This article focuses on the performative recognition offered to victims through
political apologies for conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV). It engages with
understandings of political apology as an act of acknowledgment and moral
visibility that has the capacity to further include marginalized accounts of violence or injustice within exclusive national histories/memberships. I introduce
feminist understandings of visibility as ambivalent alongside a differential politics of “grievability” in order to suggest that political apologies must always
recognize and make visible particular accounts of violence and subject positions; however, they simultaneously obscure others. I problematize the gendered and gendering effects of this process in relation to two cases of
apology for CRSV: the Japanese imperial “comfort women” and the US Abu
Ghraib torture scandal during the Global War on Terror (GWoT).