Posted on 11/28/2006 6:00:56 PM PST by FLOutdoorsman
Pope Benedict XVI has invited Henry Kissinger, former adviser to Richard Nixon, to be a political consultant and he accepted.
VATICAN CITY Over the course of his long and controversial career, former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has had many titles. Now he reportedly has one more adviser to the Pope.
According to the Italian newspaper La Stampa, Pope Benedict XVI has invited the 83-year-old former adviser to Richard Nixon to be a political consultant, and Kissinger has accepted.
Quoting an authoritative diplomatic source at the Holy See, the paper reported Nov. 4 that the Nobel laureate was asked at a recent private audience with the Holy Father to form part of a papal advisory board on foreign and political affairs.
As the Register went to press, Kissingers office was unable to confirm or deny the report. La Stampa stood by its story, although the Italian press is less rigorous in its authentication of stories as is the United States Press.
If true, there is speculation on which issues Kissinger would advise the Holy Father. Relations with Islam, Palestine and Israel, and Iraq Kissinger has been critical of the conduct of the war but opposes a quick withdrawal are likely to be high up on the agenda.
It has also been speculated that, in view of the Muslim hostility to Benedicts recent Regensburg speech, Kissinger might provide advice on dealing with an increasingly fractious Islamic world.
Furthermore, like the Pope, Kissinger has analyzed the challenges of globalization and might provide advice in this area as well.
The idea [of his appointment] sounds like a good one, said veteran Vatican journalist Sandro Magister. But so would it also be to consult other experts on geopolitics with different orientations.
As possible expert advisers with different perspectives, Magister listed Catholic philosopher and former diplomat Michael Novak; Bernard Lewis, professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University; and foreign policy experts such as Charles Kupchan and G. John Ikenberry.
Expert Advice
The recruitment of Kissinger would not be unprecedented. Experts from a variety of disciplines, including the realm of economics, politics and philosophy, are regularly invited to advise popes and Vatican officials on current affairs.
Pope John Paul II was close friends with Zbigniew Brzezinski, the Polish-born national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter, partly because both had a common Polish heritage (though this caused the Soviets to suspect the Vatican of fixing the election of Karol Wojtyla, which occurred during the Carter presidency).
Similarly to John Paul and Brzezinski, Benedict and Kissinger are close in age and were both born in Bavaria (a Jew, Kissinger and his family fled Nazi Germany before World War II).
In recent years, other figures invited to share their expertise with the Holy See have included Paul Wolfowitz, a former President Bush adviser and now president of the World Bank; Michel Camdessus, the former director of the International Monetary Fund; American economist Jeffrey Sachs and Hans Tietmeyer, former governor of Germanys central bank.
The pontifical academies also regularly call on academic luminaries as consultants, such as Nobel laureates Gary Becker, the successor to Milton Friedman at the Chicago School of Economics, and Italian medical researcher Rita Levi-Montalcini.
In comments to the Register, Novak said that many, maybe most of these experts are not Catholic, but that the Pope can call in certain experts he wants to talk to, or hear a paper from, with discussion in a small group.
Novak said this is true of both Benedict XVI and John Paul II, whom he described as having very curious and searching minds.
Any appointment of Kissinger is likely to cause some unease, however. One Iranian radio station is already reporting the news as a papal-Jewish conspiracy, while others object to the Pope consulting with someone who has been widely identified with the realpolitik school of political analysis, an approach that places practical considerations before morality.
Different Voices
Yet like Pope John Paul II, Benedict XVI is winning recognition for his intellectual ability and his capacity to discuss international issues with a diverse spectrum of world figures, ranging from the Dalai Lama to the late atheist polemicist Oriana Fallaci and to Mustapha Cherif, an Algerian Muslim philosopher whom he met this month.
Such an appointment would really show Benedict XVI to be contrary to his media image, as someone whos willing to listen to other voices not in accordance with his views, said one Holy See diplomat about the reported enlistment of Kissinger as a papal adviser. Its always helpful to hear different voices offering different views.
Oy vey.
Mr. Kissinger best be advised to carry a grounded lightning rod at all times from now on.
The Pope doesn't need any of Henry's advice.
Chris Hitchens is going to implode.. lol.
Henry should have retired years ago. Why do these old fogies hang around?
Egos don't age.
Popes have had advisors like Henry the K before. Alexander VI, for one... ;-)
I guess so, but I would be enjoying life.
The father of the zero-population movement to advise the Pope? That's rich ...
I thought this was a joke. Oh well politics and religion does make strange bedfellows.
This is a joke, right?
KIssinger was brain dead when he advised that looser Nixon and he's even more brain dead now.
If the Pope really wants some advice, he should read more of Michael Palaeologus, HE knew what the west WILL be facing soon.
/sarcasm
Why all the Kissinger hate? He is a very intelligent, experienced man who deserves respect.
The Pontiff knows as much as we do about these advisors. Kissinger Boy is one of several if not many. The Pope doesn't do these things for photo-ops or the idiot box media, and he never heard of Drudge and craigslist, thanks heaven. The cat fully trusts Papa Ratzi.
This is such a fatuous article. It is laughable.
Kissinger & Population Control
Kissinger & The NSSM-200 Directive on the FR
"Abortion is Vital to the Solution" -- A 'Key Point' from Kissinger's NSSM-200
The Pope, like Rick Warren should stick to spiritual matters!
...ummm...don't you mean Paul Erlich?
I ran into Henry's brother Walter once. He was a client of our firm in midtown.
I heard this voice coming down the hall (someone was walking him to the door). It sounded EXACTLY like Henry Kissinger.
I carefully looked up as he passed by to catch a glimpse, but it wasn't Henry.
I later asked my boss about it. "Yeah," he said, "there's a reason he sounds like Henry Kissinger. That's his brother Walter!"
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