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The Promises We Keep: Human Rights, the Helsinki Process, and American Foreign Policy. By William Korey. New York: St. Martin’s Press/Institute of EastWest Studies, 1993. Pp. xxxvi, 518. Index. $45.00.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2017

T. Jeremy Gunn*
Affiliation:
Of the District of Columbia Bar

Abstract

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Type
Book Reviews and Notes
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1994

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References

1 In his memoirs, written before the successes of the CSCE were achieved, Kissinger spoke of the CSCE as an obstacle demanding American forbearance. By 1972, he said in the 1982 memoirs,

so many West European leaders had agreed to culminate the conference at a summit gathering that there was no longer any purpose in America’s holding out on this point. … And the remaining issues in what later became the Helsinki Final Act were too abstruse—they were mostly pedantic drafting problems in a collective document—to lend themselves to top-level solutions, though they were discussed inconclusively at considerable length.

Henry A. Kissinger, Years of Upheaval 1164–65 (1982).

2 6 Human Rights, European Politics, and the Helsinki Accord: The Documentary Evolution of the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe 1973–1975 (Igor I. Kavass et al. eds., 1981).