Analysis: Taped Conversation between Nixon and Kissinger
The "Analysis: Taped Conversation between Nixon and Kissinger" delves into a significant private discussion that took place in the summer of 1972, focusing on U.S. foreign policy during the Vietnam War. During this period, President Nixon was concerned about his upcoming reelection amidst increasing domestic unrest due to military operations in Cambodia and declining troop morale in Vietnam. The conversation reveals Nixon and his national security advisor, Henry Kissinger, strategizing on how to maintain U.S. prestige by delaying the end of American involvement in Vietnam until after the election, allowing South Vietnam to shoulder the blame for its eventual downfall.
This exchange reflects a broader trend in American foreign policy characterized by realpolitik, where political expediency often superseded humanitarian concerns. The discussion reveals Nixon's recognition of the inevitability of failure for South Vietnam and presents a calculated approach to managing both international relations and domestic perceptions. The conversation also highlights the complexities of the U.S. role in Vietnam, marked by manipulation and concern for legacy, while underscoring the tragic human cost of prolonged conflict. Overall, this analysis offers insight into the political strategies employed by Nixon and Kissinger during a tumultuous time in American history.
Analysis: Taped Conversation between Nixon and Kissinger
Date: August 3, 1972
Author: Richard M. Nixon, Henry Kissinger
Genre: discussion; transcript
Summary Overview
In the summer of 1972, President Nixon's mind was on his upcoming reelection. Although his public approval rating was high, Nixon still worried about his legacy. Expanded military operations in Cambodia stirred increasingly violent demonstrations at home: Nixon won no popularity contests when four students were killed during a 1970 protest at Kent State University. Additionally, decreased troop morale, desertion, and increased fragging (killing of another soldier or commander, usually by fragmentation grenade) weakened the US armed forces in Vietnam. Determined to preserve his own and the United States' prestige, Nixon and his national security advisor, Henry Kissinger, discussed their options in a private, taped meeting. The men discussed delaying the end of US involvement for a “decent interval” until a weak and corrupt government in South Vietnam could justifiably take the blame for its own downfall in the media. The revelation of this tape after the end of the war seemed to support the picture of Nixon and Kissinger as realpolitik strategists, who subordinated individual suffering to the needs of the state.
Defining Moment
Nixon and Kissinger inherited a difficult situation in Vietnam from their predecessors. Deception, intransigence, and stalling tactics on both sides characterized the ceasefire negotiations between Saigon and Hanoi. South Vietnam's president Nguyen Van Thiêu was subject to the United States' demands in order to maintain his government's legitimacy. Often relying on Soviet and Chinese support, North Vietnam pressed for the removal of Thiêu and the coalition government. Hanoi's proposals were unacceptable for the United States: the “leader of the free world” could not tolerate communist government after supporting their opponents for so long. At the time of this private conversation between the American president and foreign policy advisor, the United States had mediated negotiations for nearly four years.
Rather than give in to an embarrassing compromise, the Nixon administration secretly decided to stall for a “decent interval” until both the presidential election was concluded and Saigon could be blamed for its own defeat. The conversation between Nixon and Kissinger exemplifies an increasingly pragmatic and pessimistic trend in American foreign policy. South Vietnam was no longer as important to Nixon's image as it had been in Nixon's first presidential campaign. By 1972, several events complicated the status of American foreign relations. First, as part of a plan to gain leverage over the Soviets, Nixon planned a historic trip to reopen relations with communist China in February. Nixon then met with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev in May: the two opposed nations signed a series of agreements in a stunning moment of détente, a period of less strained political relations between the United States and Soviet Russia. Finally, an aggressive campaign designed by North Vietnam to improve their bargaining position in peace talks (the Easter Offensive) occupied American and South Vietnamese military corps from March–October 1972.
Although audiotapes of White House conversations did not begin with Nixon, his implementation of automatic voice-activated recordings was more extensive and secretive. The revelation of the scope and content on these tapes after the investigation of the Watergate scandal would inextricably link Nixon's administration to a history of secrecy and manipulation. Kissinger, too, as participant in such machinations, would tarnish his reputation as peacemaker by the information revealed in these tapes.
Author Biography
Richard M. Nixon showed himself to be a political opportunist from 1950–60 both as a member of Congress and as Eisenhower's vice president by encouraging anticommunist hysteria. Nixon returned to power with the presidency in 1968 by capitalizing on dissension among the Democrats over the unpopular Vietnam War. Citing the need to win “peace with honor” to the public, Nixon was privately intent on maintaining his own popularity and the United States' leadership at any cost. Disparities between Nixon's public promises to curb the war and covert, escalated bombing stirred US dissatisfaction. As a result, Nixon increased pressure on his advisor Kissinger to find a formula to resolve the war.
Henry Kissinger, a Jewish immigrant from Nazi Germany, served in the US military during World War II. Afterwards, he attained his PhD in political science at Harvard in 1954 and then involved himself as an advisor in several different political capacities. As Nixon's national security advisor, Kissinger conducted negotiations to reduce American involvement and end the war in Vietnam. Although Kissinger would eventually receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 1973 for his participation in the Paris Peace Accords, bombardment continued in Vietnam.
Document Analysis
Nixon won his first presidential term by manipulating the South Vietnamese president, Thiêu, into delaying peace talk concessions in 1968; the incumbent president won his second term in part by yet again manipulating events in South Vietnam. If Kissinger could delay a resolution about a ceasefire in Vietnam until Nixon won reelection, This conversation, secretly recorded before the results of the 1972 election, shows that Kissinger and Nixon entertained notions of political expediency and fatalism in their approach to foreign affairs.
First, the conversation between the two men shows that they considered South Vietnam part of a small piece in a larger game. “Let's be perfectly cold-blooded about it,” Nixon says to Kissinger. The US had been playing a game with Soviet Russia and China since the 1950s, and Thiêu was merely a pawn on whom the Americans could force “almost anything” in the negotiations. Additionally, Nixon tells Kissinger: “winning an election is terribly important,” but he gives no other reason for its importance than having a “viable foreign policy.” Kissinger responds that the Chinese and domestic opponents would not look favorably on them if they could blame Saigon's collapse on the Nixon administration. Absent from these remarks are the earlier rhetorical ploys about the need to win “peace with honor” and the “silent majority” who believed in the war. By a certain point, Kissinger asserts, the administration can preserve its power at Saigon's expense, and no one in the American public “will give a damn.”
In addition to showing that the American government's interests justify the means, this conversation indicates that Nixon believed in a postcolonial fatalism that doomed Saigon before he came to office. The president recognizes that even though the Easter Offensive caused a great amount of damage to North Vietnam, “South Vietnam probably can never survive anyway.” In the course of the conversation, Nixon mentions both the Israelis and the Algerians, two groups who were fighting or had struggled over sovereignty with different, but disastrous, results. Of course, the United States was not fighting for its own independence in Vietnam. The fact that Nixon states “nobody gives a goddamn about what happened in Algeria” connects his fatalism back again to a political philosophy that expediency was morally justified for a world superpower. The French left the Algerians to kill each other after independence; the same thing would likely happen in Vietnam. If the United States and China no longer cared about Saigon's fated fall, then it was no longer necessary to preserve South Vietnam against its opponents.
Finally, this taped conversation is another piece of evidence that Kissinger and Nixon were anxious about the legacy the administration would leave. However, Nixon's closing words do prove that the man was capable of comprehending the scale of human suffering. “Jesus, they've fought for so long, dying, and now…I don't know,” remarks Nixon. Behind the “decent interval” strategy lay not only calculated policy, but also aporia—doubt or puzzlement—after years of no political progress.
Bibliography and Additional Reading
Greenberg, David. Nixon's Shadow: The History of an Image. New York: W.W. Norton, 2003. Print.
Karnow, Stanley. Vietnam: A History. New York: Penguin, 1991. Print.
Kimball, Jeffrey P. Nixon's Vietnam War. Lawrence, KS: U of Kansas, 1998. Print.
Nguyen, Phu Duc & Arthur J. Dommen. The Viet-Nam Peace Negotiations: Saigon's Side of the Story. Christiansburg, VA: Dalley Book Service, 2005. Print.
Snep, Frank. Decent Interval: An Insider's Account of Saigon's Indecent End Told by the CIA's Chief Strategy Analyst in Vietnam. New York: Random, 1977. Print.