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Kissinger ’73: ‘If they put Jews in gas chambers in the Soviet Union, it’s not an American concern’

The Nixon library in California is playing Assange to get attention? It released 265 hours of Nixon tapes this week. Some shockeroos, on Jews. From The Times:

[In 1973] Nixon and Mr. Kissinger were brutally dismissive in response to requests that the United States press the Soviet Union to permit Jews to emigrate and escape persecution there.

“The emigration of Jews from the Soviet Union is not an objective of American foreign policy,” Mr. Kissinger said. “And if they put Jews into gas chambers in the Soviet Union, it is not an American concern. Maybe a humanitarian concern.”

“I know,” Nixon responded. “We can’t blow up the world because of it.”

Note that Soviet Jews weren’t able to get out in big numbers until the 1980s…

Then there’s this. Anti-Semitism, and then the military issue. And yes the military question is tied into Jewish liberalism; it goes back to S.Y. Agnon characters lying to get out of service for stupid wars in Poland…

Nixon listed many of his top Jewish advisers — among them, Mr. Kissinger and William Safire, who went on to become a columnist at The New York Times — and argued that they shared a common trait, of needing to compensate for an inferiority complex.

“What it is, is it’s the insecurity,” he said. “It’s the latent insecurity. Most Jewish people are insecure. And that’s why they have to prove things.”

Nixon also strongly hinted that his reluctance to even consider amnesty for young Americans who went to Canada to avoid being drafted during the Vietnam War was because, he told Mr. Colson, so many of them were Jewish.

“I didn’t notice many Jewish names coming back from Vietnam on any of those lists; I don’t know how the hell they avoid it,” he said, adding: “If you look at the Canadian-Swedish contingent, they were very disproportionately Jewish. The deserters.”

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