I had extremely mixed feelings about this book, from start to finish. Goldhagen is a controversial writer and a unique thinker, and he makes some important points. Unfortunately, his single-mindedness and uncompromising views on certain topics made a lot of these important points and good intentions fall apart.
When I first read criticisms of Goldhagen's work, I assumed that readers who disliked the book went into it with different expectations about the style and format than what it turned out to be. It is not non-fiction written in prose style at all, it is composed in a research format, so each section lays out a central concept or thesis, what points the author will use to support it, then the following pages hit each of those bullet points, followed by a summation at the end of that section. When readers described Goldhagen as presenting "circular logic," I presumed they were referring to the circular nature of the writing. Unfortunately, after reading, that does not seem to be the case. In many sections of the book, the author contradicts his own stated principles, or at best applies them in a hypocritical manner.
For example, he is deeply devoted to the idea that most participants in the killing, torture, expulsion and other atrocities of the Holocaust were not only willing to do so but enthusiastic. (He wrote another entire book on just this subject.) He goes so far as to insist upon referring to the perpetrators simply as Germans rather than as Nazis. He cites examples from his research and anecdotes that he believes discredit the many mitigating factors for everyday Germans (and others who participated in the violence). To accept his point of view is to believe that no German took part for any reason other than their own anti-Semitism and desire to act out viciously. According to this author, there were no perpetrators who took part because they feared retribution against themselves or their families, because they feared losing their jobs (bureaucratic, law enforcement, etc.) in the wake of years of German economic hardship, because of social pressure or influences, or for any other reason. He insists that everyone who took part in the Holocaust did so 100% willingly, knowing the consequences of their actions, and with great relish, and that the German people were willing to do so because of their societal, nationalistic beliefs and mores.
However, when discussing international responses to eliminationism, and how outsiders explain or rationalize the horrors that take place, he seems to adopt a different stance on non-German perpetrators. The book includes very graphic incidents from the Tutsi on Hutu slaughter in Burundi in the 1970s and the Hutu on Tutsi atrocities in Rwanda in the 1990s. This includes contrived famine, extreme sexual violence, and literal butchery on a mass scale. The attacks were a daily business, one perpetrator describing the machete killings as going from "9:00 am to 4:30 pm" as though it were a shift in an office. The politically and racially motivated Khmer Rouge expulsions and killings in Cambodia shared many of the same characteristics. The survivors' accounts from all of these which Goldhagen relayed would turn the stomach of any decent human being. But the author insists that an outside viewer who sees these perpetrators and their actions as barbaric is plainly racist. I don't see how one can find fault in the German perpetrators of the Holocaust and blame it on their personal natures, but cannot apply the same standard to an African or Asian perpetrator. Purposefully starving someone to death or cutting out a woman's reproductive organs or impaling a non-combatant on bamboo is just as bad as starving, sterilizing or gassing a European. It is absurd to apply one set of standards and labels to Nazis but then to dance around the Khmer, Tutsi and Hutu perpetrators in an attempt to not sound racist.
I also take issue with Goldhagen's proposed resolution to the issue. His anger and disgust that such atrocities are often allowed to start and continue by isolationist outsiders is justifiable and hard to disagree with. But his over-simplified presentation of the interventions that have occurred is mind boggling, and his suggestion for discouraging and stopping eliminationist violence is quite amoral in itself.
I was ready to stop reading the book at about the 40% mark when Goldhagen eviscerates world leaders (particularly American ones) for not stepping in to stop eliminationism in Rwanda, Darfur, and for not acting sooner in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was not his desire to see these assaults swiftly ended that bothered me, but rather his ridiculous and cavalier treatment of our military interventions in Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan. He states that the public's reaction to 1993's "Black Hawk Down" battle in Mogadishu was overblown and caused a racist, isolationist attitude that prevented our intervention in 1994 in Rwanda. He asks why an American soldier's life is worth more than an African's. It isn't. But why are 18 American soldiers worth less than 18 African lives? What kind of person would watch 18 soldiers die, then witness their families' continued torture as the soldiers' bodies were mutilated and disrespected in the streets of the city they were sent to help, and not react with anger? Goldhagen lauds Operation Enduring Freedom as an appropriate, swift, and effective response to the Taliban's oppression in Afghanistan and Al Qaeda's genocidal international terror campaign. Well, thanks for the vote of confidence, Mr. Goldhagen, but the families and friends of the 3,261 (as of today) coalition troops KIA would probably beg to differ on your proclamation that the oppressive regime was toppled in a matter of weeks at relatively small cost to the intervening forces. As a matter of fact, two US troops and three Afghani police were murdered TODAY by a "fellow" Afghani police officer. My husband and his fellow soldiers are currently deployed to the war you seem to think we won twelve years ago. You are either grotesquely uninformed about the true toll of the war in Afghanistan or you are unbelievably callous.
The author's solution for stopping eliminationist assaults (aside from his daydream version of war) is an international sort of for-profit vigilantism. He asserts that if perpetrators (including all from the Head of State to the bureacrats to the elected officials to the police officers and military members) are held unquestionably accountable for any eliminationist acts and guilty by association, and that punishment is meted out on this premise, that future atrocities will be deterred. He suggests the application of "justice" in the way that it has been applied to pirates in the past, as enemies of humanity, is all that is due in cases of genocide, and that there should be a burden of proof that translates to "guilty until proven innocent." Yet in the beginning of the book, Goldhagen condemns President Truman for the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He asserts that these were calculated mass murders, and that Truman should therefore be granted the title of Mass Murderer along with the likes of Stalin, Mao, Pot, and Hitler. He argues that the motivation is irrelevant to the label for the act. He clearly classifies the Bataan Death March and the Rape of Nanking as brutal eliminationist assaults. (Truly, he barely scratched the surface of what was done to Filipinos, Americans, Chinese, and even to Japanese citizens, but he concretely places these acts along with the other genocides in the book.) Logic would follow that, based on the author's hardline plan of action against eliminationism, anything and everything should have been done to stop the Japanese in their tracks. Except, apparently, nuclear bombing.
Again, his conclusion to this very same book asserts that the international community (particularly democracies, including those in which capital punishment is illegal) should adopt a "wanted dead or alive" approach to known or suspected perpetrators in ongoing eliminationist campaigns. He states that the application of due process is unnecessary as well as cost and time prohibitive in the cases of these perpetrators, and that monetary rewards should be issued for their capture and/or assassination. So, adopting a financially motivated, "pirates, ye be warned," witch-hunt style of international intervention to stop an eliminationist campaign is acceptable and desirable, but a strategic (and granted, catastrophic) series of bombing is a "war on humanity?" Whether or not one agrees with the use of nuclear weapons in WWII or not, I find it extremely difficult to reconcile this train of thought.
The biggest issue for me was that the take-home message gets muddled because of Goldhagen's extreme perspectives and opinions on certain issues and events. The author takes a singular interest in the plight of the Jewish population, focusing almost entirely upon their persecution under the Nazi regime and during other episodes throughout history. I do not intend in any way to diminish the suffering of this religious group by what I am saying, but I feel that Goldhagen's almost myopic focus on this and his enthusiasm in pointing the finger at the rest of the world takes away from what I think his message is, somewhere deep inside: that genocide and eliminationism are global problems, and that any ethnic, religious, political, cultural or national group can fall prey. He devotes a great deal of energy to criticizing the Catholic and Orthodox churches in Europe and their actions or inactions during the Holocaust. He conveniently glosses over the concerted Nazi efforts to close down Catholic schools, discredit and frame priests and nuns who spoke out against the regime and distributed anti-Nazi encyclicals from the Pope and sermons by German Cardinals. He doesn't mention the Inquisition-Style torture, the prosectution for "immorality" on fictitious charges, or the number of priests who were murdered themselves. He completely omits from his list of eliminations the death or expulsion of around 3 million Irish Catholics at the hands of the Protestant British, capitalizing on the potato blight. The British government used contrived starvation, disease, expulsion and forced religious conversion to eliminate the "undesirables" over the course of a few years. The consequences of this and other brutal British policies resonate today with the violence in Northern Ireland. But not a word from Goldhagen on this. Goldhagen gives the same lax treatment to the Polish, giving great emphasis to the Poles who willingly killed or drove out their Jewish neighbors, while writing almost nothing about their courageous Resistance movement. Goldhagen's mention of the Communist party members, homosexuals, and mentally ill killed under the Third Reich makes it sound as though their lives were a comparative vacation. He focuses a great deal on the current Political Islamic stance on Judaism and anti-Israeli sentiments, but fails to mention countries in Africa where being gay is legally prosecuted and punishable by death. I understand that for Goldhagen to hit upon every instance and victim of eliminationism would be impossible if he wanted to keep the book at a readable, non-encyclopedic length. But I do feel that his personal emotions took some of the scholarly merit away from this piece. I suppose in summary what I am attempting to get across is the narrow focus on one religious group undermines the true nature of genocide, eliminationism and hate as human threats, not as threats limited to one geographic area, religion, or ethnic group. I'll end with this fairly famous quote, as translated on the Holocaust Memorial in Boston, MA, which I think gets to the root of the issue pretty concisely.
They came first for the Communists,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.
Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.
Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Catholics,
and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant.
Then they came for me,
and by that time no one was left to speak up.
---Martin Niemoeller