Mr Kissinger is quoted extensively in Michael Wolff's book 'Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House'. President Donald Trump meets with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in the Oval Office
President Donald Trump meets with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in the Oval Office (Photo by Molly Riley-Pool/Getty Images) Henry Kissinger described the relationship between Steve Bannon and Donald Trumps Jewish family members as a war between the Jews and the non-Jews.
The former Secretary of State to presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford made the remark to the author Michael Wolff when describing the White House feuds between Mr Bannon and Mr Trumps Jewish family members, Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump.
Mr Kushner, Donald Trumps son-in-law, was given a prominent role devising a new plan for peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
For Trump, giving Israel to Kushner was not only a test, it was a Jewish test: the president was singling him out for being Jewish, rewarding him for being Jewish, saddling him with an impossible hurdle for being Jewish - and, too, defaulting to the stereotyping belief in the negotiating powers of Jews, Mr Wolff wrote in his book Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, which was published last week.
But Mr Bannon wanted the stronger on Israel label for himself, Mr Wolff wrote, saying the Breitbart editor was set on making Mr Kushner appear weak and inadequate.
A passage in Chapter 10 of the book reads: After months of defending Bannon against liberal media innuendo, Kushner had concluded Bannon was an antisemite. That was the bottom-line issue.
This was a complicated and frustrating business quite hard to communicate to his father-in-law because one of Bannons accusations against Kushner, the administrations point person on the Middle East, was that he was not nearly tough enough in his defence of Israel.
The book describes how Mr Kushner impressed his father-in-law by pushing for Gary Cohn, the former president of Goldman Sachs, to be the president's top economic adviser.
Mr Bannon had wanted CNBCs conservative anchor and commentator Larry Kudlow to take on the role.
The two continued to clash until Mr Bannon was fired by Mr Trump in August 2017.
Mr Wolff wrote: Bannon regarded Kushner and Cohn (and Ivanka) as occupying an alternative reality that had little bearing on the real Trump revolution.
Kushner and Cohn saw Bannon as not just destructive but self-destructive, and they were confident he would destroy himself before he destroyed them.