Ebook {Epub PDF} Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power by Robert Dallek
· Dallek’s attention to personalities makes “Nixon and Kissinger” remarkably engaging for a page study of policy www.doorway.ru: Mark Atwood Lawrence. I found Robert Dallek's detailed account of one of the most important foreign policy partnerships in US history utterly compelling. When Nixon's distrust of eastern-seaboard intellectuals collided with Kissinger's conviction that he was always the smartest person in the room, the result could not be anything other than a volatile working relationship between the two men, each determined to make his /5. · Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power. by Robert Dallek. pp, Penguin, £ Henry Kissinger once gave the secretary of state, William Rogers, a Author: Frances Stonor Saunders.
Robert Dallek was interviewed about his book [Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power], published by HarperCollins. He discussed the close, but uneasy, relationship between Secretary of State Henry. Tapping into a wealth of recently declassified documents and tapes, Robert Dallek uncovers fascinating details about Nixon and Kissinger's tumultuous personal relationship and the extent to which they struggled to outdo each other in the reach for foreign policy achievements. Robert Dallek is the author of An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, and Nixon and Kissinger, among other books. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and Vanity Fair.
WASHINGTON, April 16 — Robert Dallek sat in the National Archives day after day, mining the 20, pages of Henry Kissinger’s telephone transcripts for historical gold. And every so often. Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power. by Robert Dallek. pp, Penguin, £ Henry Kissinger once gave the secretary of state, William Rogers, a transcript of a conversation with Nixon, in. Tapping into recently disclosed documents and tapes, historian Dallek uncovers fascinating details about Nixon and Kissinger's tumultuous personal relationship -- their collaboration and rivalry -- and the extent to which they struggled to outdo each other in foreign policy achievements.
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