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Darfur "Genocide" Pervades U.S. Campaign Discourse

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  • Darfur "Genocide" Pervades U.S. Campaign Discourse

    DARFUR "GENOCIDE" PERVADES U.S. CAMPAIGN DISCOURSE
    Daniel Van Oudenaren

    Sudan Tribune
    July 28 2008
    Sudan

    Senator Barack Obama, the presumed Democratic nominee for President
    of the United States, told a crowd of 200,000 Germans gathered at the
    Berlin Victory Column on Thursday that "the genocide in Darfur shames
    the conscience of us all." He added later, "Will we give meaning to
    the words 'never again' in Darfur?"

    Obama's rival, meanwhile, Republican presidential candidate Senator
    John McCain, emphasized twice during an interview for "This Week,"
    a television show aired this Sunday, that Obama's opposition to 2007
    troop increases in Iraq could have led to "chaos" and "genocide."

    German politicians typically have been more guarded than their American
    counterparts in their rhetoric on Darfur -- German Chancellor Angela
    Merkel, for instance, preferred to speak of the "Darfur conflict"
    during a July 15 press conference with UN Secretary-General Ban
    Ki-moon.

    But the American candidates have unequivocally characterized the
    conflict as genocide. McCain and Obama, along with primary challenger
    Senator Hillary Clinton, signed a joint statement on May 28 declaring
    that "five years of genocide" in Darfur is "unacceptable to the
    American people and the world community."

    Despite this jointly held position, in a series of events this past
    week the candidates competed to appear tougher than the other on
    genocide.

    As Obama laid a wreath Wednesday at Israel's Yad Vashem Hall of
    Remembrance, a memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, McCain aide
    Tucker Bounds emailed reporters a statement questioning Obama's
    commitment to stopping genocide. The McCain campaign insists that
    Obama's plan for Iraq would have failed to quell violence and could
    have led to genocide. Bounds indicated in his statement that Obama's
    Iraq stance is inconsistent with his position on genocide elsewhere.

    Obama remarked at the Yad Vashem museum, "Despite this record of
    monumental tragedy, this ultimately is a place of hope, because it
    reminds us of our obligations and our responsibilities, and hopefully
    creates a better future for our children and our grandchildren."

    Cindy McCain, Senator McCain's wife, was part of a similarly
    high-profile delegation to visit the Kigali Genocide Memorial on July
    19. She was accompanied by former Arkansas governor Mick Huckabee,
    who challenged McCain in the Republican primary, and by former Senate
    Majority Leaders Tom Daschle (Democrat) and Bill Frist (Republican).

    During McCain's television interview Sunday, he said, "If we had done
    what Sen. Obama wanted done, it would have been chaos, genocide,
    increased Iranian influence, perhaps al-Qaeda establishing a base
    again." He added, "the consequences of failure would have been
    severe." McCain has made prioritizing victory in Iraq a central part
    of his platform.

    But the campaign rhetoric also makes use of the increasing political
    leverage of the term "genocide" as the candidates vie for credibility
    with Darfur activists and constituencies traditionally sensitive to
    genocide, including Jewish and Armenian-American voters.

    The Jewish vote will be particularly important in the swing state
    of Florida, where 27 electoral votes are at stake. Senator Joseph
    Lieberman, an independent senator from Connecticut and a conservative
    Jew, shares McCain's position on Iraq and campaigned in south Florida
    July 20-21 on behalf of McCain. Lieberman cosponsored a January
    resolution urging the United States to provide tactical and utility
    helicopters for the UN-AU mission in Darfur.

    The Armenian National Committee of America announced July 22 that
    Samantha Power, a close advisor to Obama during the early stages of
    his campaign, will be an honoree at the group's Eastern Region annual
    banquet. Power won the Pulitzer Prize for her book A Problem From Hell:
    America and the Age of Genocide.

    Obama received the endorsement of the Armenian-American leaders in
    January. He had objected to the U.S. State Department's removal of
    Ambassador John Evans in 2006, after Evans publically used the term
    "genocide" to describe the slaughter of Armenians from 1915 to 1923.

    A group of senators, most prominently Robert Menendez, has repeatedly
    blocked confirmation of a new Ambassador to Armenia until the nominee
    characterizes the killings as genocide. Obama used his position on
    the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to submit written questions to
    the new nominee, Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, at a June 19 hearing,
    stalling her confirmation.

    The U.S. presidential election will take place November 4, 2008. All
    435 seats in the House of Representatives and 35 of the one hundred
    Senate seats are also up for election.

    The U.S. presidential election will take place November 4, 2008. All
    435 seats in the House of Representatives and 35 of the one hundred
    Senate seats are also up for election.
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