<https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/07/04/opinion/hey-america-how-about-an-apo
logy/> Boston Globe
  


Hey, America, how about an apology?


  


Some countries are making amends for things they've done to other countries.
But the United States is never sorry.



July 4, 2021
By
<https://www.bostonglobe.com/about/staff-list/contributor/stephen-kinzer/?p1
=Article_Byline> Stephen Kinzer
  

I'm so sorry. I now realize that we did something awful to you. For a long
time, we minimized and even denied it. Today, finally, we accept
responsibility. On my own behalf and on behalf of my people, I offer a
heartfelt apology.

World leaders do not easily pronounce words like those. Most countries, like
most individuals, wrap themselves in a comfortable myth of innocence. That
makes it difficult to admit any kind of guilt. Americans are especially
assertive in refusing to acknowledge that we've committed crimes abroad. "I
will never apologize for the United States, I don't care what the facts
are," President George H.W. Bush declared after a missile from a US Navy
cruiser shot down a civilian Iranian airliner in 1988, killing all 290
people aboard.

"I'm not an apologize-for-America kind of guy," Bush liked to say. Neither,
it seems, is President Biden. During Biden's first months in office, he and
his senior aides have strongly resisted acknowledging that the United States
has ever sinned against other nations. Yet during these same months, three
other world leaders have acknowledged their countries' participation in
bloody crimes. They admitted painful truths while Biden remained securely in
his cocoon of denial.

In May, President Emmanuel Macron of France traveled to Rwanda and
acknowledged "the extent of our responsibilities" for collaborating with
perpetrators of the 1994 genocide. Around the same time, President Andrés
Manuel López Obrador of Mexico apologized for a 1911 massacre of 303 Chinese
civilians by revolutionary soldiers. Then Germany formally accepted
"historical and moral responsibility" for the slaughter of tens of thousands
of Africans in the early 20th century and agreed to provide $1.3 billion in
aid to Namibia, a former German colony.

 
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logy/> [Continue Reading] 

 

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