World

Ex-Official Reveals How US Broke Kissinger's Efforts to Improve Relations With Russia

Henry Kissinger, former US secretary of state known for his contributions to contemporary political discourse and the field of international relations, died on Wednesday at his home in the US state of Connecticut at the age of 100.
Sputnik
The collapse of the legacy of former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who sought to improve Soviet-American relations, as well as the policy of Presidents Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon, has led to the fact that trust between Washington and Moscow is completely absent today, Paul Craig Roberts, former assistant Treasury secretary, told Sputnik.
According to Roberts, who personally knew Kissinger, the achievements of Nixon and Kissinger on the issue of détente between the US and the USSR "were unrivaled" until President Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev ended the Cold War.

"The Clinton regime violated the word of the George H.W. Bush administration that in exchange for the Soviet Union permitting the reunification of Germany, the US would not move NATO one inch toward the East. All subsequent US regimes exited from all of the arms agreements that had reduced tensions and created a bond of trust between the nuclear superpowers," Roberts noted.

According to the former Treasury Department official, the consequence of the "breakdown" of the work of Nixon, Reagan, and Kissinger today is "a total lack of trust between the US and Russia."

"The situation today is far worse than it was in the darkest days of the Cold War," Roberts stressed.

World
Kissinger's Controversial Legacy
Kissinger's death was announced on November 29. The former secretary of state gained fame as one of the most influential political figures in the United States, leaving a significant mark on the history of diplomacy. Despite his advanced age, Kissinger commented extensively on current international events, including the situation in Ukraine.
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