I don't think there are usually cases where the targets of a genocide were utterly powerless to do anything, unless they were ambushed unaware, or disunified somehow, often by inside bickering egged on by the force that wants to exterminate them. Information is the best defense, and hiding information and misinforming are some of the best weapons known to man. If the targets of annihilation never saw it coming or were distracted from uniting and preparing adequately, the slaughter itself is just the endgame. I really think any group of people willing to unanimously trust an outside source saying their demise was in the works could come up with some way to dodge it.
First I think this is an unrealistic assumption. In Nazi Germany there was about 500,000 Jews. About half left the country before things got really bad. The other half either couldn't afford to leave or stubbornly wanted to stay for whatever reason. Maybe to continue to resist or because they didn't want to leave their home.
In Rwanda the Tutsi population had the means to defend themselves and even formed a militia that eventually overthrew the genocidal Hutu government. But not before 800,000 people were killed.
Second if your argument were valid than most genocides could have been avoided easily. Intelligence communities do not usually share their information. They either get their government to act on the intel or ignore it. Sharing information is pretty much a no no when it comes to spies unless they too have something to gain from sharing.
I'll ask a couple of my family members who know their history a bit better than me about this. I'd always assumed the US intervention in Somalia was, in some roundabout way, a gambit for oil, or at the very least a firmer geopolitical foothold in a part of the world that has oil.
I think your being a little cynical here which is understandable given the United States recent track record involving the military. Yes most of the time this is true America goes into a country to "help" but also to further their goals in the region. But let me ask you this if indeed the humanitarian mission to Somalia was some kind of guise for a secret geopolitical power grab in the region. You really think the United States would pull out its military force after only losing 2 helicopters and 20 men? 2 helicopters and 20 soldiers is a small geopolitical price to pay for control of a strategically valued area. Just look at how many men we have lost in Afghanistan and Iraq. I think what happened was the top brass during the Clinton administration thought they were losing men while not gaining anything of strategic value and decided that saving lives was less important than conserving military resources for future conflicts. Also remember the biggest force sent to Somalia after the American force was Pakistani.
It strikes me that maybe this mission was set up to fail, so that the major players in the UN could justify being cheapskates and giving up on Africa.
It was. Again read about Romeo Dallaire. Not only did he only have 2,600 troops but his force was further cut (when the genocide was just starting to pick up steam) to about 260 poorly trained and poorly equipped soldiers. But even with less than 300 men he managed to save 20,000 people! 20,000! Imagine if he had the 5,000 troops he requested in the first place. I trust you can do the math?
The world doesn't give a flying fuck about Africa and Romeo Dallaire has said as much. He believed and I agree with him that the world collectively decided to ignore Rwanda because of racism. For example Romeo Dallaire asked the United States military to jam a radio signal coming from the Hutus that was giving details on where to find Tutsi people to kill. It was estimated that it would have only cost the United States air force about 8,500 dollars per flight hour to send one signal jamming plane to stop this information from being sent out. Information that killed countless people. And the US ignored it saying that it had no reason to intervene because it wasn't a genocide yet! They actively avoided the term genocide! Because once that word was used in the UN the UN would have to step in because of their mandate.
I also think the UN is a good idea, and would like to see its roles in keeping the world stable expanded. The challenge, of course, is keeping it a body that truly holds all nations of people (and all conflicts) to be on equal footing, and cannot easily be infiltrated or usurped by the selfish interests of one of more powerful participants. It's a "Who's going to watch the watcher?" kind of scenario.
Different nations exist because people fundamentally disagree on what matters in an individual's life, and what matters in society. Most people in any given country operate under the assumption that the world would just be a better place if everybody saw things their way. This fails to take into account, though, the fact that different people in different terrestrial environments have faced different challenges, and have needed to define themselves differently in order to survive. The reason I bring this up is because it calls into question the feasibility of nations answering to any higher authority like a world government.
I have a hard time imagining a real, functioning world government without a more or less complete cultural steamrolling of the world by one nation and its culture. For better or for worse, this could actually come to pass.
This is why I think the UN security council needs to be completely overhauled and if need be replaced. The fact that the five permanent seats on the council are also 5 of the biggest arms producers in the world and also maintains economic and military rivalries with each other means nothing will ever be accomplished via this council.
As for the one world one government idea? I personally wouldn't mind it although I can see the obvious problems with such a government. Too many conflicting interests. But on a selfish note as a person who travels a whole bunch for business and pleasure it would be nice not to have to go through customs ever again. Imagine a world without borders where you get off the plane and go straight to your hotel after picking up your baggage. No customs officer drilling you on what you're bringing into their country. Ahh that would be impossibly awesome. A man can dream though I suppose.
I like the idea, and I'm not so jaded that I think there's no way to make this work (creating the incentives to join up, funding, management, the whole enchilada). However, since you'd need a politically complicated system of checks and balances to make sure this UN force was both truly effectual and relatively impervious to being usurped AND able to respond at a moment's notice, I bet it'd be one hell of an expensive and bureaucratic institution to maintain.
Of course a vast system would need to be set up to make sure that this force is not misused. But no matter how expensive I think it will be worth it. The soldiers would also need special training because they will be peacekeepers not an invading force. Also more than anything I think the officers of such a force must be completely free of attachments to their home country and must be 100% committed to this force. Any conflicting loyalties to their home military would conflict with the interests of peacekeeping. They must be entirely neutral in politics and must always question orders that don't seem to line up with their ultimate goal of protecting human life.
I think the best way to be a hero in a case like this is to restrain the guy, or if that's not possible, rally the help of security people or bouncers to restrain him.
The problem with restraining the guy is that the guy will probably end up hitting you as well. I think rallying the bouncers is the best idea IMO.
Last edited: