Henry Kissinger served in the US Army during the Second World War and subsequently held teaching posts in History and Government at Harvard University for twenty years. He served as National Security Advisor and then Secretary of State under Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, and has advised many other American presidents on foreign policy. He received the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the Medal of Liberty, among other awards. He is the author of numerous books and articles on foreign policy and diplomacy, including most recently On China and World Order. He is currently Chairman of Kissinger Associates, Inc., an international consulting firm.
This is an extraordinary book, one that braids together two through
lines in the long and distinguished career of former Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger. The first is grand strategy: No practical
geopolitical thinker has more assuredly mastered the way the modern
global system works or how nations use the tools of statecraft to
bend an often-resistant world to their will. But Mr. Kissinger is
also an astute observer of the personal element in strategy-the art
and science of leadership, or how, on the executive level,
"decisions [are] made, trust earned, promises kept, a way forward
proposed." In Leadership he presents a fascinating set of
historical case studies and political biographies that blend the
dance and the dancer, seamlessly. ... In doing so, he lays out a
set of graspable tools that leaders can use effectively today. ...
Kissinger puts a high premium on a deep and considered knowledge of
history, coupled with a strength of inner character.
*Wall Street Journal*
Do individuals matter in shaping the course of events? Henry
Kissinger thinks they do, and in his latest book he draws on case
studies and his own experience to argue that the individual leader,
and his or her statecraft, can sometimes determine history ...
Although Kissinger, now aged 99, has not held office since 1977, he
has advised virtually every US president since Nixon... For
Kissinger, good leaders have a deep appreciation of the past and an
ability to imagine possible futures ... Elder statesman is an
overused term but Kissinger is the genuine article, and worth
listening to.
*Financial Times*
As he heads towards his century, Kissinger has lost none of the
intellectual firepower that set him apart from other foreign policy
professors and practitioners of his and subsequent generations.
*Sunday Times*
Yoda for foreign policy geeks
*Observer*
The 99-year-old Kissinger has written what purports to be a
handbook for the leaders of today and tomorrow, built around six
portraits of global figures from the second half of the 20th
century: Konrad Adenauer, Charles de Gaulle, Nixon, Anwar Sadat,
Lee Kuan Yew and Margaret Thatcher. Kissinger draws interesting
parallels between them. All six lives were shaped by what he calls
the Second Thirty Years War - the period of global conflict from
1914 to 1945. ... Kissinger knew them all and enlivens his text
with accounts of his own interactions with the leaders and those
around them. ... informed and authoritative
*New Statesman*
They all triumphed over their modest starts in life, through their
great ability and drive, to reach the pinnacle of power. All of his
six subjects, Kissinger argues, show that "transformative
leadership" by great people matters more than impersonal forces in
shaping history.
*The Times*
authoritative... given the pitiful state of leadership in the
western world today, a few of those already in high office would
lose nothing except, perhaps, their idiocy by reading it.
*Daily Telegraph*
There is no denying his intellectual potency ... this tome is a
robust study of six leaders who he asserts 'transcended the
circumstances they inherited'. ... he makes shrewd comments about
the way in which leaders operate today in an era dominated by
social media and identity-based factionalism.
*Literary Review*
One of America's most legendary diplomats finds the soul in
statecraft in these enlightening sketches of world leaders. . . .
Kissinger infuses his lucid policy analyses with colorful firsthand
observations. . . . Kissinger's portraits of politicians spinning
weakness and defeat into renewed strength are captivating. This is
a vital study of power in action.
*Publishers Weekly*
Now aged 99, Henry Kissinger is still writing books. Here he
profiles six leaders he has known - Lee Kuan Yew, Konrad Adenauer,
Richard Nixon, Charles de Gaulle, Margaret Thatcher and Anwar Sadat
- and draws general lessons about the character and intellect of
leaders who are able to change the world.
*Financial Times Book of the Year*
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