Book Read Free

A Problem From Hell

Page 84

by Samantha Power

Rusk, Dean, 64–65, 135

  Russia (and Soviet Union) 2–3, 5, 14, 20–21, 64, 69, 130, 158–160, 175, 210, 459, 478

  Rwanda, warning 335, recognition 348, response 364, aftermath 385. see also International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda

  accountability for U.S. inaction, 510

  evacuation of foreigners, 351–353

  guilt and Kosovo, 385–390, 447, 468

  massacres begin in, 329–335

  peace processors and, 345–348

  question of genocide in, 358–364

  U.S. knowledge of genocide in, 354–357, 505

  U.S. military presence in, 354, 381

  weaknesses in U.S. diplomacy, 346–348

  Rwanda, UN deployment, 335–345

  Dallaire, lack of information, 340–341

  Dallaire, warns of Hutu massacres, 343–344

  Hutu militants reaction to Arusha accords, 337

  Hutu Ten Commandments, 338–339

  International Commission of Investigation, 337–338

  proposal for arms raid, 344–345

  U.S. hostility toward peacekeeping, 340–342

  Rwanda, U.S. policy, 364–385

  Clinton’s “apology,” 386

  humanitarian aid operation, 380–382

  options in, 382–385

  PDD-25 in action, 377–380

  Pentagon and, 370–373

  radio jamming and, 370–373

  rationalizations about, 383–385

  society-wide silence, 373–377

  UN withdrawal, 366–370

  Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)

  civil war vs. Hutu regime, 333

  halting genocide, 357, 380

  invasion of Rwanda by, 336, 340

  Sacirbey, Amb. Mohammed, 404–405

  “safe areas” in Bosnia, 301–303, 391–392, 411–412, 415, 418

  safe havens

  Iraq, 241, 507

  Rwanda, 368, 372

  Safire, William

  on genocide in Iraq, 218

  on military intervention in Iraq, 240

  outrage after fall of Srebrenica, 433

  Pol Pot/Hitler analogies and, 129

  Saloth Sar. see Pol Pot (Saloth Sar)

  Samphan, Khieu, 99, 147–148, 490

  Samrin, Heng, 147, 152, 153

  sanctions, against Saddam Hussein

  change in Senate sentiment, 222–224

  House version of, 227–228

  prevention of Genocide Act and, 203–206

  Senate passage of D’Amato amendment, 236

  Sarajevo, xi–xiii, 265, 310–311, 324

  Sary, Ieng

  denial of Khmer Rouge atrocities, 112, 126, 137

  UN Credentials Committee and, 150, 152

  Vietnam invasion of Cambodia and, 141

  Sassoon, Siegfried, 309–310

  satellite photos. see evidence of genocide

  Schanberg, Sydney, 99, 102, 103, 105–107

  Scheffer, Amb. David, 467–469

  Schindler’s List (film), 351–352

  Schmidt, Christina, 402

  Schroeder, Rep. Patricia, 375

  Schumann, Howard, 166–167

  Schwarzbart, Ignacy, 32–33

  Schwarzkopf, Norman, 239

  Schweppe, Alfred T., 66

  Scowcroft, Brent, 261, 278, 287–289, 293, 431

  Security Council. see UN Security Council

  Serbs, Bosnian

  Bosnian independence and, 248–249

  concentration camps run by, 269–274, 279–281

  dominance by, 247–248

  ethnic cleansing by, 249–251, 295

  evidence of genocide, 320–321

  exploitation of U.S. military anxiety, 284

  NATO bombings end war, 438–440

  shelling of Sarajevo by, xi–xiii

  Srebrenica massacre, 392, 401–404

  UN–EU negotiation process with, 259–263

  U.S. warnings about brutality of, 252–254

  wishful thinking about intentions of, 255–258

  Serbs, Kosovo

  destruction of evidence of atrocities, 470–472

  Kosovo Albanians, atrocities vs., 445–447

  Kosovo Albanians, brutality vs. Serbs, 463–464

  Kosovo Albanians, history with, 444–445

  NATO attacks on targets affecting civilians, 456–457

  Operation Horseshoe, 449–450

  tactics against NATO, 450–451

  Seselj, Vojislav, 284, 291

  Sevres, Treaty of, 16, 238

  Shala, Blerim, 454

  Shalikashvilli, Lt. Gen. John M., 241

  Shattuck, John, 410, 414–415, 418–419

  Shawcross, Hartley, 57

  Shawcross, William, 94, 114–115

  Shedd, William A., 12

  Shelly, Christine, 359–360, 363–364

  Shultz, George, 176, 178, 199, 210–212, 224

  Sihanouk, Prince Norodom

  Cambodia’s civil war and, 92, 94

  Khmer Rouge victory and, 105

  as public face of Khmer Rouge, 99–100

  return after Vietnamese occupation, 149, 153

  U.S. support for coup against, 92

  Silajdzic, Haris, 395, 396, 397

  Simon, Sen. Paul, 286, 376–377

  Simon, Scott, 434

  Simons, Lewis, 114

  Simpson, Sen. Alan, 235

  skepticism and incredulity. see bystander attitudes

  Skoler, Michael, 355

  Slovenia, 247

  Smith, Sen. H. Alexander, 68

  Smith, Adm. Leighton, 444, 476

  Solarz, Rep. Stephen, 127–128, 144

  Somalia

  Bush intervention in, 285–286, 293

  lessons learned from, 366, 374–375

  U.S. casualties in, 316–317

  Soros, George, 428, 433, 493

  sovereignty, 8, 14, 19, 47, 49, 56, 76, 163, 168, 491, 503, 526

  Soviet Union, ratification of genocide convention, 158–159

  Srebrenica, warning 393, recognition 401, response 406, aftermath, xiii, 391–441

  creation of safe area in, 301, 391–392

  first evidence of atrocities in, 402–405

  massacres in, 411–421

  survivors from, 415–416

  Srebrenica, U.S. policy

  congressional pressure, 423–430

  criticism over, 421–423

  defense of U.S. response, 420–421

  endgame strategy, 437–441

  European pressure, 435–437

  fear of deploying U.S. troops, 423

  media/NGO pressure, 430–435

  NATO intervention after, 440

  pressure to lift arms embargo, 423–430

  Red Cross reports and, 409–411

  satellite imagery, use of, 407–408

  U.S. nonresponse to massacre in, 401–409

  U.S. options after fall of, 406–407

  Stalin, Joseph, 69

  Stanton, Gregory, 486–487

  Steinberg, Donald, 364, 367

  Stevens, George, 73

  Stevenson, Adlai, 53

  Stojilkovic, Vlajko, 472

  Streiker, Gary, 355

  Surroi, Veton, 457, 463

  survivors, statements of

  Armenian. see also Kelikian, Tehlirian

  Bosnia, 243, 257

  Cambodia, 113, 115. see also Chhang, Teng

  Holocaust, 72, 277. see also Gati, Lantos, Lemkin, Levi, Wiesel

  Iraq, 189–190, 196, 208–209, 213, 241–243. see also Ahmad, al-Askari

  Rwanda, 333, 372

  Srebrenica, 411–412, 415, 418

  Tadic, Dusan, 494

  Talaat, Mehmed

  assassination of, 1

  Henry Morgenthau and, 7–8

  international response to regime of, 4–6

  memoirs of, 15

  persecution of Armenians by, 2–3

  sensitivity to outside world’s opinion, 10

  Talabani,
Jalal, 174, 198–200, 229, 237–238

  Talbott, Strobe, 379

  Tarnoff, Peter, 298

  Tehlirian, Soghomon

  assassination of Talaat, 1, 17

  atrocities against family of, 3–4

  defense trial and acquittal of, 19

  Teltsch, Kathleen, 51, 157

  Teng, Seath K., 116

  Thatcher, Prime Min. Margaret, 301, 480

  Thomson, James C., Jr., 312

  Thurmond, Sen. Strom, 168

  Tito, Marshal, 255–256

  Topzawa detention center (Iraq), 195–196

  Trnopolje concentration camp, 275–276

  Truman, Pres. Harry, 64

  Tudjman, Franjo, 255, 262

  Tuol Sleng prison, 143–145, 488–489

  Turkey, 208–209, 240–241

  Tutsi. see also Rwanda, Rwandan Patriotic Front

  fighting against Hutus, 333, 336, 340

  genocide against, 329–350

  past domination of Hutus, 337

  U.S. policy toward Burundi, 82–83

  Twining, Charles, 115–117, 125, 130, 146, 487

  Tyler, Patrick E., 192, 225

  UN Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR), 125, 233–234

  UN Credentials Committee, 149–154

  debate on Khmer Rouge credentials, 151–154

  U.S. policy in, 149–154

  UN peacekeeping, 377–378

  blue helmet hostages in Bosnia, 392, 394, 397, 400, 415, 439

  collapse of Rwandan mission, 332, 366–370

  deterrent effect of, 368

  Habyarimana and, 345–346

  humanitarian relief and, 381

  legislation to limit U.S. participation in, 341–342

  massacred in Rwanda, 332

  Srebrenica, weak position of, 391–392, 393–394

  U.S. suspicion of, 332–333, 340–341

  UN Security Council

  actions during Bosnian war, 326–327

  condemnation of Iraq, 230

  debate over Bosnian genocide, 361

  debate over sending UNAMIR II to Rwanda, 377–380

  Rwandan ambassador speaks before, 381, 383

  slashing UNAMIR’s force size, 369

  UNAMIR

  ineffectiveness of, 342–343, 382

  Rwanda withdrawal, 366–369

  UNAMIR II, 377, 380

  United Nations (UN)

  Bosnia, humanitarian aid to, 281–282

  Bosnian Muslims, arms embargo against, 371, 423–430, 437–438

  Cambodian genocide and, 125

  genocide convention, drafting text of (1947–1948), 56–60

  genocide resolution (1946), 52–54

  investigations of Iraqi chemical weapons use, 230

  Kosovo mission in, 465–466

  U.S. criticism of, 69–70

  United States

  Armenian massacres, response to, xix, 5, 13–14

  Balkan atrocities, knowledge of, 264–269

  Bosnia, opposition to intervention in, 260–263

  Bosnia, backing statehood for, 249

  domestic politics, xviii, 503, 509

  elections: 1992, 274, 286; 1994, 359; 1996, 424, 431

  genocide convention, opposition to, 65–70; Proxmire and, 79–85, 155–161, 165–169; ratification of, 163–169

  Hitler, suppression of truth about, 34–35

  Holocaust, indifference during, 128–129

  Iraqi Kurds, response to genocide against, 173, 185–186, 190–195, 203–212

  Marines, witness Rwandan genocide, 354

  military campaigns abroad, justification for, 305–306

  modest progress in response to genocide, 503

  opposition to ICC, 491

  Pentagon, 122, 330, 332, 342, 366, 370–373, 379–381, 383, 413, 423, 426, 438, 444, 451, 456–457, 459

  public opinion, 276, 289, 294, 304–305

  silence, society–wide, xviii, 122, 229, 373–377, 509

  terrorism and, 511–512

  Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), 74

  universal jurisdiction, principle of 19–22

  UNPROFOR, 281, 304, 396, 403

  U.S. State Department. see also Albright, Baker, Christopher, Kissinger, Lansing, Muskie, Shultz, Vance

  Dissent Channel, 287, 292, 515

  dissenters, 287, 301, 311–318, 503

  Intelligence and Research (INR), 209–210, 292, 320–321

  Legal Advisor’s Office, 124, 245, 321, 372

  Near Eastern Affairs, Bureau for (NEA), 209–210, 224–226

  Office of War Crimes Analysis, 467

  Open Forum, 296–298, 410, 515

  Riegner Telegram, 34

  Uwilingiyimana, Agathe, 330, 331–332

  Van Hollen, Chris, 212–216

  Vance, Cyrus, 136, 142, 147, 259–260

  “victor’s justice,” 492

  Vieira de Mello, Sergio, 398

  Vietnam

  Cambodia, attacks from, 140–142

  Cambodia, mass murders and, 142–145

  Cambodia, occupation of, 148–149

  lessons from, 283–285, 294, 315

  relations with Khmer Rouge, 136–137

  “syndrome,” 261

  U.S. policy toward, 146–147

  Viorst, Milton, 223–224

  Vishinsky, Andrei, 53

  Vulliamy, Ed, 271, 275, 277

  Walker, Steven, 314–315, 428

  Walker, Amb. William, 446–447

  Wallace, Vice Pres. Henry, 27–28

  Walzer, Michael, 461–462

  War Crimes Commission, 80–81, 204, 291, 482–483

  war crimes tribunal; for former Yugoslavia. see International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia; for Rwanda. see International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda

  War Refugee Board (1944), 35, 44

  warning. see also evidence of genocide

  identity cards, used to target groups, 350

  informants, warnings of, 343–344

  lists, used to target groups, 144, 249, 333, 500

  massacres, Croatia, 254–255; early Rwandan massacres, 337; Halabja massacre, 188–193; Racak (Kosovo), 446; Srebrenica massacre, 393–398, 400

  militias, formation and training of, 252, 337–338

  peacekeepers, held hostage or massacred, 332, 392, 394–439

  relocation, 87–90, 96, 104–107, 175, 250, 452–453

  separation of sexes, families, 96, 177–178, 392, 402, 417

  threats, vs. group, 2, 178, 338–340

  weapons, stockpiling, 249, 337

  Warren, Justice Earl, 155

  Washington Post

  on Cambodia, 110–111

  on fall of Srebrenica, 430, 433

  on genocide (1944), 44

  on genocide in Iraq, 223–225

  on Iraqi chemical weapons, 191–192

  on Khmer Rouge, 98, 108

  on Rwandan massacres, 356–357, 374

  Waters, Rep. Maxine, 376

  Weinberger, Caspar, 261–262

  Western, Jon

  effort to prove genocide, 290, 292

  knowledge of Serb brutality, 264–267, 276

  resignation from State Department, 314

  Whitaker, Ben, 154

  Whitten, Les, 108, 129

  Wiesel, Elie, 73, 121, 158, 161, 162, 291–292, 297–298

  Wieseltier, Leon, 430–431

  Williams, Ian, 275–276

  Wilson, Pres. Woodrow, 6–7, 13

  Wise, Rabbi Steven, 34

  Wisner, Frank, 354, 371–372

  Woerner, Manfred, 302

  Woods, James, 332–333, 342

  World Jewish Congress (WJC), 34

  Yeltsin, Pres. Boris, 459

  Young, Amb. Andrew, 131, 132, 146

  Yugoslavia. see also Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Serbs, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia

  collapse of, 258

  map of, 248

  prosecution for war crimes in, 481�
�484, 491–495, 507

  Serb dominance in, 247

  Yugoslav National Army (JNA), 247

  Zedong, Mao, 88, 127

  Zepa. see “safe areas” in Bosnia, 416–418, 427, 438

  Zimic, Sidbela, xi–xiii

  Zimmerman, Amb. Warren, 260, 262, 263, 267–268, 284, 285

  Zwerdling, Daniel, 355–356

  Zygielbojm, Szmul, 31–33, 36–37

  SAMANTHA POWER served from 2009 to 2013 as the Special Assistant to President Barack Obama and Senior Director for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights at the National Security Council. She was the founding executive director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy and the Anna Lindh Professor of the Practice of Global Leadership at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. She is also the author of Chasing the Flame: Sergio Viera de Mello and the Fight to Save the World (2008)—the basis for the award-winning HBO documentary, “Sergio”—and the recent editor, with Derek Chollet, of The Unquiet American: Richard Holbrooke in the World (2011). A former Balkan war correspondent and a recipient of the National Magazine Award and the Pulitzer Prize, she lives in Washington, DC with her husband, Cass Sunstein, and their two children.

 

 

 


‹ Prev