pakistan, Nixon’s backing of, 161–163

  Palmer, Bruce, 146

  Paris peace talks. See peace talks

  Parrot’s Beak, 39

  1970 military offensive in, 113–114

  Paul, Pope, 237

  PAVN. See People’s Army of Vietnam

  peace agreement

  cease-fire in, 216, 220, 229, 239, 241

  DMZ in, 230–233, 239

  DRV announcement of, 225

  DRV violations of, 94, 241

  finalization of, 209–221, 227–233, 239–241

  Nixon’s announcement of, 241–243

  North Vietnamese forces in South Vietnam in, 215–217, 219, 223–224, 228, 236–237

  political future of South Vietnam in, 209–220, 228–230, 239, 243

  POWs in, 210, 229

  Thieu’s objections to, 221–231

  troop withdrawal in, 210, 216, 224

  peace talks

  DRV’s 1969 March desire to resume, 40–42

  Kissinger’s failings in, 66–70, 83–86

  Kissinger’s misrepresentation and revisionism of, 91–95

  Kissinger’s optimum moment for, 82–83, 86–91

  1968 October, 2–5

  1969, 57–70

  1970. See Choisy-le-Roi meetings

  1970 April, 107–109

  1970 February, 91, 93, 95–100

  1970 March, 100–107

  1970 September, 124–132

  1971, 148–159

  1972 December, 229–233

  1972 May, 179–187

  1972 November, 227–229

  1972 October, 214–221

  1972 September, 200–212

  1972 summer, 189–199

  1973 January, 239–241

  Nixon’s 1972 exposure of, 164–168

  troop withdrawal effects on, 32–33, 41–42, 60–63, 68–69, 98–99, 120

  See also secret peace talks

  peace with honor

  birth of formulation for, 21

  DRV concessions allowing, 203–204

  Nixon’s desire for, 90–91

  PENNSYLVANIA, 57–58

  Pentagon Papers, 157–158

  People’s Army of Vietnam (PAVN, North Vietnamese Army)

  Cambodia bombings targeting, 36–42, 116

  Easter Offensive of, 168–179

  Laos attacks targeting, 136–145

  in South Vietnam after peace agreement, 201–202, 215–217, 219, 223–224, 228, 236–237

  South Vietnam’s 1969 gains against, 86

  People’s Liberation Armed Forces (PLAF), South Vietnam’s 1969 gains against, 86

  Pham Van Dong

  1970 meeting with China, 130–131

  rejection of Nixon’s 1969 peace proposals, 51–52

  Phnom Penh, 112, 203

  PLAF. See People’s Liberation Armed Forces

  Pocket Money, 183–186

  port mining, 1972 North Vietnam, 183–186

  Porter, William, 230

  postwar reconstruction aid

  DRV’s demand for, 153, 155

  as possible option in negotiations, 84, 87, 155

  power

  Kissinger’s and Nixon’s shared views on, 5–6

  Kissinger’s childhood experiences with, 92–93

  Kissinger’s concentration of, 46–49, 65–68, 114

  POWs. See prisoners of war

  presidential elections

  1964 US, 13–15

  1968 US, 1–5

  1971 South Vietnam, 154–156, 158

  1972 US, 160–161, 177–178, 200, 204, 226

  PRG. See Provisional Revolutionary Government

  prisoners of war (POWs)

  in finalized peace agreement, 210, 229

  in 1970 peace talks, 101–102

  in 1971 peace talks, 148, 153, 156

  in 1972 peace talks, 190–195, 198–199, 201

  protests

  against Cambodian invasion, 116–120

  against Laos invasion, 149

  May 1970 march on White House, 117

  military escalation affected by, 72–74, 78, 120, 146–147, 149

  against 1972 bombing of North Vietnam, 174

  against Nixon’s 1972 military escalations, 183, 187

  Provisional Government of National Concord (GNC), 203, 214

  Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG)

  DRV’s demand for, 51–52, 102, 107, 125–128, 153–156, 193–195, 203–206, 209

  1970 eight-point peace program of, 126–128

  Soviet support of, 56–57

  Pruning Knife, 71–75

  Pye, Lucian, 17

  Quang Tri City

  North Vietnam taking of, 179

  South Vietnam counteroffensive on, 186

  Raborn, William, 18–19

  Radford, Charles, 163

  RAND Corporation, Vietnam contingency options study by, 25–27

  Reasoner, Harry, 242

  reconstruction aid

  DRV’s demand for, 153, 155

  as possible option in negotiations, 84, 87, 155

  Red Flag. See Hongqi

  Republic of Vietnam (GVN, South Vietnam)

  civil society and cultural identification developing in, 83–84

  Communist 1975 victory in, 244

  DRV insistence on control of, 48, 51–52, 102, 107, 125�
��128, 153–155, 203–204

  DRV 1973 attacks on, 241

  Kissinger’s contempt for, 99–100, 244

  Kissinger’s shutting out of, 65, 67, 103, 201

  map of, xviii (fig.)

  1971 presidential elections in, 154–156, 158

  North Vietnamese forces allowed to remain in, 201–202, 215–217, 219, 223–224, 228, 236–237

  objections to finalized peace agreement, 221–231

  peace agreement over political future of, 209–220, 228–230, 239, 243

  rejection of Johnson’s October 1968 peace talks, 3–5

  troop withdrawals from. See troop withdrawal

  urbanization of, 110–111

  resignation, Kissinger’s threats of, 76

  revisionism, Kissinger’s habit of, 91–95

  Rockefeller, Nelson, 1, 7, 13–14

  Rodman, Peter, 71, 201

  Rogers, William, 8–9

  Kissinger’s memos against, 79–80

  Kissinger’s replacement of, 68

  Kissinger’s shutting out of, 47–49, 65, 67, 76, 139, 201, 244

  in Laos invasion, 141

  military escalation opposed by, 76

  in 1970 Cambodia military offensive, 114–116

  in secret Cambodia bombings, 38, 40

  Rolling Thunder, 3

  Roosevelt, Franklin, 92

  Rostow, Walt, 19

  Rusk, Dean, 16, 57

  Safire, William, 77

  Saigon. See Republic of Vietnam

  Sainteny, Jean, 59–60

  Saxbie, William, 237

  Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., 44

  secrecy

  of Cambodia bombings, 37–40

  Kissinger’s and Nixon’s love of, 8, 10, 47, 102–103

  secret peace talks

  1969 back-channel negotiations, 57–70

  1970 April, 107–109

  1970 February, 91, 93, 95–100

  1970 March, 100–107

  1970 September, 124–132

  1971, 148–159

  Nixon’s 1972 exposure of, 164–168

  secretary of defense. See Laird, Melvin

  secretary of state

  Kissinger’s appointment as, 68

  See also Rogers, William

  The Senior Review Group, 68

  Sheehan, Neil, 157

  Sidey, Hugh, 165

  Sihanouk. See Norodom Sihanouk

  Silent Majority speech, 78–81, 86

  Sirik Matak, 111

  Sitton, Ray, 36–37

  South Vietnam. See Republic of Vietnam

  Soviet Union

  China rift with, 53–54

  Kissinger’s 1972 April visit to, 175–179

  Kissinger’s push for cooperation from, 45–57

  1971 diplomatic breakthroughs with, 151

  Nixon’s 1972 May letter to, 181–182

  Nixon’s 1972 visit to, 176–178, 184–185

  Spinoza, Baruch, 44

  Stalin, Joseph, 53–54

  standstill cease-fire. See cease-fire

  State Department

  inclusion in The Senior Review Group, 68

  Kissinger’s shutting out of, 47–49, 65, 67, 76, 139, 201, 244

 

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