*The Ambassador From Hell?*






*Samantha Power wrote the book on how the U.S. government ignores and
legitimates genocides. Or was it a handbook?*

*By Lee Smith <http://www.tabletmag.com/author/lsmith/>*

*February 17, 2016*

Even die-hard supporters of President Barack Obama’s “realist” approach to
foreign affairs are nauseated by the White House’s Syria policy. *New York
Times* columnist Roger Cohen, a vocal supporter of the nuclear weapons
agreement with Iran, is fed up with nearly five years of the “fecklessness
and purposelessness” of a Syria policy that “has become hard to
distinguish” from Russian President Vladimir Putin’s. “Syria is now the
Obama administration’s shame,” Cohen wrote
<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/09/opinion/americas-syrian-shame.html> last
week, “a debacle of such dimensions that it may overshadow the president’s
domestic achievements.” Ambassador Dennis Ross
<http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-0209-ross-what-putin-wants-syria-20160209-story.html>
 and *New York Times*military correspondent David Sanger
<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/11/world/middleeast/russian-intervention-in-syrian-war-has-sharply-reduced-us-options.html>
also
published articles excoriating Obama’s policies in Syria. There is a
military solution, it’s “just not our military solution,” a senior U.S.
security official admitted to Sanger. It’s Putin’s.



Perhaps most damning of the stink-bouquets was a *Washington Post* op-ed
from former *New Republic* literary editor Leon Wieseltier and Harvard
professor Michael Ignatieff. “It is time for those who care about the moral
standing of the United States to say that this policy is shameful,” they
wrote
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-era-of-us-abdication-on-syria-must-end/2016/02/09/55226716-ce96-11e5-88cd-753e80cd29ad_story.html>.
“If the United States and its NATO allies allow [Putin and his allies] to
encircle and starve the people of Aleppo, they will be complicit in crimes
of war.”



What made the *Post *op-ed particularly striking is that Wieseltier and
Ignatieff are both friends and former colleagues
<http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=cbd057a0-1dad-4729-b469-d19f3140dbaf>
of
Obama’s U.N. ambassador, Samantha Power. Ignatieff taught with her at
Harvard, and Wieseltier published early parts of her book on genocide, *A
Problem From Hell: America and the Age of Genocide*, which described in
searing detail the strategies by which American officials typically deflect
responsibility for the massacre of innocents. Power’s 600-page book
consists largely of case studies of how the United States responded to
20th-century genocides, like the Turkish genocide of the Armenians, the
Nazi Holocaust, Cambodia, Saddam Hussein’s genocidal campaigns against the
Kurds, Bosnia, Rwanda, Srebrenica, and Kosovo. As Power notes in the book’s
conclusion, “What is most shocking about America’s reaction … is not that
the United States refused to deploy U.S. ground forces to combat the
atrocities. For much of the century, even the most ardent interventionists
did not lobby for U.S. ground invasions. What is most shocking is that U.S.
policymakers did almost nothing to deter the crime.”

There can be no doubt that the murderous campaign of sectarian cleansing
that Assad and his allies Russia and Iran have been waging against the
Sunni Arab population of Syria is a crime of historic proportions—the first
genocide of the still-young 21st century, or, if you prefer the language of
a recent U.N. report, state-sponsored mass extermination. Power herself has
documented it all on Twitter:



Power’s tweets are a legitimate response to a horror that is unfolding
daily. What’s so odd about them is the Twitter account they come from
belongs to the American Ambassador to the United Nations, who has been a
member of Obama’s inner circle since he hit the campaign trail in 2007.
Hence, Ambassador Power’s doe-eyed outrage against the policies that she
helped to shape in her time in the White House and whose current public
face is literally Samantha Power leaves a casual observer a bit
slack-jawed. Is the real Samantha Power being held prisoner in the U.N.
basement with access to Twitter, while a Davos-friendly version of Arya
Stark from *Game of Thrones* impersonates Power in policy meetings? Or was
her book on genocide actually a clever way of advertising her services to a
future U.S. administration, which—if history is a fair guide—would need
someone to deflect responsibility for standing idly by while hundreds of
thousands of innocent people were murdered?



As Ignatieff and Wieseltier suggest, Power is a handmaiden to war crimes.
And no number of righteous tweets or broadsidesagainst Russian diplomats
<http://www.voanews.com/content/us-official-slams-russian-airstrikes-in-syria/3018925.html>
can
hide how the White House has used her monumental 2002 classic, *A Problem
>From Hell*, as a how-to manual in how to enable genocide and still maintain
your soulful cred. From the very beginning when Assad opened fire on
peaceful protesters, to the present, as Russia bombs hospitals
<http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/15/airstrike-destroys-msf-clinic-northern-syria>,
the United States has done nothing to stop Assad and his gory friends—and
all the faux-outraged tweets and Putin-blaming in the world will not
distract a single Syrian from the plain facts that the United States was
not only indifferent to the destruction of their country, but has also
diplomatically enabled their horrific suffering.



Remember when Obama warned Assad not to use chemical weapons against his
own people? That, said Obama, “might change his calculus”—i.e., the use of
chemical weapons against civilians would be such an obvious and grotesque
violation of the international laws and norms and a host of arms agreements
that Assad might actually manage to shame commander-in-chief into stopping
a genocide. Obama was told
<https://now.mmedia.me/lb/en/commentaryanalysis/collision-course> repeatedly
that Assad was using chemical weapons, but when the butcher of Damascus
dared Obama, the leader of the free world blinked and said he wasn’t really
going to take military action after all
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/11/world/middleeast/syrian-chemical-arsenal.html>.
Even after continued attacks with chemical agents
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-syria-usa-chlorine-idUSBREA3K19420140422>,
Obama boasted about getting rid of Assad’s chemical weapons’ arsenal, as if
unconventional weapons was the only way the Syrian tyrant could process
human flesh through his meat grinder. As Power notes in the conclusion to
her book, “on occasion the United States directly or indirectly aided those
committing genocide.”



It is hard to imagine any future edition of *A Problem From Hell* being
complete without a chapter on Syria. Instead of helping to topple Assad,
the mass-murdering goon who drops barrel bombs on civilian areas, the White
House launched a phony train-and-equip program that required rebel fighters
to sign a document that they wouldn’t use their weapons against the
dictator who was murdering their families. The administration’s anti-ISIS
campaign has allowed Assad to ignore ISIS nearly altogether and focus his
attention instead on destroying other opposition groups, and
indiscriminately targeting Sunni towns and villages. The White House’s
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action has now put additional tens of billions
of dollars in Iran’s coffers, which it is now free to use in supporting
Assad’s genocide. Indeed, it is partly because Obama was so eager to secure
a nuclear agreement with Iran that he disdained any efforts to stop
Tehran’s ally from slaughtering Sunnis when Assad first started nearly five
years ago.



How have the president and his aides managed to avoid being held
accountable for their complicity in a five-year-long orgy of mass murder
that has now taken an estimated 470,000 Syrian lives? In her book’s
conclusion, Samantha Power lists a number of popular and relevant tactics
that U.S. policymakers have used over the last century to avoid being
tagged as accessories in crimes of war.



In the past, she notes, one of the key ways to shirk responsibility was to
claim that no one really knew what was going on. But that doesn’t work in
the age of the 24-hour news cycle and social media. In fact, long before
ISIS became known for its depredations, the Assad regime posted YouTube
videos in order to terrorize opponents and keep them from trying their luck
against regime forces. So, everyone knows what’s happening in Syria.

One way around that inconvenience, as Power shows, is to “overemphasize the
ambiguity of the facts.” The White House has used this strategy to great
effect, especially early on, when it claimed that there were “no good guys”
in Syria. Sure, they’re victims of a genocide, yes, but when they fight
back to save themselves, they kill people, too. Some rebel fighters facing
government air bombardment and poison gas attacks, and the torture and
murder of their families and friends, have even turned fanatical. As Obama
himself argued, there’s no guarantee the people being slaughtered will
ultimately prove any friendlier to their neighbors or America than Assad
is. I mean, better the devil you know, right? Maybe they’re all terrorists,
even the little kids.



Another tactic Power lists is to play “up the likely futility, perversity,
and jeopardy of any proposed intervention.” The Obama Administration
clearly read Power’s pages quite carefully: The only alternative to doing
nothing, they repeated, over and over again, was a massive ground invasion
by U.S. forces—an option that no one actually ever proposed. As Power warns
in her book: “The United States should not frame its policy options in
terms of doing nothing or unilaterally sending in the Marines.” But that’s
exactly what the administration did, in order to justify doing nothing.

Samantha Power quite literally wrote the book on how the American
superpower must stop genocides when it has the power to do so. Why hasn’t
she resigned?



Yet there were—and are—clearly other options. In *A Problem From Hell*,
Power suggests that the United States “should set up safe areas to house
refugees and civilians, and protect them with well-armed and robustly
mandated peacekeepers, airpower, or both.” Lots of people did argue for a
no-fly zone or buffer zone to protect Syrians fleeing from Assad’s killing
machine. But the White House said no. Mighty Syrian air defenses were too
much <http://www.weeklystandard.com/article/where-karfan/633304> for the
U.S. air force, said former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey.

There was a time when virtually all of Obama’s national security staff
advocated
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/obama-avoided-syria-action-to-help-iran-negotiations/article/1027276>
arming
the rebels to take down Assad. The president was against it. He derided the
opposition. As he told
<http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/09/opinion/president-obama-thomas-l-friedman-iraq-and-world-affairs.html>
Thomas
Friedman in August 2014, “This idea that we could provide some light arms
or even more sophisticated arms to what was essentially an opposition made
up of former doctors, farmers, pharmacists and so forth, and that they were
going to be able to battle not only a well-armed state but also a
well-armed state backed by Russia, backed by Iran, a battle-hardened
Hezbollah, that was never in the cards.” But the reality is that those
doctors, farmers, and pharmacists are still out in the field, and might
already have stopped the genocide against them on their own, if the
president of the United States had been moved to help them help themselves.



Last week John Kerry blamed
<http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/opposition-blame-syrian-bombing-kerry-tells-aid-workers-1808021537>
members
of the anti-Assad opposition for walking away from the negotiating table at
Geneva, even as Aleppo was being bombed by Russian planes. He told them to
expect another three months of bombing, which, he said, would “decimate”
them. When the opposition petitioned Kerry to do more, he replied
<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/10/world/middleeast/syrian-opposition-groups-sense-us-support-fading.html>:
“Don’t blame me, go and blame your opposition.” Then he continued: “What do
you want me to do? Go to war with Russia?” This represents something new in
the history of American acquiescence to genocide, and something not even
Power documented in her handbook—a U.S. official demanding pity from the
victims of a genocide whose suffering he thinks can be alleviated by
surrendering to the people who are killing them.



The entire White House, from the president on down, is complicit in the
crimes that Power tweets about. As the person who quite literally wrote the
book on how the American superpower must stop genocides when it has the
power to do so, why hasn’t she resigned? Maybe genocide isn’t actually that
important after all, when measured against things like a trade deal with
Asia. Perhaps, like the predecessors she describes in her book, she
“assumed that U.S. policy was immutable, that their concerns were already
understood by their superiors, and that speaking (or walking) out would
only reduce their capacity to improve the policy.” Power’s book was taken
at the time of its publication as a powerful warning against the moral
price that our country pays for such delusional rationalizations. It will
be hard to read it the same way again.

*To read more of Lee Smith’s foreign policy analysis in Tablet
magazine, click here <http://www.tabletmag.com/author/lsmith/>.*





*Lee Smith is a senior editor at the *Weekly Standard* and a senior fellow
at the Hudson Institute. He is also the author of the recently published*


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