Frank Newgent said:
"The Case of the Missing Letter in Foreign Affairs: Kissinger, Pinochet, and Operation Condor" by Kenneth Maxwell is here.
Don't know if anyone else has taken the time to read the link...
Briefly, the writer, Kenneth Maxwell (staff expert on Latin America at the
Council on Foreign Relations and long-time book reviewer for
Foreign Affairs (journal of the CFR), wrote a book review of
The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability (author Peter Kornbluh) in the November 2003 issue of
Foreign Affairs.
Longtime Kissinger associate William Rogers answered with a letter published in the January 2004 issue, denying allegations in the book of Kissinger's involvement with the murder of Chilean General Rene Schneider or with "Operation Condor", set up by Pinochet to silence critics of his regime (An opponent of Pinochet, Orlando Letelier, was killed by a car bomb in Washington, DC, in 1976).
Maxwell approached the editor of
Foreign Affairs, James Hoge, with a reply to Rogers which included a call on Kissinger to answer for himself. That is "The Missing Letter" which was never published in
FA.
Maxwell believes that Peter Peterson, the chair of the council's board of directors, and Maurice Greenberg, head of American International Group (world's largest commercial insurer) and honorary vice chair of the council - acting on pressure from Kissinger and Rogers - persuaded Hoge to shut down the published exchange of letters.
Out of indignation over the apparent loss of editorial independence at
Foreign Affairs and of intellectual freedom at the CFR he quit.
Maxwell kept a diary of what happened throughout (this article).
William of Occam was never the victim of conspiracy.