WASHINGTON: At a press conference last Thursday, Ed Henry of Fox News asked White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest a straightforward question about President Barack Obama’s decision to authorise force against the Islamic State: “Is preventing a genocide in America’s core interests?” The question assumed greater resonance later that day, when Obama justified military action in Iraq “to prevent a potential act of genocide”, as the Islamic State surrounds thousands of members of Iraq’s Yazidi religious sect.

Earnest paused. Then, in his incoherent non-answer, he paid lip-service to one of the most persistent truisms in American foreign policy: “Of course the United States has been and will continue to be a beacon for freedom and respect for basic human rights around the globe. And that is a core founding principle of this country and one that American men and women have fought and died to protect. And we will continue to stand up for that value.”

The current generation seems to believe that preventing genocide around the world is and has always been in the United States’ interest. From calls to intervene in Syria, to activism around “Save Darfur”, to attention paid to anti-Rohingya Muslim violence in Myanmar, there is widespread believe that the United States will intervene in troubled spots around the world.

But Washington has always had a dismal record of stopping genocides and ethnic cleansing, and that is unlikely to change. With few exceptions, the US response to grave humanitarian crisis since it emerged as a major power in the 1870s have ranged from tacit support and indifference to post-facto condemnation. Probably the first example was in the 1880s, when then President Chester A. Arthur recognised and supported Belgian King Leopold’s claims to the Congo. Leopold’s brutal rule — indiscriminate violence against local populations, collective punishment and mutilations, led to the death of several million Congolese, if not more. Despite decades of lobbying for the United States to take a strong position against Leopold, Washington remained reluctant. Teddy Roosevelt, president from 1901 to 1909, said “it was a literal physical impossibility to interfere” and called the idea of campaigning for intervention “imbecile”.

In subsequent decades, US presidents more isolationist than Roosevelt refused to stop Japanese atrocities in East Asia, Turkey’s genocide in Armenia or European colonisers’ large-scale killing of civilians in places like South-East Asia. Joseph Stalin’s forced deportation of some six million minorities in the Soviet Union in the 1930s — ethnic cleansing in its truest sense — did not diminish the admiration for him by some in the highest levels of US government, including Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s vice president Henry A. Wallace (who later tried to make amends by publishing an article called Where I Was Wrong).

What about the Holocaust? US war efforts certainly contributed to the defeat of Nazi Germany and put an end to the most horrifyingly industrialised genocide in history. But American popular lore often overlooks the fact that on Dec 11, 1941, Adolf Hitler first declared war on the United States — and not vice versa. The United States’ humanitarian intentions — despite having learned about Auschwitz and other concentration camps — were an afterthought.

It gets worse. The United States managed to win the Cold War against the Soviet Union while preserving its moral high ground. But that period may have marked a nadir for the United States when it came to genocide and ethnic cleansing. As Princeton professor Gary J. Bass documents in his 2013 book The Blood Telegram, Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger tacitly supported the Pakistan military’s ethnic cleansing in East Pakistan in the early 1970s, which led to the deaths of at least 300,000 people. It wasn’t until an opportunistic intervention by India in 1971 — which the United Nations overwhelming condemned — that the mass killings stopped.

And when the Khmer Rouge conducted its reign of terror in Cambodia from 1975 to 1979, leading to the death of up to 25 per cent of its roughly seven million people — proportionally the largest genocide of the 20th century — Washington remained aloof. Because of its then geopolitical interests at the time with regards to opening up to China and spurning the USSR and Vietnam, Washington opted for a policy of non-intervention, a morally indefensible stance. The United States was even critical of the 1978-1979 invasion of Cambodia by a pro-Soviet Vietnam that ended Pol Pot’s reign.

Similarly, when Saddam Hussein used chemical and conventional weapons to kill an estimated 100,000 ethnic Kurds in Iraq in 1988, Washington — having recently made overtures to Baghdad, with which it then had a common adversary in Iran — did not even impose sanctions, much less intervene.

It was the hands-off approach to the genocide in Rwanda in 1994, at a moment of unchallenged US global supremacy, that awoke the United States from its slumber. Many, including current US National Security Adviser Susan Rice, then a young National Security Council official dealing with international organisations and peacekeeping, felt that Washington could and should have stopped the genocide, which saw members of the Hutu ethnicity slaughter more than half a million ethnic Tutsis in just a few months.

Given its century-long track record of non-intervention, the 1999 US-led bombing campaign in Yugoslavia to stop the Serbian ethnic cleansing of Kosovar Albanians was an aberration. But even in that case, Washington was arguably influenced as much by other considerations — Western European countries’ determination to intervene, Washington’s enmity with Yugoslavian President Slobodan Milosevic, and the United States’ overwhelming military superiority — as altruism. And America’s subsequent record — failing to stop the ethnic cleansing in the Sudanese region of Darfur, in the shambolic Central African Republic, or (again) in the Congo, has been dismal.

Why then do so many Americans cling to the belief that genocide prevention has been — or could be — a core national interest? Some of the self-delusion may stem from America’s self-image as a moral superpower, combined with the unambiguous success of the 1999 Nato bombing campaign in the Balkans. And it is hard to underestimate the influence of the 2002 book A Problem from Hell by Samantha Power — now US ambassador to the United Nations — on the foreign policy community. Yet Power’s book, which drew attention to the Washington’s poor track record on genocide prevention, has produced far more in the way of historical revisionism than changes to policy.

None of this grim history should mean that the United States lacks a moral compass in its international relations. Nor does it mean that Washington should not help the Yazidis and other minority groups at the receiving end of the Islamic State’s savagery. That is a call for senior US leaders to make, taking into account their country’s interests, abilities, costs and risks. But let’s get one thing straight: stopping genocide is not a core US national security interest, nor has it ever been, and realising that would be better than radiating false hope to persecuted minorities the world over.

—By arrangement with Foreign Policy-The Washington Post

Published in Dawn, August 13th, 2014

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