Dylan Matthews

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In early 1970 Nixon and Kissinger were on one of their periodic highs about prospects for settling the war. Encouraged by signs from Moscow of eagerness for an improved relationship with the United States and by evidence that the Chinese were possibly moving in a friendly direction, they entertained the hope, however remote, that the USSR and the People’s Republic might pressure Hanoi into a more tractable stance in the Paris peace talks.
Fire and Rain: Nixon, Kissinger, and the Wars in Southeast Asia
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