14 hrs ago | Star Tribune
Washington Post: Federalism isn't really catching on in Europe
Who do I call if I want to call Europe? Henry Kissinger once famously asked. For eight years European federalists labored to produce an answer to that question -- staging a constitutional convention, ignoring repeated rebuffs by voters and bullying skeptical small countries.
Marsh on Monday: Bland Belgian rather than barnstorming Blair
Henry Kissinger, the ever-querulous former U.S. Secretary of State, still asks from time to time whom he should telephone when he wishes to speak to the chief representative of Europe.
AIG Bailout: A Goldman Rescue in Drag?
Krugman is bashing Timmy! Geithner for his role in the AIG bailout . This poses something of a dilemma for yours truly.
Leading article: Safe and boring a " but the new EU line-up does the job
There was a lot wrong with how the European Union selected its new leaders, and the two individuals chosen as the faces and voices of Europe may have their defects.
Finally, an answer to the Kissinger question
The European Union says it finally has the answer to a question long attributed to former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger: who do I call if I want to call Europe? That answer is simple.
European Union: Fading presidential ambitions
Who do you call when you want to call Europe? After five years of wrangling designed to deal with the Henry Kissinger question, the EU last night failed to provide a satisfactory answer.
Bloomberg, Kissinger help Koch celebrate 85th birthday
Former Mayor Ed Koch is greeted by former Secretary of State Dr. Henry Kissinger during his 85th birthday celebration on Wednesday.
University of Cambridge News Stories
Henry Kissinger reflects on Germany's past, present and future
One of the twentieth century's most influential and controversial political figures visited Pembroke College, Cambridge on Wednesday evening, courtesy of the annual Xchanging German Xcellence Lecture series.
Top candidate debates EU tax at elite dinner
Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy, a top candidate for the new European Union president job, laid out his views on future EU financing at a dinner of the secretive Bilderberg group last week.
Henry Kissinger once sarcastically asked whom he should call in Europe if the world caught fire.
Germany celebrates fall of Berlin Wall
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, left, welcomes U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Berlin, Germany, Monday, Nov.
NYT: Legacy of a 89 is still up for debate
Former SovietA president of Mikhail Gorbachev, former U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger and former German foreign minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher visit aA piece of the Berlin Wall on Sunday.
Truth be told: Henry Kissinger is not an advisor to Pope Benedict XVI
I'd like to examine an issue which needs to be addressed. As a lifelong Catholic, I respect the teaching of the Church and the authority of it's leader the Pope, who serves as the Vicar of Christ .
No luck with Janet Reno? Did you try Henry Kissinger?
Today's question: Why no sale of alcohol before 10 a.m. on Sundays? I wrote to Janet Reno about it and all she said was thanks for writing.
ELLE Macpherson, Bill Gates, Ted Turner and Henry Kissinger are all readers of the Economist, but we learnt today First Minister Rhodri Morgan is not.
Henry Kissinger once sarcastically askedwho he shouldcall in Europe if the world caught fire.
Sex and power ignite 'Oleanna' and 'Miss Julie' on Broadway
By DAVID A. ROSENBERGHour Theater Critic "Power," Henry Kissinger once famously said, "is the ultimate aphrodisiac." Sex, class, communication, control and, of course, power are the elemental isotopes that fuel "Oleanna" and "After Miss Julie," two explosive revivals now on Broadway.
The leak that STUNNED a nation
President Richard Nixon, right, and Henry Kissinger, who served as national security adviser and secretary of state under Nixon, were central figures in the Pentagon Papers controversy after Daniel Ellsberg leaked the top-secret documents to the media.
Brad DeLong's Semi-Daily Journal
Can We Please Shut the Republican Party Down This Evening?
Henry Kissinger once said, people say: "It has the added advantage of being true." For today's Republican standard bearers like Meg Whitman, that is no longer the case: telling the truth never crosses their minds, and the idea that something being true might be an advantage for it is completely foreign to them.
For more than 200 years, America's policy makers have wrestled with the complexities of dealing with the world.
Also on Topix