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A Willful Ignorance: America Must Apply A Uniform Standard In Its Re

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  • A Willful Ignorance: America Must Apply A Uniform Standard In Its Re

    A WILLFUL IGNORANCE: AMERICA MUST APPLY A UNIFORM STANDARD IN ITS REACTION TO GENOCIDE
    By Matthew H. Ghazarian

    Harvard Crimson
    http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref =525589
    Nov 26 2008
    MA

    Over the course of this year's campaign, my grandparents--despite
    their unfortunate racist inclinations--were particularly happy with
    Barack Obama, then candidate and now President-elect. For them,
    his appeal didn't lie with his denunciation of the war in Iraq, his
    plan for universal healthcare, or even his promise to reinvigorate
    the economy. Rather, it was his stance on the Armenian Genocide,
    of which my grandparents were victims, that won them over: "America
    deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide
    and responds forcefully to all genocides," Obama said last January,
    "I intend to be that President."

    Only time will tell whether or not Obama will stick to his
    word. History, certainly, is not on his side. Despite its steady
    criticism of human rights violations abroad, the United States
    government has a disconcerting tendency to its power not as a means
    of preventing the more despicable cases of crimes against humanity,
    but as a strategic or political tool.

    It's no news that Iranian President Ahmadinejad has consistently
    denied the occurrence of the Holocaust. The U.S. government wasted no
    time in lambasting Ahmadinejad; in 2007 Congress passed a resolution
    signaling their disapproval in no uncertain terms and condemning the
    practice of Holocaust denial in general. Of course, there remains no
    political risk in scolding Iran--America has had little strategic
    interest or diplomatic ambition in the Islamic Republic since both
    countries parted ways after the 1979 revolution.

    It is no coincidence that, when these practical exigencies do exist,
    the U.S. abandons its hard-line opposition to genocide in all its
    forms. The government of Turkey, one of America's closest allies in
    the Middle East, not only vehemently denies the thoroughly documented
    slaughters and deportations of 1.5 million Armenians during World War
    I by Ottoman authorities, but has actually prosecuted its citizens
    for insinuating any such events occurred.

    Raphael Lemkin, the man who invented the word "genocide," did so in
    part because he could not find a word to describe the horrors of
    the Armenian episode. Yet in October 2007 Congress--the very same
    legislature that inveighed against Holocaust denial when it was
    easy--simply refused to officially recognize the Armenian Genocide
    in a non-binding resolution. Upon hearing the news that the House
    was planning a vote, Turkey threatened to cancel arms deals and
    revoke their support for American air units operating in Iraq. The
    U.S government blinked immediately.

    Of course, some have pointed out that contemporary governments
    shouldn't meddle in history, that the confirmation and evaluation
    of historical phenomena should be left to historians. However,
    Congress has a strong precedent of politically recognizing historic
    events. In recent years, it has passed resolutions commemorating
    the anniversaries of the Holocaust, the founding of the Republican
    Party, and even Napa Valley's victory in a 1976 Paris wine-tasting
    competition. No one objected to these commemorations.

    This moral inconsistency on genocide is nothing new. In 1994,
    having recently suffered losses in Somalia, the American political
    establishment had no interest in starting other human rights
    expeditions in Africa--so it dithered while the Rwandan genocide was
    being perpetrated. At State Department press briefings, officials
    refused to acknowledge that genocide was occurring, despite internal
    documents clearly stating that it was. This spineless denial delayed
    the placement of U.N. troops that could have averted the bloody 100
    days during which Hutu militias slaughtered at least 800,000 Tutsi
    citizens. Intervention was simply politically inconvenient.

    In the contemporary case of Darfur, American politicians didn't
    hesitate to use the "g-word." With the war on terror spreading
    throughout both Afghanistan and Iraq, anti-Arab sentiment was palpable
    at the time, and again, the United States had little to lose in
    labeling the actions of the Arab janjaweed as genocidal before the
    U.N. could. Yet, again, intervention and even effectual advocacy has
    been slow to come.

    There is of course nothing wrong with the sober reverence paid to
    the victims of the Holocaust by the powers-that-be in the United
    States. The only problem is that that reverence is ultimately
    undermined by general inconsistency in response to other clear
    cases of genocide, all of which have wreaked unfathomable havoc
    upon communities not unlike our own. If American politicians are to
    continue to present this nation as the global defender of liberty
    and human rights, it must begin to do so in every case.

    Matthew H. Ghazarian '10, a Crimson editorial comper, is a government
    concentrator in Kirkland House.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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