How Did Kissinger Become an American Citizen?
Reason has obtained an exclusive copy of Henry Kissinger's immigration files from the 1940s.

Before he became America's most controversial secretary of state, Henry Kissinger was a refugee boy named Heinz from Fürth, Germany. He had the pouty look of a teenager, with a hint of impish curiosity. His birth certificate bore the swastika emblem of the Nazi German state, but his visa application said that he was "of the Hebrew race," a very good reason to leave Germany at the time.
Six months after Kissinger's parents filed that application with the U.S. Consulate in Stuttgart, and two months after the family arrived in New York, the Nazi government invalidated all German Jews' passports. Kissinger had just escaped a genocide.
Reason has obtained an exclusive copy of Kissinger's immigration file under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). It includes both his original entry documents from the 1930s and his naturalization forms from the 1940s. The papers provide intimate snapshots of Kissinger's early life, when he was first starting to realize the power and danger of politics, but before he took that power for himself.
If Kissinger was an impish boy when he applied for a visa, he was a world-weary man by the time he gained U.S. citizenship. Photos attached to different forms over the years show Kissinger's face growing more mature, his gaze more alert, his teenage impishness more muted.

Those images were almost lost forever. Shortly after Kissinger's death last year, I sent FOIA requests to several federal agencies for his files. (The Privacy Act prevents the government from releasing data on living citizens, but anyone can ask for records on the dead.) The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service said that they couldn't find Kissinger's file. When I complained in a (now-deleted) tweet, the FOIA office abruptly claimed that his file turned up.
The basic details in the files are well-known to Kissinger's biographers. He was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1943 and became a naturalized American citizen during his basic training at Camp Croft in South Carolina.
Kissinger's talents were quickly recognized, and the Army promoted him to be a counterintelligence officer in charge of denazifying German territory. It set him up well for a meteoric rise through the government during the Cold War.
During his Army service, Kissinger stopped going by the name "Heinz" and started going by "Henry," a fact that was noted in his naturalization application. He later said that Army service was an "Americanization process."
That process was a lot simpler in the 1940s. To get a visa, Kissinger's parents had to provide some basic biographical information and provide the address of a cousin in New York.

To become a citizen, Kissinger had to list any travel outside the country and swear that he was not an "anarchist," a "polygamist," a foreign agent, or otherwise loyal to any "foreign prince, potentate, state or sovereignty."

Some of the fields on the forms are jarringly out of date today. The U.S. forms offered five racial categories to choose from: "White," "Negro," "Chinese," "Japanese," and "Other." And, of course, today's Germany would not categorize its citizens by whether they belong to the "Hebrew race."

Kissinger's entire immigration file—including his visa application, his alien identification card, his Army background check, and his citizenship papers—are only 50 pages in total. It took five years after his arrival to become a U.S. citizen. Compare the thousands of pages of paperwork and decades of waiting it takes today.
Ironically, Kissinger became an advocate of shutting the door on others. He was infamously caught on tape telling then-President Richard Nixon in 1973 that "the emigration of Jews from the Soviet Union is not an objective of American foreign policy, and if they put Jews into gas chambers in the Soviet Union, it is not an American concern."
In an October 2023 interview with a German journalist, Kissinger said that "it was a grave mistake to let in so many people of totally different culture and religion and concepts, because it creates a pressure group inside each country that does that." He died the following month.
It is hard to imagine that a young Heinz Kissinger knew where he would end up in a few decades: telling the most powerful man in the world not to care about Jewish refugees. Or that he knew his last public act would be railing against diversity on German television.
But that's America. Anyone can reinvent themselves however they'd like.
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I don't know how they can get away with calling this "exclusive" - I just went to ancestry.com and found the entire file in about twenty seconds!
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/6762273:2280?tid=&pid=&queryId=9cadd003-c799-4bd9-b193-034e2933ba30&_phsrc=Mqv1436&_phstart=successSource
Thus us the site who didn't know how to find Joe's campaign site.
Fun fact: my wife has Henry Kissinger's signature as Secretary of State on her own naturalization papers from 1970.
"Ironically, Kissinger became an advocate of shutting the door on others."
I would not cite this as an example of irony, Matthew. I think it means Kissinger was a hypocrite! Not only that, but Kissinger was a particularly egregious example of hypocrisy since many, many people died around the world as a result of his official influence on American policies which, if they had been in effect when his family escaped from the holocaust, would likely have resulted in his death and spared the world from his political career.
https://www.streetroots.org/news/2014/06/05/drawing-controversy-victor-s-navasky-traces-radical-roots-political-cartoons-and
I think you are full of shit.
Maybe, having grown up in Eastern Europe, Kissinger knew something about how those religious remnants managed to survive the pogroms and 54 years of Soviet tyranny. That they were more than likely to be hardline communists whose families had been willing to sell out their neighbors to save themselves.
Or maybe he was an example of "Rocky Mountain High Syndrome." You know - where someone like John Denver moves from a third world toilet like New York City to a beautiful place like Colorado and then agitates for the government to close the door behind you so no one else can crowd into your new space and ruin it for you ...
I know a BUNCH of Soviet Jewish people. There are none-zero-zilch-nada Communists among them.
Well then it’s settled!
Good for them! Communism sucks! Is there anything that Kissinger could have done to get them out that would not have started a hot war? In 1973, emigration out of the USSR was prohibited.
Your anecdote would also be more helpful if you identified how old they were in 1973. If they were children, it is not very informative.
Kissinger was wrong on the Soviet Jews..they tend to be conservative or libertarian, it was the pre Soviet Jews which tended to be socialist, zionist, and secularist who immigrated to the US and to a great extent moved the media left, were fans of Trotsky and were proponents of the post modernism/cultural marxism in academia, govt, and ngos...
But he was right about putting American first not like the neocons who put old world grudges (the "Czar did this") above American interests.
When political cartoons were thought provoking and cutting edge.
Could you imagine how many apologies would have to be given if a modern political cartoonist drew Antony Blinken screwing the peace dove.
but anyone can ask for records on the dead
Except voting, wouldn't want any inconvenient truthes coming to light.
Alright back to reading the article...
IronicallyPragmatically, Kissinger became an advocate of shutting the door onotherscommunists. He was infamously caught on tape telling then-President Richard Nixon in 1973 that "the emigration of Jews from the Soviet Union is not an objective of American foreign policy, and if they put Jews into gas chambers in the Soviet Union, it is not an American concern."FTFY
There is no reason not to give Kissinger the benefit of the doubt. Soviet Jews being persecuted for their religion could still be hardline communists determined to undermine capitalism. There were plenty of examples in the US. The Soviets murdering their own citizens in 1973 is no more an American concern than the Chinese murdering their own citizens today. Should we be castigating Blinken for failing to advocate for the emigration of 5 million Uighurs to the US?
"How Did Kissinger Become an American Citizen?"
A better question would be, "How did Kissinger keep his citizenship after demonstrating so many times he was a globalist puppet?"
and swear that he was not...a foreign agent, or otherwise loyal to any "foreign prince, potentate, state or sovereignty."
So, he lied.
Uhm, wut?
That's your idea of "railing against diversity?" LO-fuckin-L. That's a pretty milquetoast statement to be called "railing." Hope Mr. Petti never sees a Klan meeting, he'd probably have a stroke hearing the shit that comes out of their mouths.
So not "wetback"?
So not "illegal"?
So not "undocumented"?
So not "newcomer"?
Just a plain old law abiding person.
How quaint.
Cool. Does this mean that you guys are now birthers?
He later said that Army service was an "Americanization process."
Yes it is. We've gone completely upside down re this. It's been the oldest route to citizenship and we've (aka Trump) made it more cumbersome recently. While there is a very little 'penalty' for those who serve in someone else's Army.
For a magazine that mostly danced on his grave, "Loose immigration policy made it easy for Henry Kissinger to become part of the American political class" doesn't exactly sound like a ringing endorsement.
That said, from a strictly amoral realpolitik standpoint, Kissinger's statements later in life do seem to hold more water than y'all might care to acknowledge. From a view of American interests, how other countries treat their citizens really isn't a matter of American interest. Or at least it shouldn't be a matter of our government's interest. They're sovereign states. And admitting large numbers of people who don't share your culture with a dysfunctional process of assimilation is undoubtedly a recipe for problems.
More "immigrants" have come into the US in Joe Biden's term than the total that came through Ellis Island in the decades it was open. Maybe we need a better definition of loose immigration policy.
Fact check on myself. Turns out,
"Between 1892 and 1954, more than twelve million immigrants passed through the U.S. immigration portal at Ellis Island, enshrining it as an icon of America's welcome."
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/goldman-immigration-and-deportation-ellis-island/#:~:text=Between%201892%20and%201954%2C%20more,That%20story%20is%20well%20known.
Of course that was 62 years compared to three but I'm not going to quibble about that.
The most impactful way to look at it would be as a percent of population growth. Between 1892 and 1954, the population grew by 100 million of which 12% were immigrants.
Today, population growth from immigration is vastly exceeding native population growth.
In light of "The West Bank Comes to New Jersey" article, Kissinger may have had something of a point about not being sanguine about importing foreign political interest groups en masse into the country
So for a case like Jews being persecuted by the Soviet Union, an interventionist foreign policy is desirable?
I am still trying o figure out why Reason felt it necessary to obtain Kissinger's immigration documents, it seems rather far down on the scale of newsworthyness.
Something, something, open borders is good.
I can't think of any real reason why they think this is important.
Now that Kissinger is dead, who plays Kissinger's role?
In other words, I wonder who's Kissinger now.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RfiaY9ynK5w
Obama
Kissinger, Soros, Oppenheimer. I'm really trying to resist a politically incorrect conspiracy theory here.
Well, Reason, now that you have become investigative journalists, let's see you get hold of Obama's college applications to Harvard and Columbia.
I will bet a week's wages that Barak claimed he was born in Kenya, just like he did on his book cover bio.
(shudders) When the Chosen One is mentioned Reason editor's legs tingle en masse. Born of a virgin, the dude won the Nobel Peace Prize. The Fucking Peace Prize! I've always suspected he exited the birth canal in Bethlehem.
Obama is Indonesian. His father was Mohammed Subuh Sumohadiwidjojo. It appears he was born in Hawaii, but we have no proof of that.
Are we sure his father wasn’t a literal jackal?
As far as I know, there are no jackals in Indonesia or Hawaii.
"it was a grave mistake to let in so many people of totally different culture and religion and concepts, because it creates a pressure group inside each country that does that."
Correct.
Maybe Mathew should do some reporting on Sweden.
I think that's illegal now.
If he'd jumped the border, you'd have called him a hero. A laudable story of an undocumented American escaping persecution and seeking a better life. Everything you want to call a "war crime" - before AND after he got here - would be immediately forgiven because there isn't a snowball's chance in Hell you'd EVER criticize a border jumper.
He has papers though, so the hell with him. That ain't conducive to the narrative.
Hey Matt - if even a small percentage of illegals were future Kissinger's, would you advocate for border control?
Yea, I didn't think so.
The Hispanic™ race had not yet been invented.