A Problem From Hell

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A Problem From Hell Page 82

by Samantha Power


  Cassin, René, 76

  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

  analysis of Balkan atrocities, 310, 396–397, 408, 409, 412, 419

  Cambodia, 99, 107–109

  Rwanda, 338

  Chamberlain, Neville, 260, 278, 306, 433

  Chea, Nuon, 488–489

  chemical weapons

  Hussein’s use of, 186–195, 200–201

  Iran-Iraqi war, 178–179

  Iraq, avoiding criticism of, 207–212, 220–224

  Iraq, proving use of, 208–209, 212–216

  survivors of, 189–190, 208–209, 213, 241–242

  U.S. fearing proliferation of, 205–206

  U.S. skepticism about reports of, 190–195

  use of mustard gas in World War I, 205

  Cheney, Richard, 261, 282, 284

  Cherne, Leo, 129

  Chernomyrdin, Prime Min. Viktor, 459

  Chhang, Youk, 488–489

  China

  Khmer Rouge and, 126–127

  U.S. policy toward, 147

  Chirac, Pres. Jacques, 407, 433, 436

  Chomsky, Noam, 113

  Christianson, Gerald, 219, 222, 228, 231

  Christopher, Warren

  “a problem from hell,” 306, 311, 440

  Bosnia, lift and strike policy, 302

  Bosnia, Muslim atrocities and, 308

  Bosnia, national interests and, 310–311

  Bosnia, policy on, 295–296, 298, 305–306

  Bosnia, statements on genocide question, 298, 300, 318–319, 321–324

  Iraq, genocide finding, 245

  Khmer Rouge, human rights violations, 132

  Rwanda, demand for UN withdrawal, 367

  Rwanda, evacuation, 352

  Rwanda, views on using the term genocide, 362

  Srebrenica, nonintervention in, 412–413

  Churchill, Prime Min. Winston, 16, 29, 39–40, 205

  Claes, Willie, 367

  Clark, Gen. Wesley

  arresting war criminals, 444

  attempt to accelerate NATO operation, 454–455

  Kosovo invasion plan, 458–459

  Milosevic, defeat of, 472–473

  Milosevic, miscalculation of, 453–454, 456

  Rwanda and, 330, 373

  target selection and, 456–458

  Clarke, Richard, 342, 364, 368, 378

  Cleveland, Peter, 487

  Clinton, Pres. Bill

  Bosnia. see Bosnia, Clinton administration

  Bosnia, statements on, xi–xii, 301, 303, 324, 326, 327, 400, 422, 435–437

  campaign pledges, xxi, 274–275

  genocide prevention and, xxi

  Kosovo. see Kosovo, U.S. response

  relationship to military of, 316–317

  Rwanda, apology for, 386

  Rwanda, concern for Mujawamariya, 365–366

  Rwanda, statements on, 353, 374–375, 381, 386, 505–506

  Srebrenica. see Srebrenica, U.S. policy

  war crimes tribunal support, 491, 495

  Cody, Ed, xiii–xiv

  Cohen, William, 235–236, 455

  Committee on Armenian Atrocities, 11–12

  Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC), 173, 177, 204, 236

  concentration camps, Bosnian Serb, 269, 277

  Bush’s pledge to document, 279–281

  Holocaust analogy, 274–279

  overview of, 269–274

  Red Cross monitoring in, 409

  Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), 376

  Convention of the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. see genocide

  Cook, Robin, 447

  Coward, Gary, 394–395

  Croats

  ethnic cleansing of, 249–251

  held prisoner in Serb concentration camps, 269–274

  leadership of, 309–310

  massacre vs., 254–255

  Serb intentions toward, 255–258

  war in Croatia, 247, 254–255

  war with Bosnian Muslims, 309

  Cvrk, Senada, 412

  Daigne, Mbaye, 368

  Dallaire, Maj. Gen. Romeo

  background of, 335–336

  diagnosis of crimes vs. humanity, 348–350

  diagnosis of genocide, 358

  evacuation and, 352–353

  faith in UN, 515

  lack of support for, 340–343, 350

  media use by, 355–357

  PDD–25 and, 378–379

  proposal for arms raid, 344–345

  proposal for reinforcements, 378

  radio jamming and, 371–372

  Rwanda massacres and, xx, 329–330

  UN withdrawal and, 366–370

  UNAMIR ineffectiveness and, 382

  warning of massacres, 343–344

  D’Amato, Sen. Alphonse, 235–236

  Dayton accords, 440–441, 443–444, 453

  de Borchgrave, Arnaud, 453

  Dean, John Gunther, 89

  DeConcini, Sen. Dennis, 298

  Dellums, Rep. Ron, 299–300

  Dennis, Patricia Diaz, 292–293

  Des Forges, Alison, 330–331, 337–338, 365, 509

  Diary of Anne Frank (film), 72–73

  Dicker, Richard, 244–245

  Djordjevic, Zivadin, 471

  Documentation Center of Cambodia, 488–489

  Dodge, Cleveland, 11–12

  Dole, Sen. Bob

  Bosnia, xx, 303–304, 423–430, 441

  Cambodian genocide and, 130

  genocide convention, support for, 165

  Rwanda, favors evacuation from, 352

  Saddam Hussein and, 235

  Srebrenica and, 421–429, 441

  trip to Kosovo, 253–254

  U.S. peacekeeping and, 341–342

  war injury, 253, 425

  The Drowned and the Saved (Levi), 465

  Duch (Kang Keck Ieu), 143, 490

  Dudman, Richard, 137–140

  Dulles, John Foster, 59, 70

  Dusaidi, Claude, 357

  Dutch peacekeepers

  massacre of Bosnian Muslim men and, 402–403, 417

  NATO air strike promises and, 397, 399

  Serb capture of, 397

  Srebrenica and, 391, 393–394

  Dyrac, Jean, 89–90

  Eagleburger, Lawrence

  Bosnian policy of, 262, 281–283, 287

  “naming names” of war criminals, 291–292, 482

  receiving warnings of Yugoslavia’s collapse, 252–253

  East Timor, 146–147

  Eastman, George, 41–42

  Ecole Technique Officielle (ETO), 353

  Edwards, Ralph, 72

  Eichmann, Adolf, 496

  Eisenhower, Pres. Dwight D., 70, 71

  Elsner, Alan, 363

  Etcheson, Craig, 487

  ethnic cleansing in former Yugoslavia, 247–251, 255–257, 288–289, 483

  Europe

  Clinton’s passivity in Srebrenica and, 435–437

  international tribunal proposal of, 482

  response to Bosnia, 258–260, 483

  suppression of genocide and, 503

  Evatt, Herbert V., 59

  evidence of genocide

  debriefing refugee survivors, 120, 265, 270, 418

  documents, 143, 242–243, 487–489

  eyewitness reports, 32, 121, 280, 354

  forensic investigations, 243, 441, 470

  intercepted messages, 34, 108, 209

  photo and video, 5, 121, 186, 238, 276

  satellite and aerial photos, 186, 264–266, 269–270, 407–409, 419, 501,

  Fascell, Rep. Dante, 228, 236

  Fein, Helen, 191

  Feiner, Leon, 33

  Feinstein, Sen. Dianne, 429

  Ferencz, Benjamin, 50

  Fitzwater, Marlin, 193, 224–225

  Ford, Pres. Gerald, 102–103, 107–109

  Ford, Sen. Wendell, 204

  Fox, John, 266–267, 278–279

  France, 34, 48, 50 />
  Bosnia and, 304, 407, 433–436, 483

  Huguenots, 54

  Iraq, arms trade with, 222

  Rwanda, patron of, 341, 380

  Frank, Anne, 72–73, 157–158

  Frankfurter, Justice Felix, 33–34, 121

  Fraser, Rep. Donald, 130

  Frenzel, Rep. Bill, 220

  “g-word,” avoiding the. see genocide, U.S. response

  Gaillard, Phillipe, 358

  Galbraith, John Kenneth, 221

  Galbraith, Peter

  background of, 179–185

  evidence of Iraqi war crimes, 212–216, 242

  experience with Cambodian refugees, 215

  faith in U.S. government, 515

  Kurdish uprising, 237–241

  Moynihan’s praise of, 240

  reputation of, 179–180, 228

  sanctions vs. Hussein, xix, 203–206, 219–221, 226–229

  Srebrenica, 412–413, 417–418

  use of Holocaust analogy, 216–219

  Gatabazi, Felicien, 345

  Gati, Charles, 433

  Gati, Toby, 320, 362, 408, 420

  genocide. see also genocide, U.S. response

  acceptance of new term, 29, 40–45, 48–50, 54

  Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, 62–63

  defined by UN, 54, 57–58

  intent and, 290, 320

  Srebrenica, conviction of, 479

  genocide convention

  Cambodian government and, 153–154

  Frank McCloskey and, 300

  Lemkin’s campaign to ratify, 61–73

  opposition to, 65, 70, 74–78

  Peter Galbraith and, 202–203

  Proxmire’s campaign to ratify, 79–85, 155–161, 165–169

  rape of women in Rwanda and, 485–486

  terms of, 52–63

  U.S. ratification of, 161–169

  Genocide Convention Implementation Act (1988), 167–168

  genocide, U.S. response, 503–516

  accountability for inaction, 510–511

  American use of the word re. Kosovo, 466, 468–472

  avoidance of the word: Bosnia, xii, 257–258, 288–293, 298, 300, 318–319, 321–324; Cambodia, 123–124, 153–154; Iraq, 224–226; Rwanda, 358–364

  capacity for influence, 506–507

  Holocaust awareness and, 503–504

  international stability and, 512–513

  knowledge of atrocities, 504–506

  lack of will, 508–510

  link to terrorism, 511–512

  Genscher, Hans-Dietrich, 481

  Germany, 4, 22, 34, 40

  Gingrich, Rep. Newt, 433

  Glaspie, April, 207, 212, 234

  Goebbels, Joseph, 34

  Goldberg, Arthur J., 34–35, 36

  Gorbachev, Pres. Mikhail, 154

  Gore, Sen. Al, 204, 280, 327, 378–379, 413

  Gosden, Christine, 241–242

  Gramm, Sen. Phil, 236

  Greenway, David, 120

  Gregorian, Vartan, 157

  Grey, Sir Edward, 5

  Gutman, Roy, 271–272

  Gypsies (Roma), 55, 277

  Habyarimana, Pres. Juvénal, 329, 345–346

  Haiti, 317

  Halabja massacre

  chemical weapons use in, 188–193

  legacy of, 241–242

  press coverage of attack, 190–195

  Hamdoon, Amb. Nizar, 181, 207, 211

  Hamid, Abdul, 8–9

  Harmon, Mark, 477–478

  Harris, Marshall

  Bosnian policy and, 265, 295, 296, 300, 301, 307–308, 321, 428

  resignation from State Department, 286, 313–314

  Hastings, Rep. Alcee, 376

  Hatch, Sen. Orrin, 163

  Hauser, Rita, 159

  Hawk, David, 487

  Haxiu, Baton, 454

  Hecimovic, Selma, 271

  Helms, Sen. Jesse, 163, 166, 204–205, 493

  Helsinki Watch. see Human Rights Watch (HRW)

  Herzog, Chaim, 125

  Hildebrand, George, 112–113

  Hiltermann, Joost, 244

  Hirschman, Albert, xviii, 125; his categories of reaction: Perversity, Futility and Jeopardy, 121, 125, 222, 282, 306, 429, 451, 461–466, 506

  Hitchens, Christopher, 471

  Hitler, Adolf

  annihilation as aim of war, 23

  anti-Semitism and, 35

  comparing Hussein to, 203

  comparing Milosevic to, 449

  comparing Pol Pot to, 129

  Lemkin’s crusade vs., 26–30, 38–40

  Lemkin’s flight from, 23–26

  weak response to, 22–23, 27–28, 34–36, 158

  Hitler’s Willing Executioners (Goldhagen), 39

  Hoagland, Jim, 193, 218–219

  Holbrooke, Amb. Richard

  deaths of U.S. officials in Bosnia, 439

  Kosovo diplomacy, 446

  Milosevic and, 446

  on Serbian attacks on Muslims, 280, 294–295, 410

  Srebrenica, fall of, 405, 433, 436

  Srebrenica, forecasting fall of, 393

  statement on Khmer Rouge by, 130

  Holocaust, warning 22, recognition 31, response 35, aftermath 47. see also analogy to the Holocaust

  awareness of, 73, 128

  genocide convention and, 157–158

  postwar reticence about, 72–73

  U.S. genocide prevention and, xx–xxi

  U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, xxi, 229, 277, 297, 314

  U.S. indifference during, 128–129

  “Holocaust standard,” 503

  Bosnia, 273, 300

  Iraq, 244

  Kosovo, 468

  Lemkin’s concept of genocide and, 43

  “Rwanda standard,” 470

  Hooper, Jim

  early warnings of violence, 252–253

  lifting arms embargo and, 428

  policy options for Bosnia, 268, 287, 292, 296–298, 327

  Hoyt, Michael, 83

  Hughes, John, 160

  human rights movement

  Balkan war criminals, arrest of, 493

  Bosnia and, 257, 434

  Cambodia and, 130–131

  Iraq and, 193–194, 233–234, 242–244

  Khmer Rouge brutality and, 113, 125–126

  Kosovo Albanians and, 253, 462

  Raphael Lemkin’s disagreement with, 74–78

  Vietnam invasion of Cambodia and, 141–142

  Human Rights Watch (HRW)

  Bosnia, call for military force in, 258, 434–435

  Bosnia, investigation in, 257–258, 288

  growth of, 72, 193–194, 229

  Iraq, role in, 196–197, 242–245

  NATO in Kosovo and, 462

  Rwanda and, 337–338, 357, 377

  war crimes tribunal and, 482, 493

  humanitarian aid, xvii–xviii, 240, 281, 283, 316–317, 411

  Hun Sen, 147, 489–490

  Husarska, Anna, 307

  Hussein, Saddam. see also al-Majid, Ali Hassan; chemical weapons

  Anfal campaign of, 171–173, 187–190, 195–198, 231–232, 242–245

  background to, 173–176

  chemical weapons, proving Iraqi use of, 207–212, 212–216

  criminal prosecution of, 480–481, 490–491

  defeat of, 226–231

  Holocaust analogy to, 216–219

  Kurds, mass executions, 195–198

  Kuwait invasion, 236

  resettlement campaign of, 182–186

  U.S. initial response to, 185–187

  U.S. policy during Iran-Iraq war, 176–177

  U.S. reluctance to criticize, 207–212, 219–224

  U.S. sanctions bill on genocide, 203–206

  Hutus. see also Rwanda

  claiming self-defense, 340

  crimes vs. humanity by, 348–350

  deterred by UN peacekeepers, 368

  genocide brought to halt, 380�
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  massacre of Belgian peacekeepers, 332

  massacre of political figures, 330–332

  plans to kill Tutsi, 340

  statistics on massacres, 334

  Tutsi rebellion against, 333

  UN deployment and, 336–339

  Hyseyni, Drita, 459–460

  imagination, failure of, xvii, 34, 39, 95, 102, 346, 386, 404, 410, 453, 505

  implicated victims, 191

  INDICT coalition, 490–491

  International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

  Nazi atrocities and, 34

  Rwandan genocide and, 356–357

  Serb concentration camps and, 271, 273, 409–410

  Srebrenica, Muslim males and, 411

  International Court of Justice (ICJ)

  Cambodian genocide and, 124

  Iraqi genocide and, 244

  U.S. ratification of the genocide convention and, 68, 163–164

  International Criminal Court (ICC), 166, 491

  International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)

  arrests for, 443–444, 472–473, 494

  establishment of, 326, 483–484

  international support for, 491–496

  Kosovo and, 462, 470, 472

  Milosevic indictment and, 458

  procedures in, 496–499

  public interest in, 481–484, 496–499

  trials before, 475–479, 481–484

  truth-telling in, 499–502

  U.S. role in, 290–291, 326, 482–484

  International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)

  establishment of, 484–486

  results of, 495–496

  trials before, 385–386, 485–486

  international war crimes trials

  background, 479–480

  Cambodia, 486–490

  former Yugoslavia, 481–484

  Iraq, 480–481, 490–491

  Ottoman war criminals, possible prosecution of, 14

  Rwanda, 385–386, 484–486, 495

  Intervention, barriers to. see “ancient hatreds,” perception of; bystander attitudes; genocide, U.S. response, avoidance of the word; “Holocaust standard”; imagination, failure of; perpetrator behavior; sovereignty; United States, domestic politics; Vietnam, “syndrome”

  intervention, continuum of, xviii, 504

  intervention, options for

  Bosnia, 263, 268, 275, 287, 296–298, 327

  Cambodia, 121–127, 130–136

  Germany, 28–29, 33–36, 38

  Iraq, 204

  Ottoman Empire, 5–8, 10–14

  Rwanda, 371, 383

  Srebrenica, 406, 408

  Iran-Iraq war

  armistice, 200

  background to, 175–176

  chemical weapons use, 191–195

  press coverage of, 181–185

  U.S. policy toward, 176–179

  Iraq, warning 170, recognition 187, response 203, aftermath 231

  accountability for war crimes, 241–245, 480–481, 490–491

  chemical warfare, proving use of, 207–212

  defeat of U.S. sanction bill, 226–231

  genocide, skepticism regarding, 190–195, 212–216, 224–226

 

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