Does a Hegemon
ever Meaningfully Apologize?
By Kim
Petersen
US
threatens further naval incursions despite
furious reaction from China
—
Guardian
Many
tributaries, very tricky to navigate, flow from
this main current of public avowals and
disavowals; not least, must an apology lead to
reparation, if it is to be to be at all
meaningful? That is, without a subsequent act of
reparation or restitution, can it be fully
constituted as an apology? Or is the performance
of a speech act something that itself makes
change?
—
Marina Warner
January 21,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- What underlies a proffered apology has obvious
relevance. Particularly important is whether the
apology was sincere or whether it had ulterior
motive. And what does it indicate to the citizens of
a country when its government refuses or elides
meaningful apology for its wrongdoing?
What is the
ideology that underlies the determination not to
apologize; that is, what are the foundations or
motives for not apologizing? Right-wingers will
portray apologizing as a sign of weakness.
The recent
incursion of US navy personnel into Iranian coastal
water has seen the American corporate media focus
inordinately on the fact that purportedly no apology
has been issued to Iran.
CNN cited John Kirby, a spokesman for Secretary
of State John Kerry: “There is no truth in reporting
that Secretary Kerry apologized to the Iranians.”
CNN also
cited a nameless CENTCOM official seeking to disavow
the videoed apology of a US navy sailor: “Clearly
this staged video exhibits a sailor making an
apology in an unknown context as an effort to defuse
a tense situation and protect his crew.” Clearly the
anonymous official’s comment targets the trespassee
rather than the trespassers.
CBS News
featured the US vice president in its
headline: “Biden: Iran didn’t want or get
apology for boats incident.” The right-wing
Daily Wire, however,
contends Biden is lying about not apologizing.
BBC News,
cited general Ali Fadavi, the commander of
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards naval forces, saying the
US did apologize to Iran for its naval incursion.
Whether the
United States did or did not apologize for its
incursion into Iranian waters is revelatory. What is
historical fact is the longstanding refusal of US
officials to apologize in a sincere and meaningful
manner for wrongdoing on its part.
This is
especially applicable to Republican politicians.
This is emblemized by the words of former president
George H.W. Bush who audaciously quipped, “I’ll
never apologize for the United States. Ever. I don’t
care what the facts are.”
Mitt Romney,
Republican presidential candidate drew inspiration
from Bush the Elder’s obstinacy which he used for
his book unabashedly entitled:
No
Apology: The Case for American Greatness.
Romney sought
a wedge between himself and Barack Obama who has on
occasion offered a form of apology. Last year,
president Obama
made a “rare” apology for a US war crime: the
bombing of the Doctors Without Borders Hospital in
Afghanistan. However, despite
paying compensation to the families of those
killed and injured, what does the failure to
prosecute the guilty parties in this war crime
signify? When war criminals escape censure and
punishment, can cash and such an apology be
considered authentic and meaningful atonement?
The spotty and
cavalier US record as far as saying sorry for its
slew of major crimes extends deep into its past.
Disdainfully,
it is still unwilling to apologize for the genocidal
mushroom clouds it caused over Hiroshima and
Nagasaki at the tail-end of World War II.
The US still
has not apologized for its abduction and enslavement
of Africans. Most Americans apparently
agree with this non-apology.
A breakthrough
of sorts occurred during the administration of
president Bill Clinton when both houses of the
United States Congress adopted the Apology
Resolution (U.S. Public Law 103-150 [107 Stat.
1510])
acknowledg[ing] that the overthrow of the
Kingdom of Hawaii occurred with the active
participation of agents and citizens of the
United States and further acknowledges that the
Native Hawaiian people never directly
relinquished to the United States their claims
to their inherent sovereignty as a people over
their national lands, either through the Kingdom
of Hawaii or through a plebiscite or referendum.
But what does
it mean to say, in effect, sorry we took your land,
and then leave unstated: but we will continue to
keep what we stole from you? Is that a genuine
apology?
Bill Clinton
apologized for the slave trade in Africa. He
apologized on behalf of the international
community for the genocide in Rwanda:
The
international community, together with nations
in Africa, must bear its share of responsibility
for this tragedy, as well. We did not act
quickly enough after the killing began. We
should not have allowed the refugee camps to
become safe haven for the killers. We did not
immediately call these crimes by their rightful
name: genocide.
As a president of a country that
fancies itself as the
leader of the free world and the world’s only
indispensable nation, it is not surprising that the
US would presume to speak for other nations. Of
course, in doing so the US dilutes its
responsibility for the genocide in Rwanda.1
On 19 December
2009, president Barack Obama signed into law a joint
resolution, an apology to Indigenous peoples:
Declares
that the United States acting through Congress:
(1) recognizes the special legal and political
relationship the Indian tribes have with it, the
solemn covenant with the land we share, and that
there have been years of official depredations,
ill-conceived policies, and the breaking of
covenants by the Federal Government regarding
Indian tribes; (2) commends and honors the
Native Peoples for the thousands of years that
they have stewarded and protected this land; (3)
apologizes on behalf of the people of the United
States to all Native Peoples for the many
instances of violence, maltreatment, and neglect
inflicted on them by U.S. citizens; (4)
expresses its regret for the ramifications of
former offenses and its commitment to build on
the positive relationships of the past and
present to move toward a brighter future where
all the people of this land live reconciled as
brothers and sisters, and harmoniously steward
and protect this land together; (5) urges the
President to acknowledge the wrongs of the
United States against Indian tribes in U.S.
history in order to bring healing to this land
by providing a proper foundation for
reconciliation between such entities; and (6)
commends the State governments that have begun
reconciliation efforts with recognized Indian
tribes located in their boundaries and
encourages all State governments similarly to do
the same.
Among the
Indigenous reaction was an
article entitled: “A Tree Fell in the Forest:
The U.S. Apologized to Native Americans and No One
Heard a Sound.” It lamented, “The US apology, as
un-public as the delivery has been thus far, also
misses the opportunity to list the transgressions.”
Another
article at Indian Country asked, “Is an
apology that’s not said out loud really an apology?
What if the person expressing the apology doesn’t
draw attention to it?”
It causes
thoughtful people to ask: What’s the purpose of an
apology if it swept under a rug? What’s the purpose
of an apology if no concrete actions or compensation
are being enacted?
However
sincere or not Obama’s “apologies” may have been,
they have been fodder for criticism from more
extreme right-wingers. One right-wing UK newspaper
called “Obama’s supine approach … a humiliating
spectacle” for the US. The newspaper further argued
that the “new
strategy
is weakening his country and making the United
States more vulnerable to attack.” [italics added]
Note that the apology is considered a “new
strategy.”
The
Thatcherite writer opines further, “The brutal truth
is that the United States is increasingly viewed as
a soft touch by its enemies, increasingly jeered
rather than feared.”
Obama, the
Nobel Peace Prize winner, has during his terms
in the White House, had America involved in the
violence in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, Syria,
Palestine, Venezuela, Yemen, Ukraine, etc. What does
this portend for his use of apology?
In his novel
Disgust, author J.M. Coetzee’s protagonists
ponder the quintessence of an apology:
Isaacs
accepts Lurie’s apology but states, ‘We are all
sorry when we are found out. The question is
what lesson have we learned? The question is,
what are we going to do now that we are sorry?’
Kim
Petersen is a former co-editor of Dissident
Voice. He can be reached at:
kimohp@inbox.com.
ENDNOTE
In fact, the US sides with the
genocidaires in Rwanda. Read the factual compilation
by Edward S. Herman and David Peterson,
Enduring Lies: The Rwandan Genocide in the
Propaganda System, 20 Years Later (2014).
Moreover, the US it remains on the sidelines of a
far greater genocide in Congo, as does much of the
world. Again, see Herman and Peterson,
Enduring Lies: The Rwandan Genocide in the
Propaganda System, 20 Years Later.
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