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The phrase had originated before Nixon's actual visit to China. An early use of the phrase is found in a December 1971 U.S. News & World Report interview with US Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield in a section summary lead that read, "'Only a 'Nixon' Could Go to China." The actual quote from Mansfield, which he prefaces by noting he had ...
”Only Nixon could go to China.” A reference to President Nixon’s 1972 visit to China. ”We need breathing room,” a reference to Hitler’s take on Lebensraum or possibly a 1923 interview where he said, “they must have room to breathe and room to work.” A paraphrase. ”Have you not a shred of decency in you, Kirk?”
Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power. New York: HarperCollins. Drew, Elizabeth (2007). Richard M. Nixon. New York: Times Books. Ladley, Eric (2002) Nixon's China Trip, Writer's Club Press; (2007) Balancing Act: How Nixon Went to China and Remained a Conservative. MacMillan, Margaret (2007). Nixon & Mao: The Week that Changed the World. New ...
Nixon and Kissinger gave away more than they needed to in pursuit of China's help ending the Vietnam War. Op-Ed: How Nixon's fabled trip to China, 50 years ago this week, led to today's Taiwan ...
In 1972, then-President Richard Nixon visited China after establishing his career as a vehement anti-communist. At the time, people said, "Only Nixon could go to China." Maybe the president who ...
"Only Nixon could go to China", saying that became popular in the wake of Richard Nixon's visit to the People's Republic of China. [ 13 ] "What did the President know and when did he know it?", asked by Senator Howard Baker in the Senate Watergate hearings .
Only Nixon could go to China; P. Papa Was a Rollin' Stone; R. Reeds! Reverse the polarity; S. Seven dirty words; Sí se puede; Sweet Christmas! T. This is the big one ...
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