Remarks By Dr. Henry Kissinger At Richard Nixon's Funeral
April 27, 1994
During the final week of
Richard Nixon's life, I often imagined how he would have reacted
to the tide of concern, respect, admiration and affection evoked
by his last great battle. His gruff pose of never paying
attention to media comment would have been contradicted by a warm
glow and the ever-so-subtle hint that another recital of the
commentary would not be unwelcome. And without quite saying so,
he would have conveyed that it would mean a lot to him if Julie
and Tricia, David and Ed were told of his friends' pride in this
culmination to an astonishing life.
When I learned the final news, by then so expected,
yet so hard to accept, I felt a profound void. In the words of
Shakespeare: "He was a man. Take him. For all in all, I shall
not look upon his like again."
In the conduct of foreign policy, Richard Nixon was
one of the seminal presidents. He came into office when the
forces of history were moving America from a position of
dominance to one of leadership. Dominance reflects strength.
Leadership must be earned. And Richard Nixon earned that
leadership role for his country with courage, dedication and
skill.
When Richard Nixon took his Oath of Office, 550,000
Americans were engaged in combat in a place as far away from the
United States as it was possible to be. America had no contact
with China, the world's most populous nation. No negotiations
with the Soviet Union, the other nuclear superpower. Most Moslem
countries had broken diplomatic relations with the United States,
and Middle East diplomacy was stalemated. All of this in the
midst of the most anguishing domestic crisis since the Civil War.
When Richard Nixon left office, an agreement to end
the war in Vietnam had been concluded, and the main lines of all
subsequent policy were established: permanent dialogue with
China; readiness without illusion to ease tensions with the
Soviet Union; a peace process in the Middle East; the beginning,
via the European Security Conference, of establishing human
rights as an international issue, weakening Soviet hold on
Eastern Europe.
Richard Nixon's foreign policy goals were long-
range. And he pursued them without regard to domestic political
consequences. When he considered our nation's interests at
stake, he dared confrontations, despite the imminence of
elections and also in the midst of the worst crisis of his life.
And he bore, if with some pain, the disapproval of longtime
friends and allies over relaxing tensions with China and the
Soviet Union. He drew strength from a conviction. He often
expressed to me the price for doing things halfway is no less
than for doing it completely. So we might as well do them
properly. That's Richard Nixon's greatest accomplishment. It
was as much moral as it was political -- to lead from strength at
a moment of apparent weakness, to husband the nation's resilience
and, thus, to lay the basis for victory in the Cold War.
Shy and withdrawn, Richard Nixon made himself
succeed in the most gregarious of professions, and steeled
himself to conspicuous acts of extraordinary courage. In the
face of wrenching domestic controversy, he held fast to his basic
theme that the greatest free nation in the world had a duty to
lead, and no right to abdicate.
Richard Nixon would be so proud that President
Clinton and all living former Presidents of the United States are
here, symbolizing that his long and sometimes bitter journey had
concluded in reconciliation.
I wish that in his final hours I could have told him
about Brian McDonald who, during the Cambodian crisis, had been
fasting on a bench in Lafayette Park, across from the White House
until, as he said, "President Nixon redeemed his pledge to
withdraw American forces from their anguished country in two
months" -- a promise which was, in fact, kept.
Across the chasm of the decades, Brian called me the
day Richard Nixon fell ill and left a message: "When you talk to
President Nixon, tell him that I'm praying for him."
So let us now say goodbye to our gallant friend. He
stood on pinnacles that dissolved in the precipice. He achieved
greatly and he suffered deeply. But he never gave up. In his
solitude, he envisaged a new international order that would
reduce lingering enmities, strengthen historic friendships, and
give new hope to mankind -- a vision where dreams and
possibilities conjoined.
Richard Nixon ended the war. And he advanced the
vision of peace of his Quaker youth. He was devoted to his
family. He loved his country. And he considered service his
honor. It was a privilege to have been allowed to help him.
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