Thursday, February 01, 2007
ââ¬ËPakistan was key to 1971 breakthrough in US-Sino tiesââ¬â¢
NEW YORK: Chinese distrust of Romania led the then US president, Richard Nixon, to use Pakistan as his diplomatic conduit to Mao Zedong, said Henry Kissinger on Wednesday.
Speaking at the Asia Society, Kissinger said poor communications between the US and China was a major obstacle in the run up to the historic 1971 Nixon visit to China. He said Washington began to realise the depth of the Sino-Soviet rift when the Soviet ambassador began coming to the White House ââ¬Ånearly ever dayââ¬Â to brief the Nixon administration about the clashes between Russian and Chinese troops on Ussuri river.
Kissinger, who was the national security adviser, said he called in Chinese expert and retired US diplomat Alan Whiting to explain the clashes.
Whiting noted that the clashes were happening near Russian supply depots, not the Chinese ones. ââ¬ÅThis meant the clashes were not being started by the Chinese,ââ¬Â said Kissinger.
Further evidence that Moscow was applying the squeeze on Beijing came when the Soviets began asking the US how they would react to ââ¬Åcertain military redeployments on their part vis a vis Chinaââ¬Â.
At this point, the US saw a window to begin a rapprochement with China. ââ¬ÅBut finding ways to communicate with China proved more difficult than we imagined,ââ¬Â said Kissinger. ââ¬ÅWe first used a communist interlocutor in the form of Romania. The Chinese did not trust the Romanians.ââ¬Â
Beijing tried to send signals back to the Nixon administration through Maoââ¬â¢s friend and author of Red Star Over China, US journalist Edgar Snow. However, Snow was seen as a leftist by the administration and ignored.
Kissinger said that while lower-level State Department officials welcomed opening up to China, senior levels were hostile to the idea. A delegation of them went to Nixon and warned that such a China policy could trigger a Sino-Soviet war. ââ¬ÅFinally,ââ¬Â said Kissinger, ââ¬Åwe found a channel in Pakistan. After that we moved forward on setting up the trip.ââ¬Â
Winston Lord, the State Department official who assisted Kissinger, added that one reason Kissingerââ¬â¢s trip to China via Pakistan had been secret was that ââ¬Åwe wanted to be sure Beijing was readyââ¬Â. Until then, Sino-US talks had never gotten past the issue of Taiwan and ââ¬Åwe told them through Pakistan that the agenda would go beyond Taiwanââ¬Â. sana
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\02\01\story_1-2-2007_pg7_46
ââ¬ËPakistan was key to 1971 breakthrough in US-Sino tiesââ¬â¢
NEW YORK: Chinese distrust of Romania led the then US president, Richard Nixon, to use Pakistan as his diplomatic conduit to Mao Zedong, said Henry Kissinger on Wednesday.
Speaking at the Asia Society, Kissinger said poor communications between the US and China was a major obstacle in the run up to the historic 1971 Nixon visit to China. He said Washington began to realise the depth of the Sino-Soviet rift when the Soviet ambassador began coming to the White House ââ¬Ånearly ever dayââ¬Â to brief the Nixon administration about the clashes between Russian and Chinese troops on Ussuri river.
Kissinger, who was the national security adviser, said he called in Chinese expert and retired US diplomat Alan Whiting to explain the clashes.
Whiting noted that the clashes were happening near Russian supply depots, not the Chinese ones. ââ¬ÅThis meant the clashes were not being started by the Chinese,ââ¬Â said Kissinger.
Further evidence that Moscow was applying the squeeze on Beijing came when the Soviets began asking the US how they would react to ââ¬Åcertain military redeployments on their part vis a vis Chinaââ¬Â.
At this point, the US saw a window to begin a rapprochement with China. ââ¬ÅBut finding ways to communicate with China proved more difficult than we imagined,ââ¬Â said Kissinger. ââ¬ÅWe first used a communist interlocutor in the form of Romania. The Chinese did not trust the Romanians.ââ¬Â
Beijing tried to send signals back to the Nixon administration through Maoââ¬â¢s friend and author of Red Star Over China, US journalist Edgar Snow. However, Snow was seen as a leftist by the administration and ignored.
Kissinger said that while lower-level State Department officials welcomed opening up to China, senior levels were hostile to the idea. A delegation of them went to Nixon and warned that such a China policy could trigger a Sino-Soviet war. ââ¬ÅFinally,ââ¬Â said Kissinger, ââ¬Åwe found a channel in Pakistan. After that we moved forward on setting up the trip.ââ¬Â
Winston Lord, the State Department official who assisted Kissinger, added that one reason Kissingerââ¬â¢s trip to China via Pakistan had been secret was that ââ¬Åwe wanted to be sure Beijing was readyââ¬Â. Until then, Sino-US talks had never gotten past the issue of Taiwan and ââ¬Åwe told them through Pakistan that the agenda would go beyond Taiwanââ¬Â. sana
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\02\01\story_1-2-2007_pg7_46