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A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide by Samantha Power
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A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide (P.S.)

by Samantha Power

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838115,095 (4.36)3
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Harper Perennial (2007), Paperback, 688 pages

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In this intense and moving book Power explores America's role, or lack there of, in the genocides of the recent century, spanning from 1920 Armenia, through 1999 Kosovo. Wonderfully detailed, but intriguing accounts of America's response to genocide around the globe. There are occasional graphic stories; sixteen year old reading and up. Especially interesting opinions from Elie Wiesel. ( )
  marybear | Sep 15, 2009 |
From Ireland to Yale to Harvad Law School, and now a big part of Obama’s foreign policv world, Ms. Power has written “A magisterial chronicle.” Rwanda, Kosovo, the first Iraq, and more.
  cmeatto | Jan 1, 2009 |
Fascinating, passionate, and damning in equal measure, A Problem from Hell is an indictment against the prevailing attitudes in the USA (and much of the west) towards genocide throughout the twentieth century. From the Turkish massacres of the Armenians, through to the Serbian butchery in Kosovo, Power examines the ways in which American politicians have paid lip-service to opposing genocide, while failing to act for reasons of political expediency. As Power writes: "No US President has ever made genocide prevention a priority, and no US President has ever suffered politically for his indifference to its occurrence. It is thus no coincidence that genocide rages on." She makes a very compelling moral argument as to why military intervention is sometimes necessary to ensure that lives are saved, and why the US should use its pre-eminent global position to bring about that intervention. I did, however, wonder why Power chose to focus on examples of genocide which placed Washington as a rather remote outsider, a quasi-isolationist, removed from complicity in the causes of genocide—East Timor and Guatemala are two sad examples—why not also look at the suffering American militarism and complicity have caused? ( )
  siriaeve | Dec 11, 2008 |
I read this book shortly after its 2/02 publication and it was so powerful that I was hell-bent on the US just once taking out a dictator. This led to my initial support of what later became our very misguided misadventure in Iraq. I was wrong about Iraq. The US simply didn't know how to do it right. Now I worry, based on that debacle, that we will spend another hundred years allowing genocides to occur unabated and without intervention. ( )
1 vote iausas | Jan 7, 2008 |
3757. "A Problem From Hell" America and the Age of Genocide, by Samantha Power (read June 12 2003) This book won the Pulitzer Prize for non-fiction this year. It is a study of genocide and of this country's reaction to it. It tells of the Armenian massacre of 1915, the Holocaust, the efforts of Raphael Lemkin to have a treaty declaring genocide (a word he invented) a crime, the horror in Cambodia, Saddam Hussein's genocide of the Kurds in the 1980s (when we were supporting him and made no effort to help the Kurds), Bosnia, Rwanda, Croatia and Kosovo (but no mention of Stalin or Mao!), The book is well organized, fully footnoted, has a full bibliography, and is a passionate argument against genocide. It is well worth reading, since it pulls together and clarifies much recent history. You think everybody would be against genocide, but only after daily speeches for many years by Senator Proxmire did the US ratify the Genocide Treaty--with reservations. ( )
  Schmerguls | Nov 12, 2007 |
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A Problem from Hell is not the same book as Chasing the Flame. Please do not combine them.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0060541644, Paperback)

During the three years (1993-1996) Samantha Power spent covering the grisly events in Bosnia and Srebrenica, she became increasingly frustrated with how little the United States was willing to do to counteract the genocide occurring there. After much research, she discovered a pattern: "The United States had never in its history intervened to stop genocide and had in fact rarely even made a point of condemning it as it occurred," she writes in this impressive book. Debunking the notion that U.S. leaders were unaware of the horrors as they were occurring against Armenians, Jews, Cambodians, Iraqi Kurds, Rwandan Tutsis, and Bosnians during the past century, Power discusses how much was known and when, and argues that much human suffering could have been alleviated through a greater effort by the U.S. She does not claim that the U.S. alone could have prevented such horrors, but does make a convincing case that even a modest effort would have had significant impact. Based on declassified information, private papers, and interviews with more than 300 American policymakers, Power makes it clear that a lack of political will was the most significant factor for this failure to intervene. Some courageous U.S. leaders did work to combat and call attention to ethnic cleansing as it occurred, but the vast majority of politicians and diplomats ignored the issue, as did the American public, leading Power to note that "no U.S. president has ever suffered politically for his indifference to its occurrence. It is thus no coincidence that genocide rages on." This powerful book is a call to make such indifference a thing of the past. --Shawn Carkonen

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 10 Jul 2009 08:16:56 -0400)

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