sisyphusshrugged: (Default)
[personal profile] sisyphusshrugged
well, this is rather embarassing for the current crop of cold war retreads inside the beltway
Former US President Richard Nixon was too drunk to answer the phone when Britain's prime minister rang him at the height of the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, according to newly-released records.

Transcripts of the phone conversations of the president's close adviser, Henry Kissinger, show him trying to fend off a UK request to discuss the crisis as it sucked in Cold War rivals, Russia and America.

"Can we tell them no?" Mr Kissinger asks his assistant. "When I talked to the president, he was loaded."

Brent Scowcroft, Mr Kissinger's assistant, replies: "We could tell him the president is not available and perhaps he can call you."

Mr Kissinger said the president would talk to British PM Edward Heath the next morning.

The conversation, which took place on the night of 11 October, 1973, is included in over 20,000 pages of transcripts cleared for release from the archives after over three decades.

The president has approved this thing... although I'm not quite sure he knew what he was approving
Henry Kissinger

They span the period January 1969 to August 1974 - a turbulent chapter in American history featuring war in Vietnam, detente with China, conflict in the Middle East and eventually, the Waterfall scandal that terminated the Nixon presidency.

Mr Kissinger held the joint offices of Secretary of State and National Security Adviser in President Nixon's cabinet.

Other revelations in the transcripts include an apparent admission by Mr Kissinger that the US covertly engineered a coup against the socialist government of President Salvador Allende of Chile.

"Well we didn't - as you know - our hand doesn't show on this one, though," Mr Kissinger told President Nixon on 16 September 1974.

"We didn't do it. I mean we helped them," he said, adding that a person or institution whose name is deleted from the transcript had "created the conditions as great as possible".

The transcripts also uncover fissures behind the statesman-like facade the politicians presented to the public.

Asked if he thought President Nixon was still rational, Mr Kissinger answered, "It's pretty rough."

He told an aide the president had approved a certain proposal, although "I'm not quite sure he knew what he was approving."

In another conversation, Mr Kissinger complains to an aide that the president's tough remarks on Israel could "start a war".

The aide attempts to allay his fears, saying the president was "just unwinding".

To assure him Mr Nixon did not always mean what he said, he recounts how the president had recently asked for the briefcase containing the controls to America's nuclear arsenal.

"For what?" asked Mr Kissinger.

"He is going to drop it on the Hill," said the aide. "What I am saying is, don't take him too seriously."

Nah. You wouldn't want to take a depressive world leader who's drinking at work and rearranging the world to his exacting political specifications seriously when he says he wants his political opponents to die.

Poor Bob Dole. Official confirmation that the White House saw him as collateral damage.

Date: 2004-05-27 10:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] supergee.livejournal.com
This is not surprising in light of his famous semicoherent harangue about football and surfing to the college kids sleeping at the Lincoln Monument. Some of his audience thought he was on booze and sleeping pills, and Bob Haldeman's memoirs revealed that he was.

Date: 2004-05-27 10:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] serenada.livejournal.com
Your http://ljutils.hopto.org/cgi-bin/count.cgi?code=928892 is preventing my page from completing loading, my dear.

Date: 2004-05-27 10:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jmhm.livejournal.com
Oh dear.

It shouldn't.

Can you block it?

Date: 2004-05-27 10:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] serenada.livejournal.com
It's behaving now -- I guess hopto was down for a while.

I don't think I can block it from work anyway, so I'm glad it's back.

Date: 2004-05-27 11:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mehetabel.livejournal.com
Ah, yes, the Waterfall scandal! Nixon was accused of expanding the war to properties built by Frank Lloyd Wright, or something, yes? America is cruel to history.

& Al Haig is now an anonymous "aide"? History is cruel to Al.

Profile

sisyphusshrugged: (Default)
sisyphusshrugged

November 2016

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789 101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 11th, 2026 11:52 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios