Customer Reviews
Brilliantly informative - By: Mr. K. Papas, 16 Dec 2004 
Samantha Power won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for her book & after reading it, you'll understand why. She must have put years of research into this book,in fact tome is more accurate. It is near obsessively thorough & she explains how the term genocide was created & where & by whom it was perpetrated from 1915 up to 2001. I consider myself pretty well versedin 20th century history but I confess to feeling dumbstruck at the scale & scope of the last century's attrocities. It is a thought provoking & enormously valuable guide to those of you who want to find what lies behind the "spin", lies & disinformation propagated by most governments. Highly recommended.
A Classic History - By: , 17 Dec 2003 
This passionately & eloquently argued book is an essential work of 20th century history. It is compelling from first page to last, written with academic precisionin brilliant prose, & it well deserves the praise it has been awarded. Chronicling & scrutinising U.S. involvementin the genocides of the last century, Power paints a startling & damning picture of countless administrations & government officialsin their employ. It is a vast, chilling, & important account of an aspect of our world that won't go away until we choose to do something about it. It is also a book about the many, many individuals who have worked assiduously to try & prevent genocides; here there is hope. With bravery & persistence people can make a difference, & intervention - whether NATO bombing or a simple phone-call - can, & frequently has, saved lives. Very highly recommended.
A Classic History - By: , 11 Dec 2003 
This passionately & eloquently argued book is an essential work of 20th century history. It is compelling from first page to last, written with academic precisionin brilliant prose, & it well deserves the praise it has been awarded. Chronicling & scrutinising U.S. involvementin the genocides of the last century, Power paints a startling & damning picture of countless administrations & government officialsin their employ. It is a vast, chilling, & important account of an aspect of our world that won't go away until we choose to do something about it. It is also a book about the many, many individuals who have worked assiduously to try & prevent genocides; here there is hope. With bravery & persistence people can make a difference, & intervention - whether NATO bombing or a simple phone-call - can, & frequently has, saved lives. Very highly recommended.
Why Genocide Is Repetitive - By: taking a rest, 29 Oct 2002 
It should be the easiest subject to have universal agreement on; Genocide is reprehensible & cannot be defended. The reality is of course much different for our species is the only one that kills, tortures, & maims its members without cause. Differencesin religion, the desire to control land, natural resources, or hunger for power are not reasons to kill entire groups. The title of the book is, "A Problem From Hell", & it is an outstanding work by Samantha Power. She is not only a competent historian she spent yearsin the midst of one of the more recent examples of what could also be called, a problem of human nature. This Nation's Congress took 40 years to ratify the treaty on Genocide. It seems some Southern Congressmen were worried about culpability from Jim Crow that was still alive & well, others for the millions of Native Americans slaughtered because they werein our way.
She specifically covers the massacre of Armenians by Turkey, Hitler's murder of the Jews, Pol Pot's slaughter of Cambodians, Saddam Hussein gassing minoritiesin Iraq, the 1994 murder of 800,000 peoplein Rwanda, & most recently the Serb Nationalist's bid to join the roster of those who kill almost for sport. The mass killing is not sport however the individual conduct of the sadists who enjoy inventive killing is hard to read.
In 1915 The United States was notin a position to impose on Turkey. It is now 2002 & The United States deems Turkey an ally, a country that has refused to admit any Genocide took place. The United States has a congress that killed a vote condemning the Turkish Government because hours before the vote President Clinton, a lame duck President asked them too. It is a sad commentary that our congress lacks the moral fiber of men like Henry Morgenthau our Ambassador to Turkey while they were killing, a man who was denouncing what he called, "Race Murder", while trying to gain the attention of his government.
The Holocaust is well documented & some of the participants were punished, but it & Armenia are events that are 50 & 100 years old, & blurred by time. They are still better remembered than millions of Native Americans slaughtered, & millions, who were bought, sold, enslaved, & murdered because they were black.
In the 1970's 2,000,000 were killedin Cambodia, the 1980's brought Saddam Hussein & his slaughter of The Kurds, & thenin 1994, the world watched Rwanda, 800,00 dead, & then the former Yugoslavia, they are still counting the missing. In 2001 on September 11th on a comparably small scale we experienced the murder of our citizens only because they were Americans.
Largely because of what was Yugoslavia a new international treaty was created to establish a body to constantly deal with the crimes discussed. The treaty requires 60 nations ratify the document for it to become reality. When this book was written 43 had signed, about 10 days ago 66 was reached. The United States is not a party to this effort.
When I started this book it was easy to deal with U.S. conduct simplistically. At the end of the book the same issues became very gray. As the world stands today any intervention will require The United States. This has nothing to do with misplaced national pride it's reality. We had Special Forcesin Afghanistan 48 hours after The World Trade Center was hit. We can monitor any piece of ground on the planet with either satellites, manned or unmanned aircraft capable of real time intelligence gathering within hours of deciding to deploy them. Our military is without peerin both individual capability & technological superiority. So what should we do?
The Rwandan Genocide took placein approximately 100 days, 8,000 murdered per day. The only effective response would have been a unilateral move by The United States into Rwanda. The United Nations would take 100 days to agree on the shape of the table to meet at. What would be our reason for violating another sovereign nation? Genocide seems to be a very good reason. But now back to reality. How many confirmed deaths justify military intervention, what threshold needs to be met for our country to commit forces & lose lives of our soldiers? And it may be unpopular to state but there needs to be more than philosophical outrage to act. What is Rwanda to The U.S.? The reality is virtually nothing. Iraq threatened our economy intervention was an easy call. A U.N. sanctioned operation; it took 5 months to start, had severe limitations, & left Iraq a viable threat.
The conclusion I came to after reading & thinking about the book is that the closest one can get to a stated policy would be something like what follows. The United States decides that we are going to be the world's police force. No other country can do it, so we will. Economic sanctions will be forced upon the offending country to pay the bill, because the citizenry of this nation will not. This will necessitate our not being involvedin any treaty that exposes us to any liability or sanction other than those we place on ourselves. The other extreme is we act only when it isin the interest of our country to do so The Rwandas of the world are ignored, & we protect our interests or punish those responsible for September 11th like attacks.
I enjoyed this book, & I share the author's anger & frustration. There is no record on effective international cooperation, & there is no way The United States will become a police force. It is true a Serb official killed himself 2 weeks ago to avoid being deported & tried, & the Dutch Government resigned last week over their inaction during Srebrenica. Neither action saved a single life.
Genocide will stop when humans evolve further, not before.