Kissenger's Shadow
Permission is granted to use this review Give full credit to Veit Johnson include our URL https://read52booksayear.blogspot.com/ In Kissinger’s Shadow , historian Greg Grandin delivers a forceful and meticulously researched critique of Henry Kissinger’s enduring influence on American foreign policy. The book sets out to do something more ambitious than most biographies: rather than simply recount the man’s career, Grandin argues that Kissinger’s ideas and actions cast a long, ominous “shadow” over how the United States conceives of power, war, and diplomacy today. At its core, the book is both a biography of a contentious figure and a meditation on how the machinery of imperial dominance endures. Grandin begins with Kissinger’s early intellectual formation—his Harvard doctoral work, his early writings about history and power—and shows how these ideas shaped a worldview in which intuition, will and conflict mattered more than conventional moral or legal restraints. He dubs Ki...