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The Lion, the Fox and the Eagle [Paperback]

Carol Off (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 9, 2001
Three Canadians – Lewis MacKenzie, Romeo Dallaire and Louise Arbour – were at the centre of the two greatest tragedies of the 1990s. Two of them could have stopped the killing. One was asked to bring the perpetrators to justice. In this riveting, original and explosive book, Carol Off explores the failure of peacekeeping missions in Sarajevo and Rwanda, and the international community’s attempt to redeem itself by prosecuting the people responsible for the genocides. Events turned on the action of two Canadian generals: the fox of the title, Lewis MacKenzie, who commanded the UN forces in Bosnia for the first crucial months of the conflict; and the lion, Romeo Dallaire, who developed an interventionary plan that he believed would have prevented the Rwandan genocide but was forced by the UN to stand by while 800,000 people were slaughtered. The eagle is Louise Arbour, a Canadian judge who became Chief Prosecutor for War Crimes in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“In Off’s fluid and measured account, Dallaire emerges as a tragic hero, a symbol of the world’s failure to respond to the second genocide of the 20th century….Off’s opposing role models — the impotent man of conscience and the cynical advocate of moral equivalence — offer insights into how we might do better next time the unthinkable happens. And it will.” —Time (Andrew Purvis)

“Off is a smooth and powerful writer, delivering a mixture of descriptive passages, contextual background and editorial argument which collectively produce a provocative page-turner….Her concise backgrounder and summary of the horrific genocide in Rwanda in 1994 is the best account I have read." —The Globe and Mail (Scott Taylor)

“…the CBC reporter steers by her own conscience and that is to tell the story from the point of view of the powerless.” —Vancouver Sun

“Off deserves praise for painting this appalling picture so vividly.” —The Edmonton Journal

“The Lion the Fox and the Eagle
provides a solid account of the roles three Canadians played on the world stage in two of the bloodiest conflicts at the close of the century.” —The Chronicle-Herald

“It is a powerful book, and Off writes with a meticulous sense for disconcerting details that resonate with ugly truth.” —Calgary Straight

“In her portraits of Dallaire and Mackenzie, Off has written a pair of biographies that bring to mind Suetonius’s lives of Nicias and Alcibiades — the ancient Roman’s portraits of two brilliant but contrary generals, one good, but maligned, the other as famous as he was duplicitous. These are shocking and instructive moral studies of what it can cost a man to be involved…We learn from [this book] that the work of peacekeeping is not derived from some neat and formulaic model that is universally applicable. It cannot be grafted onto a hostile landscape and it requires historical knowledge. It cannot be applied halfheartedly.” —Noah Richler, National Post

“This is an explosive look at what really happened in the failed peacekeeping missions in Sarajevo and Rwanda.” —Ottawa Citizen

From the Inside Flap

Three Canadians ? Lewis MacKenzie, Romeo Dallaire and Louise Arbour ? were at the centre of the two greatest tragedies of the 1990s. Two of them could have stopped the killing. One was asked to bring the perpetrators to justice. In this riveting, original and explosive book, Carol Off explores the failure of peacekeeping missions in Sarajevo and Rwanda, and the international community?s attempt to redeem itself by prosecuting the people responsible for the genocides. Events turned on the action of two Canadian generals: the fox of the title, Lewis MacKenzie, who commanded the UN forces in Bosnia for the first crucial months of the conflict; and the lion, Romeo Dallaire, who developed an interventionary plan that he believed would have prevented the Rwandan genocide but was forced by the UN to stand by while 800,000 people were slaughtered. The eagle is Louise Arbour, a Canadian judge who became Chief Prosecutor for War Crimes in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Canada (October 9, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679311386
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679311386
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 1 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,599,927 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Lion, the Fox and the Eagle, July 15, 2007
This review is from: The Lion, the Fox and the Eagle (Paperback)
Carol Off does a terrific job explaining two of the most complicated tragedies of this lifetime. If you want a concise understanding of the Rwandan and Yugoslavian genocides and wars then this is your book.

It is told from the point of view of the Canadians. It has excellent references.
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9 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Peacekeeping 101 - What Is To Be Done?, March 29, 2005
By 
David Macri (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Lion, the Fox and the Eagle (Paperback)
Since the end of the Cold War, the number of United Nations peacekeeping efforts created to intervene in regional conflicts has increased significantly. Of these, two of the most striking failures were the missions sent to Rwanda and Bosnia. In her book The Lion, The Fox, & The Eagle, Carol Off attempts to identify the reasons why these failures occurred by examining the actions of three prominent Canadians closely associated with those events. The principle actors involved in her exploration are, on the military side, generals Romeo Dallaire and Lewis MacKenzie, with Justice Louise Arbour rounding out the group as Chief Prosecutor for the International War Crimes Tribunal. For those Canadians who may find themselves acting in the role of peacekeeper this book is useful, not necessarily as a guide to conduct, but for revealing the mindset of many of Canada's political elite, and for explaining the purposes they will expect sacrifices to be made.
Off makes it clear that much of the blame for the Rwandan and Bosnian tragedies stem from United Nations inefficiencies and with Kofi Annan personally, but her assessment of the three principle actors identified is intended to reinforce the organization's perceived viability for any potential intervention in future conflicts. Philosophical or ideological considerations compel her to do so, and in the process, she offers a new definition of heroism to gauge the success of those who will be tasked with leading these efforts. Her assessment however, is unconvincing.
It is a collectivist worldview which causes Off to cast Major General Romeo Dallaire in a tragic and heroic light. Dallaire, the lion, was force commander of the UN mission to Rwanda prior to, and during, the genocidal slaughter of the Tutsi minority by the governing Hutus. At the outset, his assigned mandate was to assist in the implementation of a new power sharing agreement encompassing both ethnic groups. Once Hutu President Habyarimana was killed however, it became impossible for him to fulfill his mission. His continued efforts to do so, fueled by ideological considerations shared by Off, caused the general to subordinate the welfare of his troops to the completion of his diplomatic endeavors. This resulted in the useless deaths of ten Belgian paratroopers.
The fox in this story is Major General Lewis MacKenzie, Chief of Staff of the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR) in Sarajevo. His job was to provide leadership for the UN forces within the city once the Serbian siege altered the strategic situation. Off vilifies MacKenzie for realizing the tenuous position UNPROFOR had fallen into, and for making the maintenance of his force's security his primary goal. Unlike Dallaire, MacKenzie realized it would not be feasible to continue with his original mission (to Croatia) as it was configured, and rationally assumed that his individual responsibilities towards those under his command remained his paramount consideration. To prevent mass starvation in Sarajevo, UN officials simultaneously decided to open the Sarajevo airport. Thus, with official approval, MacKenzie quickly deployed his forces to secure the position. Off contends this action extended the war by removing the necessity of NATO intervention, thereby increasing the suffering of the people of Sarajevo.
Yet, on several occasions throughout the book human suffering seems less significant than does adherence to ideological dogma. If MacKenzie's troops had been engaged in fighting a war (rather than having found themselves caught in the middle of one), then more aggressive action may have been warranted. But that was not the situation MacKenzie was faced with or equipped for. If however, the function of the United Nations is to facilitate the complete destruction of all forms of nationalism, as opposed to providing a forum for encouraging international cooperation, then Off's assertion that MacKenzie should have forcefully challenged the JNA makes her argument more consistent. Consequently, one is left to consider that she would have preferred to see his troops needlessly slaughtered rather than establish a secure defensive posture. Moreover, their removal from the area (either through destruction or capitulation) could have created greater hardship for Sarajevo's citizens.
Off, and many others on both sides of the issue, believe that the creation of a `New World Order' (a phrase she uses repeatedly) is the main purpose of the United Nations. Only when the organization is viewed in such light does her account make any sense. That is why her greatest acclaim goes to the eagle, Louise Arbour, for her dramatic successes against the numerous African and Balkan practitioners of genocide. Arbour, as hero, belatedly succeeds where the two men have failed. Her example is glorified to demonstrate how the enemies of collectivism can be defeated.
Obviously, those responsible for acts of genocide deserve punishment for the horror they have inflicted, but for Off, the only acceptable methods to impose it stem from direct international intervention. This assumption, and others, such as the role of military leadership in conducting international political affairs, remains questionable. An additional problem involves the idea that nationalism is the root cause of all genocide. What of the actions of Josef Stalin, the greatest collectivist of all time? How many tens of millions were slaughtered in the name of creating the perfect socialist union? Her treatment of lesser communist tyrants such as Marshall Josip Tito is also bizarre. In comparing the `rehabilitated' communist Slobodan Milosevic's attempts at consolidating Serbian power with those of the late dictator, Off states he had, "None of the vision or imagination of Tito."(341) What exactly was that vision? The creation of a perfect multiethnic union fused together by state sanctioned murder and maintained through the employment of OZNA-UDBA terror squads? As far as Off is concerned, supranational government remains the solution, not the problem.
Accompanying these considerations, Off's work displays other contradictions that further unravel her argument. If Tito's vision of state controlled multiculturalism is to be enforced on a global scale then there is a great deal of certainty that humanity is in store for more acts of genocide, not less. More people were killed by socialist based governments (whether labeled national socialist or international socialist) during the last century than by any other cause. This point is lost on Off as she explains how the implementation of the Dayton accords brought peace at the cost of ideological advancement. "Everybody won something," she states, "but everybody lost something as well - especially a generation of Sarajevans who, under Tito, had come to believe in and live the dream of multiculturalism."(222) Was it a dream or a nightmare?
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
presidential guard, thesecretary general, cousin pauvre, airport agreement, onthe ground, geno cide, lift and strike, ofthe men, atthe time
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United Nations, New York, Security Council, Bosnian Serb, Boutros Ghali, Hutu Power, Romeo Dallaire, Louise Arbour, Booh Booh, Radovan Karadzic, State Department, The Hague, Slobodan Milosevic, Luc Marchal, United States, Madeleine Albright, Kod Sonje, Colm Doyle, Arusha Accords, Kofi Annan, Mme Agathe, President Izetbegovic, Biljana Plavsic, Operation Turquoise, Canadian Forces
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