Samantha
Power, Henry Kissinger & Imperial Delusions
By Daniel Kovalik
June 16,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Counterpunch"
- Quite
revealingly, the self-proclaimed crusader against
genocide, Samantha Power, was awarded the 2016 Henry
A. Kissinger Prize in Berlin. That Power would be
awarded a prize named after one of the world’s great
génocidaires, and that she would happily
accept it, proves what many of us have believed all
along – that she is more the clever apologist for
U.S. crimes than a bona fide human rights advocate.
The problem
with Power all along has been that her refusal to
acknowledge the incontrovertible fact that the U.S.,
as exemplified by such figures as Henry Kissinger
himself, is in reality the world leader in war
crimes commission, and an active facilitator of
genocide. The U.S. is not, as Power has claimed
throughout her career, a force for halting such
evils. However, Power has done an impressive job
in advancing this myth, and in the process in
perpetuating the false belief that the world would
be better off if only the U.S. were more active
militarily throughout the world. In so doing, Power,
who is lauded as some great human rights advocate,
probably does more than any other public figure to
harm the cause of global human rights.
Power’s
acceptance speech, entitled, “Remarks on
‘Twenty-First Century Realism’ at the Awarding of
the 2016 Henry A. Kissinger Prize,” is very
illustrative of the delusions Power promotes in the
interest of U.S. power projection and the grave
harms done by this projection. [1]
First of
all, Power, in full agreement with Kissinger,
condemns what she refers to as “the rise of
extremist and isolationist voices in the U.S.” who
dare challenge “the internationalist assumptions
that have undergirded U.S. foreign policy across
party lines since the Second World War.” This
statement is pregnant with meaning and deserves some
dissecting.
As an
initial matter, it is stunning that Power would
characterize those who call for the U.S. to stop, or
even slow, its aggressive, interventionist policy
around the globe as “extremist” when it so clear to
any rational observer that it is this
interventionist policy itself which is so extremist
as to be insane.
Indeed, it
is hard to point to any great successes, especially
in terms of human rights, that the U.S.’s post-WWII
“internationalism” (I would prefer to call it
imperialist aggression) achieved, and Power in her
speech tellingly does not point to even one such
success. And, how could she with a straight
face? The innumerable U.S. interventionist
adventures since WWII have done nothing to advance
human rights or even national security, at least if
national security means the protection of U.S.
citizens like you and me.
Rather, the
U.S.’s “internationalism” has consisted of
overthrowing constitutional democracies in countries
like Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), Chile (1973),
Haiti (2004), Honduras (2009), just to name a few.
It has consisted of carrying out mass slaughter in
an attempt to put down national liberation
struggles, for example in Vietnam and in Southern
Africa, costing the lives of millions. And, it has
involved sewing instability throughout Northern
Africa and the Middle East, in such countries as
Libya, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen and Iraq.
Power’s
complete blindness to such realities – though she
ironically entitles her speech, “Twenty-first
Century Realism” – is hard to fathom. For example,
she explains the current rise of ISIL in Iraq as the
product of “the deeply sectarian, corrupt, and
abusive rule of Prime Minister Maliki . . . . “
There is no mention, however, of the 1991 and 2003
military interventions in Iraq by the U.S., nor of
the intervening sanctions regime, which destroyed
the social fabric of that country and left hundreds
of thousands of civilians, including at least half a
million children, dead. No, those acts of
“internationalism” apparently do not deserve even a
mention in Power’s distorted view.
In
addition, Power does not mention the U.S.
intervention in Libya in 2011, though that was an
intervention which she and her soulmates Hillary
Clinton and Susan Rice played a key role in bringing
about. Again, the undisputed result of this
intervention has been instability in Libya and
surrounding countries, such Mali and Tunisia, and
the accompanying rise of armed extremist groups in
those countries. But again, this deserves no
mention. Instead, Power attempts to explain the
“instability roiling the Middle East” as the product
of almost mystical forces beyond the purview of the
U.S., thus criticizing those who would “presume that
the United States had within our control to put the
Arab Spring genie back in the bottle . . . .”
Power,
repeating her long-time refrain which has given her
the reputation as a human rights advocate, ends her
speech by stating that “we no longer live in an era
in which foreign policymakers can claim to serve
their nations’ interests treating what happens to
people in other countries as an afterthought.
. . . What happens to people in other countries
matters. It matters to the welfare of our own
nations and our own citizens.” Of course, there is
nothing particularly profound about this statement,
and it would be hard to find many who would admit to
disagreeing with it.
However, as
with all Power says, what is absent is any
discussion about how the actions of the U.S., and of
even of Power herself, has undermined the welfare of
people in other countries. For example, in
addition to her role in pushing for the disastrous
intervention in Libya, Power has also been active in
giving diplomatic cover to the U.S.-backed Saudi
slaughter in Yemen which continues to this day.
Thus, in an episode quite reminiscent of those she
criticizes in her Pulitzer-prize winning book,
A Problem From Hell, Power helped the
Saudis scuttle a resolution at the United Nations
that called for an investigation into the civilian
toll of the Saudi coalition war against Yemen [2],
in which at least 6,000 civilians have been killed
and 14 million civilians find themselves on the
brink of starvation. In the end, even for Power,
whether “people in other countries matter”
inevitably depends upon who the people are, and
whether the state impacting their interests is a
friend of the U.S. or not.
In short,
Power is really the perfect exemplar of U.S. foreign
policy. She is a hypocrite and a phony idealist
who believes her own lies about the role of the
U.S., and even herself, in the world, and who does a
great job of convincing the public that these lies
are truth. But sadly — like Kissinger himself who
will never be able to wash the blood of the
Vietnamese, Cambodians, Laotians, Chileans,
Argentines and East Timorese off his hands, but who
nonetheless is treated as an elder statesman — Power
will most likely never be brought to account. She
will continue to live out her days watching Boston
Red Sox games and hanging out with the rich and
powerful, while other, lesser criminals are sent to
The Hague. Regrettably, this is what passes for
human rights these days . . . .
Daniel Kovalik
teaches International Human
Rights at the University of Pittsburgh School of
Law.
Notes.
[1]
See, Power speech at
http://usun.state.gov/remarks/7320
[2]
https://news.vice.com/article/as-saudis-block-a-human-rights-inquiry-in-yemen-the-us-stays-quiet
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