The Devil Came on Horseback: Bearing Witness to the Genocide in
Darfur
By Brian Steidle and Gretchen Steidle Wallace
(PublicAffairs, 237 pp., $14.95)
War in Darfur and the Search for PeaceEdited by Alex de Waal
(Global Equity Initiative, Harvard University and Justice Africa,
431 pp., $24.95)
Darfur's Sorrow: A History of Destruction and Genocide
By M.W. Daly
(Cambridge University Press, 368 pp., $22.99)
Darfur: The Long Road to Disaster
By J. Millard Burr and Robert O. Collins
(Markus Wiener Publishers, 340 pp., $28.95)
The Translator: A Tribesman's Memoir of Darfur
By Daoud Hari, as told to Dennis Michael Burke and Megan M. McKenna
(Random House, 204 pp., $23)
Heart of Darfur
By Lisa French Blaker
(Hodder & Stoughton, 348 pp., $37.51)
Darfur Diaries: Stories of Survival
By Jen Marlowe with Aisha Bain and Adam Shapiro
(Nation Books, 259 pp., $15.95)
Not on Our Watch: The Mission to End Genocide in Darfur and Beyond
By Don Cheadle and John Prendergast
(Hyperion, 252 pp., $14.95)
A Long Day's Dying: Critical Moments in the Darfur Genocide
By Eric Reeves
(The Key Publishing House, 360 pp., $37.99)
A Billion Lives: An Eyewitness Report from the Frontlines of
Humanity
By Jan Egeland
(Simon & Schuster, 253 pp., $27)
I.
In July 2004, a colleague beckoned Brian Steidle into his office and
took out a laptop. "As he handed me his computer," writes Steidle
in The Devil Came on Horseback, his memoir about Darfur, "a series
of the most disturbing images I had ever seen came across the
screen"--photographs of young girls who had been handcuffed and
burned to death outside their school. Steidle, a former U.S.
marine, was working as a peacekeeper in southern Sudan. His job was
to monitor a cease-fire between the country's government and the
rebels in the south--a cease-fire that had ended a decades-long
civil war in which some two million people had died. But just as a
tenuous peace was finally taking hold in the south, violence had
broken out in Sudan's western corner--a dusty, impoverished region
called Darfur. That was where the unbearable pictures had been
taken. Steidle was stunned by what he saw on the laptop, and he
assumed that others would be stunned, too. "If these photos were
released to the public," he e- mailed home, "there would be troops
in here in no time."
Four years later, the sentiment seems quaint. For we are awash in
information about Darfur. Disturbing photos--now ubiquitous--of
torture, death, and starvation are just the beginning of it. There
are the regular dispatches of wire service reporters, the drumbeat
of opinion columns, and the images beamed home by television
cameras. There are more websites maintained by activists and human
rights groups than anyone can count. And now there is something
else, too: a substantial body of literature, academic and popular,
about western Sudan. This was not always the case. Africa may be a
continent full of forgotten corners, but until a few years ago not
many were quite as forgotten as Darfur. I took an African history
course in college, and when, in early 2006, I dug out my textbook
(which carries the authoritative-sounding title Africans: The
History of a Continent) and looked in the index, I found just four
isolated mentions of Darfur. The region's colonial history merited
less than a sentence: "Darfur in the Sudan and Ovamboland in
northern Namibia were conquered during the First World War, the
interior of British Somaliland in 1920." That was the extent of
it.
I was, at the time, reading the first two books to trace the
historical roots of the crisis--Gerard Prunier's Darfur: The
Ambiguous Genocide and Alex de Waal and Julie Flint's Darfur: A
Short History of a Long War. Searching for something to which I
might compare them, I visited the libraries of two large research
universities. There I found many books about Sudan, but relatively
few about Darfur. The Sudan books contained plenty of detail on the
colonial-era exploits of British military men such as Charles
Gordon and Horatio Kitchener, the political intrigue that had
unfolded in Khartoum in the years since independence, and the
decades of civil war between Sudan's northern and southern halves.
But in many of those books, Darfur--which contains approximately 15
percent of Sudan's population and about 20 percent of its land
mass--was mentioned only as an afterthought.
Today, by contrast, anybody going to a university library--or, for
that matter, a Barnes & Noble--in search of information about
Darfur would not have a hard time finding it. On the heels of those
first two books has come an avalanche of published material about
western Sudan--memoirs, journalistic accounts, histories. There is
a book by a survivor of the genocide; memoirs by a nurse working
for Doctors Without Borders, a top-ranking U.N. official, and an
African Union peacekeeper; two collections of essays that narrate
the events of the past few years--particularly the failed
international effort to stop the killing--in painstaking detail; a
book by three activists who snuck into Darfur in November 2004; an
account that patiently traces the history of the region; a book
that links the Darfur genocide to the decades-long war between Libya
and Chad; and even a book--easily the oddest entry in this grim
genre--co-authored by the actor Don Cheadle. (About his visit to a
camp for Darfuri refugees, Cheadle writes: "Just then, I catch the
eye of a little boy, no more than ten or eleven, staring at me
tripping. I hope he didn't vibe my slippery state." As if evil will
be defeated by cool.) And there are also the movies: documentaries
that focus on the experiences of aid workers, activists, and of
course the victims themselves--men and women whose faces and voices
are captured in hour after hour of stomach-churning interviews,
whose children have been murdered and communities destroyed, whose
existence is now confined to squalid refugee camps from which they
will probably never go home.
All this gives Darfur a morbid sort of distinction. No genocide has
ever been so thoroughly documented while it was taking place. There
were certainly no independent film-makers in Auschwitz in 1942, and
the best-known Holocaust memoirs did not achieve a wide audience
until years after the war. The world more or less looked the other
way as genocide unfolded in Cambodia during the 1970s, and the
slaughter in Rwanda happened so quickly--a mere hundred days-- that
by the time the public grasped the extent of the horror, the killing
was done. But here is Darfur, whose torments are known to all. The
sheer volume of historical, anthropological, and narrative detail
available to the public about the genocide is staggering. In the
case of the genocide in Darfur, ignorance has never been possible.
But the genocide continues. We document what we do not stop. The
truth does not set anybody free.
If these photos were released to the public, there would be troops
in here in no time. That was Brian Steidle's hope--more, his
expectation--in 2004. And his assumption--that if only Americans
could see what was happening in Darfur, they would take the steps
necessary to end the killing--was by no means a radical one. It is
an assumption that is shared, in one form or another, by many who
have commented on Darfur in recent years: by Daoud Hari, a refugee
and translator from the persecuted Zaghawa tribe who, after fleeing
his country, repeatedly took outlandish risks in order to shepherd
Western writers back into the killing fields of Darfur, and who
wrote a memoir of his experiences "because I know most people want
others to have good lives, and, when they understand the situation,
they will do what they can to steer the world back toward
kindness"; by Paul Rusesabagina, the real-life hero of Hotel Rwanda,
who, in his preface to one of the Darfur books, implores readers,
"Now that you know, what do you plan to do?"; and by the victims
themselves, who, in film after film, look into the camera and relay
their horrific stories, clearly hoping that their honesty will
shake the world from its slumber.
The assumption is really quite simple: that knowledge will beget
action. It is hardly unique to Darfur. (It is, among other things,
one of the moral foundations of journalism. War correspondents,
high school reporters investigating unsanitary conditions in the
school cafeteria, and everyone in between--all are acting on the
idea that injustice will be remedied if only it is exposed.) But
Darfur has tested this assumption in the realm of genocide; and the
results, now conclusive, give grounds for a measure of despair. The
first part of Brian Steidle's wish was granted--the photos were
released--but not the second part. The troops did not arrive. Or,
to be more precise, not the troops Steidle was hoping for--not the
troops that would have been capable of stopping the killing.
In the years after Steidle first saw those photos, peacekeepers
would gradually trickle into Darfur under different mandates--first
African Union troops, then United Nations forces. But their ranks
have yet to grow beyond a paltry 9,000, and they have made little
progress in stopping the destruction, let alone in reversing it by
allowing millions of displaced Darfuris to begin returning to the
land that was stolen from them almost overnight. While the killing
and the ethnic cleansing no longer take place at the feverish pace
at which they once did, the genocide continues to this day. The
Sudanese military periodically bombs towns belonging to non-Arab
tribes, forcing villagers to flee. The Janjaweed--Arab militias
unleashed by the government to terrorize civilians--have not been
disarmed, and they continue to rape and to kill. In the camps to
which they are confined, the displaced still die of malnutrition
and disease.
All the information--the dispatches, the websites, the columns, the
books, the films--have not roused anybody with the power to stop
this tragedy actually to stop it. In the documentary movie that he
made to go along with The Devil Came on Horseback--which is the
best written of the Darfur memoirs and the most politically
astute--Steidle comes to grips with this crushing fact: "I honestly
thought, as I wrote in an email home, that if the people of America
could see what I've seen, there'd be troops here in one week....
Man, I am so naive. Because that's not true at all. They've seen it
now. And we've still done nothing."
Steidle's role in Darfur as an unarmed "observer" was in many ways a
perfect metaphor for the world's response. As he reports in his
memoir, after he saw the pictures of the murdered schoolgirls, he
requested a transfer from southern Sudan to Darfur, where he worked
for the African Union during some of the worst months of the
killing. His job was to monitor violations of one of the bogus
cease-fires that the Sudanese government signed during the early
days of the conflict--cease-fires that the government had no
intention of honoring, but that provided an effective diplomatic
cover under which the work of ethnic cleansing could continue.
After a village had been attacked, almost always by the government
or the Janjaweed, Steidle and his team would investigate,
interviewing victims and photographing the destruction. With the
information they gathered, they would write reports, which were
sent to African Union headquarters in Ethiopia and then to the
countries that were funding the observer mission. Their role was
only to document, never to protect.
Toward the end of his tenure in Darfur, Steidle speaks to a
Janjaweed commander who alleges that rebels have kidnapped members
of his tribe and stolen cattle, taking them to non-Arab villages:
"He announced that he would attack each village, kill all
inhabitants, and burn the towns to the ground." After consulting
maps, Steidle concludes that a village called Hamada will be first.
He reports this prediction to his team's commander, a callous
African Union official known as Colonel Mohammed, who brushes the
warning aside. One week later, Steidle's colleagues return from a
patrol looking "aghast." "A massacre had taken place at Hamada,"
Steidle writes. "Of the 450 villagers, 107 had been brutally
tortured and murdered. Bodies were strewn along blood-soaked
village paths. Infants had been crushed. Toddlers had their faces
smashed in with rifle butts, their bodies tossed into the dirt.
Deep gashes in a bloody tire bore witness to its use as a chopping
block; beside it was an axe."
Steidle had known the killing was coming. Indeed, the person who
perpetrated the killing had told Steidle exactly what he was going
to do. Yet all Steidle could do was observe. On another occasion he
finds himself circling a burning village in a helicopter when, from
the sky, he spots two vehicles speeding away with loot. "If we had
a mandate to defend these people, and if I was looking through a
scope instead of looking through the lens of my camera, these
vehicles would be done," he says. "These people could return to
their village, and they'd be safe. Well, I was taking pictures."
Like Brian Steidle, we are all observers now. For more than four
years, we have known exactly what is going on in western Sudan, yet
we have failed to halt (or even to impede) it. To be sure, Darfur
is not the only man-made disaster that has unfolded in the world in
recent years; far from it. In North Korea, Burma, and Zimbabwe,
populations are also suffering the effects of political cruelty.
What has taken place in Darfur may or may not be judged "worse"
than such extreme repression--who could really judge whether Kim
Jong Il is a crueler man than Omar Bashir?--but it is certainly
different. Liberation is possible for victims of political
repression, but the dead cannot be liberated. Tyranny is an
outrage, but genocide is an outrage and an emergency.
And so Darfur merited a different response than other contemporary
tragedies, a swift and effective response that we did not deliver.
The genocide may not be over, but the verdict on the world's
reaction is in: we have failed. We have been hypocrites and we have
failed. How could this have happened? How could we have known so
much and done so little? The story of how we acquiesced in the
destruction of Darfur is not a simple one. But from the burgeoning
literature on the subject, it is possible to begin piecing together
some explanations.
II.
For centuries the Fur were the most powerful group in Darfur, ruling
the area through a dynasty of sultans that arose in the 1600s. The
word "Dar" means homeland, so "Darfur" literally means "homeland of
the Fur," although the area we today call Darfur has long been home
to numerous tribes. Besides the Fur, the largest non-Arab (or
African) groups are the Masalit and the Zaghawa; others include the
Tunjur and the Daju. Darfur is home to numerous Arab tribes as
well, including the Rizayqat, Habbaniyya, Ta'aisha, Bani Halba,
Misiriyya, and Ma'alia. The divisions between African and Arab are
not as clear-cut as one might imagine. For one thing, all Darfuris
are Muslim. (Their brand of Islam draws substantially on local
traditions and has historically been more liberal than versions
practiced throughout much of the Middle East. In an essay included
in the volume War in Darfur and the Search for Peace, edited by
Alex de Waal, Ahmed Kamal El-Din calls it "a Sufi, tranquil,
tolerant, and consequently popular Islam.") For another thing,
intermarriage between the groups has blurred the ethnic
distinctions over generations, and, at least to Western eyes, the
Africans and Arabs of Darfur look similar.
In general, the African tribes are sedentary farmers, while the Arab
tribes are nomadic herders, but this is not true across the board.
The Zaghawa, for instance, are both Africans and herders. Moreover,
while the violence of the past five years has generally consisted
of Arab groups targeting African groups, the contours of the
fighting have not always been so straightforward. Some Arab groups
have stayed out of the conflict altogether. Meanwhile, the African
groups have sometimes managed to unite in resisting the onslaught
but have sometimes fought among themselves.
The genocide is partly a conflict among ethnic groups within Darfur
for land. But, as Alex de Waal argues in the opening essay of War
in Darfur, it is best understood as a conflict between Sudan's
center and its periphery--a conflict in which the government in
Khartoum has co-opted Arab Darfuris to help defeat rebels from the
African population. "The hyper-dominance of the national capital is
the single most important reality in Sudan today," de Waal
observes.
The awkward co-existence between Darfur in the west and Khartoum in
the east has deep historical roots. As with so many countries in
Africa, Sudan's unwieldy borders were created at the whim of
outside powers, and the historical justifications for Darfur's
inclusion in Sudan are weak to say the least. Darfur was an
independent entity until 1874, when an Arab slave trader named Al
Zubayr Rahma Mansur amassed an army and set out to conquer the Fur
sultanate. He succeeded, but not for long: sensing an opportunity
to expand their reach, Egypt and the Turks, who had already
conquered other parts of Sudan in 1821, moved westward into the
region. In 1885, a charismatic Sudanese holy man known as the Mahdi
evicted the Egyptians and Turks from Sudan. In 1898, his successor
was in turn evicted by the British, who now assumed control of
Khartoum. In the chaos that attended the British takeover, Ali
Dinar, heir to the Fur sultanate, seized power in Darfur and
reached a deal with the British under which Darfur would be
independent once again.
That was how things remained until the outbreak of World War I, when
England began to worry that Darfur, a Muslim state, might be
inclined to support the Ottomans in the war. And so, according to
the historian M.W. Daly, the British authorities in Khartoum
resorted to a strategy for pursuing their interests in western
Sudan that will sound quite familiar to us nearly a century later:
they "began secretly to arm the Arab tribes of Darfur" against the
Fur rule of Ali Dinar. In 1916, the British deposed Ali Dinar and
made Darfur part of Sudan for good.
For the next forty years, the British and the Egyptians would share
sovereignty over Sudan, though it was the British who held the true
levers of power. For Darfur, this period was characterized by
intentional neglect: the region remained poor and underdeveloped,
even as the center of the country lurched fitfully toward the
modern world. The colonial period in Darfur is chronicled in
impressive detail in Daly's book, which is far and away the best of
the historical works. His chapter on the colonial neglect of Darfur
is full of telling quotations from British officials--like the one
who, in arguing against expanding educational opportunities for
Darfuri children, cautioned against developing a local elementary
school "into something ... more than the district needed or
deserved." By the time Sudan declared independence in 1956, Darfur
lagged so far behind the country's center--in education,
infrastructure, and wealth--that it might as well have been a
separate nation.
And Sudan's new leaders had no intention of helping it catch up.
Through decades' worth of twists and turns in Sudanese politics--a
democratic government, followed by a military regime, followed by
another democratic government, followed by another military regime,
followed by a third democratic interlude that ended in 1989 with
the rise of the National Islamic Front, the odious party that rules
Sudan to this day--Khartoum's basic approach to governing Darfur
was not so dissimilar from that of the British. Daly calls it
"internal colonialism." Whatever it was, it ensured that Darfur
remained underdeveloped and neglected, even when, as during periods
of crushing famine in the 1970s and 1980s, the region desperately
needed help from the government that was, in theory, responsible
for it.
The ethnic makeup of Darfur and the historical tension between the
center of Sudan and the outlying west are the two most obvious
roots of the genocide--but they are just the beginning of the
story. The third factor arrived on the scene in 1969, in the figure
of a young Libyan colonel named Muammar Qaddafi. Today Qaddafi is
largely viewed in the West as something of an irrelevant eccentric,
popping up occasionally from his desert kingdom to issue odd
pronouncements on geopolitics but more or less leaving the rest of
the world alone. It is easy to forget the zeal with which the wild
young radical set about destabilizing and terrorizing Africa during
his first decades in power. Indeed, the portrait of Qaddafi that
emerges from J. Millard Burr and Robert O. Collins's book (a
detailed and dry account of the Chad-Libya relationship and its
impact on Darfur) is that of a man who was in some way addicted to
violence and intrigue.
Although Qaddafi claimed to be an opponent of imperialism, he was in
fact Africa's foremost imperialist. As Burr and Collins write, his
political philosophy resembled nothing so much as Mussolini's: a
desire for the grandeur of empire combined with a belief that his
own race was destined to rule over others. In his quest for empire,
Qaddafi was constantly proposing "unions" with other countries, and
constantly being disappointed when his offers were resisted.
Immediately after taking power, Qaddafi surprised Nasser in Egypt
with a request for union between the two nations, and he would later
demand union with Sudan as well. But for twenty-five years his
designs would focus mainly on Chad.
Chad, like Sudan, straddles the border between sub-Saharan Africa
and the Middle East, with a population made up of both African and
Arab tribes. When Qaddafi came to power, Chad was ruled by Francois
Tombalbaye, a Christian African from the south. This was
unacceptable to Qaddafi, so he began funding the National
Liberation Front of Chad (better known by its French acronym,
FROLINAT), the northern Chadian rebels who were seeking to overthrow
Tombalbaye. He also seized a piece of land in Chad called the Aozou
Strip, claiming that it was historically part of Libya. As Chadian
leaders came and went, as rebel leaders fell and rose, as ethnic
alliances among Chad's rebel groups shifted, Qaddafi continued to
seek control of the country to his south. In late 1980, he and his
Chadian proxy forces succeeded in toppling Chad's government,
leading the Libyan leader to declare the "complete unity" of the
two countries. But this union was short-lived, as Chad's deposed
president, Hissene Habre, soon regrouped and took back the capital.
For a time, Libya controlled the northern half of the country and
Habre ruled the southern half--the two parties separated by French
troops. It was not until 1994 that Qaddafi, exhausted by decades of
war, would finally leave Chad for good.
What did all this have to do with Darfur? First, there were the
weapons. Throughout his long war with Chad, Qaddafi used Darfur as
a base, sometimes with the acquiescence of Sudanese leaders. "The
influx of arms into Darfur," write Burr and Collins, "was the most
criminal act by Qaddafi in the thirty years' war for Chad." Second,
there was the ideology. Qaddafi's brand of Arab supremacism
trickled into Darfur along with his guns. Libya backed the
formation of a Darfur-based group known as the Arab Gathering, an
alliance of leaders that sought to promote the interests of Arab
tribes. As Arab groups organized and armed, so did the Fur and
Zaghawa. Small-scale wars began to break out among various groups.
Suddenly the inhabitants of Darfur were more inclined than ever to
conceive of their identities in starkly racial terms. And thanks in
part to Qaddafi's long war in Chad, they had the weapons to act on
their grievances.
Into this volatile situation, in 1989, stepped the National Islamic
Front. Led by General Omar Bashir, the NIF overthrew the
democratically elected government of Sadiq Al Mahdi and assumed
power in Sudan. Though the NIF was not the first military
government in Sudan's history, it represented a clear break with
what had come before. As Burr and Collins explain, "Bashir imposed
the most implacable authoritarian government in the history of the
Sudan, ancient or modern, to the astonishment if not disbelief of
the Sudanese." Daly describes the NIF as "totalitarian," and this
is not a stretch. Ideologically, the NIF was a toxic brew of some
of the worst traditions to come out of the Middle East and Africa
over the previous half-century: it combined the austere devotion to
radical Islam of the Saudi monarchs, the Arab supremacism of
Qaddafi, and the cold pragmatism of the postcolonial African
dictator whose main objective is to cling to power at all costs.
As tribal conflict mounted in Darfur--in addition to Qaddafi's
weapons, environmental factors were exacerbating tensions, as
drought and famine drove large numbers of Arabs and Zaghawa from
Chad into Sudan, changing Darfur's ethnic balance at a time when
the total amount of arable land was diminishing due to
desertification--the NIF supported the Arab militias. It also
reorganized the governance of Darfur, dividing the region into new
districts in order to reduce the numerical dominance of the Fur.
But even as the NIF introduced new problems into western Sudan, it
maintained faith with at least one venerable Sudanese tradition: it
kept Darfur, as a whole, underdeveloped and poor.
The deteriorating situation in Darfur in the 1990s did not elicit
much notice from the world, in part because the news out of Sudan
tended to focus on the civil war in the country's south. Unlike the
conflict in Darfur, this war had religious dimensions--southern
Sudanese, in contrast to Darfuris, are Christians and animists--but
many of the dynamics that would characterize the Darfur genocide
were in play here as well: Arabs fighting Africans; the central
government using violence to maintain control of a poor, peripheral
region with only tenuous historical links to the rest of the
country; the arming by Khartoum of proxy forces with links to other
countries in order to terrorize Sudanese civilians (in this case,
the Lord's Resistance Army, a sadistic cult of Ugandans known for
brainwashing children and amputating their victims' limbs). As
would be the case in Darfur, the utter ruthlessness of the NIF--
extreme even by the standards of third-world dictatorships--was on
full display. For instance, the NIF denied food aid to civilians
believed to be sympathetic to the rebels, resulting in upward of
500,000 deaths. (The depredations of this era are summarized in Not
on Our Watch, the peculiar book by Don Cheadle and John
Prendergast. If you can get past the sections written in Cheadle's
exceedingly bizarre and offensively digressive voice, the book
contains some useful historical information.)
John Garang, the leader of the southern rebels, was no angel, and he
was certainly responsible for his share of abuses. But Garang did
represent a population with legitimate grievances. And the NIF
chose to fight Garang essentially by committing genocide against
the civilian population from which his soldiers came. The moral
difference between Garang and the NIF was significant. This was a
government that had no compunction about killing massive numbers of
its own citizens. In the end, some two million people died in the
south before the Bush administration--under pressure from American
evangelicals, who had taken an interest in the plight of their
fellow Christians in southern Sudan--finally helped to broker a
peace deal, which, after more than two years of negotiations, was
signed in early 2005.
It was around the time these negotiations started that Darfuri
rebels took up arms. The timing was not a coincidence. Darfuris
were worried that they would be further marginalized in the new
Sudan that would emerge from an agreement between the south and the
north. The south had fought for a stake in Sudan, for the right to
be treated as more than an impoverished peripheral outpost,
subservient to the central government. Darfuris had similar
anxieties, and similar hopes. In April 2003, two groups made up of
Fur, Zaghawa, and Masalit--the Sudan Liberation Army and the
Justice and Equality Movement-- launched a successful attack on a
military airfield in the region. The Darfur rebellion was under
way.
Khartoum was caught by surprise, but by July of that year it had
formulated a response. It would do what it had done in the south:
crush the rebels by exterminating, or at least displacing, the
African tribal groups from which the resistance had sprouted. To
help accomplish this task, Khartoum turned to its longtime allies,
the Arab tribes of Darfur. The historical competition for land
between ethnic groups, now exacerbated by environmental factors;
the longstanding tensions between the center of Sudan and its
western edge; the infusion of weapons and Arab supremacism from
Qaddafi in the north; the brutality of the men who ran the NIF to
the east; the impending arrival of a peace deal in the south--all
these factors had brought the African tribes of Darfur to a
terrible moment in their history. And so the descent into genocide
began.
III.
The Darfur literature chronicles what happened next in two separate
genres. The memoirs (as well as many of the documentaries) tell the
awful story of what transpired on the ground--the individual tales
of torture, rape, and brutality-- while other books focus on the
developments (or lack thereof) in Washington, at the United
Nations, and in Khartoum. To read these accounts in tandem is a
maddening experience, since they cover the same time periods but
seem to take place in parallel worlds. In one world, those on the
ground in Darfur witness unimaginable and systematic cruelties on a
daily basis--crimes that call out for a strong and speedy response.
In the other world, international leaders conduct peace talks, urge
patience, contemplate sanctions, and wrangle with one another at
the United Nations--actions that would never even come close to
stopping the killing.
Other than Steidle's, the most powerful of the Darfur memoirs
belongs to Daoud Hari, a survivor of the genocide. His story could
scarcely be more harrowing. A Zaghawa raised in a North Darfur
village, he is sent by his family to school in El Fasher, the
region's largest city. There he learns English, reads Western
literature, and develops an interest in the wider world. Next he
immigrates to Libya; then, in pursuit of higher wages, he moves to
Egypt; then he is caught trying to sneak into Israel, where he had
hoped to find still better pay. He is extradited to prison in Egypt
and eventually released to Chad. From there he heads back into
Darfur to reunite with his family.
By this time, however, the genocide is under way, and as Hari
travels home, he watches the disaster unfold. In one village, he
learns that "junked appliances and other scrap metal had been
packed around the huge bombs dropped by the Sudanese government,
creating a million flying daggers with each explosion.... Most of
those killed by the bombs were buried in several pieces." In
another town, he notes that the residents' water sources have been
bombed. Watching the young men of this village join up with the
rebels, Hari observes that "no one in the boys' families would try
to stop them. It was as if everybody had accepted that we were all
going to die, and it was for each to decide how they wanted to go."
He finally arrives in his own village just as it is about to be
destroyed by the Sudanese Army and the Janjaweed in an assault that
kills his older brother. Hari flees toward Chad with the survivors.
Along the way he meets residents of other villages who are doing
the same, all with their own horrible stories. He learns of a woman
who has hanged herself from a tree after being raped by the
Janjaweed. When Hari finds her, "two of her three children were
dead. The third child died in our arms."
In Chad, Hari uses his command of English to work with NGOs and
international officials. He sees more suffering and hears more
stories: "So many villages were caught completely by surprise:
surrounded, burned alive, massacred from helicopters above and
Janjaweed below, with only a few escaping, or a few coming from
other villages to find everyone dead and the bodies burned in
heartbreaking positions; mothers died trying to protect their
children and husbands died trying to protect their wives." The
suffering is monumental in scale and excruciating in the
particulars. Hari talks to a man whose four-year- old daughter was
speared in the stomach by a Janjaweed fighter's bayonet. The
soldier then lifted her dying body--still alive and bleeding--into
the air and danced underneath it in celebration. The father, tied
to a nearby tree, watched the entire episode. "It took a long time
for her to die," the man tells Hari, "her blood coming down so
fresh and red on this--what was he? a man? a devil? He was painted
red with my little girl's blood and he was dancing. What was he?"
Next Hari begins serving as a translator for journalists, leading
them in and out of Darfur. In one town he learns that "villagers
escaping up a hillside were machine-gunned from helicopters" and
sees "the hill still littered with at least thirty-five
bodies--many of them children." Later, while translating for BBC
reporters, he comes across a forested area on the outskirts of a
village. "We walked through a strange world of occasionally falling
human limbs and heads," he recalls. "A leg fell near me. A head
thumped to the ground farther away." And then: "eighty-one men and
boys fallen across one another, hacked and stabbed to death in that
same attack." Hari's career as a translator ends when, during one
of his forays into Darfur, he is captured by a rebel group aligned
with the government. Turned over to the Sudanese military, he is
tortured and then put on trial, before Governor Bill Richardson of
New Mexico--the home state of the National Geographic reporter with
whom Hari had been traveling-- arrives in Darfur to negotiate their
freedom.
The other on-the-ground chronicles--Heart of Darfur and Darfur
Diaries--are neither as well-written as Steidle's nor as gripping
as Hari's. Still, the stories they relate add to the historical
record. Heart of Darfur is written by a Doctors Without Borders
nurse from New Zealand who traveled to Darfur in 2005 and 2006.
Unlike the other writers, who are more interested in the politics
of the situation, Lisa French Blaker writes from an almost
exclusively humanitarian perspective: her role in Darfur was to
save lives, not to reach political conclusions, and her book
focuses on recounting tales of human suffering, not analyzing the
causes of that suffering. "The politics of war are complicated, too
complicated for a nurse like me," she demurs.
And yet Blaker's perspective as a nurse makes her story a useful
historical document. Unlike many journalists and activists who were
able to travel only in rebel-held territory, Blaker, because she
worked for a humanitarian organization, went everywhere. And the
differences between her descriptions of rebel territory and
government territory are stark. In rebel territory, humanitarian
workers generally seem welcome, whereas the government goes out of
its way to obstruct medical workers operating in its territory,
setting arbitrary limits on the amount of work they are able to do
in vulnerable areas.
Blaker and her team make several visits to a town called El Wadi,
which had been attacked by the Sudanese Liberation Army but was
still held by the government. "The Zaghawa tribe, among others,
were being treated badly and threatened because of their presumed
support of the SLA attack," she writes. "But there were no
outsiders to see what unfolded." Their trips to El Wadi require
approval from a Sudanese military official named "Commander Ali,"
who allows them into town for short periods but seems bent on
hampering their work by intimidating patients and limiting the
lengths of their visits. ("I know who you are and we do not need
your services," the commander initially tells the group. But "Steve
negotiated and the commander gave a little.... We could have two
hours to look at the sickest patients. Two hours in a village of
20,000 people, and again I was the only medical person.") On
Blaker's final visit to El Wadi, Commander Ali abruptly evicts the
team after learning that Blaker has treated two young children for
gunshot wounds. He had forbidden the team to treat anyone with
gunshot wounds, presumably because he regarded them as rebels-
-never mind that Blaker's patients were a seven-year-old boy and his
little sister. Both had been shot in the legs by soldiers who were
firing guns into homes in the hope of nabbing rebels.
Although Blaker does not say so, anecdotes like these make her book
probably the most damning account to date of what many observers
have termed "genocide by attrition"--the Sudanese government's
policy of killing off African tribes not by marching them into gas
chambers, but by disrupting their livelihoods and then
systematically denying them access to the medical and humanitarian
help they need to survive. What other explanation could there be
for a commander enraged by the prospect of a seven-year-old boy and
his little sister being treated for gunshot wounds?
The authors of Darfur Diaries-- three young human rights activists--
snuck into Darfur in November 2004 and toured a number of villages.
They, too, add to the historical record with their stories of
savagery--again, almost all at the hands of the government or the
Janjaweed. After a while, reading all these books together, the
tales become strikingly repetitive. Over and over, villages are
bombed by government planes and swarmed by Janjaweed fighters; women
are raped; survivors flee toward camps, with many dying along the
way. These similarities point to something significant: they
suggest the systematic nature of what has occurred in Darfur over
the past several years. Taken together, the books show why the
Darfur tragedy cannot be dismissed as just a series of bad things.
At a certain point, the mountain of nearly identical anecdotes
contained in the Darfur literature (not to mention the reports of
human rights organizations and the dispatches of wire services)
pile so high that they leave the realm of the anecdotal and become
something more--a record of murderous collective malice that has to
be regarded as greater, and more pre-meditated, than the sum of its
individual parts.
Radical evil has become commonplace in Darfur. It is impossible to
reach any other conclusion. There are simply too many
government-sponsored men who show up in these narratives solely for
the purpose of committing almost incomprehensible acts of cruelty.
The sadism knows no bounds. Heart of Darfur describes the fate of a
nineteen-year-old pregnant woman named Miriam whose husband had
been killed six months before. One afternoon Janjaweed entered her
home, and one of them tapped her pregnant belly. "What have you got
in there?" he asked. "I think she's got money inside," said
another. And so they "beat her with their guns, pushed her to the
ground and kicked, punched and whipped her. They laughed as she
rolled, made bets as they joked who would get the money, wondering
how much she had inside. When they tired of their game some time
later her baby was dead and Miriam went into labour."
Stories such as this one should disgust us, and they do. But one
effect of the extraordinary amount of knowledge we have about
Darfur is that these stories eventually run together and gradually
lose their power to shock. Horrors become tropes; repetition
eventually numbs the moral imagination. Consider how the sheik of
the town of Shegeg Karo, interviewed in a typical passage in Darfur
Diaries, explains what happened to his village: "The government
came first, shooting and bombing. The people ran away to the
mountains to hide. The janjaweed came after to finish. There has
been nobody to protect us but Allah." If that is the first
description you have heard of the destruction in Darfur, it sounds
alarming. After four books of similar anecdotes--many of them far
more gruesome--the tale of the sheik of Shegeg Karo starts to sound
downright prosaic. It is a terrible thing to admit, but the more
information we consume about Darfur, the less shocking each piece of
new information seems. And surely that is a part of the problem.
Ignorance is not the only ally of indifference; sometimes
knowledge, too, blunts the heart and the will.
IV.
While all this was happening in Darfur, a parallel story was
unfolding on the world stage. The most complete moment-by-moment
account of the geopolitics surrounding the genocide is provided by
Eric Reeves, an English professor turned Darfur activist who has
published regular columns about Sudan on his website for years.
Recently he collected many of these writings in A Long Day's Dying:
Critical Moments in the Darfur Genocide. (Reeves has written often
for this magazine in recent years, and I have usually been his
editor.) His book begins in late 2003 and proceeds more or less
chronologically. Reeves never travels to Darfur to witness the
genocide first-hand, but his book is a testament to the value of
obsessively reading wire services and human rights reports that
everyone else ignores. In December 2003, more than a month before
The New York Times first mentioned the mounting catastrophe and many
months before it would dawn on Americans that a genocide was under
way, he cited a dispatch from the U.N. wire service IRIN, which
relayed the following quote from a tribal leader: "I believe this
is an elimination of the black race."
Reeves writes in a sustained rage, hurling invective at anyone and
everyone who might act to rescue Darfur but does not do so. The
titles of his columns say it all: "June 1, 2004--Acquiescing Before
Unambiguous Genocide in Darfur: The United Nations, Europe, Canada,
the Arab League, the African Union"; "July 1, 2004--Annan and
Powell Visit Sudan-- Mortality Figures Rise--No Sense of Urgency";
"December 6, 2004--Genocide in Darfur--No Humanitarian
Intervention-- Equivocation--Avoidance of Moral Responsibility."
You get the idea. The columns are extremely repetitive, but that is
precisely the point: again and again Reeves argues for the powers
to send a substantial number of troops to Darfur; again and again,
the powers opt for lesser measures. He repeats his arguments, they
repeat what they do (or don't do), and the hell continues.
Reeves was not the only writer to narrate the international
community's failed efforts to stop the genocide. A number of essays
in War in Darfur do the same; and Jan Egeland, the former U.N.
undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, devotes a chapter
of his new memoir (a fairly flat chronicle of his years in
international politics) to his coordination of relief efforts in
Darfur--efforts that the Sudanese government, acting on its policy
of genocide by attrition, often obstructed. Reading this material
with the benefit of hindsight, a number of themes emerge. The first
is the grossly inadequate nature of the responses contemplated by
the international community at nearly every step along the way. In
June 2004, for instance, after the genocide had been going on for
almost a year, and at which point the death toll may already have
reached 100,000, Reeves noted that Hilary Benn, Britain's
international development secretary, had come out against
humanitarian intervention. "I do not think it is a helpful
suggestion," he said. "I think we should let the monitors do their
work. I think they will make a difference." As Reeves points out,
Benn was talking about ten African Union monitors who were being
sent to Darfur. Ten monitors in response to the deaths of 100,000
people!
Three weeks later, Reeves cites an Associated Press report
paraphrasing Colin Powell: "As a stick, Powell warned that the
United States might take the issue to the UN Security Council if
Sudan ignored the problem. He believes that got Bashir's attention
because no government wants the stigma of Security Council
sanctions." That was our idea of a stick capable of stopping the
carnage: to threaten to report the murderer to the United Nations,
where he might be hit with sanctions. In retrospect, this seems
delusional. Around the same time, as Reeves notes, the United
States ludicrously proposed placing an international travel ban on
Janjaweed leaders--as if such a threat might really cause those
bent on raping and looting to reconsider. All the while, as they
settled for half-measures, international leaders counseled patience.
Reeves notes that Robert Zoellick, Bush's deputy secretary of
state, urged patience with the African Union while testifying
before Congress in June 2005. Later that year, Assistant Secretary
of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer would tell a reporter
that ending the genocide "is a long process."
The second theme is the international community's persistent faith
that negotiations between the rebels and the government would
somehow stop the killing. In fact, they probably ended up enabling
it. War in Darfur contains several essays on the political
negotiations that resulted in the signing of the Darfur Peace
Agreement in May 2006. The first cease-fire agreement between the
government and rebels came in September 2003. That cease-fire was
extended in November 2003. Another cease-fire was signed in April
2004. Peace talks were held in July 2004. The peace talks continued
in August 2004. Another round began in October 2004. The parties
convened again in December 2004. In June 2005, the parties
negotiated more. And again in September 2005. And again in late
November, with this final round lasting five long months until early
May 2006, when a deal was finally inked--a deal that did not end
the genocide at all.
All told, the parties held seven rounds of peace talks over nearly
two years, straight through some of the worst days of the genocide.
Think of it this way: while the NIF was burning towns, raping huge
numbers of women, and forcing Darfur's African tribes into camps,
it was also sitting at a negotiating table and stalling for
time--and being indulged in this farce by international mediators.
Many of the authors in War in Darfur seem oblivious to how absurd
this looks in retrospect. Dawit Toga, a member of the African Union
team that mediated the talks, writes with a straight face that
"although the parties were unable to agree on an agenda and on a
concrete framework on how to proceed, the Addis Ababa meeting
sensitized the mediators and allowed them to better understand the
issues at stake." The negotiations to which Toga is referring took
place in July 2004--the same month that Brian Steidle saw the
pictures of the schoolgirls who had been burned alive.
The work of diplomats certainly has its place in international
politics; but how could mere mediators, no matter how "sensitized,"
ever deliver peace when one of the negotiating parties was in the
process of carrying out mass murder? A part of the problem with
negotiating an end to genocide is that negotiations depend on the
good faith of the participants. The parties cannot be liars, or
people for whom a signature on a paper is just a tactical move. But
throughout the Darfur conflict, the NIF has demonstrated a contempt
for truth that, even by the standards of authoritarian propaganda,
must count as brazen. (To this day, the government claims that only
10,000 people have died in Darfur. Estimates by reliable sources
differ, but most news organizations put the number between 200,000
and 400,000.)
In the end, the Darfur Peace Agreement signed in May 2006 was
stillborn, because it was signed by only one of the rebel factions.
(The JEM did not sign, and by this point the SLA had split into two
factions, only one of which signed. ) But even if all the parties
had accepted the agreement, is it really conceivable that the NIF
would have stopped the killing, disarmed the Janjaweed, and allowed
the millions of displaced people to go home? The NIF had spent the
past several years killing hundreds of thousands of its own people
while technically observing cease-fires. Who in their right mind
would trust such a government to implement a peace agreement?
Eventually it did seem to dawn on the international community that
only troops--and not peace negotiations--were going to stop the
killing. And that led to the final misstep: the decision to work
with the United Nations to get troops into Darfur. The United
Nations plays many useful roles in the world; indeed, as Egeland
argues in his memoir, it has often played a useful humanitarian
role in Darfur itself, helping to coordinate the delivery of food,
medicine, and water and thereby keeping millions alive in the camps.
But while the United Nations was a perfectly good vehicle for
delivering aid, it proved to be a terrible vehicle for delivering
troops.
The first troops to go into Darfur were soldiers of the African
Union. They were overmatched from the start. While their ranks
eventually grew to 7,000, they never came close to controlling
catastrophe. Indeed, their mandate explicitly prevented them from
doing so. They were allowed only to observe the violence, not to
stop it. "You are witnessing what happens, but you aren't helping,"
one Darfuri told a contingent of A.U. troops in October 2006,
according to the Associated Press. This was a pretty fair summary of
the A.U.'s role.
One sequence in Heart of Darfur revolves around a compound that the
African Union set up on the edge of a village called Saleem. With
Janjaweed intimidating the local population in town, many non-Arabs
decided they had to leave. Some fled toward rebel-held territory,
but others decided to set up an impromptu camp in what Blaker
describes as "the barbed wire wasteland that circled the African
Union's compound." Outside the compound, they hoped they would be
safe. The problem was, they needed water. And the African Union at
first refused to share its water, wanting the people to go away.
Eventually Doctors Without Borders convinced the A.U. to start
regularly filling two barrels of water for the civilians. Sometimes
the A.U. followed through on its promise to supply the water;
sometimes, in a bid to get the displaced to return to their
homes--homes where they would likely be killed or raped--the A.U.
withheld it. Predictably enough, disease and dehydration spread in
the makeshift camp outside the compound, allowing the genocide to
run its course.
None of this should have happened. A proper protection force would
have gone into the town and evicted the Janjaweed. But the A.U. was
not much of a protection force. By the middle of 2005, it was clear
that the A.U. had to be replaced. When the Bush administration
decided to work through the United Nations to make that happen,
however, problems began to crop up. The name of the biggest problem
was China. Since China, which purchases Sudanese oil and sells the
country weapons, holds a veto on the Security Council, there was
never a chance that the United Nations would authorize a
non-consensual deployment of troops. This meant that no troops
would enter Darfur without Khartoum's approval. And just like that,
the international community found that it had essentially given
those committing the genocide veto power over whether and when
forces would be deployed to stop them.
Not surprisingly, Khartoum delayed and wrangled for two long years.
It was January 2008 before U.N. troops-- technically it was a
U.N.-A.U. hybrid force-- took over peacekeeping duties in Darfur.
It is difficult to know exactly how many people died in the time
between when the United States resolved to dispatch a U.N. force
and when the deployment finally happened, but the number is
undoubtedly substantial. Moreover, the U.N. force has not exactly
stopped the killing. For one thing, it can do nothing to prevent
the Sudanese Air Force from bombing villages, which Khartoum has
done several times since the United Nations hit the ground. For
another, seven months into the mission, only 9,000 of the promised
26,000 troops have deployed. This is nowhere near the manpower that
is necessary to provide the security that would allow Darfuris to
begin their return home. And so they remain huddled in camps,
waiting for help that is probably never going to come.
What should we have done instead? There were drawbacks to every
available option; but given that only international troops could
provide the security Darfuris needed (and still need), and given
that the United Nations has for many reasons proved a disastrous
vehicle for supplying those troops, it seems clear in retrospect
that a NATO coalition--acting, as it did in Kosovo, without
authorization from either the United Nations or the killers
themselves--would have had the best chance of ending the genocide
in a reasonable timeframe. The Bush administration's hesitation to
assemble a NATO coalition and enter Darfur without permission from
Khartoum was somewhat understandable, given what was taking place
in Iraq. When the final history of Darfur is written, Iraq will
surely be judged to have been a central factor mitigating against
action in Sudan. But let us not make too much of this dark irony.
Would we have acted in Darfur if there had been no war in Iraq?
Somehow I doubt it.
It is true that the American military was stretched thin in
Afghanistan and Iraq, but France and Germany have militaries
numbering in the hundreds of thousands. Other allies could have
contributed ground troops as well. At the same time, American
fighter jets might have quickly convinced Khartoum to rein in its
militias and stop bombing civilians--which was exactly what happened
in Kosovo. But we never so much as threatened to use our airpower
on behalf of Darfuris. Might this not have made a difference? Would
it not at least have been worth exploring?
And if we had sent NATO troops to Darfur, how would they have been
received? It is impossible to know for sure, but we do know that
the victims of the genocide have repeatedly begged for
international troops capable of protecting them--something U.N.
troops will almost certainly never be able to accomplish . In a
widely reported incident in 2006, displaced Darfuris gathered in a
camp and chanted, "Welcome welcome USA, welcome welcome
international force!" Some Sudanese evince a general, and
surprising, faith in America and the West-- a faith that, in the
wake of our considerable failures in Iraq, we ourselves lack. It
crops up repeatedly in the books and the documentaries.
After enduring weeks of torture at the hands of the Sudanese Army,
Daoud Hari describes his elation to see American military personnel
show up at the back of the Sudanese courtroom where he and an
American journalist are being tried for spying: "My God, you have
no idea what they looked like to us....The good America was in the
room." In All About Darfur--which is the least slick of the Darfur
movies and, in many ways, the most revealing--William Ezekiel,
editor of the dissident Khartoum Monitor, expresses hope that
Americans will somehow rescue Sudan, to which the film-maker
replies incredulously, "Are they saints--angels that come to the
rescue of the world, of the universe?" His response: "Americans?
They are not angels. But they are keen enough to save the weak from
the oppressors." In another film, Darfur Now, two rebel soldiers,
surely aware of the camera's presence, conduct the following
exchange: "Right now the black people are dying," says one. "The
white people will help us," flatly asserts the other. "We are so
happy that America is here to save us like you have done for the
people of Afghanistan and Iraq," villagers whose town has recently
been bombed by the government tell Brian Steidle in The Devil Came
on Horseback--apparently mistaking the presence of a former U.S.
soldier in Darfur for evidence that Western intervention is on the
way.
It is true that Americans are not angels; and the Darfuri villagers
who welcome Steidle seem to overstate the scale of our achievements
in Iraq and Afghanistan. Then again, if my village had just been
bombed and my children and I were facing the prospect of likely
death at the hands of marauding militias, I would not be picky
about who came to rescue me. If a superpower happened to arrive
instead of an angel, that would be just fine.
V.
The final strand of the Darfur story has very little to do with
Darfur itself, and everything to do with us. Darfur has spawned a
remarkable movement of American activists, particularly among
students and people in their twenties. This has been a wonderful
thing. The activists have kept the issue at, or near, the forefront
of political debate. They have forced numerous universities and
states to divest their holdings from companies that do business with
Sudan. They have created institutions such as the Genocide
Intervention Network-- founded by Swarthmore students and now based
in Washington--that have exhibited an admirable impatience with the
inaction of their own government. (This impatience has sometimes
led in audacious directions. At one point, the Swarthmore students
actually looked into obtaining an unmanned aerial vehicle and
deploying it to Darfur themselves. The idea of a bunch of college
students launching a rogue quasi-military operation in Darfur was
not very sound, but the spirit was right.)
Perhaps most significantly, these activists have helped to rescue
the concept of activism itself. As anyone who attended an
anti-World Bank rally in the early part of this decade can tell
you, by 2000 liberal activism had fallen into something of a
self-parodying state. The activist worldview, if such a thing could
be said to exist, was an odd melange of hostility to capitalism,
Israel, the American use of Vieques as a bombing range, and anyone
who had played a role in the jailing of Mumia Abu-Jamal. No wonder
most members of my generation kept their distance, preferring to
view activism as a relic from their parents' youth. The Darfur
activists, to their immense credit, have begun to change this. They
have made a forceful and convincing case to young people that there
are still causes worth marching for. And they have signaled that
one of those causes--an efficacious humanitarianism-- will be taken
seriously by the next generation of liberal leaders.
But no movement is perfect. Understandably consumed by the work of
trying to stop a genocide, the Save Darfur movement has not always
had time for self- criticism. It has now been five years since the
genocide began and four years since the movement started work in
earnest, and while the activists can legitimately claim many
successes, they cannot claim the one success that really matters:
stopping the killing. Of course, even an activist movement that did
everything right might not have been able to convince the Bush
administration to end the genocide. It is the American president,
not the American activists, whom history will judge most harshly.
Still, the question seems worth asking: What might this admirable
movement have done differently?
Several of the movies and books about Darfur spend considerable time
on the activists. Watching and reading, it becomes apparent that
the Darfur activists were much more comfortable with the
descriptive than with the prescriptive. That is, they were very
good at raising awareness about the genocide, but when it came to
articulating what is needed to stop a genocide, they either
faltered or coalesced around half-measures. The thesis of Don
Cheadle and John Prendergast's book is that, in a democracy, the
only way to ensure that the government will act in faraway places
such as Darfur is to build a mass constituency of voters and
activists who will demand that the government do so. This is
correct, up to a point. It is not enough for that constituency to
demand that the government act. It must be willing to demand that
the government act in ways that will actually stop the killing. It
must be willing to support the use of power. If it is not, then its
righteous efforts will have been wasted.
And much of the activism surrounding Darfur never even reached the
point of demanding half-measures; it settled instead for
consciousness-raising, for rhetoric, for the gestural culture of
protest. The cover of Cheadle and Prendergast's book advertises
that it "Includes six ways you can help today." The first way?
"Raise awareness." But awareness has already been raised, and
Bashir is unmoved. Some of these pedagogical exercises have been
more successful than others: the green "Save Darfur" banners and
bracelets have become ubiquitous, but not Cheadle's
anti-mass-murder shoes, whose soles leave an imprint on the ground
that reads "Stomp Out Genocide." ("Activism and fashion needn't be
mutually exclusive, and in fact, if sporting a phat boot with a
strong message can attract more young people and bring them into
the fray ... why not take this opportunity to create a righteous
blend? Besides, I've always rocked Timberlands and relished any
excuse to stuff another pair into my shoe-heavy closet." So style
will stop the genocide!)
Beyond the awareness-raising, things got problematic. One of the
most popular causes among Darfur activists was lobbying state
governments and universities to divest from companies doing
business with Sudan. With its echoes of the fight against apartheid
in the 1980s, this idea had understandable appeal. It was not, in
and of itself, a bad idea. But the notion that divestment alone
would play a key role in ending the killing was too optimistic. The
campaign against South African apartheid was a long-term struggle
against a political system; the campaign to save Darfur, by
contrast, is a short-term struggle against an ongoing emergency.
Sending a message to Sudan that its behavior would have long-term
economic consequences was certainly a worthwhile endeavor, but it
was no substitute for putting troops on the ground in Darfur.
Ideology and bigotry and the lust for power often inspire people to
act against their economic interests. Sand and Sorrow--the
glossiest of the Darfur movies, narrated virtuously by George
Clooney--at one point shows an activist carrying a sign that reads,
"The dollars stop the dying." History tells us that isn't true.
Another position taken by activists was to call for the perpetrators
to be brought to justice. Like divestment, this was an admirable
idea for the long run. Those who commit genocide should be
punished, and it will be a wonderful day when Omar Bashir sits in
the Hague like Slobodan Milosevic before him. But the long-term
goal of bringing the genocidaires to justice is no substitute for
the short-term work of stopping a genocide. Many seemed not to
appreciate this distinction. Darfur Now chronicles the work of Luis
Moreno Ocampo, the prosecutor at the International Criminal Court
charged with investigating crimes in Darfur. A few weeks ago,
Ocampo issued an arrest warrant for Omar Bashir. Ocampo grew up in
Argentina, and he explains that his country's "dirty war" helped to
shape his faith in the power of the law. "The top generals were
prosecuted for mass murders. And I was a deputy prosecutor, so it
was a huge challenge. And I saw how the information we provide, the
evidence we present, changed everything." The trouble with the
analogy is that when Argentina's generals went on trial, the
killing was already over. And that is when the Darfur trials should
start: when the killing is over. For now, it seems unlikely that
handing down indictments against Sudanese leaders will stop the
next village from being destroyed or the next woman from being
raped.
Genocide really is different from other foreign policy crises, in
that it will not wait. Either you stop genocide immediately or you
fail to stop it. And when it came to the question of troops, the
Darfur activists were split. Many were uncomfortable with the use
of force. Cheadle and Prendergast are candid about this: "Many of
us peace and human rights advocates are rightly reluctant about the
use of force. We need to get over it. There is such a thing as evil
in this world, and sometimes the only way to confront evil is
through the judicious use of military force." Amen, as long as
"judicious" also means effective.
Eventually the movement coalesced around the idea that U.N. troops
were the answer. In the wake of the Iraq debacle, the idea of
sending U.N. peacekeepers to Darfur represented for many activists
a sort of safe compromise--troops would be put on the ground, but
American power would not be wielded. It was military action that
they could endorse without opening a dissonance in their worldview.
Even Prendergast, one of the most hawkish Darfur activists (and one
of the smartest), endorses the U.N. option in his book as the
solution that makes the most sense. To be fair, he has also
suggested elsewhere that the United States should keep other
military options on the table; but this latter position certainly
places him outside the mainstream of the Darfur activist
community.
At least one shortcoming of the Save Darfur movement cannot really
be blamed on the movement's members. While its existence has
undoubtedly helped to focus the attention of politicians on Darfur,
it may also, in a bizarre way, have provided an excuse for these
same politicians to avoid the fundamental responsibility that
leadership entails. There is no better example than the
introduction to Cheadle and Prendergast's book, which was written by
Senators Barack Obama and Sam Brownback. "So what does it take to
stop genocide?" they write. "What does it take to make the world
listen and respond? It takes a number of important tools, including
diplomacy, financial resources, and effective security forces. And
in a world where these resources are finite, it often takes
pressure--pressure from ordinary individuals standing together for
an extraordinary cause--to mobilize these resources. In short, it
takes you." Get it? Obama and Brownback are urging us to urge them
to stop the genocide. And Obama repeats this weird formula in the
movie version of The Devil Came on Horseback, remarking that "we
need greater pressure from the American public to tell their
senators this is something we are paying attention to, and we want
you to prioritize it."
The circular nature of this logic is maddening, especially coming
from Obama, who may soon be the most powerful man in the world.
Such logic misunderstands the way a representative democracy works.
The line that connects people to politicians is not a one-way
street. In a democracy, leaders must be responsive to people's
views--but people's views are also shaped by their leaders. The
failure of leaders to act cannot be explained by the failure of the
public to demand, or to demand more loudly, that they act, unless
of course the leaders wish to be regarded merely as followers.
Politicians have an obligation to do more than urge us to urge them
to formulate solutions to problems, particularly when the problem
is an emergency that requires swift action. Genocide will not be
stopped by an ideas festival, in or out of government.
The Save Darfur movement, with its noble emphasis on the ability of
average people to make a difference, has created a somewhat
exaggerated sense that ultimate responsibility for preventing
genocide lies with voters. In doing so, it may have given some of
our leaders an excuse not to lead. This same flawed logic was on
display in 2005, during some of the worst days of the genocide,
when Congress authorized a National Weekend of Prayer and Reflection
for Darfur. There is nothing wrong with praying for Darfur; but
when we reach the point where our leaders are asking us to pray for
them to act, something has gone very wrong.
VI.
The successes and the failures of the Save Darfur movement offer
some clues to the central mystery of the shameful response to the
Darfur genocide: how we could have known so much and done so
little. But there may be another element in the explanation, and it
has to do with the consequences of complexity. The more we learn
about Darfur, the more complicated the situation seems. The one-
sentence summary of the genocide that we first heard back in
2004--Arab tribes backed by the Sudanese government are trying to
exterminate African ones-- sounded straightforward enough, morally
and strategically. Morally, it read like a simple narrative of
victims and oppressors. And strategically, the simple version of
the Darfur genocide made it appear to be a problem we could easily
handle. While deploying troops to a conflict zone is never a simple
matter, surely NATO, with its sophisticated weaponry, was up to the
task of stopping men on horses and camels from attacking villages.
But then we started to learn more, and the situation began to seem
less and less tractable. At the level of moral analysis, we learned
that the killing was a response to a rebellion, and that the rebel
groups had committed atrocities themselves. We learned that not all
the Arab tribes were persecutors, and that some of the African
tribes had been guilty of cruelties. We learned that one of the
rebel groups, the Justice and Equality Movement, was led by
disgruntled former members of the government--and shared Khartoum's
Islamist philosophy. We learned that the Chadian government was
allied with the Darfuri rebels, and that the Sudanese government
was aligned with Chadian rebels. And since the Chadian government
was a nasty dictatorship, didn't this mean the good guys were
allied with bad guys and the bad guys were allied with good guys?
The closer we looked at Darfur, the more clarity seemed to recede.
It is important to point out that none of this is incorrect; there
are plenty of moral complexities in Darfur. But acknowledging this
cannot be the end of the discussion. For one thing, the recognition
of complexity is not incompatible with the recognition of right and
wrong. (We know this from our experience of many other excruciating
policy problems, at home and abroad.) Killing innocents and raping
women on a mass scale is wrong, even if the historical forces that
cause a region to arrive at the moment of madness are tangled and
thick. History is always complicated, isn't it? But the study of
history must not make it impossible to see the victims and the
oppressors clearly, as it did in the early years of American
inaction against the genocide in Bosnia, where action seemed to
have been rendered impossible, in the eyes of the president and his
advisers, by the haunting and inextricable power of "Balkan
ghosts." As Fouad Ajami wrote witheringly in these pages in 1994,
"You cannot launch an air strike against the fourteenth century."
Too many in Washington have learned just enough about the history of
Darfur to be inhibited by Sudanese ghosts. And so they throw up
their hands, label the situation "complex," and accuse others of
failing to see the shades of gray. In fact, if you spend enough
time with the historical and journalistic material on Darfur--that
is, if you look at the broad sweep of the conflict rather than
trying to cherry-pick the dissonant notes for the purpose of forming
an alibi-- patterns begin to emerge out of the haze of
complexities. One of those incontrovertible patterns concerns the
government of Sudan and the rebels. Even when there are no good
guys (or, rather, when the only good guys are the civilians caught
up in a conflict--that is, the majority of Darfuris), some bad guys
are worse than others; and when the difference can be measured in
body counts in the hundreds of thousands, the distinction between
bad and worse is worth taking seriously.
Consider the entirety of the NIF's record, from starving its own
people in southern Sudan in the 1990s, to supporting the Lord's
Resistance Army (arguably the most sadistic militia in Africa), to
torturing dissidents and journalists, to espousing a mix of Arab
supremacism and radical Islamism, to insisting that only 10,000
people have died in Darfur, to obstructing humanitarian assistance
to vulnerable populations, to signing off on a policy of systematic
rape and murder--consider all this, and it becomes hard to see a
moral equivalence between the government and the Darfuri rebels,
whatever the rebels' faults. It is telling that the writers who go
into Darfur without political preconceptions generally come out
enraged not by the rebels but by the government. Steidle and Blaker
knew little about Sudan before they went to Darfur on essentially
humanitarian missions. The vast majority of the abuses that they
witnessed were the work of the government. Occasionally one of the
authors will learn of rebels committing an atrocity or hijacking a
truck or stealing livestock, but these anecdotes--as essential a
part of the historical record as any other true report--never rise
even close to the level at which they might be called systematic,
let alone genocidal.
While many of the rebel leaders are far from sympathetic characters,
it is at least possible to understand the motives of many of the
rank-and-file Darfuris who have taken up arms with them. Consider
the story of Hejewa Adam, a female soldier interviewed in Darfur
Now. She recalls that her village, Shatia, was
a beautiful place with fresh air, orchards, and hills.... I was home
cooking when I heard explosions. They hit us. Some kids lost their
legs and mothers were separated from children. Boys under five were
killed, and the girls were taken away. I remember my friends whose
throats were slit in front of my eyes. I lived in my village for 15
years. And now my child is dead. My home is burned down and now I
have nothing. The massacre in Shatia humiliated me and convinced me
to join the rebel army.
The rebels are clearly part of the problem in Darfur, and they
certainly have crimes to answer for. As Julie Flint makes clear in
an essay on the rebels in War in Darfur (the best-written essay in
the book), rebel leaders have frequently failed to exercise
adequate control over their soldiers, and the results have been
rape, kidnapping, and other abuses. And yet to find a moral
equivalence between Hejewa Adam and the Sudanese government is to
surrender to ignorance, not to sophistication.
Strategically, of course, the question of complexity in Darfur is a
very different story. Establishing security in Darfur would clearly
be a complicated task. But how complicated? This is where another
pattern emerges from the Darfur literature, and it has to do with
the interpretation of the genocide's root causes. Is the genocide
primarily an ethnic conflict among the Arabs and the Africans of
Darfur? Or is the conflict primarily a dispute between the Sudanese
government and the region as a whole--a dispute in which the
government has co-opted the services of certain Darfuri groups in
order to pursue its overall strategy of clinging to power via
terror? Both interpretations contain more than a grain of truth;
and both (along with other factors, such as Qaddafi and
environmental degradation) are necessary to explain how the path to
genocide was paved.
And yet it is important to ask whether one of these elements has
played a larger role than the other. After all, if the prime causes
of the conflict are ancient ethnic disputes among Darfuris, then it
probably is a situation so complex that outsiders would have no
chance to solve it. There are too many tribes with too many
agendas, too many grievances, too many leaders. But if the Sudanese
government is the primary cause of the conflict, that changes
things. It does not exactly make the genocide a simple affair, but
it does render the complexities somewhat less bewildering, at least
from the standpoint of intervention. It means, for one thing, that
there is a single entity we can hold largely responsible for
unleashing the violence--and whose behavior we might change through
threats, coercion, or military power. It also means that if there
were some way to insulate Darfur from the nefarious meddling of
Khartoum, then some of the violence might start to subside. Again,
it does not mean that solving the conflict would be easy. Nor does
it guarantee that intervention would end well. But it does suggest
that efforts to stop the genocide are not from the outset futile.
If there is anything the Darfur literature makes clear, it is that
the prime cause of the genocide is the national government. Not
ancient and immovable tribal hatreds among Darfuris, but a
particular regime in Khartoum. The historical studies show that
while Darfur has seen tribal tension for centuries, these conflicts
were nothing like the one that is now taking place. This was partly
because Darfur's tribes lacked modern weaponry, but it was also
because they had systems in place for containing
conflicts--protocols that called for negotiations between tribes
and for payment of compensation to prevent disputes from escalating
out of control. The vast majority of the Darfur scholars and
writers seem to hold Khartoum, not the Arabs of Darfur, mainly
responsible for initiating the slaughter.
And so do the Darfuris whom they cite. "We haven't any problem with
Arabs. We have a problem with the policy of the government. Arabs
are being used by the government to fight us," says one man in
Darfur Diaries. "This is not a wise government who burns villages
and kills civilians," says another Darfuri in the same book. "This
is not a government that anyone can elect or support. In war,
soldiers fight soldiers, but we never heard about soldiers fighting
civilians." Writing in War in Darfur, Abdul-Jabbar Fadul and Victor
Tanner quote a Fur leader saying that "Our problem is not with the
Arabs, it is with the government. The government destroyed our
area. Even if Arabs did take part, they are just poor people like
us. The government is behind it." In the same chapter, a Masalit
leader puts it this way: "The government says the problem is
tribal. I say the problem is the government." Daoud Hari predicts
that "when the government has removed or killed all the traditional
non-Arabs, then it will get the traditional Arabs to fight one
another so they too will disappear from valuable lands. This is
already happening in areas where the removal of non-Arab Africans
is nearly complete." Later in the book, he and Nicholas D. Kristof
of The New York Times interview a Janjaweed fighter, about fourteen
years old, who has been captured after participating in a failed
attack on a non-Arab village. Why, they ask, did the Janjaweed
attack? "We are from a village just over there," the boy responds.
"We have always been friends with the people of this village." Then
he explains what changed: "We were told by the government soldiers
that these people were going to attack our village and kill our
families if we did not attack them first. They would give us money
if we did this."
In other words, government officials were the ones pulling the
strings. Indeed, many Darfuris seem to hold Omar Bashir personally
responsible for the violence. "After the English left, we were
still okay, but at Bashir's time they came and separated Arab
people and black people," says the sheik of Shegeg Karo in Darfur
Diaries. In Heart of Darfur, Blaker and a colleague speak with a
Darfuri woman who has been chased out of her village. "She wants us
to write this down," the colleague translates. "She says that
Bashir has thrown us into this fire and we are all dying." In
Darfur Diaries, one refugee who has fled to Chad says that she and
her husband, who is still in Darfur, "are separated by Omar
Bashir."
To be sure, many observers believe that the conflict has grown far
more labyrinthine in the past year or two, as Khartoum has lost
control over the carnage that it initiated. The violence between
tribes has acquired a momentum of its own, while the rebels have
split into myriad different factions. Some rebels have declared
allegiance to the government, then turned their guns on other
rebels. All this is, first and foremost, an argument for why we
should have intervened earlier. Had we sent troops in 2004 or even
2005, we would have encountered a much more tractable war than the
one we face today--and hundreds of thousands of lives could have
been saved. But it is also a cautionary note about the situation
that awaits us in Darfur should we decide to intervene now.
Still, the fact that non-Arab Darfuris ultimately blame Khartoum for
the genocide more than they blame their Arab neighbors must count
as a sliver of hope for the region's future. It suggests, among
other things, that if an intervention force could ever establish a
modicum of peace in Darfur, such a peace might stand a reasonable
chance of taking hold. For their part, not all Arabs in Darfur
participated in the slaughter, and many are disgusted by what they
have seen--so disgusted that, in 2006, Arab Darfuris actually
launched a rebel group to oppose the government themselves. "It
denounced the Janjawiid as 'a minority of mercenaries and hired
individuals,'" Flint explains, "and pledged to fight the
'injustice' of Khartoum and the 'terrorizing' of civilians. "
So the role of complexity in Darfur is, well, complicated. While
some complexities undoubtedly make the genocide more difficult to
stop, others might mitigate in favor of intervention. And some
complexities are, upon close examination, less complex than they
seem. What we can say for certain is that invoking "complexity" in
order to dismiss the possibility of armed intervention has played
right into the hands of the Sudanese government, which wanted the
world to view Darfur as a hopelessly elaborate tribal conflict, and
not as the campaign of government-orchestrated mass murder that it
is. Reeves cites the following statement from 2005 by Robert
Zoellick, who by that time had become Bush's point man on Darfur:
"It's a tribal war. And frankly I don't think foreign forces want
to get in the middle of a tribal war of Sudanese." The ghosts,
again. If Omar Bashir knew of Zoellick's comment, then he would
also have known that he would win in Darfur. And he has won.
When the definitive book about Darfur is someday written, I suspect
it will treat the genocide as something that was both old and new.
The story of Darfur is old in the context of Sudan, where similar
mass atrocities unfolded in the south during the 1990s; old in the
context of Africa, where Rwanda famously exploded in violence in
1994; and old in the context of the world--which, after a century
filled with genocides, has yet to figure out how to answer the
question posed by a displaced man early in the movie Darfur Now:
"One by one, they are killing us like dogs. Where do you go to
complain?"
Yet while genocide is an old phenomenon, our experience of the
Darfur genocide has been in one way novel. Never before have we
observed a genocide so diligently. We educated ourselves about the
suffering. We watched movies, read books, and wore bracelets. Our
politicians attended peace conferences, issued ultimatums, even
dispatched an international force. And yet none of it has stopped
the killing. What has gone wrong? Did we, over time, grow immune to
the images and the testimonies? Did we give too much weight to what
seemed like the conflict's complexities, and too little to the raw
human suffering that was taking place before our eyes? Did we put
too much faith in the United Nations and too little in ourselves?
Did we allow our elected leaders to deflect responsibility back
onto us--to seduce us with airy statements congratulating us on our
passion, when they should have been consulting with generals about
how to get soldiers onto the ground as quickly as possible? True, we
were poorly served by a small-minded president and his bungling
administration. But did liberals demand the right things of him?
Did we push for what would really save the people of Darfur? Or did
we get trapped by the inclinations of our worldview, and advocate
for too little?
But it is too soon to succumb to a retrospective spirit, and to busy
ourselves only with learning the right lessons for the next
genocide, which will surely come. The suffering in Darfur is not
yet yesterday's news.