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  • What Have We Learned, If Anything?

    The New York Review of Books
    Volume 55, Number 7 · May 1, 2008



    What Have We Learned, If Anything?

    By Tony Judt


    The twentieth century is hardly behind us but already its quarrels
    and its achievements, its ideals and its fears are slipping into the
    obscurity of mis-memory. In the West we have made haste to dispense
    whenever possible with the economic, intellectual, and institutional
    baggage of the twentieth century and encouraged others to do
    likewise. In the wake of 1989, with boundless confidence and
    insufficient reflection, we put the twentieth century behind us and
    strode boldly into its successor swaddled in self-serving
    half-truths: the triumph of the West, the end of History, the
    unipolar Ameri-can moment, the ineluctable march of globalization and
    the free market.

    The belief that that was then and this is now embraced much more than
    just the defunct dogmas andinstitutions of cold war-era communism.
    During the Nineties, and again in the wake of September 11, 2001, I
    was struck more than once by a perverse contemporary insistence on
    not understanding the context of our present dilemmas, at home and
    abroad; on not listening with greater care to some of the wiser heads
    of earlier decades; on seeking actively to forget rather than
    remember, to deny continuity and proclaim novelty on every possible
    occasion. We have become stridently insistent that the past has
    little of interest to teach us. Ours, we assert, is a new world; its
    risks and opportunities are without precedent.

    Perhaps this is not surprising. The recent past is the hardest to
    know and understand. Moreover, the world really has undergone a
    remarkable transformation since 1989 and such transformations are
    always unsettling for those who remember how things were before. In
    the decades following the French Revolution, the douceur de vivre of
    the vanished ancien régime was much regretted by older commentators.
    A century later, evocations and memoirs of pre-Word War I Europe
    typically depicted (and still depict) a lost civilization, a world
    whose illusions had quite literally been blown apart: "Never such
    innocence again."[1]

    --------------------------------- -------------------------------

    But there is a difference. Contemporaries might have regretted the
    world before the French Revolution. But they had not forgotten it.
    For much of the nineteenth century Europeans remained obsessed with
    the causes and meaning of the upheavals that began in 1789. The
    political and philosophical debates of the Enlightenment had not been
    consumed in the fires of revolution. On the contrary, the Revolution
    and its consequences were widely attributed to that same
    Enlightenment which thus emerged - for friend and foe alike - as the
    acknowledged source of the political dogmas and social programs of
    the century that followed.

    In a similar vein, while everyone after 1918 agreed that things would
    never be the same again, the particular shape that a postwar world
    should take was everywhere conceived and contested in the long shadow
    of nineteenth-century experience and thought. Neoclassical economics,
    liberalism, Marxism (and its Communist stepchild), "revolution," the
    bourgeoisie and the proletariat, imperialism, and "industrialism" - the
    building blocks of the twentieth-century political world - were all
    nineteenth-century artifacts. Even those who, along with Virginia
    Woolf, believed that "on or about December 1910, human character
    changed" - that the cultural upheaval of Europe's fin de siècle had
    utterly transformed the terms of intellectual exchange - nonetheless
    devoted a sur- prising amount of energy to shadowboxing with their
    predecessors.[2] The past hung heavy across the present.

    ---------------------------------------- ------------------------

    Today, in contrast, we wear the last century rather lightly. To be
    sure, we have memorialized it everywhere: shrines, inscriptions,
    "heritage sites," even historical theme parks are all public
    reminders of "the Past." But the twentieth century that we have
    chosen to commemorate is curiously out of focus. The overwhelming
    majority of places of official twentieth-century memory are either
    avowedly nostalgo-triumphalist - praising famous men and celebrating
    famous victories - or else, and increasingly, they are opportunities
    for the recollection of selective suffering.

    The twentieth century is thus on the path to becoming a moral memory
    palace: a pedagogically serviceable Chamber of Historical Horrors
    whose way stations are labeled "Munich" or "Pearl Harbor,"
    "Auschwitz" or "Gulag," "Armenia" or "Bosnia" or "Rwanda"; with
    "9/11" as a sort of supererogatory coda, a bloody postscript for
    those who would forget the lessons of the century or who failed to
    learn them. The problem with this lapidary representation of the last
    century as a uniquely horrible time from which we have now,
    thankfully, emerged is not the description - it was in many ways a
    truly awful era, an age of brutality and mass suffering perhaps
    unequaled in the historical record. The problem is the message: that
    all of that is now behind us, that its meaning is clear, and that we
    may now advance - unencumbered by past errors - into a different and
    better era.

    But such official commemoration does not enhance our appreciation and
    awareness of the past. It serves as a substitute, a surrogate.
    Instead of teaching history we walk children through museums and
    memorials. Worse still, we encourage them to see the past - and its
    lessons - through the vector of their ancestors' suffering. Today, the
    "common" interpretation of the recent past is thus composed of the
    manifold fragments of separate pasts, each of them (Jewish, Polish,
    Serb, Armenian, German, Asian-American, Palestinian, Irish,
    homosexual...) marked by its own distinctive and assertive
    victimhood.

    The resulting mosaic does not bind us to a shared past, it separates
    us from it. Whatever the shortcomings of the national narratives once
    taught in school, however selective their focus and instrumental
    their message, they had at least the advantage of providing a nation
    with past references for present experience. Traditional history, as
    taught to generations of schoolchildren and college students, gave
    the present a meaning by reference to the past: today's names,
    places, inscriptions, ideas, and allusions could be slotted into a
    memorized narrative of yesterday. In our time, however, this process
    has gone into reverse. The past now acquires meaning only by
    reference to our many and often contrasting present concerns.

    This disconcertingly alien character of the past is doubtless in part
    the result of the sheer speed of contemporary change. "Globalization"
    really has churned up people's lives in ways that their parents or
    grandparents would be hard put to imagine. Much of what had for
    decades, even centuries, seemed familiar and permanent is now passing
    rapidly into oblivion. The past, it seems, really is another country:
    they did things differently there.

    The expansion of communication offers a case in point. Until the last
    decades of the twentieth century most people in the world had limited
    access to information; but - thanks to national education,
    state-controlled radio and television, and a common print culture
    - within any one state or nation or community people were all likely
    to know many of the same things. Today, the opposite applies. Most
    people in the world outside of sub-Saharan Africa have access to a
    near infinity of data. But in the absence of any common culture
    beyond a small elite, and not always even there, the fragmented
    information and ideas that people select or encounter are determined
    by a multiplicity of tastes, affinities, and interests. As the years
    pass, each one of us has less in common with the fast-multiplying
    worlds of our contemporaries, not to speak of the world of our
    forebears.

    All of this is surely true - and it has disturbing implications for the
    future of democratic governance. Nevertheless, disruptive change,
    even global transformation, is not in itself unprecedented. The
    economic "globalization" of the late nineteenth century was no less
    turbulent, except that its implications were initially felt and
    understood by far fewer people. What is significant about the present
    age of transformations is the unique insouciance with which we have
    abandoned not merely the practices of the past but their very memory.
    A world just recently lost is already half forgotten.

    -------------------------------------- --------------------------

    What, then, is it that we have misplaced in our haste to put the
    twentieth century behind us? In the US, at least, we have forgotten
    the meaning of war. There is a reason for this. In much of
    continental Europe, Asia, and Africa the twentieth century was
    experienced as a cycle of wars. War in the last century signified
    invasion, occupation, displacement, deprivation, destruction, and
    mass murder. Countries that lost wars often lost population,
    territory, resources, security, and independence. But even those
    countries that emerged formally victorious had comparable experiences
    and usually remembered war much as the losers did. Italy after World
    War I, China after World War II, and France after both wars might be
    cases in point: all were "winners" and all were devastated. And then
    there are those countries that won a war but "lost the peace,"
    squandering the opportunities afforded them by their victory. The
    Western Allies at Versailles and Israel in the decades following its
    June 1967 victory remain the most telling examples.

    Moreover, war in the twentieth century frequently meant civil war:
    often under the cover of occupation or "liberation." Civil war played
    a significant role in the widespread "ethnic cleansing" and forced
    population transfers of the twentieth century, from India and Turkey
    to Spain and Yugoslavia. Like foreign occupation, civil war is one of
    the terrible "shared" memories of the past hundred years. In many
    countries "putting the past behind us" - i.e., agreeing to overcome or
    forget (or deny) a recent memory of internecine conflict and
    intercommunal violence - has been a primary goal of postwar
    governments: sometimes achieved, sometimes overachieved.

    War was not just a catastrophe in its own right; it brought other
    horrors in its wake. World War I led to an unprecedented
    militarization of society, the worship of violence, and a cult of
    death that long outlasted the war itself and prepared the ground for
    the political disasters that followed. States and societies seized
    during and after World War II by Hitler or Stalin (or by both, in
    sequence) experienced not just occupation and exploitation but
    degradation and corrosion of the laws and norms of civil society. The
    very structures of civilized life - regulations, laws, teachers,
    policemen, judges - disappeared or else took on sinister significance:
    far from guaranteeing security, the state itself became the leading
    source of insecurity. Reciprocity and trust, whether in neighbors,
    colleagues, community, or leaders, collapsed. Behavior that would be
    aberrant in conventional circumstances - theft, dishonesty,
    dissemblance, indifference to the misfortune of others, and the
    opportunistic exploitation of their suffering - became not just normal
    but sometimes the only way to save your family and yourself. Dissent
    or opposition was stifled by universal fear.

    War, in short, prompted behavior that would have been unthinkable as
    well as dysfunctional in peacetime. It is war, not racism or ethnic
    antagonism or religious fervor, that leads to atrocity. War - total
    war - has been the crucial antecedent condition for mass criminality in
    the modern era. The first primitive concentration camps were set up
    by the British during the Boer War of 1899-1902. Without World War I
    there would have been no Armenian genocide and it is highly unlikely
    that either communism or fascism would have seized hold of modern
    states. Without World War II there would have been no Holocaust.
    Absent the forcible involvement of Cambodia in the Vietnam War, we
    would never have heard of Pol Pot. As for the brutalizing effect of
    war on ordinary soldiers themselves, this of course has been
    copiously documented.[3]

    ---------------------------------- ------------------------------

    The United States avoided almost all of that. Americans, perhaps
    alone in the world, experienced the twentieth century in a far more
    positive light. The US was not invaded. It did not lose vast numbers
    of citizens, or huge swathes of territory, as a result of occupation
    or dismemberment. Although humiliated in distant neocolonial wars (in
    Vietnam and now in Iraq), the US has never suffered the full
    consequences of defeat.[4] Despite their ambivalence toward its
    recent undertakings, most Americans still feel that the wars their
    country has fought were mostly "good wars." The US was greatly
    enriched by its role in the two world wars and by their outcome, in
    which respect it has nothing in common with Britain, the only other
    major country to emerge unambiguously victorious from those struggles
    but at the cost of near bankruptcy and the loss of empire. And
    compared with other major twentieth-century combatants, the US lost
    relatively few soldiers in battle and suffered hardly any civilian
    casualties.

    This contrast merits statistical emphasis. In World War I the US
    suffered slightly fewer than 120,000 combat deaths. For the UK,
    France, and Germany the figures are respectively 885,000, 1.4
    million, and over 2 million. In World War II, when the US lost about
    420,000 armed forces in combat, Japan lost 2.1 million, China 3.8
    million, Germany 5.5 million, and the Soviet Union an estimated 10.7
    million. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., records
    the deaths of 58,195 Americans over the course of a war lasting
    fifteen years: but the French army lost double that number in six
    weeks of fighting in May-June 1940. In the US Army's costliest
    engagement of the century - the Ardennes offensive of December
    1944-January 1945 (the "Battle of the Bulge") - 19,300 American
    soldiers were killed. In the first twenty-four hours of the Battle of
    the Somme (July 1, 1916), the British army lost more than 20,000
    dead. At the Battle of Stalingrad, the Red Army lost 750,000 men and
    the Wehrmacht almost as many.

    With the exception of the generation of men who fought in World War
    II, the United States thus has no modern memory of combat or loss
    remotely comparable to that of the armed forces of other countries.
    But it is civilian casualties that leave the most enduring mark on
    national memory and here the contrast is piquant indeed. In World War
    II alone the British suffered 67,000 civilian dead. In continental
    Europe, France lost 270,000 civilians. Yugoslavia recorded over half
    a million civilian deaths, Germany 1.8 million, Poland 5.5 million,
    and the Soviet Union an estimated 11.4 million. These aggregate
    figures include some 5.8 million Jewish dead. Further afield, in
    China, the death count exceeded 16 million. American civilian losses
    (excluding the merchant navy) in both world wars amounted to less
    than 2,000 dead.

    As a consequence, the United States today is the only advanced
    democracy where public figures glorify and exalt the military, a
    sentiment familiar in Europe before 1945 but quite unknown today.
    Politicians in the US surround themselves with the symbols and
    trappings of armed prowess; even in 2008 American commentators
    excoriate allies that hesitate to engage in armed conflict. I believe
    it is this contrasting recollection of war and its impact, rather
    than any structural difference between the US and otherwise
    comparable countries, which accounts for their dissimilar responses
    to international challenges today. Indeed, the complacent
    neoconservative claim that war and conflict are things Americans
    understand - in contrast to naive Europeans with their pacifistic
    fantasies - seems to me exactly wrong: it is Europeans (along with
    Asians and Africans) who understand war all too well. Most Americans
    have been fortunate enough to live in blissful ignorance of its true
    significance.

    That same contrast may account for the distinctive quality of much
    American writing on the cold war and its outcome. In European
    accounts of the fall of communism, from both sides of the former Iron
    Curtain, the dominant sentiment is one of relief at the closing of a
    long, unhappy chapter. Here in the US, however, the story is
    typically recorded in a triumphalist key.[5] And why not? For many
    American commentators and policymakers the message of the twentieth
    century is that war works. Hence the widespread enthusiasm for our
    war on Iraq in 2003 (despite strong opposition to it in most other
    countries). For Washington, war remains an option - on that occasion
    the first option. For the rest of the developed world it has become a
    last resort.[6]

    -------------------------------------- --------------------------

    Ignorance of twentieth-century history does not just contribute to a
    regrettable enthusiasm for armed conflict. It also leads to a
    misidentification of the enemy. We have good reason to be taken up
    just now with terrorism and its challenge. But before setting out on
    a hundred-year war to eradicate terrorists from the face of the
    earth, let us consider the following. Terrorists are nothing new.
    Even if we exclude assassinations or attempted assassinations of
    presidents and monarchs and confine ourselves to men and women who
    kill random unarmed civilians in pursuit of a political objective,
    terrorists have been with us for well over a century.

    There have been anarchist terrorists, Russian terrorists, Indian
    terrorists, Arab terrorists, Basque terrorists, Malay terrorists,
    Tamil terrorists, and dozens of others besides. There have been and
    still are Christian terrorists, Jewish terrorists, and Muslim
    terrorists. There were Yugoslav ("partisan") terrorists settling
    scores in World War II; Zionist terrorists blowing up Arab
    marketplaces in Palestine before 1948; American-financed Irish
    terrorists in Margaret Thatcher's London; US-armed mujahideen
    terrorists in 1980s Afghanistan; and so on.

    No one who has lived in Spain, Italy, Germany, Turkey, Japan, the UK,
    or France, not to speak of more habitually violent lands, could have
    failed to notice the omnipresence of terrorists - using guns, bombs,
    chemicals, cars, trains, planes, and much else - over the course of the
    twentieth century and beyond. The only thing that has changed in
    recent years is the unleashing in September 2001 of homicidal
    terrorism within the United States. Even that was not wholly
    unprecedented: the means were new and the carnage unexampled, but
    terrorism on US soil was far from unknown over the course of the
    twentieth century.

    But what of the argument that terrorism today is different, a "clash
    of cultures" infused with a noxious brew of religion and
    authoritarian politics: "Islamofascism"? This, too, is an
    interpretation resting in large part on a misreading of
    twentieth-century history. There is a triple confusion here. The
    first consists of lumping together the widely varying national
    fascisms of interwar Europe with the very different resentments,
    demands, and strategies of the (equally heterogeneous) Muslim
    movements and insurgencies of our own time - and attaching the moral
    credibility of the antifascist struggles of the past to our own more
    dubiously motivated military adventures.

    A second confusion comes from conflating a handful of religiously
    motivated stateless assassins with the threat posed in the twentieth
    century by wealthy, modern states in the hands of totalitarian
    political parties committed to foreign aggression and mass
    extermination. Nazism was a threat to our very existence and the
    Soviet Union occupied half of Europe. But al-Qaeda? The comparison
    insults the intelligence - not to speak of the memory of those who
    fought the dictators. Even those who assert these similarities don't
    appear to believe them. After all, if Osama bin Laden were truly
    comparable to Hitler or Stalin, would we really have responded to
    September 11 by invading...Baghdad?

    But the most serious mistake consists of taking the form for the
    content: defining all the various terrorists and terrorisms of our
    time, with their contrasting and sometimes conflicting objectives, by
    their actions alone. It would be rather as though one were to lump
    together the Italian Red Brigades, the German Baader-Meinhof gang,
    the Provisional IRA, the Basque ETA, Switzerland's Jura Separatists,
    and the National Front for the Liberation of Corsica; dismiss their
    differences as insignificant; label the resulting amalgam of
    ideological kneecappers, bomb throwers, and political murderers
    "European Extremism" (or "Christo-fascism," perhaps?)...and then
    declare uncompromising, open-ended armed warfare against it.

    This abstracting of foes and threats from their context - this ease
    with which we have talked ourselves into believing that we are at war
    with "Islamofascists," "extremists" from a strange culture, who dwell
    in some distant "Islamistan," who hate us for who we are and seek to
    destroy "our way of life" - is a sure sign that we have forgotten the
    lesson of the twentieth century: the ease with which war and fear and
    dogma can bring us to demonize others, deny them a common humanity or
    the protection of our laws, and do unspeakable things to them.

    ------------------------------------------- ---------------------

    How else are we to explain our present indulgence for the practice of
    torture? For indulge it we assuredly do. The twentieth century began
    with the Hague Conventions on the laws of war. As of 2008 the
    twenty-first century has to its credit the Guantánamo Bay detention
    camp. Here and in other (secret) prisons the United States routinely
    tortures terrorists or suspected terrorists. There is ample
    twentieth-century precedent for this, of course, and not only in
    dictatorships. The British tortured terrorists in their East African
    colonies as late as the 1950s. The French tortured captured Algerian
    terrorists in the "dirty war" to keep Algeria French.[7]

    At the height of the Algerian war Raymond Aron published two powerful
    essays urging France to quit Algeria and concede its independence:
    this, he insisted, was a pointless war that France could not win.
    Some years later Aron was asked why, when opposing French rule in
    Algeria, he did not also add his voice to those who were speaking out
    against the use of torture in Algeria. "But what would I have
    achieved by proclaiming my opposition to torture?" he replied. "I
    have never met anyone who is in favor of torture."[8]

    Well, times have changed. In the US today there are many respectable,
    thinking people who favor torture - under the appropriate
    circumstances and when applied to those who merit it. Professor Alan
    Dershowitz of Harvard Law School writes that "the simple cost-benefit
    analysis for employing such non-lethal torture [to extract
    time-sensitive information from a prisoner] seems overwhelming."
    Professor Jean Bethke Elshtain of the University of Chicago's School
    of Divinity acknowledges that torture remains a horror and is "in
    general [sic]...forbidden." But when interrogating "prisoners in the
    context of a deadly and dangerous war against enemies who know no
    limits...there are moments when this rule may be overridden."[9]

    These chilling assertions are echoed by New York's Senator Charles
    Schumer (a Democrat), who at a Senate hearing in 2004 claimed that
    "there are probably very few people in this room or in America who
    would say that torture should never ever be used." Certainly not
    Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who informed the BBC's Radio
    Four in February 2008 that it would be absurd to say that you
    couldn't torture. In Scalia's words,

    Once you acknowledge that, we're into a different game. How close
    does the threat have to be? How severe can the infliction of pain be?
    I don't think these are easy questions at all.... But I certainly
    know you can't come in smugly and with great self-satisfaction and
    say, "Oh, it's torture, and therefore it's no good."[10]
    But it was precisely that claim, that "it's torture, and therefore
    it's no good," which until very recently distinguished democracies
    from dictatorships. We pride ourselves on having defeated the "evil
    empire" of the Soviets. Indeed so. But perhaps we should read again
    the memoirs of those who suffered at the hands of that empire - the
    memoirs of Eugen Loebl, Artur London, Jo Langer, Lena Constante, and
    countless others - and then compare the degrading abuses they suffered
    with the treatments approved and authorized by President Bush and the
    US Congress. Are they so very different?[11]

    Torture certainly "works." As the history of twentieth-century police
    states suggests, under extreme torture most people will say anything
    (including, sometimes, the truth). But to what end? Thanks to
    information extracted from terrorists under torture, the French army
    won the 1957 Battle of Algiers. Just over four years later the war
    was over, Algeria was independent, and the "terrorists" had won. But
    France still carries the stain and the memory of the crimes committed
    in its name. Torture really is no good, especially for republics. And
    as Aron noted many decades ago, "torture - and lies - [are] the
    accompaniment of war.... What needed to be done was end the war."[12]

    We are slipping down a slope. The sophistic distinctions we draw
    today in our war on terror - between the rule of law and "exceptional"
    circumstances, between citizens (who have rights and legal
    protections) and noncitizens to whom anything can be done, between
    normal people and "terrorists," between "us" and "them" - are not new.
    The twentieth century saw them all invoked. They are the selfsame
    distinctions that licensed the worst horrors of the recent past:
    internment camps, deportation, torture, and murder - those very crimes
    that prompt us to murmur "never again." So what exactly is it that we
    think we have learned from the past? Of what possible use is our
    self-righteous cult of memory and memorials if the United States can
    build its very own internment camp and torture people there?

    Far from escaping the twentieth century, we need, I think, to go back
    and look a bit more carefully. We need to learn again - or perhaps for
    the first time - how war brutalizes and degrades winners and losers
    alike and what happens to us when, having heedlessly waged war for no
    good reason, we are encouraged to inflate and demonize our enemies in
    order to justify that war's indefinite continuance. And perhaps, in
    this protracted electoral season, we could put a question to our
    aspirant leaders: Daddy (or, as it might be, Mommy), what did you do
    to prevent the war?

    Notes
    [1] Never such innocence,
    Never before or since,
    As changed itself to past
    Without a word - the men
    Leaving the gardens tidy,
    The thousands of marriages
    Lasting a little while longer:
    Never such innocence again.

    - Philip Larkin, MCMXIV

    [2] See, for example, Lytton Strachey, Eminent Victorians, first
    published in 1918.

    [3] See Vernichtungskrieg: Verbrechen der Wehrmacht 1941-1944, edited
    by Hannes Heer and Klaus Naumann (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 1995).
    Many German soldiers on the eastern front and in Yugoslavia recorded
    their worst crimes for the delectation of family and friends. The
    American prison guards in Abu Ghraib are their lineal descendants.

    [4] The defeated South did indeed experience just such consequences
    following the Civil War, however. And its subsequent humiliation,
    resentment, and backwardness are the American exception that
    illustrates the rule.

    [5] See my discussion of The Cold War: A New History (Penguin, 2005)
    by John Lewis Gaddis, in The New York Review, March 23, 2006.

    [6] It should be noted, however, that a younger generation of
    political leaders in the UK - starting with Tony Blair - has proven
    almost as indifferent to the lessons of the twentieth century as
    their American contemporaries.

    [7] See Caroline Elkins, Imperial Reckoning: The Untold Story of
    Britain's Gulag in Kenya (Henry Holt, 2005); Marnia Lazreg, Torture
    and the Twilight of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad (Princeton
    University Press, 2008); and Darius Rejali, Torture and Democracy
    (Princeton University Press, 2007).

    [8] Raymond Aron, La Tragédie Algérienne (Paris: Plon, 1957),
    L'Algérie et la République (Paris: Plon, 1958), and Le Spectateur
    engagé (Paris: Julliard, 1981), p. 210. For a firsthand account of
    torture, see Henri Alleg, The Question (Bison, 2006; originally
    published in 1958 as La Question). La Torture dans la République, by
    the late Pierre Vidal-Naquet, is a penetrating account of how torture
    rots the political system that authorizes it. First published in
    English in 1963, this book has long been out of print. It should be
    retranslated and made required reading for every congressman and
    presidential candidate in the US.

    [9] Alan M. Dershowitz, Why Terrorism Works: Understanding the
    Threat, Responding to the Challenge (Yale University Press, 2002), p.
    144; Jean Bethke Elshtain, "Reflections on the Problem of 'Dirty
    Hands,'" in Torture: A Collection, edited by Sanford Levinson (Oxford
    University Press, 2004), pp. 80-83.

    [10] Senator Schumer is quoted in The Wall Street Journal, November
    2, 2007. For Justice Scalia's remarks, see
    www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2008-02-13-sc alia_N.htm.

    [11] Lena Constante, The Silent Escape: Three Thousand Days in
    Romanian Prisons (University of California Press, 1995); Jo Langer,
    Une Saison à Bratislava (Paris: Seuil, 1981); Eugen Loebl, My Mind on
    Trial (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976); Artur Gerard London, L'Aveu,
    dans l'engrenage du Procès de Prague (Paris: Gallimard, 1971).

    [12] Le Spectateur engagé, pp. 210-211.

    http://www.nybooks.com/articles/21311
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