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Bassett Medical Center opens new hybrid operating room
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Bassett Medical Center announced it has opened a new hybrid operating room, a state-of-the-art cardiac surgery facility that expands options for emergency

MVCC mourns passing of past president Michael Schafer
UTICA, N.Y. — Mohawk Valley Community College’s (MVCC) longest-serving president Michael I. Schafer recently passed away at his home in Naples, Florida, according to a

Hochul creates consortium that includes SUNY, Cornell to focus on AI research, innovation
ALBANY, N.Y. — Gov. Kathy Hochul on Monday announced the creation of a consortium that will create and launch an artificial intelligence (AI) computer center

Walsh to deliver State of the City message Jan. 18 at City Center
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh will deliver the 2024 State of the City address on Jan. 18 at 5:30 p.m. at City Center

Oneida County Tourism moves to two new office locations
UTICA, N.Y. — Oneida County Tourism (OCT) has moved operations to two new offices that it says will help enhance the visitor experience and accessibility.

People news: S.E.E.D. Planning Group adds client-operations specialist
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — S.E.E.D. Planning Group, LLC announced that Matthew Goliber has joined the financial-planning firm as a client-operations specialist in its Syracuse–area office (town
VIEWPOINT: New state Clean Slate Act’s impact on private employers
On Nov. 16, 2023, New York State Gov. Kathy Hochul signed legislation, also known as the Clean Slate Act, to automatically seal from public access
Ask Rusty: We’re Planning to Claim SS at 62; What Do We Need to Know?
Dear Rusty: My wife (born May 1962) and I (born April 1963) are retired and will soon be looking to start collecting our Social Security
OPINION: Resolve and Resilience: Motivation for a New Year
[Now that we have turned] the page on another year, we reflect on the journey over the past 12 months and welcome the opportunity to
OPINION: Kissinger left complex foreign-policy legacy
Possibly no one had more influence on American foreign policy in the late 20th century than Henry Kissinger, who died [on Nov. 29] at age 100. In his long and active career, he advised presidents, carried out policies and initiatives, and was a highly visible figure around the world. While it’s early to pronounce judgment
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Possibly no one had more influence on American foreign policy in the late 20th century than Henry Kissinger, who died [on Nov. 29] at age 100. In his long and active career, he advised presidents, carried out policies and initiatives, and was a highly visible figure around the world.
While it’s early to pronounce judgment on Kissinger’s legacy, it’s clear that his impact is mixed. His accomplishments were both positive and negative. He was respected and he was reviled.
Kissinger is the only person to have served as national security adviser and secretary of state at the same time, positions he held in the Nixon and Ford administrations. He was brilliant and secretive, and he wasn’t much focused on the human cost of his policies. He was interested in strategy, not values.
He showed little interest in democratic governance or transparency. A creature of the executive branch, Kissinger seemed to almost scorn the idea of three separate and coequal branches of government. You sometimes got the impression he had contempt for Congress.
I was not close to Kissinger, but our paths did cross on foreign-policy matters. I served in Congress, and we approached policy from different perspectives. Coincidentally, we were both connected to the commission that investigated the 9/11 [terror] attacks. Kissinger was the original pick to chair the group, and former Sen. George Mitchell was to be vice chair. Both stepped down because of perceived conflicts of interest. Former New Jersey Gov. Tom Kean chaired the 9/11 Commission, and I was vice chair.
Kissinger’s view of the world, which he characterized as sober realism, may have been influenced by his background as a Jew who spent his childhood in Nazi Germany, before his family fled and settled in New York City. He was a very talented man and, wherever he went, in academic, policy circles and government, he rose to power very quickly. In the 1970s, Kissinger was widely praised for his diplomatic work. When he was named secretary of state in 1973, a Gallup Poll found him to be the most respected man in the world.
He engineered President Richard Nixon’s historic visit to China in 1972, opening the door to improved U.S.-Chinese relations and ultimately reshaping the geopolitical map. Kissinger promoted détente with the Soviet Union, helping to reduce Cold War tensions. In the Middle East, his tireless shuttle diplomacy improved relations between Israel and its neighbors. These were real accomplishments.
Kissinger shared the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating the agreement that ended the Vietnam War. His critics found that highly ironic. During the war, Kissinger orchestrated the U.S. bombing and invasion of Cambodia, which expanded the conflict and fueled a civil war that eventually brought the Khmer Rouge to power, resulting in up to 3 million deaths. The Cambodia disaster was exhibit No. 1 for critics who accused Kissinger of war crimes, but he was also tied to a brutal military coup in Chile, Indonesia’s bloody invasion of East Timor, a violent civil war in East Pakistan, and other foreign-policy disasters.
Kissinger later had a lucrative career in consulting. He clearly enjoyed being a celebrity, rubbing elbows with rich and powerful people and being photographed with glamorous women. He became a great figure on the social circuit in Washington. Getting Kissinger to attend your dinner was a big achievement.
Henry Kissinger left quite a stamp on American foreign policy. He was a master of developing strategy and exercising power. But American greatness isn’t just about using force and gaining advantage. It also relies on our faith in democratic governance and our belief in human rights and the dignity of all people. There is a place for sober realism, but American foreign policy should be grounded in our values.
Lee Hamilton, 92, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at the IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south-central Indiana.
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