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  • On the denial of genocide

    On the denial of genocide

    Jerusalem Post
    Bret Stephens
    Apr. 15, 2004

    In April 1998, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the UN
    Genocide Convention, a "Statement by Concerned Scholars and Writers"
    was published by the Armenian National Institute. Its purpose was to
    "commemorate the Armenian Genocide of 1915" and "condemn the Turkish
    government's denial of this crime against humanity."

    "Denial of genocide is the final stage of genocide," the statement
    read. "In a century plagued by genocide, we affirm the moral necessity
    of remembering."

    The statement garnered more than 150 signatures, including those of
    William Styron, Norman Mailer, Susan Sontag, Kurt Vonnegut, Seamus
    Heaney, John Updike and Daniel Goldhagen. Also signing was Ben
    Kiernan, a professor of history at Yale and director of its Genocide
    Studies Program. And therein lies a tale.

    In 1994, Kiernan, an Australian, was awarded a $500,000 grant by the
    US State Department to establish the Cambodian Genocide Project, the
    purpose of which was to gather precise data on Khmer Rouge crimes in
    order to bring its leaders to justice. But Kiernan's scholarship, it
    turned out, was blemished by his past attempts to whitewash those
    crimes.

    "Did the new government [of Cambodia] plan and approve a systematic
    large-scale purge?" asked Kiernan in the pages of the Australian
    Outlook in December 1976. "There is little evidence that they did."
    Elsewhere, he had claimed at the height of the killing that
    "photographs of alleged atrocities are fake" (The Age, March 2, 1977)
    and that "there is ample evidence in Cambodian and other sources that
    the Khmer Rouge movement is not the monster that the press have
    recently made it out to be" (Melbourne Journal of Politics, 1976).

    Kiernan's appointment elicited outrage in some quarters, particularly
    in the opinion pages of The Wall Street Journal and in Commentary
    magazine. But the Clinton State Department ignored calls to have the
    grant rescinded and Kiernan proceeded as planned. In 1997, Yale made
    Kiernan a full professor. In 2002, he was awarded the Critical Asian
    Studies Prize. He is currently at work on a history of genocide from
    1492 to the present.

    In fairness, from the 1980s onward Kiernan became a tireless
    chronicler of Khmer Rouge atrocities. But this was only after those
    atrocities became impossible to deny. What's significant, at any rate,
    is that Kiernan is hardly the only scholar still active today who came
    to the Khmer Rouge's defense while the killing fields were in full
    bloom.

    In June 1977, The Nation - the flagship publication of the American
    Left - ran a lengthy review of three books dealing with contemporary
    events in Cambodia. The reviewers, Noam Chomsky of MIT and Edward
    Herman of the University of Pennsylvania, cast aspersions on the
    reliability of one book alleging Khmer Rouge atrocities while
    lavishing praise on a volume which gave "a very favorable picture of
    [the Khmer Rouge's] programs and policies." As with Kiernan, Chomsky
    and Herman noted "repeated discoveries that massacre reports were
    false." And in a chilling echo of classic Holocaust denial, they gave
    credence to the view that the death toll in Cambodia was mainly
    attributable to sickness, not slaughter.

    PERHAPS IT is not surprising that Kiernan, Herman and Chomsky were Pol
    Pot apologists. It was in the late Seventies, after all, that Chomsky
    was coming to the defense of Holocaust denier Robert Faurisson, while
    Kiernan was a disciple, and apparently remains an admirer, of the
    Australian Stalinist Wilfred Burchett.

    But three points are significant. First, all three vehemently deny
    their past sympathies. So much for "the moral necessity of
    remembering." Second, in sympathizing with the Khmer Rouge when they
    did, they hardly traveled alone: Efforts to deny the existence of the
    killing fields were widespread at the time, particularly in Europe,
    and certainly not beyond the pale as far as the editors of The Nation
    were concerned. Third, Kiernan, Chomsky and Herman are representative
    of a broader phenomenon, namely, the tendency among self-styled
    progressives and human-rights activists to willfully ignore, or
    tacitly acquiesce in, some of the worst human-rights abuses of their
    era.

    Why? Among the oft-made arguments of people like Chomsky and Herman
    is that Western policy makers focus only on the human-rights abuses
    committed by their enemies, not their friends. Why, for example, was
    so much Western attention and outrage devoted to goings-on in
    Communist Cambodia, instead of East Timor, which was then under the
    thumb of US-allied Indonesia? Why obsess about the sins of the
    Sandinistas in Nicaragua, but not those of the Pinochet regime in
    Chile? It's a legitimate point. But what has been true of some
    quarters of the Right has been at least as true of parts of the
    Left. In their 1977 review, Chomsky and Herman did not merely point
    out hypocrisy in Western attitudes; they systematically attempted to
    shred the evidence that the Khmer Rouge was guilty of "autogenocide"
    (the killing of their own people). Furthermore, they repeatedly argued
    that most of Cambodia's suffering was either the direct or indirect
    consequence of American actions. Thus, in discussing photographs of
    Cambodian civilians pulling plows in a field, they first alleged the
    photos were faked, then suggested that if people rather than oxen were
    in fact pulling plows, it was because "the savage American assault on
    Cambodia did not spare the animal population."

    The proclivity to deny was not unique to the Cambodian situation.
    Walter Duranty, the New York Times's Pulitzer-winning Soviet
    correspondent in the early 1930s, completely failed to report the
    forced famine of the 1930s, which killed an estimated 10 million
    peasants, mostly Ukrainian. This was not out of ignorance. Instead, it
    stemmed from his conviction that "within five years or less [peasants]
    will benefit enormously from being forced to accept a modern form of
    agriculture [i.e., collectivization]." For him, the key question was
    not the human toll, but "whether the Soviet drive to Socialism is or
    is not successful irrespective of costs."

    A more recent case of genocide denial occurred 10 years ago this
    month. In April 1994, as eyewitness evidence mounted that Hutus in
    Rwanda were methodically exterminating hundreds of thousands of
    Tutsis, the US State Department assiduously avoided use of the term
    genocide. As described by Samantha Power in her article "Bystanders to
    Genocide" (The Atlantic Monthly, September 2001), then-secretary of
    state Warren Christopher instructed his spokesmen and deputies to
    speak only of "acts of genocide," a legalism that would, he believed,
    avoid triggering US obligations under the Genocide Convention to
    intervene. Power quotes the following remarkable exchange between
    State Department spokeswoman Christine Shelly and Reuters reporter
    Alan Elsner.

    Elsner: How would you describe events taking place in Rwanda? Shelly:
    Based on the evidence we have seen from observations on the ground, we
    have every reason to believe that acts of genocide have occurred in
    Rwanda.

    Elsner: What's the difference between "acts of genocide" and
    "genocide?" Shelly: Well, I think the - as you know, there's a legal
    definition of this... clearly not all of the killings that have taken
    place in Rwanda are killings to which you might apply the label... But
    as to the distinctions between the words, we're trying to call what we
    have seen so far as best as we can; and based, again, on the evidence,
    we have every reason to believe that acts of genocide have occurred.

    Elsner: How many acts of genocide does it take to make a genocide?
    Shelly: Alan, that's just not a question I'm in a position to answer.

    UNLIKE CHOMSKY, Kiernan and Herman, the Clinton administration did not
    attempt to deny the unfolding reality in Rwanda. And unlike Duranty,
    the administration did not wink at the mass killing as the necessary
    price to be paid for achieving some prospective greater good. Their
    motives were purely political. The US had been badly burned by events
    in Somalia six months earlier and the appetite for another African
    humanitarian assistance mission was slight.

    Yet the administration, and particularly Clinton himself, did have at
    least one thing in common with Chomsky, Kiernan and Herman: They
    sought to obscure their past actions. On a visit to Rwanda in March
    1998, Clinton confessed "that we in the United States and the world
    community did not do as much as we could have and should have done to
    try to limit what occurred." Yet as Power points out, "this implied
    that the United States had done a good deal but not quite enough. In
    reality the United States... led a successful effort to remove most of
    the UN peacekeepers who were already in Rwanda. It aggressively worked
    to block the subsequent authorization of UN reinforcements."

    Clinton's post facto handwringing notwithstanding, there were at least
    intellectually defensible reasons for the US to stay out of Rwanda
    when it did. To begin with, there was no compelling strategic
    rationale to intervene, no vital material interests at stake in
    Rwanda. Furthermore, Rwanda's was hardly the only African tragedy in
    the 1990s: assorted wars in Somalia, Congo, Sierra Leone, Liberia and
    Ivory Coast collectively took approximately three million lives.

    Why should one tragedy deserve intervention, and not the other? And
    how does a single intervention put a stop to concurrent or future
    genocides or massacres? Absent compelling answers to such questions,
    the natural tendency is to do nothing. Of course, the Genocide
    Convention is meant to compel great powers to act, whatever the
    tangled moral dilemmas or strategic considerations.

    Yet as Canadian scholar Michael Ignatieff has noted, in the case of
    Rwanda the Convention did at least as much to hamper an effective
    response to the genocidaires as it did to deter them. There were
    limited measures the US and other countries might have taken in Rwanda
    against the Hutu militia, such as jamming Hutu radio. One reason they
    failed to take them is that the Convention condemned the US and other
    countries into an all-or-nothing approach. Either a genocide was
    taking place, in which case maximum efforts had to be undertaken to
    stop it; or it wasn't, in which case the situation in Rwanda was a
    matter for Rwandans to resolve themselves. Confronted by such options,
    denying the genocide, and doing nothing to help the massacred Tutsis,
    seemed the counsel of prudence.

    The instinct to do nothing, however, does not apply only to hardheaded
    practitioners of realpolitik. In the face of atrocity, pacifists and
    human-rights activists also tend to counsel inaction or measures not
    likely to bring about a swift end to the atrocities. For example,
    Human Rights Watch director Kenneth Roth argued recently that the war
    in Iraq was "not a humanitarian intervention," since despite the
    uncontested awfulness of Saddam's regime "it is possible to imagine
    scenarios even worse."

    Many others in the so-called peace camp also tend to apply the
    precautionary principle when it comes to military intervention, on the
    theory that waging a war to end a bad regime might impose greater
    hardship on the tyrannized population than the tyranny itself. Thus
    the anguished predictions, prior to the Iraq war, of tens of thousands
    of civilian casualties and up to two million dead as a result of food
    shortages, water contamination and so forth.

    WHAT ASTONISHES one most, looking back on some of this sordid history,
    is not so much that so many genocides or mass killings were "allowed"
    to happen.

    Rather, it is that the reasons for shielding ones eyes from the
    killing are so many, and the reasons for "doing something" are so few
    and weak.

    The hard Left represented by Chomsky looked the other way in Cambodia
    because it could not believe that a "progressive" regime could be
    responsible for such horror. The Durantys of the world understood that
    killing was taking place on a mass scale, but thought it was a
    worthwhile price to pay for the sake of realizing utopia. For Clinton,
    interfering in Rwanda was not worth the prospective cost in American
    lives or political capital.

    For those who marched against invading Iraq, war is worse than
    tyranny. For the so-called realists, a foreign policy based on
    human-rights considerations is a bottomless swamp of open-ended
    commitments and moral hazards into which no responsible power can
    allow itself to wade. Anyway, if Hutus want to exterminate Tutsis -
    indeed, if Tutsis put themselves in a position where it is possible
    that they may be exterminated - that's nobody's fault but theirs.

    Monday is Holocaust Remembrance Day in Israel. Sirens will blare,
    traffic will come to a halt, and for a minute or two an entire nation
    will stand in silence. They will do so behind the shield of a mighty
    army - so far, the only proven remedy for collective helplessness.

    [email protected]
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