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Op-Ed: The Inconvenience of Genocide

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  • Op-Ed: The Inconvenience of Genocide

    Arutz Sheva, Israel
    April 19 2015

    Op-Ed: The Inconvenience of Genocide


    Genocide is only condemned or acted upon by the current US
    administration when politically convenient. A must read, especially
    for those who believe Obama's promises to protect Israel.

    It's just a coincidence that the day commemorating the most
    widely-recognized genocide, the Holocaust, came out (April 16, this
    year) in close proximity to the day for remembering the
    least-recognized genocide, the slaughter by the Turks of the Armenians
    (April 24). But the lessons from the two experiences are inextricably
    linked, especially in light of the current debate over how the United
    States should respond to genocide and other atrocities around the
    world.

    The Armenian genocide has been unexpectedly in the news, thanks to the
    April 12 statement by Pope Francis characterizing the Turks' slaughter
    of more than one million Armenians between 1914 and 1918 as "the first
    genocide of the 20th century." In Turkey, the pontiff's words were
    greeted with outrage. The Turkish government called home its
    ambassador to the Vatican, and its minister for European affairs, one
    Volkan Bozir, offered the clownish theory that Argentina-born pope, a
    native Argentinian, has been unduly influenced by nameless members of
    "the Armenian diaspora" who supposedly "control the media and
    business" in Argentina.

    The pontiff was stating an obvious fact that is widely recognized
    among mainstream historians and in the Jewish world. The European
    Parliament this week seconded the Pope's statement and urged Turkey to
    face up to its past. No such pronouncements were forthcoming, however,
    from the White House, where the pontiff is more popular when he talks
    about poverty and less appreciated when he raises an issue at odds
    with the Obama administration's foreign policy agenda.

    As a presidential candidate in 2008, then-Senator Barack Obama said,
    "America deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian
    genocide." Yet the statements that President Obama has issued each
    April 24 on Armenian Remembrance Day have never included the G-word.
    Instead, he has used an Armenian expression-- "Meds Yeghern," meaning
    "the great calamity." In all likelihood, he will do so again this
    year. Fear of displeasing the Turks is more important to the Obama
    administration than acknowledging this painful historical truth.

    A Dangerous Rug

    The administration took this strategy to such an extreme that for more
    than a year, it refused even to permit the display of a rug
    symbolizing the Armenian genocide.

    That peculiar episode began in the autumn of 2013, when the
    Smithsonian Institution announced it would hold an event featuring a
    new book, "President Calvin Coolidge and the Armenian Orphan Rug," by
    Dr. Hagop Martin Deranian, the son of a survivor.

    The eighteen foot-long rug was woven in 1925 by four hundred Armenian
    orphan girls living in exile in Lebanon and sent to President Calvin
    Coolidge as a gesture of appreciation for America's assistance to
    survivors of the genocide. Coolidge proudly displayed the rug in the
    White House for the rest of his term.

    After he left office, Coolidge took the rug to his Massachusetts
    residence. It was still there in 1939, when former First Lady Grace
    Coolidge became a leading figure in the struggle to rescue a different
    group of children from a genocidal dictator. Mrs. Coolidge lobbied in
    support of the Wagner-Rogers bill, which would have admitted 20,000
    German Jewish children to the United States. But President Franklin D.
    Roosevelt refused to support the legislation, and it was buried in
    committee.

    Ironically, FDR's relative and predecessor, Theodore Roosevelt,
    advocated declaring war on Turkey over the Armenian genocide. "The
    failure to deal radically with the Turkish horror means that all talk
    of guaranteeing the future peace of the world is mischievous
    nonsense," the then-ex-president asserted in 1918. Teddy Roosevelt was
    correct to fear that tolerating genocide would pave the way for it to
    happen again.

    Indeed, Adolf Hitler reportedly once assured his subordinates that
    their atrocities would not be remembered, since "Who, after all,
    speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

    The genocide rug eventually made it back to the White House and was in
    use during at least part of the Clinton administration. Then it was
    mothballed.

    President Coolidge had pledged that the rug would have "a place of
    honor in the White House, where it will be a daily symbol of goodwill
    on earth," but instead, in the autumn of 2013, it became a daily
    symbol of politics taking precedence over recognizing and combating
    genocide.

    The Obama White House refused to loan the rug to the Smithsonian.
    Reporters who asked the State Department about it were referred to the
    White House. When they asked the White House spokesman, they were
    curtly told that he had nothing to say except "It is not possible to
    loan it out at this time."

    After more than a year of protests, including several embarrassing
    articles about the controversy in the Washington Post, the Obama
    finally allowed the rug to be displayed--but for just six days, and
    not in a display concerning the Armenian genocide. Instead, it was
    mushed together with other foreign gifts to the White House, in a
    display called "Thank You to the United States: Three Gifts to
    Presidents in Gratitude for American Generosity Abroad." The genocide
    rug was sandwiched in between a Sevres vase presented by France to the
    United States after World War One, and a cluster of lucite-encased
    branches sent by Japan after the 2010 tsunami.

    Grouping victims of genocide together with those who drowned in a
    tsunami or were left homeless by World War One in effect disguised
    what happened to the Armenians. It blurred the distinction between
    something that was inevitable and something that was not.
    Weather-related disasters and damage caused by wars are inevitable.
    But the Armenian genocide was different: it was an act of mass murder,
    systematically planned and implemented by evil men driven by religious
    and ethnic hatred.

    The Armenian Orphan Rug happens to be a work of great beauty. But the
    point of displaying it is not for the sake of its aesthetic value. Its
    power is its message. Its significance is as a symbol and reminder of
    the genocide that the Turks perpetrated against the Armenians. Six
    days in an exhibit about gifts to the White House was no victory; on
    the contrary, it was a defeat for everyone who cares about remembering
    the past and learning from it.

    Politics and Genocide

    For human rights advocates, the Obama administration began with great
    promise. Dr. Samantha Power, an outspoken critic of past American
    responses to genocide, was named as the president's senior adviser on
    human rights issues on the National Security Council. Her Pulitzer
    Prize-winning book called "A Problem from Hell," had taken past
    presidents to task for failing to act against genocide and ethnic
    cleansing. Now, for the first time, someone who was both well informed
    regarding the history of the problem and personally committed to a new
    approach evidently would be in a position to chart a new course.

    But there was another face to this administration--a face which,
    ironically, Power herself had in her book: the troubling role of Susan
    Rice in shaping the Clinton administration's decision not to intervene
    in the genocide in Rwanda.

    Rice was director of Africa Affairs for the National Security Council
    in the spring of 1994, when reports began pouring in about
    machete-wielding militias of the Hutu tribe in Rwanda carrying out
    nationwide massacres of the country's ethnic minority, the Tutsis.

    Then-journalist Samantha Power found a Defense Department memo
    revealing that the State Department was "worried" that acknowledging
    that genocide was underway in Rwanda "could commit [the U.S.] to
    actually 'do something'." Susan Rice was quoted as saying to her
    colleagues: "If we use the word 'genocide' and are seen as doing
    nothing, what will be the effect on the November [midterm] elections?"

    When Dr. Rice was nominated in 2012 to become President Obama's
    National Security Adviser, she was asked during her confirmation
    hearings about that Rwanda-midterms remark. She replied that she did
    not recall having made that statement. (She added: "If I said it, it
    was completely inappropriate, as well as irrelevant.")

    Samantha Power found another fascinating internal Defense Department
    memo, which sheds further light on why the Clinton administration was
    resisting calling it "genocide." The memo reported: "Legal [division]
    at State [Department] was worried about this yesterday--Genocide
    finding could commit [the U.S.] to actually 'do something'."

    Those familiar with America's response to the Holocaust will recall an
    eerily similar behind-the-scenes discussion between the Roosevelt and
    Churchill administrations in the autumn of 1942, after receiving
    overwhelming evidence that the Germans were annihilating millions of
    Jews in Europe. The British government suggested to the United States
    that they issue a joint statement acknowledging and condemning the
    mass murder. One Roosevelt administration official objected on the
    grounds that if they issued such a statement, the Allies "would expose
    themselves to increased pressure from all sides to do something more
    specific in order to aid these people."

    Cookies and Gold Stars

    Dr. Rice, for her part, has suffered more than one memory lapse when
    asked about genocide. A wikileak cable in 2010 quoted a disturbing
    exchange between Rice and the chief prosecutor of the International
    Criminal Court concerning Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir, architect
    of the Darfur genocide. The ICC prosecutor told Rice that Bashir had
    amassed a secret $9-billion stash. The prosecutor wanted to publicize
    that information in the hope of turning the Sudanese public against
    Bashir. But the U.S. never publicized it. After the cable was leaked
    to the press, a reporter asked Rice about it. She replied that she
    "didn't recall" being told about the $9-billion.

    Susan Rice's evasiveness regarding Bashir was symptomatic of a broader
    problem in the Obama administration concerning the Darfur genocide.

    During the 2008 presidential campaign, candidate Obama appropriately
    chastised the Bush administration for its inadequate response to
    Darfur. "There must be real pressure placed on the Sudanese
    government," he said. And the candidate surrounded himself with
    advocates of action against the Bashir regime. Major-General Merrill
    A. McPeak, who co-chaired the Obama presidential campaign, had called
    for establishing a no-fly zone over Sudan. So did Joe Biden, when he
    was a senator, and Susan Rice, before she became the Obama
    administration's first ambassador to the United Nations.

    In early 2009, Sudanese president Bashir was indicted by the
    International Criminal Court for sponsoring the Arab militias that
    were "murdering, exterminating, raping, torturing, and forcibly
    transferring large numbers of civilians, and pillaging their property"
    in Darfur.
    The gravity of that indictment did not deter Russia and China from
    rallying to the defense of Bashir, whom they supply with advanced
    weapons, and with whom they do a thriving oil business. The Arab
    League rushed to support Bashir as a fellow-Arab; the African Union
    embraced him as a supposed victim of Western colonialism.

    The AU urged that Bashir be tried before a local Sudanese court that
    would include some "international personnel." It was a
    thinly-disguised way for Bashir to escape with minimal punishment,
    yet, remarkably, the Obama administration was soon hinting that it
    might accept it.

    Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in May 2010,
    the president's Special Envoy to Sudan, J. Scott Gration, said the
    U.S. would support what he called "locally-owned accountability and
    reconciliation mechanisms in light of the recommendations made by the
    African Union High Level Panel on Darfur" last year.

    It's clear from the statements made by Gration and his successor,
    Lyman, that Obama was putting in place a kinder, gentler, U.S. policy
    toward Sudan's perpetrators of genocide. In a September 2009 interview
    with the Washington Post, Gration explained: "We've got to think about
    giving out cookies. Kids, countries--they react to gold stars, smiley
    faces, handshakes, agreements, talk, engagement."

    Princeton Lyman, his successor, was even blunter. Lyman told the
    London-based Arabic daily Asharq Al-Awsat: "Frankly we do not want to
    see the ouster of the [Bashir] regime, nor regime change."

    On another occasion, Lyman said frankly the reason the U.S. has not
    taken a tougher line on Bashir is that "when you're looking for
    allies, your African allies and others, they do recognize [Bashir's]
    government...Sudan and Bashir is a member of the African Union, so we
    have to accommodate those realities." Darfur, in other words, was
    politically inconvenient for an administration concerned about its
    relations with the African Union.

    Samantha Power was left with the unenviable task of convincing the
    public that the lethargic administration had responded actively to the
    Darfur war criminal problem. Speaking at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
    Museum in November 2010, Power said "President Obama has been very
    outspoken on the occasions that President Bashir has traveled."

    But a search of the White House web site turns up exactly one sentence
    by President Obama, in August 2010, expressing "disappointment" that
    Kenya hosted the mass murderer. Not one word by the "very outspoken"
    president in response to Bashir's visits to other countries that are
    supposed allies of the U.S. and recipients of American aid, including
    Egypt, Iraq, Libya, and Saudi Arabia.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was blunter; in a January 2013
    interview with Fox News, she actually spelled out the administration's
    rationalization for not acting. Asked why the U.S. had not reacted to
    the decision by Egypt's new Muslim Brotherhood president, Mohamed
    Morsi, to invite Bashir, Secretary Clinton at first agreed that
    "[Bashir] does need to be held accountable for what happened on his
    watch as president," although her wording made Bashir sound like a
    bystander rather than a perpetrator.

    "On the other hand, though" --and here comes the rationalization--
    "this is a long border [that Sudan has with] Egypt," and there is a
    problem of weapons "coming out of Sudan...So we have a lot of very, uh,
    intense discussions, uh, with our Egyptian counterparts, including
    [Morsi], as to, you know, let's prioritize." Translation: Not
    ruffling Morsi's feathers with complaints about Bashir is more of a
    "priority" than isolating and capturing the Butcher of Darfur.

    Contrast President Obama's policy with that of Joyce Banda, the
    president of Malawi, in southeastern Africa. Banda's country is
    severely underdeveloped and overcrowded, with a frighteningly high
    rate of AIDS and other deadly diseases and a life expectancy of 50
    years. Those problems did not deter Ms. Banda, in her very first month
    in office in 2012, from announcing that she would not allow Sudanese
    president Omar Bashir to attend an upcoming African Union summit in
    Malawi.

    The problem has never been America's inability to bring Bashir to
    justice. His visits to numerous African and Arab countries created
    many opportunities for U.S. forces to do to him what they did to other
    tyrants and terrorists, such as Panama's Manuel Noriega, the hijackers
    of the Achille Lauro, Saddam Hussein, and Osama Bin Laden. Yet no
    attempt was ever made to capture the fugitive Bashir.

    Why? It's the politics of genocide. The Obama administration doesn't
    want to strain its relations with Moscow, Beijing, the African Union,
    or the Arab League.

    That is not to say that the Obama administration has never responded
    to atrocities abroad. Human rights activists point to several actions
    by the administration that have seemed to reflect the approach they
    hoped Samantha Power's appointment would augur. Most notably,
    President Obama used military force to bring down the Muammar Qadaffi
    regime in Libya, in 2011--specifically on the grounds that Qadaffi was
    preparing the mass murder of his opponents. " Some nations may be able
    to turn a blind eye to atrocities in other countries," he said. "The
    United States of America is different." He cited "preventing genocide"
    as a legitimate basis for American intervention in Libya.

    President Obama's rescue of the Yazidi Christians besieged by ISIS in
    2013 likewise seemed to reflect a willingness by the administration to
    use American force in support of a global human rights agenda.

    But Libya and the Yazidis really are the exceptions that prove the
    rule. Each of those actions was taken in the context of a comfortable
    international consensus. No feathers were ruffled, no diplomatic
    relationships were jeopardized in the slightest.

    The genuine test of political courage comes when there is a price to
    pay. Speaking the truth about the Armenians regardless Turkish
    temper-tantrums, or bringing Omar al-Bashir to justice despite African
    Union whining, would represent true acts of principle.

    More than Just a Word

    The word "genocide" is a relatively recent addition to our lexicon.
    Outraged by the failure of the international community to prosecute
    Turkish officials for the Armenian genocide, Polish Jewish attorney
    Raphael Lemkin trudged from law conference to law conference across
    Europe in the 1930s, making the case for legal mechanisms to define
    and combat mass murder.

    Lemkin, an expert on the development of languages, realized that a new
    word was needed for the unique crime of attempting to destroy an
    entire racial, ethnic, or religious group. He took his inspiration
    from George Eastman, who invented the word "Kodak" because he needed a
    short, unique, and easy-to-pronounce name for his camera.

    Lemkin coined the term "genocide" even as a new mass murder, the
    Holocaust, was unfolding before his eyes. He used the word "genocide"
    for the first time in 1944, in his book 'Axis Rule in Occupied
    Europe.' The 700-page tome chronicled, in painstaking detail, all the
    laws and regulations imposed by the Nazis and their collaborators to
    facilitate the annihilation of the Jews.

    Lemkin's campaign was crowned with success in December 1948, when the
    United Nations adopted the Genocide Convention. It defined genocide as
    "acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
    national, ethnical [sic], racial or religious group, as such." But one
    suspects Lemkin would have considered his efforts a failure if, in the
    end, they did not prevent or at least interrupt future genocides.

    Of what value, he might well have asked, is U.S. government
    recognition that there was genocide in Darfur, if the U.S. refuses to
    apprehend the perpetrators, or act when there are new atrocities?

    During the past several years, the Darfur genocide has almost
    completely disappeared from the news, yet periodically there are
    reports reminding us that the Sudanese regime has not yet abandoned
    its murderous ways. The outgoing prosecutor of the International
    Criminal Court, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, said at his farewell dinner in
    2012 that "There's ongoing genocide [in Darfur]...the new weapons of
    the genocide--starvation and rape--are working very well."

    New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof has reported on several
    occasions during the past few years about Bashir's savage air raids on
    the black Christian villagers in Sudan's Nuba Mountains region. Bashir
    is carrying out "mass atrocities that echo Darfur" against non-Arab
    tribes in Sudan's Nuba Mountains, yet the Obama administration has
    responded with "dithering" and "paralysis,"

    Kristof has written. "I am not only embarrassed by my government's
    passivity but outraged by it." In one column, Kristof poignantly
    described the plight of Hamat Dorbet, a Presbyterian pastor who has
    been tortured by Bashir's police for ringing his church bell. "I'd
    like to explain to [Rev.Dorbet]," Kristof wrote, "why the world lets
    this happen without even speaking out strongly, and I just don't know
    what to say. President Obama?" The White House did not respond.

    As recently as February of this year, Human Rights Watch reported that
    Bashir's soldiers had carried out the mass rape of more than two
    hundred women and girls in Darfur. Again, no response from the Obama
    administration.

    The refusal to recognize the Armenian genocide, the abandonment of the
    Jews during the Holocaust, the lack of response to the Rwanda
    genocide, and the decision not to apprehend Darfur war criminals or
    act against their latest atrocities, all ultimately stem from the same
    fundamental failure to recognize that moral responsibilities should
    trump political inconvenience.

    The recent statements by Pope Francis and the European Parliament are
    small steps in the right direction. Who will be next to muster the
    courage to speak out?

    Dr. Rafael Medoff is director of The David S. Wyman Institute for
    Holocaust Studies, in Washington, D.C. and author of 15 books about
    the Holocaust and Jewish history.


    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/16801#.VTP9FJscSP8

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