When Tolerance Becomes Criminal
From the desk of George Handlery on Thu, 2007-08-02 20:26
A stunning piece appeared in Der Spiegel (July, 23), a German weekly. It shocked this writer, so it might impress the reader, too. Inevitably, the account carries one from the report’s specifics to implications that are more significant than the original details.
The two-page piece responds to a suit brought against the UN and Dutch soldiers under its command. The plaintiff alleges their responsibility for the Srebrenica massacres.
On June 12 1995, Bosnian Serbs acting for Belgrade captured the Muslim town Srebrenica and massacred seven thousand male captives. “Blue Helmets” protected the town and a safe-zone close to it sheltering the claimants
Now Numira Subasic having lost 22 family members wants justice for herself and other abused women. That government has already been investigated the case and the conclusions cost a Minister his job.
The Dutch UN soldiers were disinterested and incompetent, intimidated as well as mainly concerned with their own survival. Indeed, the Unprofor’s Dutch were unprepared or, put facetiously; they did not anticipate encountering brutality while they also believed virtue could be served risk-free.
These attitudes taken from a PC-inspired book of myths inspired the inappropriate decisions made under the pressure of 15 hostages held by the Serbs. One mistake was that to avoid “provoking” the easily aggravated by appearing to be too martial. In addition, to signal good will, presumably in the interest of keeping “channels open” for a “dialogue”, the positions before Srebrenica were surrendered. Once the Serbs reached the camp on July 12 and asked to inspect it, the Dutch, presumably to “create confidence”, piled up their arms and admitted the Serbs. Thereafter, lacking the means to resist, they ignored the ensuing marauding. Survivors claim that some Dutch did not even surrender under duress but that they accompanied the Serbs voluntarily. (A famous photo shows the Dutch and the Serbs toasting each other.)
According to survivors, the tolerant Dutch entrusted to protect the refugees feared the Serbs and so became accessories to their crime. Therefore, they did nothing when soldiers led women out of their compound to rape them. A survivor claims that a “Dutch Bat” trooper listened to his walkman while, close to him, a woman was raped. One witness alleges that a ten-year-old was placed in his mother’s lap and then decapitated. In another case, a protector was present when the mother of a crying child was ordered to make it stop. The woman failed. Therefore, the trooper cut the throat of the infant. This writer knows a Moslem rape victim whose child cried when it happened. Thereupon the Serbs urinated on the small girl.
Previously, on July 8, UN troops came under attack. The Dutch Chief of Staff – allegedly on orders from home – refused air support. Protecting the hostages might have been the motive for self-induced paralysis.
Unless the suit is settled discreetly to protect the guilty, its aftermath could become a significant precedent. It will pertain to (1) the responsibility of troops protecting civilians, and (2) define the accountability of international organizations for the failure of national contingents acting under their aegis.
Now, let us turn to the generalizations that transcend the significance of the foregoing. (Keep in mind that in the above the venue and the nationalities are only of marginal significance.)
What follows might not suit some. This writer’s “hard-line” view is shaped by experiences that the likely reader did not have for two reasons. They are the fortunate timing and shrewdly chosen location of birth. What follows derives from surviving two systems that killed for a guilt created by defective descent.
The case of the Dutch Bat’s failure reveals how some articles of faith, thought to be so self-evident that all other cultures are assumed to heed them, are not only wrong but also harmful. Trying to appease an aggressor led here to measures that signaled weakness and cowardice, thereby encouraging a party that was violent by preference. Being “nice” and assuming that others, if handled with kind “understanding” will also be “nice” only helped the butchers. The Dutch failed to understand that in other cultures violence, such as murder and rape, might play a different role than in their own. (The range is between “effective way to assert claims” and “unthinkable act to be rejected.”) Projecting their own values the Dutch ignored reality because it contradicted their prejudices. This applied political correctness criminalized the Dutch and made them into accessories to murder. Alas, we are not alike and our cultures are not equal – unless one accepts ethically repugnant comportment as being within the pale.
The capitulation of the decent Dutch reduced them to nasty auxiliaries in mass murder. The process raises general questions about PC assumptions and their use in a world their advocates ignore. Besides that, the knee jerk at Srebrenica points at an even more important issue. Industrial civilization and its open society are besieged. Fending off the attackers is still relatively easy and, therefore, currently it is correspondingly simple to deny the existing threat. In time, when forced to do what many now are determined to avoid, the delayed action will become more costly. The sweat saved now might require rivers of tears later on.
There is – now or later – a job to be done. Regarding that, the performance at Srebrenica is a signal causing concern. What the case demonstrates is a widespread weakness within the Atlantic Alliance. You may call it a symptom of “Eurosclerosis”. In some of the entities that make up Europe, groups with programs built upon the illusionary assumptions that condemned Srebrenica are in power. In others, such as in the USA, they are set to take over.
The described crisis management of the Unprofor has created only a few thousand local victims. Conveniently, these involved, using Thirties language, a people “far away about which we know nothing.” Meanwhile, beyond their back yard, the Serbian midgets could not threaten civilization. However, other challengers, driven by the same mind-set but representing the elephant class, are rising. If these are confronted with the criminal tolerance shown in Srebrenica, the cost of the errors of those who wallow in their puddles of confusion will be towering.
An unwelcome conclusion for America and Europe emerges. Giving in to aggression might evade a fight initially. However, it will not avoid the risk of ultimate slaughter. Europe’s vulnerability derives from its state of mind, which imperils it and its US ally. The preferred approach of the “progressive humanitarians” of both continents will not even restrain a pre-teen gang. The case presented – the danger, the response and the outcome – suggests that a revision of the approach to global politics is called for. It should conform to the rules the bad guys set and abandon the illusions of an ideal world. Iran, Iraq, Korea, but also Russia and China have a message. It counsels that, a reality-corrected change in the assumptions that determine the assessment of antagonists and the means used to respond to them is imperative.
Correcting the 'captain'
Submitted by marcfrans on Sun, 2007-08-05 02:57.
@ KA
There is nothing hypocritical about "lamenting the failures of UN peacekeeping". Supranational government is impossible in the absence of minimal convergence of values.
What is hypocritical is the pretense that UN peacekeeping is 'real', or that any supranational government could be in the service of 'democratic' values under current conditions. For example, it is a total (naive-left western) phantasy that the current UN peacekeeping force in Southern Lebanon is "maintaining the peace". The only thing that is temporarily restraining Hezbollah and its sponsors for now is the possible renewed reaction of the armed forces of Israel, etc...
All genuine genocides of the recent past have either 'run their course' (on a relatively small scale in Tibet, West Irian, etc... ) or have been stopped by a superior military force. In Ruanda it was stopped by Tutsi rebels 'invading' from Uganda, in the balkans officially by NATO (but in reality by the US Air Force), in Sierra Leone by a British military intervention, in East Timor (Indonesia) by the Australian armed forces (with US support), etc...
It is not true that "neither multilateral nor unilateral solutions seem acceptable". The aforementioned examples are illustrations of both, although one could argue about the meaning of "solutions".
What is also hypocritical is for supposedly democratic nations to actively oppose and hinder the 'liberation' of others for the SOLE reason of resentment. One doesn't always have to agree with one's friends, but if one confuses one's friends with one's enemies then the future is grim indeed for liberal democracy.
In Response
Submitted by Kapitein Andre on Sun, 2007-08-05 01:01.
I do not believe that the Dutch peacekeepers in question collaborated with the Serb paramilitaries. Due to the disorganised, inefficient and ineffective nature of UN command and control, they most likely were forced to look on as massacres were committed around them.
It is hypocritical for all those opposed to supranational government (i.e. the EU and UN) to lament the failures of UN peacekeeping given that the organisation is kept powerless and handcuffed. For the UN to be more effective in the Balkans and Africa, the major countries (US, UK, France, China, Russia, etc.) would have to surrender some degree of sovereignty, and none are prepared to do so. In today's world, war crimes are despicable, but neither multilateral (e.g. the "Coalition of the Willing", NATO, the Warsaw Pact) nor unilateral solutions seem acceptable, for a plethora of reasons.
Repetition
Submitted by marcfrans on Fri, 2007-08-03 23:44.
It looks like the 1990's UN approach to 'genocides' (in the Balkans and in Ruanda) is being repeated today in Darfur. The other day the UN Security Council has authorised an expansion of the 'peacekeeping force', but the Chinese (and the Arabs) have made sure that it is again under a very weak mandate. Such is the arbitrary state of "international law". One can also be certain that, if Handlery had published this excellent article a few weeks earlier, it would not have made any difference.
@Atheling
Submitted by Atlanticist911 on Fri, 2007-08-03 15:52.
Re: Your comment.
The shy and retiring person that I am,I couldn't possibly comment.But I was right when I predicted that somebody would,wasn't I?Let's call my apparent reticence to comment,comment by proxy shall we?
@Atlanticist911
Submitted by atheling on Fri, 2007-08-03 15:31.
Amsterdamsky would have preferred the US to stay out of WWII because he would have liked to have seen The Final Solution accomplished.
Despicable.
Myths and facts of Srebrenica
Submitted by Trojan on Fri, 2007-08-03 14:50.
A few facts would do a whole lot of good to this matter.
1. A French general used his personal initiative to proclaim three safe - supposedly neutral - enclaves in the middle of a war zone.
2. This enclaves were untennable in the long term.
3. The U.N. - an NGO - was conducting the war - as best as lawyers know how. The motto at the conclusion was, never again!
4. The U.N. saw fit to 'protect' the French general's enclaves by sending a protection force, armed with Swiss army knives. Even a tank was deemed "too provocative".
5. The neutrality of the enclaves was rendered null and void as Muslim forces - as they know best - out of uniform, melting into the background whenever the going gets tough - night after night conducted raids out of the areas against the Serbs, until they got fed up with that situation.
6. Investigations abound have proved the Dutch didn't refuse air support. The air support was delayed time and again, until it had become irrrelevant when it did.
7. It wasn't just a Dutch government minister that cost it his job, but the entire government.
8. The lesson is you cannot let a legal body conduct a war: it's not their field of expertise (and certainly not the U.N.). NATO command was a shambles as well. I'm not sure at this point what the trouble was, but I think it was a tug-of-war between US General Wesley Clark and European NATO command.
The Serbs made an end to an impossible situation. The fraternization between the Dutch and Serb forces was to a large extent a media hype, public opinion having been firmly manipulated against the Serbs, who - for political reasons we see now played out in Kosovo - are to carry the can as old inflexible commies, irredeemable jingoists, led by a criminal sociopath. If we aren't very careful the result will be a Jihadi state in the heart of the Balkans (of all places).
Ave!
Cassandra.
http://millennium-notes.blogspot.com/2007/05/neo-totalitarianism-4-transnational_27.html
Re: Blame Bush!
Submitted by Atlanticist911 on Fri, 2007-08-03 14:20.
...I think I would have even preferred to live under the Third Reich.
Whoa! I just KNOW somebody is going to bite,but that someone ain't going to be me.
Blame Bush!
Submitted by Amsterdamsky on Fri, 2007-08-03 13:54.
"Therefore, I blame America for this. By protecting Europe with blood and treasure, the US allowed Europe to demilitarize."
I actually agree. I almost wonder if we americans would have been better off having stayed out of WWII. 500-600,000 dead americans for a PC socialist superstate that will be majority muslim in 30 years? I think I would have even preferred to live under the Third Reich.
I blame
Submitted by JimMtnViewCaUSA on Fri, 2007-08-03 06:01.
People who wear glasses find that over time, their "blink" reflex is weakened. If they get contact lenses, they find that the wind blows dust in their eyes because they don't blink quickly enough.
Therefore, I blame America for this. By protecting Europe with blood and treasure, the US allowed Europe to demilitarize.
Now Euros have lost their "blink" reflex and are unable to protect themselves or deal with violent environments.
Except that the Fwench can still enjoy beating up poor African nations like Ivory Coast and Chad from time to time.