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Henry Kissinger, A Man’s Man of Sin

The beginning of the white man was the beginning of a murderer. The Bible teaches you that. Cain slew Abel. These were two brothers and the two brothers have been killing each other ever since they’ve been on the planet, right? Every few minutes somebody is killed. Every minute, almost, someone is being slaughtered by the devil or by his rule of tricknology that is set up.

—The Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad, June 25, 1972

No single human being has inflicted more havoc on the world than the celebrated “master of diplomacy,” Henry Alfred Kissinger (1923-2023), America’s first Jewish secretary of state. As a high-ranking White House official in the 1970s, and long after, Kissinger has had his manipulative hand in more illegal wars, bombings, death squads, genocides, false flag operations, coups, assassinations, tortures, and a wide assortment of international wickedness than did any combination of past U.S. governments. With evident pride he boasted that “The illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer.”[1] So corrupt is his legacy that for much of his life he was unable to travel to some parts of the earth, where, under the Geneva Conventions Act, he could face arrest as a fugitive war criminal.[2]

Henry Kissinger (1923-2023), former U.S. Secretary of State

Henry Kissinger, born to Jewish parents in 1923, grew up an Orthodox Jew in Fürth, Germany, and he and his family immigrated to the United States in 1938.[3] He earned a Harvard degree in 1950, and quickly rose through the ranks of the white political world that included stints at the think tanks of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Rand Corporation. By 1969 he had achieved the position of Secretary of State, and then National Security Advisor in 1973 under the administrations of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. And it was in those White House positions that Kissinger exercised enormous influence over the foreign and domestic policies of the United States of America.

His international acts of evil exist collectively in a satanic class by themselves. He alone directed military invasions of entire nations. He alone plotted and directed coups and assassinations against foreign leaders. He alone financed terrorist operations and organizations, installed and propped up brutal dictators, and protected leaders as they were committing atrocities and acts of genocide. At the direction of Henry Kissinger secret wars were conducted for years on end, costing hundreds of thousands of lives and billions of dollars, while Kissinger blatantly lied about them to the U.S. Congress and to the American people. The description of Kissinger’s role in Indo-China by the late mild-mannered chef turned author, television host, and world traveler Anthony Bourdain is fitting:

Once you’ve been to Cambodia, you’ll never stop wanting to beat Henry Kissinger to death with your bare hands. You will never again be able to open a newspaper and read about that treacherous, prevaricating, murderous scumbag sitting down for a nice chat with Charlie Rose or attending some black-tie affair for a new glossy magazine without choking. Witness what Henry did in Cambodia—the fruits of his genius for statesmanship—and you will never understand why he’s not sitting in the dock at The Hague next to Milošević.[4]

Bourdain had witnessed the devastating effect of a madman at work. On that neutral country of rice farmers Kissinger had dropped 790,000 cluster bombs, each filled with razor-sharp darts and ball bearings. More bombs were dropped on Cambodia than the combined total dropped on Japan and Germany during World War II. At Kissinger’s command, “US pilots flew, on average, one sortie every eight minutes and dropped a ton of explosives for each and every Laotian, delivering a total of 2.5 million tons in nearly 600,000 runs.”[5] This included the wide deployment of birth-defect-causing phosphorus bombs, and the spraying of tons of the defoliant Agent Orange, which will continue to poison farmland and drinking water for multiple generations. The estimated 80 million unexploded cluster bombs are still blowing off limbs and taking lives by the hundreds to this very day.[6] Republican Rep. Paul McCloskey remarked upon visiting Cambodia that what the United States did to that country “is a greater evil than we have done to any country in the world.”[7]

The world has been trained to revile Adolf Hitler, but Hitler is not known to have killed a single human being by his own hand. When Kissinger was asked how many thousands of Laotians were killed, he confessed: “In the Laotian thing, we killed about ten, fifteen [thousand].” That is what Kissinger admitted to. The eventual death toll in Laos would be 200,000.[8] The most prolific serial killer of all time, Harold Shipman, had killed a mere 250.

It is no wonder that the Muhammad Speaks newspaper often referred to him as Henry “Strangelove” Kissinger, a reference to the madman character in the 1964 Stanley Kubrick movie Dr. Strangelove. Here are a few historical highlights of the satanic thoughts and deeds of Henry A. Kissinger:

  • he proposed that America alone had the right to use preemptive strikes and tactical nuclear weapons to win wars.
  • he sabotaged the 1968 Paris Peace Talksin order to undermine the presidential campaign of Hubert Humphrey in favor of Richard Nixon, which dealt a devastating blow to Humphrey’s candidacy. Nixon won the election and instead of peace Kissinger escalated and extended the war for four more years, during which at least 20,000 Americans and “hundreds of thousands” of Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians lost their lives.[9]
  • during the Vietnam War he secretly bombed neutral Laos and Cambodia, and according to a Pentagon report, Kissinger “approved each of the 3,875 Cambodia bombing raids in 1969 and 1970 as well as the methods for keeping them out of the newspaper.” These bombings were indiscriminate and targeted villages, hospitals, schools, and civilian centers. He then engineered a CIA coup, which deposed Cambodia’s Prince Sihanouk.[10]
  • he engineered and supervised the 1973 military coup in copper-rich Chile that murdered the democratically elected president Salvador Allende and installed the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet for the next seventeen years. Kissinger said, “I don’t see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist due to the irresponsibility of its people. The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be left to decide for themselves.”
  • he secretly recruited and militarily supplied the Iraqi Kurds to take up arms against Saddam Hussein and then abandoned them to be exterminated;[11]
  • he wiretapped American citizens, including journalists, anti-war protesters, students, and U.S. officials, whom he suspected of revealing his secret wars, and then openly lied about it to Congress;
  • he protected the hated Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, built up his navy, and trained and weaponized his machinery of torture and repression;
  • he backed Pakistan during the Bangladesh War despite his knowledge its government was committing “selective genocide”;[12]
  • with his eye on the region’s coal and oil fields Kissinger supplied the arms for President Suharto’s military invasion and occupation of East Timor, during which an estimated 103,000 civilians were slaughtered, many more put into concentration camps;[13]
  • he rigged the presidential election of Uruguay, making sure the popular candidate could not prevail, and then the U.S. sent “advisors” like Dan Mitrione, who trained the South American country’s police in torture methods. Mitrione reportedly tortured to death a number of homeless people kidnapped off the streets of Uruguay.[14]
  • in 1975 Kissinger masterminded Operation Condor, a campaign of political repression that included kidnapping, torture, and assassinations by the U.S.-backed dictatorships of Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, and Peru. Some estimate that Condor murdered at least 60,000, “disappeared” 30,000, and imprisoned 400,000. Victims included union and peasant leaders, priests and nuns, students, teachers, and intellectuals.
  • Kissinger was “the original architect,” together with Yitzhak Rabin — then Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir’s ambassador in Washington — “of the U.S.-Israel strategic alliance, which is a cornerstone of Israel’s strength today.” He shielded Israel’s nuclear program from American pressure, “forging a U.S.-Israel understanding about Israel’s policy of nuclear ambiguity which still remains in place.”[15]
  • through Israel Kissinger orchestrated political and military backing for the white apartheid regime in South Africa, including providing them with nuclear weapons. He publicly called this policy “constructive engagement” and privately, the “Tar Baby Option.” In his classified National Security Study Memorandum 39, Kissinger maintained that “the whites are here to stay and the only way that constructive change can come about is through them.” Then the Tricknology: “We would maintain public opposition to racial oppression but relax political isolation and economic restrictions on the white states.”[16] According to one analyst, this policy helped “to delay black South African freedom for nearly two decades beyond [Nixon’s] presidency.”[17]
  • Kissinger supported the rule of murderous white supremacists in Angola, Mozambique, Namibia, Guinea-Bissau, Rhodesia (before it became Zimbabwe), and backed other European colonial powers that occupied African nations. These covert actions instigated civil wars that caused the deaths of an estimated two million Africans.[18]
  • Kissinger penned a secret document in 1974 titled “National Security Study Memorandum 200” (NSSM-200), which argued that controlling the strategic resources of Third World nations was directly linked to depopulation. He wrote:

“Whatever may be done to guard against interruptions of supply and to develop domestic alternatives, the U.S. economy will require large and increasing amounts of minerals from abroad, especially from less developed countries. That fact gives the U.S. enhanced interest in the political, economic, and social stability of the supplying countries. Wherever a lessening of population pressures through reduced birth rates can increase the prospects for such stability, population policy becomes relevant to resource supplies and to the economic interests of the United States.”

  • in 1977, Kissinger’s State Department publicly announced their goal to sterilize one hundred million of the world’s women. They said population control was required to maintain “the normal operation of U.S. commercial interests around the world.” By contrast Adolf Hitler had planned to sterilize three million Jews in Germany.
  • in 1973, Kissinger was caught on tape telling Pres. Nixon that “The emigration of Jews from the Soviet Union is not an objective of American foreign policy, and if they put Jews into gas chambers in the Soviet Union, it is not an American concern.”[19] At another time he mused, “If it were not for the accident of my birth, I would be anti-Semitic….Any people [Jews] who have been persecuted for two thousand years must be doing something wrong.”[20]

The Nation of Islam confronted Kissinger in 1974, when it was intimated that he had intervened with the government of Peru to disrupt the Muslims’ fish-importing business. Bro. Charles 67X reported in Muhammad Speaks:

“Last April—just two months after the historic announcement of the Muslims importing more than two million pounds of delicious and economical whiting fish for the tables of a starving, malnourished, yet over-charged Black community, and public in general—the U.S. State Department, on orders from the highest authority, made an unprecedented and unheard of inquiry into the affairs of the Muslim fish import, not within the borders of the U.S., but 4,000 miles away, badgering Peruvian government officials for details about Muhammad’s work!”[21]

As a single human being Henry Kissinger has amassed an extraordinary collection of monstrous crimes and worldwide evil that meets and exceeds all Talmudic criteria. His embrace by the white leaders of American society reaches to the very top: Joseph Biden called Kissinger an “eminent statesm[a]n [who] has enhanced our nation’s liberty and prosperity… [and who] serves as an inspiration for our pursuit of the peace and security of a world…”[22] Hillary Clinton: “Kissinger is a friend, and I relied on his counsel when I served as secretary of state.”[23]

To world leaders Kissinger remains a pariah. When he was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize in 1973 for negotiating a ceasefire in Vietnam, his co-winner, Vietnam’s Le Duc Tho, refused to accept the award because Kissinger and the United States, he said, were the aggressors, the invaders, the warmongers, so it was the height of hypocrisy to reward them both as “peacemakers.” Kissinger accepted the “prize.”

No single person better fits the biblical prophecy of Ephesians 6:12: “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.”


This iconic 1966 illustration by Eugene Majied is strikingly similar to the serpentine map of Henry Kissinger’s “influence” below:

 


[1] March 10, 1975, meeting with Turkish foreign minister Melih Esenbel in Ankara, Turkey.

[2] Steve Boggan, “Kissinger Begins to Stoop under the Weight of Legal Scrutiny,” Independent, April 25, 2002.

[3] Martin Indyk, “Henry Kissinger wasn’t bad for Israel—he helped save it,” Forward, Nov. 2, 2021, https://forward.com/opinion/477542/henry-kissinger-wasnt-bad-for-israel-he-helped-save-it/. Kissinger “had been raised in an Orthodox home, had been bar mitzvahed and married in Orthodox synagogues, and identified as a Jew.” Martin Indyk, Master of the Game: Henry Kissinger and the Art of Middle East Diplomacy, A Council on Foreign Relations Book (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2021), 3–4, quoting Niall Ferguson, Kissinger, 1923–1968: The Idealist (New York: Penguin, 2015), 202: “As Kissinger told one of his biographers: ‘You cannot be part of a society that has suffered what the Jewish people have suffered for millennia without a strong sense of identification with it and sense of obligation to it (the Jewish-faith)’.”

[4] Anthony Bourdain, A Cook’s Tour (London: Bloomsbury, 2001), 162.

[5] Greg Grandin, Kissinger’s Shadow: The Long Reach of America’s Most Controversial Statesmen (New York: Henry Holt, 2015), 69. A sortie is one sudden attack or mission by a single plane.

[6] Ibid., 71.

[7] Ibid., 76.

[8] Scott Shane, “The Not-So-Secret War: Revisiting American Intervention in Laos,” New York Times, Feb. 3, 2017, https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/03/books/review/great-place-to-have-a-war-joshua-kulantick.html.

[9] Grandin, Kissinger’s Shadow, 39–47.

[10] Ibid., 63, 177–80.

[11] See also James Ring Adams, “Iraqgate Probe Shifts to Mysterious Bankers,” Forward, Dec. 3, 1993, 1, 5:

[12] Ibid., 117.

[13] Ibid.

[14] Greg Grandin, “America’s trinity of terrorism: The network of U.S.-sponsored terrorism now on global display relies on death squads, disappearances and torture,” Salon, Dec. 14, 2007, https://www.salon.com/2007/12/14/unholy_trinity/; Grandin, Kissinger’s Shadow, 146–47.

[15] Martin Indyk, “Henry Kissinger wasn’t bad for Israel—he helped save it,” Forward, Nov. 2, 2021, https://forward.com/opinion/477542/henry-kissinger-wasnt-bad-for-israel-he-helped-save-it/.

[16] Henry A. Kissinger to the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, Director, Central Intelligence Agency, National Security Study Memorandum 39 concerning “Southern Africa,” April 10, 1969. See Mohamed A. El-Khawas and Barry Cohen, eds., The Kissinger Study of Southern Africa: National Security Study Memorandum 39 (Westport, CT: Lawrence Hill, 1976), 105–9. Oxford English Dictionary mentions tar baby as “a contemptuous term for a black person.”

[17] Eric J. Morgan, “The Sin of Omission: The United States and South Africa in the Nixon Years” (Master’s Thesis, Miami University, 2003), 1.

[18] Grandin, Kissinger’s Shadow, 120–21. Kissinger was disgraced once Cuba sent troops to assist the Black Angolans in defeating the white supremacists.

[19] See “Comments by Nixon and Kissinger on Jews and Other Minorities Cause Stir,” World Jewish Congress, Dec. 14, 2010, https://www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/news/comments-by-nixon-and-kissinger-on-jews-and-other-minorities-cause-stir.

[20] Walter Isaacson, Kissinger: A Biography (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992), 561. But such statements were only deception. See Martin Indyk, “Henry Kissinger wasn’t bad for Israel—he helped save it,” Forward, Nov. 2, 2021. Indyk was U.S. ambassador to Israel:

Kissinger had developed a jaundiced view of peace. He feared that pursuing peace with too much enthusiasm would jeopardize the stability that his order was designed to generate. Peace, for Kissinger, was a problem, not a solution. The desire for it needed to be manipulated to produce something more reliable: a stable order in a highly volatile part of the world.

[21] See Charles 67X, “Highlights of a Government Agent,” Muhammad Speaks, June 1974, 2, 8.

[22] Vice President Joe Biden, “Vice President Biden Commends Shultz, Kissinger, Nunn and Perry on their Continued Work on Nuclear Non-Proliferation,” press release, Jan. 20, 2010, https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/realitycheck/the-press-office/vice-president-biden-commends-shultz-kissinger-nunn-and-perry-their-continued-work-.

[23] Dan Froomkin, “Henry Kissinger’s War Crimes Are Central to the Divide between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders,” The Intercept, Feb. 12, 2016, https://theintercept.com/2016/02/12/henry-kissingers-war-crimes-are-central-to-the-divide-between-hillary-clinton-and-bernie-sanders/.

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