War criminal Kissinger not getting off the hook Nobel Peace Prize winner and former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger is under fire from a book by Christopher Hitchens, the French government, the Chilean government and even Lyndon LaRouche, who opposes Kissinger's Trilateral Commission/Rockefeller connections. The CIA in 2000 released documents about the U.$. role in Chile in 1970. It turns out that then Secretary of State and National Security Advisor to Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger made an offer of $50,000 for anyone willing to kidnap Gen. Rene Schneider, the commander-in-chief of Chile's armed forces, which had managed to respect the outcome of Chile's election of mushy socialist Salvador Allende. Kissinger's hitman ended up killing Schneider. This is not to mention that Kissinger masterminded the sabotage of Chile's economy under Allende including the funding of worker strikes. The resulting repression including the killing of Allende is touched on in the movie "Missing." On Memorial Day, Kissinger received a summons from a French judge while Kissinger was in Paris. The judge wanted Kissinger's testimony on the disappearance of five French citizens under the coup beneficiary, General Augusto Pinochet.(1) The Boston Globe openly speculates that Chile may be seeking to indict Kissinger; even though thus far Chile too is only seeking testimony. In Chile, U.$. widow Joyce Horman is pursuing a lawsuit on the disappearance and presumed death of her husband, the journalist and filmmaker Charles Horman. He disappeared after the CIA coup in September 1973 against the elected president Allende. Now the special magistrate in charge of the Pinochet case in Chile is asking Kissinger to testify on Horman. Joyce Horman says Charles Horman overheard U.$. military agents talking on the day of the coup.(2) Of course, Kissinger like Nixon was responsible for the bombing of Laos and Cambodia and the whole Indochina War killing 4 million people. MIM has no doubt that Kissinger is a war criminal guilty of blood crimes against the people and thus deserving execution. Kissinger, Nixon and Pinochet are proof why the dictatorship of the proletariat--organized violence of a class--is necessary. Imperialists and their lackeys do not respect elections unless they win through bribery or intimidation. Notes: 1. Boston Globe 21June2001, p. d7. 2. Financial Times 6June2001. http://news.ft.com/ft/