Raphael
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More often than not, those who 'recommend' books have not read them...
Amazon.com: On China (9781594202711): Henry Kissinger: Books
Kim shrewdly manipulated both Stalin and Mao into a war that each did not wanted unless the other agreed to said war. In the process, each tried to outmaneuver the other into being the first to bless Kim's desire for war, thereby anticipating a potential blame that can be foisted upon the other and a blame that both knew was very real if the venture fail.
I agree with Kissinger's account and I suggested as much in a previous post: that Stalin and Mao were both notified of Kim's plans, and Kim only carried out the invasion after having obtained this dual consent. Kissinger's account differs considerably from Jung's account, as she suggests Kim was some stooge of Mao who invaded after being pressured and promised Chinese troops by an enthusiastic and zealous Mao. But of course, this disparity is to be expected when comparing a work of quality scholarship with some hack historical revisionist piece.
@ Truthseeker
It's interesting how you refused to provide a source for that:
Letters · LRB 15 December 2005
Because right under Jung's response, Professor Nathan wrote another rebuttal. Quite unnecessary IMO, because the readers worth swaying would have already dismissed Jung's work of revisionism after reading Nathan's exhaustive first rebuttal. I'm guessing Nathan was incensed that Jung could be brazen enough to continue peddling her thoroughly discredited work, and felt he had the moral obligation to have the last word.