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“Dazzling and instructive . . . [a] magisterial new book.” —Walter Isaacson, Time

"An astute analysis that illuminates many of today's critical international issues." —
Kirkus Reviews
 
Henry Kissinger offers in 
World Order a deep meditation on the roots of international harmony and global disorder. Drawing on his experience as one of the foremost statesmen of the modern era—advising presidents, traveling the world, observing and shaping the central foreign policy events of recent decades—Kissinger now reveals his analysis of the ultimate challenge for the twenty-first century: how to build a shared international order in a world of divergent historical perspectives, violent conflict, proliferating technology, and ideological extremism.

There has never been a true “world order,” Kissinger observes. For most of history, civilizations defined their own concepts of order. Each considered itself the center of the world and envisioned its distinct principles as universally relevant. China conceived of a global cultural hierarchy with the emperor at its pinnacle. In Europe, Rome imagined itself surrounded by barbarians; when Rome fragmented, European peoples refined a concept of an equilibrium of sovereign states and sought to export it across the world. Islam, in its early centuries, considered itself the world’s sole legitimate political unit, destined to expand indefinitely until the world was brought into harmony by religious principles. The United States was born of a conviction about the universal applicability of democracy—a conviction that has guided its policies ever since.

Now international affairs take place on a global basis, and these historical concepts of world order are meeting. Every region participates in questions of high policy in every other, often instantaneously. Yet there is no consensus among the major actors about the rules and limits guiding this process or its ultimate destination. The result is mounting tension.

Grounded in Kissinger’s deep study of history and his experience as national security advisor and secretary of state, 
World Order guides readers through crucial episodes in recent world history. Kissinger offers a unique glimpse into the inner deliberations of the Nixon administration’s negotiations with Hanoi over the end of the Vietnam War, as well as Ronald Reagan’s tense debates with Soviet Premier Gorbachev in Reykjavík. He offers compelling insights into the future of U.S.–China relations and the evolution of the European Union, and he examines lessons of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Taking readers from his analysis of nuclear negotiations with Iran through the West’s response to the Arab Spring and tensions with Russia over Ukraine, World Order anchors Kissinger’s historical analysis in the decisive events of our time.

Provocative and articulate, blending historical insight with geopolitical prognostication, 
World Order is a unique work that could come only from a lifelong policy maker and diplomat. Kissinger is also the author of On China
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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
3,084 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book insightful, lucid, and enlightening. They describe it as a good, erudite, and informative read. Readers also praise the prose as elegant and easy to understand.

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270 customers mention "Insight"258 positive12 negative

Customers find the book profoundly insightful, lucid, and informative. They say it offers a comprehensive and deep analysis of the issues we face. Readers also mention the book teaches a great lesson and helps them think. In addition, they appreciate the small pieces of information that can be gleaned from it.

"...This book is great food for thought, it puts forth guidance and analyzes the problems facing a "World Order" and is a must read for anyone slightly..." Read more

"...Think what you may think of him personally, his writing is superb and analysis on spot." Read more

"...and fewer prescriptions; instead, the book offers a comprehensive and deep analysis of the issues we face and the conceptual apparatus needed to..." Read more

"...World Order is well written and insightful. It is realistic in its analysis of the difference in perceptions of the role of foreign policy and..." Read more

142 customers mention "Readability"140 positive2 negative

Customers find the book erudite, incredible, and informative. They say it's well worth their effort and should be a best seller for a long time. Readers also mention the writings are resourceful.

"...Henry Kissinger's "World Order" is a great book for everyone interested in world history, politics and the concept about "World Order" based on the..." Read more

"...The book is erudite for a professor who long ago left the library stacks to become a public servant and, more recently, a super-consultant...." Read more

"This is a highly readable book with wisdom scattered wide and deep among the many enlightening accounts from history and from Dr. Kissinger's own..." Read more

"...If you are new to Kissinger's writings, you may find them resourceful, connecting the dots of all major historical events leading to where we are..." Read more

70 customers mention "Readable"55 positive15 negative

Customers find the book readable, elegantly written, and easy to understand. They say it's structured amazingly, insightful, and inspiring. Readers also mention the logic follows clearly, the books are well organized, and have no text fat. Additionally, they appreciate the good comparison and contrast of styles of leadership and views of the world.

"...World Order is well written and insightful...." Read more

"...Elegantly written, edited with great skill, it is full of insights and quotations from the “great men” of the past and contains subtle and..." Read more

"Written very well, structured amazingly, insightful and inspiring - it’s a shame he is no longer with us" Read more

"...It's not an easy read but WOW the amount of information and insight you receive is well worth efforts in digesting this book. This is the..." Read more

13 customers mention "Perspective"13 positive0 negative

Customers find the perspective of the book great, unique, and informative. They say it shows an understanding of many interpretations of an issue. Readers also mention the scope is remarkable and the book addresses both near and far threats.

"...Mr. Kissinger also does a superb job of spanning the regions of the world through these ages, not merely focusing on Europe...." Read more

"This is a well written and edited book, plenty of interesting perspectives and analysis...." Read more

"...It's not repetition, and it's not blunt, and it shows an understanding of many interpretations of an issue while simultaneously conveying opinions..." Read more

"Wonderful book, it addresses the near and far, real and perceived threats and our limited ability to respond...." Read more

9 customers mention "Content"4 positive5 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the content. Some find it clear-sighted, unsentimental, and highly informed. They say it moves them deeply and warmly. However, others are not satisfied with the content, saying it's boring and repetitive.

"...his brilliant perspective....however, this book left me confused, disappointed and longing for a book I thought I was purchasing about CURRENT World..." Read more

"...of Diplomacy, and should be highly valued for its clear-sighted, unsentimental, and highly-informed view of current world politics." Read more

"This is not his best book, but possibly worthwhile. One certainly learns about the treaty of Westphalia, that is for sure...." Read more

"...and faintly horrifying, but highly intelligent and less pompous than I expected...." Read more

Bizarre mistake on dust jacket, cheap looking cover
1 out of 5 stars
Bizarre mistake on dust jacket, cheap looking cover
Bought the hardcover on sale. Ridiculously obvious printing mistake before even taking the plastic wrap off: the text on the back of the book is about On China, a different Kissinger book. Weird, but okay, let me take the dust jacket off… the cover of the book is discolored in a way that is clearly not a stylistic choice. Really disappointed with the physical quality of this edition.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2015
Review on "World Order: Reflections on the Character of Nations and the Course of History" published by Henry Kissinger on September 9th 2014.

This book offers great insight into the inner-workings and need-to-know basics of the concept of "World Order", human politics, history and our future. I wont go into extreme detail as there is simply too much information in the book itself to comment on in an review, but I will try to elaborate on a few issues I was left with, but make no mistake, this is a brilliant book written by a man with vast experience and intellect on the workings of global politics.

Henry Kissinger's "World Order" is a great book for everyone interested in world history, politics and the concept about "World Order" based on the relation between power and legitimacy. Throughout history every great empire has sought to impose it's culture and values upon the world known to them, and rigidly trying to balance it's powers and legitimacy at the same time. Kissinger describes every great European, Middle-East, North-American and Asian empires who have since their conception strived towards fulfilling the inevitable conquest for an impending "World Order" where human beings are brought under an umbrella of global culture, values, economics and civil-rights.

The book also focuses a lot on the relations between the Unites States of America and it's "nemesises"; Iran, Soviet Union (Russia), and China - and also goes into detail about the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea and Vietnam. The concept of "World Order" is so complex and often perscribed to an already established set of principles: The United States' democracy and capitalism, The Europeans "Westphalian System", the Islamic world's order based on religious legitimacy, China's history of isolationism, and mixture of communism and "confucian culture emphasizing harmony" and Soviet (Russias) "deconstruced" concept of international order through communism. The book does not deviate from these political ideologies, it merely relies on them to be the guiding principles of a future "World Order" where there is political hegemony, peace, harmony and prosperity for all. Whilst there must be some great nation(s) that "imposes" it's values upon other nations and that strives to balance the geo-political scene with values deemed to be important and invaluable to the human species, there will always be competing values, cultures and distinctly indifferent views on how to integrate these into our daily lives.

There is also a great detail on each of the post-WWII presidents thoughts on the concept of "World Order" and what it contains, what it restrains and obtains, how it could and should be implemented and how it should be dealt with on the political scene. The reader should and would benefit from remembering that all these political insights and thoughts are products of the times they were constructed in; The Cold War, China's "Cultural Revolution" and "Great Leap Forward", USSR's fall, Middle-East conflicts and Central and East-Asian conflicts. There is also a chapter solely on the issue of Iran's Nuclear development and how the P5+1 countries tries to balance and dictate it's development and to "manipulate" it into being something Iran "cannot" use to dictate the balance of power in the Middle-East with Israel not surprisingly opposing it's every move and intention. Islamic history (and on topics of ISIS, the Caliphates, Saudi-Arabia, Persia) is also carefully described and analyzed, but not entirely criticized for it's clash with the "Western" ideologies and principles. In my opinion, "World Order" can never be based on religious principles or legitimacy as shown with the fall of the "Holy Roman Empire" in Europe, because it is such a egocentric and glorified concept that we are the creation of a "divine master" of the Universe that will "eventually save us all", because it will -- in time, in my opinion -- fall on it's own axis as it is not compatible with the political and social challenges we as a species face in the near and far future.

The book is written by a man who has a lifetime of American and geo-political experience. It comes to my mind that he has without a doubt an invaluable set of insight into politics and the history of political development from the aftermath of World War II and up until this very day, but -- and there is in my opinion a great but -- he does not deal with nor elaborate on great issues of "World Order" such as the worlds economic model of free-market and capitalism and the ever increasing corruption from corporations to politics, the sad military industry complex of the worlds great powers and lesser nations worth billions of $, the increasing gap between the rich and the poor, the "pay for your interests" lobbyism of American and global politics, global famine and starvation, climate and global pollution, medicine and healthcare and the great risk of balancing "World Order" on a set of political and social principles incrompehensible to the majority of this planets population, which can eventually lead to an all-out war are we not willing to sacrifice and change our ways for the greater good on the path to our common future.

This book is great food for thought, it puts forth guidance and analyzes the problems facing a "World Order" and is a must read for anyone slightly interested in geo-politics. For students of Political Science and Philosophy it will serve as a great detailing of the geo-political scene and workings of the great nations of power. For the younger generation it should serve as a factual perception of politics, but we should also learn and make sure that we in the future change and improve upon what is already established, as has forever been done and which has since changed the world immensely in tandem with technological and social development on a global scale. I dont have all the answers, and in my opinion, nor does Henry Kissinger, but the complexity of "World Order" requires a "World in Order" - one nation cannot do it alone, nor can it be solely one set of values and principles that forms it. Kissinger talks of not the improvement but the "reconstruction" of "World Order" based on todays political climate. And this reconstruction, is what human beings should work together for and dare not be afraid to embark on - as it is our sole purpose and destiny to make sure we build a viable future for the coming generations and strive for peace, prosperity and civil-rights on all fronts.

I have not talked about every chapter in this book as this review would be too long for people to even bother reading, but I have tried to single out -- to me -- the most important topics and ideas in the book. Read the book for the entirety of the information it describes, it is a lot.

I declare and acknowledge that I am a visionary, a dreamer of peace and disarmament of nations and especially nuclear weapons, I put my faith in science and technology to close the gaps between societies and culture - and I am a profound believer in the concept of "World Order". I personally do not believe it is up to the established bureaucracy or elected politicians to dictate and manage it's development. In Kissinger and many others view, it "requires" that "someone has to carry the banner and be the strong voice" -- but try to tell that to the 196 countries on this planet and the 193 members of the UN -- that someone "deserves" or "needs" the upper hand in this transition. It seems logic and rational given the status amongst Great Powers that USA, China and Russia, and eventually India, Japan and EU -- amongst others -- will dictate the future "World Order". But one day, we will all face threats grander than our own self-importance - whether it to be threats from the Universe (asteroids++), a tilt in the planets axis, climate change, or even facing again the threat of all-out nuclear war -- and then, just maybe then, we will have an even more "forced reason" to cooperate regardless of our indifferences, cultures and values. Let's hope we dont have to experience World War III for us humans to "meet up again to make sure it does not happen again".

5/5 stars from me for all the thoughts, ideas and feelings this book gave me! Worth every dollar!
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Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2024
A well
Documented historical view of world order, from a scholar, player and consultant. Think what you may think of him personally, his writing is superb and analysis on spot.
Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2014
If you have a serious interest in Asia or in foreign policy in general—whether you’re a policy wonk, an academic, or just a good citizen—I have a suggestion for you. Send an email to all of those to whom you owe service, such as employers and children, and ask for a three-day leave. Then take Henry Kissinger’s remarkable new book, World Order, to a hilltop without cell phone or television reception and read it, nay, study it. I assure you that you will feast on it for years to come.

The book is erudite for a professor who long ago left the library stacks to become a public servant and, more recently, a super-consultant. For example, Kissinger points out, “Until the arrival of modern Western powers, no Asian language had a word for ‘Asia.’” (Few of us would be able to make such a statement given the number of such languages.) Hence, Kissinger suggests, in my words, that the concept of Asia is a Western construct. He uses this observation to highlight that Asia and, even more so, the East are much less homogenous than the West. Asia has no shared history— no equivalent of the Roman Empire or the Napoleonic Wars—no shared religion, and no set of shared, secular core values. Kissinger concludes that this is one major reason that the peoples of the region are much more given to the pursuit of national agendas than to pooling sovereignty or to forming strong, multilateral institutions or alliances.

The book benefits from a cultural sensitivity, nurtured by Kissinger’s command of history, that is not found in many American writings on international relations. For example, Kissinger’s overview of Chinese history notes that for more than a thousand years China considered itself to be the center of the world and believed that its emperor was the ruler of “All Under Heaven.” Other peoples were offered a variety of rituals by which to pay homage to the emperor, but they were not granted an opportunity to play a role in shaping the world order. Thus, China’s tendency was to conceptualize the world order in hierarchical rather than balance of power terms.

The book’s core subject is the tension between two major foundations of American foreign policy. On the one hand, Kissinger writes, the United States draws on a perspective first spelled out for the nation by Theodore Roosevelt—that is, a strongly realist perspective focused on national interests, geopolitical considerations, and the use of raw power. On the other, the United States draws on Woodrow Wilson’s idealism, which sought to implement on a global scale the kind of democratic regime the United States fashioned for its own people, to be achieved through international law and diplomacy rather than force. At times, the earlier Kissinger—the hard-core realist—shows up in the book; he almost mocks Wilson as a naïve man who moved into the presidency from academia after only two years in politics. After reviewing the various initiatives Wilson undertook, Kissinger states flatly that “no significant elements of these initiatives survived.” Moreover, Wilson’s idealistic approach to the world, which Kissinger shows all subsequent presidents evoked, did lead to disappointments, frustrations, and sudden shifts from overextensions to abrupt withdrawals-- in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

In other pages, though, the Kissinger who is now closer to meeting his maker seems to have “found religion.” He waxes rhapsodic about the good Americans brought to the world when they set out to serve not the United States’ interests but rather the common good and others’ well-being. The United States joined wars in Europe to defend free peoples, not to gain territory or resources. It helped rebuild its enemies Germany and Japan, and it provided peace and stability to Asia that allowed the region’s nations to thrive. In short, idealism enjoyed some rather big paydays.

Closely related is the issue raised by Kissinger’s high regard for an international order founded on a balance of power rather than on one superpower’s hegemony. The balance of power is associated with moral neutrality and letting each nation follow its own core values. Hegemony is associated with trying to “bring light to the heathens,” such as coercive regime changes to foster democracy, and imposing on other peoples the American view of the international order. Kissinger views the balance of power approach as the more reliable, although less idealistic, of the two. He observes that while a balance of power system does not lead to a good end state—an “end of history,” which anyhow may be elusive —it does provide an international system that through constant adjustments and rebalancing permits the nations of the world to manage matters, to make do. This may be all we can hope to achieve.

This rich 420-page book contains much more that cannot here be captured. The reader will find few specific predictions and fewer prescriptions; instead, the book offers a comprehensive and deep analysis of the issues we face and the conceptual apparatus needed to reflect on them.
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Alessandra Cantini
5.0 out of 5 stars Kissinger is a guarantee
Reviewed in Italy on November 16, 2024
Read it to understand power
Alejandro Sinekoff
5.0 out of 5 stars gain insights from the person who writes history
Reviewed in Germany on November 14, 2024
There is little to say about the author. hated or revered and respected in same measures.
That said, nobody can question his experience and influence in the last decades of politics.
Understanding his views and opinions allows you to understand history, regardless of your personal opinion on his political views
UnstatisfiedUser
1.0 out of 5 stars Useless garbage, tiny font makes reading unbearable
Reviewed in Belgium on April 4, 2024
Garbage print, the font chosen is hurting everyone else eyes.
Guilherme Augusto Nery de Andrade
5.0 out of 5 stars Excepcional
Reviewed in Brazil on November 23, 2020
Kissinger viveu a História que conta; ajudou a moldá-la ou a viu acontecer de dentro. Seus comentários são endossados por um nível de propriedade que poucos podem se pretender ter em Relações Internacionais.
A qualidade da edição é notável, com capa dura, impressão, lombada, tudo. Além de ser um dos mais interessantes da minha estante, é também um dos mais bonitos!
Penguin
5.0 out of 5 stars Absorbing albeit inevitably US-centred
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 21, 2020
The breadth of this book is quite spectacular. When I began reading this book, I felt I knew nothing about politics at all! My score of 5-star is for the author’s mastery in articulating such a vast subject in under 400 pages without losing the threads of development and arguments. This cannot be achieved without a solid framework of analysis, which itself is very useful for the reader to grasp. If you are a student, it is a good example of how to write history essays!

The orientation of the book is centred at the US. All the materials included are to understand the context of the US role in the world scene and its dilemma. Therefore the book does give a good introduction to as well as summary of the political situations in different regions. The author’s knowledge is broad, no doubt from the vintage of the position he served at the US government.

Historical events may be objective but the politics perhaps is not. As I closed the book, I was left with a strong sense that this is the US perspective. Viewing from countries of totally different background and position, the reading of the same events would be very different. The US participation in the world order in the 20th century has been portrayed as selfless based on principles and idealism. The glimpse of the Federalist Papers that it provides is refreshing. The political rhetoric coming out of the Trump administration seems to have departed from the US idealism and turned to national interests as the basis of foreign policy? The chapter on modern technology in changing politics surely stretches our minds and heightens our alertness of its potential sway on our politics. Sadly the direction of its influence is not encouraging and it is likely that we end up with much poorer leadership and statesmanship to our shared loss.

One must write from a perspective, so I guess the US-centric perspective is not a fault. Accepting that, the book lands us in a good grip of the evolution of the US foreign policy and the challenges it faces. As the US is a dominant player in the world scene, it is still a significant part of the story, even though at the back of our minds we may doubt if the actions really matched the motives they proclaimed.