All the Missing Souls.

AuthorWenick, Martin
PositionBook review

Text:

All the Missing Souls: A Personal History of the War Crimes Tribunals by David Scheffer, Princeton University Press, 2011, ISBN-13: 978-0691140155, 570 pp., $35.00, also available as a Kindle edition $19.25.

David Scheffer's All the Missing Souls is not for those interested in light reading or the feint of heart. Rather it is for those with an interest in understanding developments leading to the creation of international war crimes tribunals set up to deal with mass atrocities in national conflicts. Scheffer, currently the Mayer Brown/Robert A Helman Professor of Law and director of the Center for International Human Rights at Northwestern University's School of Law, served as an advisor to Madeleine Albright during her tenure as United States Ambassador to the United Nations (1993 to 1997) and then as the first Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues when Albright became Secretary of State (1997 to 2001).

In All the Missing Souls, Scheffer alternates between descriptions of the atrocities committed in the four areas for which criminal tribunals were established--former Yugoslavia, Sierra Leone, Rwanda, and Cambodia--and detailed accounts of the efforts in which he participated to establish these tribunals to bring the perpetrators of these horrific crimes to justice for their actions. He relates the actions related to the ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslovavia, the carnage involved in the ethnic conflict in Rwanda, the savage and brutal civil war in Sierra Leone, and the atrocities committed by the Pol Pot regime in Cambodia. While at the United States Mission to the United Nations and then as Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues, Scheffer was in the forefront of those fighting to create tribunals to bring to justice those responsible for some of the worst human right atrocities of since the Second World War.

Scheffer details the arduous attempts to create each of the tribunals. In each case, he starts with the bureaucratic efforts to reach consensus within the United States Government where, on occasion, conflicting priorities or differing positions made this goal difficult to achieve. Along the way, Scheffer was often engaged in ongoing struggles with the defense and intelligence communities to provide international prosecutors with...

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