One Hundred Days of Silence

America and the Rwanda Genocide

By (author) Jared A. Cohen

Paperback - £30.00

Publication date:

28 December 2006

Length of book:

268 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Dimensions:

229x154mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780742552371

One Hundred Days of Silence is an important investigation into the 1994 Rwandan genocide and American foreign policy. During one hundred days of spring, eight-hundred thousand Rwandan Tutsis and sympathetic Hutus were slaughtered in one of the most atrocious events of the twentieth century. Drawing on declassified documents and testimony of policy makers, Jared Cohen critically reconstructs the historical account of tacit policy that led to nonintervention. His analysis examines the questions of what the United States knew about the genocide and how the world's most powerful nation turned a blind eye. The study reveals the ease at which an administration can not only fail to intervene but also silence discussion of the crisis. The book argues that despite the extent of the genocide the American government was not motivated to act due to a lack of economic interest. With precision and passion, One Hundred Days of Silence frames the debate surrounding this controversial history.
Jared Cohen interviewed those who usually have been overlooked by scholars and journalists—Rwandans and mid-level U.S. Government officials. His bold freshness of approach was the starting point for this arresting analysis—equally fresh—of exactly how the U.S. Government's ability to act morally in the Rwandan genocide crisis was immobilized.