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Complicity with Evil: An Interview with Adam LeBor

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  • Complicity with Evil: An Interview with Adam LeBor

    Complicity with Evil: An Interview with Adam LeBor
    By Khatchig Mouradian

    ZNet

    March, 15 2008

    Adam LeBor is an author and journalist based in Budapest, Hungary. He
    writes for The Times (of London), the Economist, the Jewish Chronicle
    and the New York Times. He is the author of six non-fiction books,
    including Milosevic: A Biography, City of Oranges: An Intimate History
    of Arabs and Jews in Jaffa and Complicity with Evil: The United
    Nations in the Age of Modern Genocide.

    In this interview, conducted by phone, we talk about the role the UN
    played - and oftentimes failed to play - when genocide and crimes
    against humanity were committed.


    Khatchig Mouradian - In Complicity with Evil, you call on the UN to
    return to its founding principles and set the agenda of the Security
    Council instead of following the lead of the great powers. Do you
    think such a drastic shift in the UN's approach would be possible
    under current circumstances?

    Adam LeBor - It would be difficult, that's for sure. That's the ideal
    that I think should happen. The problem with the UN is that the powers
    on the Security Council follow their own national interests more than
    the interests of the UN, but one place where there is room to maneuver
    is within the Secretariat. And if the Secretary General and other
    Secretariat officials don't just follow the whims of the great powers
    but actually say, `Look, the UN is here to safeguard human rights,
    prevent genocide, that's why it was founded, not to be used to pursue
    your national interests,' if the Secretariat kept making that point,
    it could, perhaps, have an effect.

    This sounds very general, but let's look at, for example, what
    happened in Bosnia. Many UN officials focused primarily on preserving
    the UN's impartiality and also following the interests of the great
    powers. Those UN officials did have an effect on the ground, but it
    wasn't a good effect.


    K.M. - You mentioned the issue of UN impartiality. In the book you
    highlight the UN's `reluctance to distinguish victim from aggressor'
    and `continued equal treatment of the parties' as the biggest blows to
    the credibility of UN peacekeeping. Can you explain?

    A.L. - We saw that in Bosnia, we saw it in Rwanda, and we are still
    seeing it in Darfur. In Bosnia, at the Sarajevo airport, UN soldiers
    were shining spotlights on people who were trying to run across the
    airfield to get out of the besieged city, and the Serbs would fire on
    them. The airport was controlled by the UN, and the UN believed it had
    to be neutral.

    You have this obsession with neutrality. You have the main UN
    political official, Yakushi Akashi, who refuses to authorize air
    strikes against the Bosnian Serbs because he believes that it would
    weaken Slobodan Milosevic - and the latter was needed to make a peace
    deal.

    You see the same thing in Rwanda, where the UN, under pressure by the
    Clinton Administration - in what was surely one of the
    Administration's most shameful moments - actually pulled out 90
    percent of the troops that were there.

    You see the same situation now in Darfur. Sudan is treated as an
    honored partner in negotiations. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon meets
    the Sudanese president and talks about how he believes the Sudanese
    president is committed to ending the carnage in Darfur, and then, a
    few weeks later, another 12,000 people are displaced and hundreds of
    more people are killed. All this is because no one seems to be willing
    to say that the UN is not founded to give a platform of membership to
    regimes carrying out genocide.

    There's a mentality that we can't get involved in what's going on. We
    just have to always be these impartial arbiters. But there comes a
    point when impartiality means siding with the aggressor.


    K.M. - How do you think this false notion of impartiality can be
    changed? After all, some would argue that the UN is the organization
    that brings all countries together and once the concept of
    impartiality is left open to different interpretations, member states
    could raise the argument that the UN is, in fact, taking sides.

    A.L. - This is the great question: How can the organization protect
    human rights when the people carrying out the human rights abuses are
    members of the UN? I would argue there are means and methods by which
    UN member states that carry out egregious violations can be suspended
    or expelled - there's a provision for that in the UN Charter. Also,
    the agenda can be set. Look at what's happening now on the new Human
    Rights Council. We have a spectacle of countries refusing to take any
    action against Sudan and Zimbabwe, obsessing about what Israel is
    doing. Now, to be sure, there are human rights issues in Israel and
    Palestine, but there are also many other human rights issues going on
    in the world. But you have member states of these organizations
    focusing only on their own interests, rather than having any actual
    interests in human rights violations. That's one area that needs a lot
    of attention.


    K.M. - This is also a problem in the media. How do you feel about
    bringing up human rights violations elsewhere to `justify' or divert
    attention from other human rights abuses? Wouldn't a universal
    approach to human rights help all sides?

    A.L. - The media in countries often reflects their country's
    interests, especially in non-democratic regimes. For example, most
    Arab regimes and much of the Arab media hasn't engaged over
    Darfur. Some of them don't believe it's happening, some of them say
    it's another Western plot to dismember another Arab country, same as
    in Iraq. You see a kind of selective judgment. But until there are
    absolute standards applied, it weakens the whole cause of human
    rights. If, for example, the Arab media is always talking about Gaza
    and the West Bank - and of course, I say again, there are human rights
    violations that need to be addressed there - but the same media never
    says anything about what's happening in Darfur or refugees in the
    Western Sahara or the lack of human rights in most Arab countries or
    the fact that there's no free press and bloggers are arrested, then it
    becomes very difficult to share outrage over other issues. We need
    less selective judgment, and clearer, absolute judgments over what's
    wrong, whether or not it is convenient to look at a certain issue.


    K.M. - I want to return to the issue of the Secretariat. Wouldn't you
    agree that the hands of the Secretariat are tied when it comes to
    setting the agenda as long as members of the Security Council are not
    willing to make concessions?

    A.L. - I think it would demand a concession by the countries on the
    Security Council, especially the five permanent members, to accept
    that Secretariat officials should have more power and should be able
    to set the agenda of the UN. But at the moment, it just doesn't seem
    to be happening. Look at how the political establishment in the U.S.,
    for example, views the UN. They see it as an anti-Western
    organization, and so why would we hand over any diplomatic power to an
    organization like this? We go back to the problem of selective
    judgment here. The General Assembly and the new Human Rights Council
    are refusing to engage on Zimbabwe or on Sudan but only engages on
    things that interest it. This actually helps the people who want to
    keep the UN weak. The Republicans can say, look at these people, they
    are not concerned about human rights, they are concerned about their
    own short-term politically expedient interests. So, that selective
    judgment does a lot of damage.


    K.M. - Talk about why the UN is, as you say, `passively complicit with
    evil.'

    A.L. - The reason I called my book `Complicity with Evil' is because
    it's actually the UN's own words. In 2000, the UN released its report
    on peacekeeping failures in Bosnia, Rwanda and some other places. The
    UN's own words were that its continued obsession with impartiality,
    with not engaging while human rights abuses were going on in front of
    UN peacekeepers, has arguably made the organization guilty of being
    `complicit with evil.' And it has been. There are people in the
    organization that realize this and want to change it.


    K.M. - What role do you see for the UN today in Darfur?

    A.L. - When people talk about Darfur, especially the U.S and Britain,
    they say that we can't do anything in Darfur because of Iraq. But
    there are many things that can be done without sending the 101st
    Airborne Division in. You can have serious, meaningful sanctions on
    the Sudanese government, on the president and the people organizing
    the genocide and the human rights abuses. You can have sanctions on
    the oil industry. You can have a more active International Criminal
    Court (ICC). You can see the contempt Sudan holds the UN in when one
    of the four people indicted by the ICC is actually promoted after the
    indictment and made the minister in charge of refugee affairs. You can
    see that a country like Sudan has no fear of the UN whatsoever,
    couldn't care less what it does. The way to address that is also to
    start focusing on the individuals that are actually running these
    regimes and to seriously target them in terms of sanctions, travel
    bans and freezing their assets. This had quite strong effects during
    the Milosevic regime, when the genocide was going on in Bosnia,
    because people started to get nervous that they'd never get their
    money or be able to leave the country. They started to turn on each
    other and started to reach out to the ICC saying that they had
    information and were ready to make a deal. All this makes the regime
    crack.


    K.M. - Do you think the U.S.'s use of the term `genocide' to describe
    the killings in Darfur has helped in any way?

    A.L. - I thought the whole U.S. position on the use of the term
    `genocide' in Darfur was completely bizarre. Clearly, it is
    genocide. Genocide does not necessarily mean mass extermination, as it
    happened in the Holocaust or Rwanda. It means the intention to destroy
    a group. And that is exactly what is happening in Darfur in terms of
    the communities that are being targeted and destroyed as a
    group. There's a lot of furor over the use of the word and this furor
    distracts from what's going on. America says it is genocide, but then
    refuses to take any action to stop this genocide. The UN says it's not
    a genocide, although some acts have been committed that resemble
    genocide. You have this, in some way, irrelevant debate over the word,
    while the slaughter continues.


    K.M. - How do you see the future of UN peacekeeping?

    A.L. - I think a lot of lessons have been learned from Rwanda, where
    UN troops evacuated places and left the Tutsis there to be slaughtered
    by the Hutus who were waiting outside the front door. And from what
    happened in Srebrenica, where Dutch peacekeepers literally forced
    Muslim men and boys into the arms of the Bosnian Serbs who then took
    them away and slaughtered them. I think important lessons have been
    learned, unfortunately at the cost of a lot of human lives and
    suffering.

    Now, where there is a meaningful peacekeeping force, like in Congo and
    Liberia, it is more robust and muscular. The department of
    peacekeeping operations has a sub-department called Best Practices,
    which looks at each mission and works out how to make it work better.

    But the problem is when the troops aren't there. If you look in
    Darfur, there's supposed to be 26,000 troops, but there's only a
    fraction of them there. Sudan is insisting that only peacekeepers from
    African countries be deployed. It is doing that because African
    countries don't have the experience and the logistics to mount
    effective peacekeeping operations. They simply don't have the
    capability that Western countries have. So it's all very clever, very
    convenient.

    I would say that where peacekeepers are properly deployed, they are
    making a difference. But they need to get there.


    Khatchig Mouradian is a journalist, writer and translator, based in
    Boston. He is the editor of the Armenian Weekly. He can be contacted
    at: [email protected].

    ------------------------------------------------- ---------------
    From: Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives
    URL: http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/16 876
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