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Sudan: March 24, 2005

The People in Dafur Matter - Does the U.S. Care

From the Opinion Journal [HT: Antioch Road]

As we sat in a refugee camp in Chad listening to Fatima describe how most of her family was killed by Sudanese government-sponsored Janjaweed militias, we found it incomprehensible that the world could not muster the political will necessary to protect her surviving family members or to hold the killers accountable.

Since returning from our visit to Chad and Darfur in late January, we have pored over the rationales the U.S. government has used for its tepid response, and have found no fewer than 10 lame excuses.

[snip - ten rationales for the tepid US response follow]

So what is the real reason why the U.S. has not responded as it should have? The truth is that combating crimes against humanity is simply not considered a national security issue. We don't want to burn our leverage on Sudan in the face of issues such as Iraq, Iran and Syria.

The only antidote to this searing truth--the only way the U.S. will take the kind of leadership necessary to end the horrors for Fatima and her people--is for there to be a political cost to inaction. As American citizens increasingly raise their voices and write their letters about Darfur, the temperature has indeed risen. But not enough. We need to make it a little warmer, a little more uncomfortable for those politicians who would look away. Just a few more degrees. Just a few more thousand letters. It is, frankly, that simple.

One way to get involved is to join the Coalition of Dafur, a group of bloggers whose primary purposes is to:
  • raise awareness of the Darfur crisis

  • raise a substantial amount of money to help the people suffering so greatly in that region.

Posted by tim at March 24, 2005 10:33 PM




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