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Page 81

by Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah


  Romania, attacks on Jews

  Roma, Germans’ conception of

  Roosevelt, Elliott

  Roosevelt, Franklin

  Rouen Sam

  RTLM (Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines)

  Rukiramacumu, Ignace

  Rushdie, Salman

  Russia

  Rwanda, eliminationist assaults in

  account of

  bringing perpetrators to justice

  camps

  coercion of some Hutu killers

  community support for

  creating rationale for

  demeanor of perpetrators

  demonization of Tutsi

  denial of genocide in

  eliminationist discourse in

  eliminationist rape in

  excess cruelty in

  failure to intervene in

  festivities following killings

  France and

  hunt for Tutsi

  Hutu leaders and

  iterative

  international tribunals for

  killing methods

  Nyamata Genocide Memorial

  planning for

  plunder of victims’ belongings

  regional variation in

  reluctance to kill among some Hutu

  role of intellectuals

  slaughter of elite

  Tig camp

  treatment of Tutsi children See also Hutu perpetrators; Tutsi

  Rwililiza, Innocent

  Safrian, Hans

  Salim, Pak

  “Sarajevo” (Karadžić)

  Sartre, Jean-Paul

  Savuth Penn

  Scheubner-Richter, Max Erwin von

  Schlieffen, Alfred von

  Schools in the Third Reich: Education for Death

  Schupack, Joseph

  Secessions

  Security trap

  Self-exonerations of perpetrators

  Serbian Memorandum

  Serbian perpetrators

  communal world of

  method of slaughter

  mobile killing units

  rape and

  self-exonerations

  slaughter of Bosniaks

  treatment of children

  use of variety of eliminationist means

  victory celebrations

  Serbian rape camps

  Serbs

  destruction of Bosniak/Kosovar culture

  eliminationism in Kosovo

  expulsion of Kosovars

  from ideal of eliminating non-Serbs to policy

  iterative mass murder by and of

  prejudices of

  role of intellectuals

  territorial gains and elimination of Bosniaks

  use of camps

  Settler communities

  “Seventeen Rules of Tutsi Conduct”

  Sharia

  Sherbrooke-Walker, Ronald

  Sihanouk, Norodom

  Silajdžić, Haris

  Sinti, Germans’ conception of

  Slavery

  Slavic peoples, Germans’ attitude towards

  Smirnova, Galina

  Social composition, eliminationist assaults and change in

  Socialization, cruelty and

  Social power, growth in

  Social psychological pressures on perpetrators

  Social relations, Zimbardoian cruelty and

  Social sterilization

  Society, ideologizing of

  Society-centered perspective on mass murder

  Soldiers, as perpetrators

  Sophea Mouth

  South Africa

  Sovereignty, as impediment to preventing eliminationist assault

  Soviet gulag

  conduct of guards

  death rates

  economics of

  guards

  Soviet Union

  attempts to deny mass murdering

  death march of Crimean Tatars

  eliminationist campaign death rates

  expulsion of Tatars

  as impediment to combating genocide

  mass annihilation and transformation and

  rape of German women by soldiers

  UN genocide convention and

  vengeful cruelty toward Germans

  victims of

  Western intellectuals and

  Space, eliminationist institutions and

  Spanish Inquisition

  Spatial aspects of mass murder

  Special Organization

  Srebrenica massacre

  Stalin, Joseph

  deportation of ethnic groups

  gulag and

  mass murders and

  Starvation

  in camps

  as eliminationist method

  in gulag

  Khmer Rouge and See also Famines

  State, transformative power of modern

  State authority

  State-centered perspective on mass murder

  State power

  Sterilization, compulsory

  Stimson, Henry

  Structural explanations of perpetrators’ beliefs

  Structured excess cruelty

  “Subhuman, The” (pamphlet)

  Subhumans

  Sudan

  investigations of genocide in

  Political Islam in See also Darfur

  Suharto, Haji Muhammad

  Suicide bombing

  Sukarno

  Syria

  Systemic mass murder

  Talât, Mehmet

  mobilizing anti-Armenian beliefs

  plan for Armenians

  on war as cover for elimination

  Taliban

  Tatars, Crimean

  Technology, mass murder and

  Teeda Butt Mam

  Temporal aspects of mass murder

  “Ten Commandments of the Hutu”

  Territory, eliminationist assaults and confiscation/conflict over

  Terrorist groups, Political Islamic . See also Al Qaeda

  Thoun Cheng

  Tibet

  Tig camp (Rwanda)

  Time (magazine)

  Tiso, Father Josef

  Tito, Josip

  Tories, expulsion of

  Torture sexual

  Totalitarian regimes

  Transformation

  camp systems and

  domestic domination and

  eliminationism and

  modern state and

  Nazi, of Europe

  political ideology and

  Transformative politics, eliminationist assaults and

  Trapp, Wilhelm

  Trocmé, André

  Trophy photographs

  Trotha, Lothar von

  Trotsky, Leon

  Truman, Harry

  comparison to Hitler, Mao, Pol Pot, and Stalin

  Tudjman, Franjo

  Turkey

  attempts to deny facts of Armenian elimination

  camps for Armenians

  discourse for slaughtering Armenians

  eliminationist assault on Armenians

  eliminationist assault on Greeks

  eliminationist assault on Kurds

  leaders’ and followers’ motives

  plan for annihilation of Armenians

  prejudice against Armenians

  Turkish perpetrators

  treatment of Armenian children

  Turkomans

  Turner Diaries, The

  Tutsi

  degradation and demonization of

  prejudice against Hutu

  See also Burundi; Hutu perpetrators; Rwanda

  “Tutsi, Race of God” (Kangura issue)

  Twagirayezuéopold

  Tyrannical regimes

  eliminationist potential and

  eliminationist threat of

  international protection of

  Political Islamic

  transformation to democracies

  in UN membership See also Dictatorships

 
Übelhör, Friedrich

  Uganda

  Ukrainians

  United Democratic Nations

  United Nations

  defense of sovereignty

  failure to act in Rwanda

  failure to work to stop eliminationism

  genocide convention

  history of

  pressing to become force against genocide

  prevention of war and

  report on Darfur

  responsibility to protect and

  tyrannical regimes’ power in

  United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide

  United Nations-International Criminal Court regime

  United Nations-Nuremberg regime

  United Nations peacekeepers

  United States

  Abu Ghraib prison

  attitudes toward genocide

  bombing by, during World War II

  current political situation

  development of enmity for Japanese

  discontinuing support for tyrannies

  eliminationist politics in

  International Criminal Court and

  invasion of Iraq

  mass murder and nation-building in

  nonintervention and

  Political Islam and

  prevention of elimination and

  racism in

  rout of Taliban in Afghanistan

  selectivity of intervention

  Uong, Rithy

  Ustasha

  Utilitarianism, subhuman victims and

  Vasilije (Bishop)

  “Vengeance with a Smile” (article)

  Vengeful cruelty

  Victims

  alleged threats from

  categories of

  degradation of

  dehumanization and demonization of

  identification of

  imputed perniciousness of

  Jews as(see also Jews)

  Khmer Rouge

  personalizing in accounts

  resistance of

  response to excess cruelty

  torture of

  Visual images, as part of eliminationist discourse

  Voluntary participation, of perpetrators

  Vorkuta

  Waldheim, Kurt

  Wallace, Henry

  Wanjiru, Major wa

  Wannsee Conference

  War

  choosing

  as context for eliminationist program

  crime vs.

  decreasing incidence of

  development of hatred for enemy

  end of eliminationist assaults and

  existential enemies and

  intervention and norms against

  preventive (defensive)

  rape and

  United Nations and prevention of

  War against humanity

  War crimes

  War dead

  Warsaw Ghetto

  Weber, Max

  Welz, Ferdinand

  West, Political Islam and

  White supremacy

  “Why Are We Antisemites” (Hitler)

  Wild camps

  Wild expulsions

  Wilhelm II

  Women

  cruelty towards(see also Rape)

  as perpetrators

  World, free countries (2008)

  World systems, heretics and

  World War I

  World War II

  Yan, Arn

  Yedinomyshlenie

  Yoshimi, Takeuchi

  Youkimny Chan

  Yousef, Ramzi

  Yugoslavia, prejudices in . See also Bosnia; Croats; Kosovo; Serbian perpetrators; Serbs

  Zahar, Mahmoud

  Zawahiri, Ayman al-

  Zhao Yushu

  Zhukov, Georgy

  Zimbardo, Philip

  Zimbardo Experiment

  Zimbardoian cruelty

  Zionism, as target of Political Islam

  Until devoting himself full time to writing, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen taught political science for many years at Harvard University. He is also the prize-winning author of the international number one bestseller Hitler’s Willing Executioners and A Moral Reckoning and contributes to major newspapers and magazines around the world.

  Please visit www.goldhagen.com

  PublicAffairs is a publishing house founded in 1997. It is a tribute to the standards, values, and flair of three persons who have served as mentors to countless reporters, writers, editors, and book people of all kinds, including me.

  I.F. STONE, proprietor of I. F. Stone’s Weekly, combined a commitment to the First Amendment with entrepreneurial zeal and reporting skill and became one of the great independent journalists in American history. At the age of eighty, Izzy published The Trial of Socrates, which was a national bestseller. He wrote the book after he taught himself ancient Greek.

  BENJAMIN C. BRADLEE was for nearly thirty years the charismatic editorial leader of The Washington Post. It was Ben who gave the Post the range and courage to pursue such historic issues as Watergate. He supported his reporters with a tenacity that made them fearless and it is no accident that so many became authors of influential, best-selling books.

  ROBERT L. BERNSTEIN, the chief executive of Random House for more than a quarter century, guided one of the nation’s premier publishing houses. Bob was personally responsible for many books of political dissent and argument that challenged tyranny around the globe. He is also the founder and longtime chair of Human Rights Watch, one of the most respected human rights organizations in the world.

  For fifty years, the banner of Public Affairs Press was carried by its owner Morris B. Schnapper, who published Gandhi, Nasser, Toynbee, Truman, and about 1,500 other authors. In 1983, Schnapper was described by The Washington Post as “a redoubtable gadfly.” His legacy will endure in the books to come.

  Peter Osnos, Founder and Editor-at-Large

  a Actual resettlement (as opposed to expulsions euphemistically called resettlement) differs from expulsion in two respects: The people being resettled are seen by their government, the broader society, and themselves as members of the larger national community, and second, the government attempts to create new and some semblance of decent lives for them (even if the attempt falls short). Resettlement may occur because of economic projects, such as building dams, or because of geostrategic necessities, such as resettling Israelis from settlements in Gaza to Israel proper.

 

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