In The Spectator, Andrew Roberts remembers the late, towering Henry Kissinger (who passed away at 100 on November 29), most famous for his role as Secretary of State to U.S. President Richard Nixon. Roberts succinctly describes how Kissinger shaped international relations in Israel, Iraq, Iran, Chile, Cambodia, East Timor, China and elsewhere in ways that often lasted to this day.

A Spite That Knows No Bounds
Gratingly awful global scold Greta Thunberg’s latest stunt is to turn on her own motherland. Sweden has been very good to her, but the former social-democratic paradise’s mugging by the realities of uncontrolled immigration do not sit well with the keffiyeh-clad rabblerouser. “For years, Sweden took more asylum seekers per capita than any other country in Europe,” writes Fredrik Karrholm in The Spectator. “Now asylum numbers have fallen to their lowest level since 1985.”


