In January 1941, with the prospect looming of U.S. involvement in another European war, President Franklin Roosevelt spoke of America’s purpose in the world: to protect and promote “four freedoms.”
FDR drew a clear link between U.S. security and the fulfillment of human rights at home. “Just as our national policy in internal affairs has been based upon a decent respect for the rights and the dignity of all of our fellow men within our gates, so our national policy in foreign affairs has been based on a decent respect for the rights and the dignity of all nations, large and small.”
In another speech he underscored the point: “unless there is [human] security here at home there cannot be lasting peace in the world.”
Among the extraordinary backward steps Donald Trump is taking America, none is more shameful, than his disregard for — in fact, his calculated trampling on — human rights at home and abroad.
To my mind, the two are interrelated: A government that does not respect the human rights of its own citizens will also show no respect for human rights in other countries — and will help other governments that seek to repress their citizens’ rights.
Undermining Rights at Home
On the home front, two survey sources show how the U.S. has declined as a repository of human rights, in particular adherence to political rights and civil liberties. These sources are the World Justice Project’s Rule of Law Index, whose ranking is based on 44 indicators of lawfulness; and Freedom House, which makes annual assessments based on implementation (not claims) of rights enumerated in the 1948 UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
The WJP ranks the U.S. 19th of 113 countries surveyed. Among the weakest dimensions for the U.S. are labor rights, effective correctional system, discrimination, respect for due process, and accessibility and affordability of the legal system. For comparison sake, note that Germany (sixth), Canada (ninth), and Britain (11th) all rank higher than the U.S. Freedom House ranks the U.S. 86th of 100 countries; Canada (99), Germany (94), and Britain (94) again rank higher. Trump’s corruption, evasion of legal and institutional norms, and low regard for certain human rights help account for a lower Freedom House ranking of the U.S. than in previous years.
I recently discussed a report by Philip Alston, the UN special rapporteur for extreme poverty and human rights on poverty in America. Before Trump, the rich-poor gap was already wide and the number of people, especially children, living in poverty was pitifully large.
The UN report detailed how, under Trump, those people are even more vulnerable because they are being deliberately targeted for political advantage. Human security and basic human rights are under assault in other ways: by reducing government responsibility for the health and welfare system; putting energy interests and private profit ahead of action to address climate change and respect scientific findings; subjecting immigration policy to outright racist priorities, such as by denial of due process, separation of families, and blatant disregard for the rights of children (the U.S. is the only country in the world that has not ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child); moving away from support of public education; and undermining the right of labor to organize. The Supreme Court, now with a far right-leaning majority thanks to Trump appointees, is a handmaiden of his attack on labor, women’s, gay people’s, and immigrants’ rights.
Trump’s immigration policy is especially notorious. UN human rights special rapporteurs from various countries have condemned it, pointing out that his Muslim ban and rejection of legitimate asylum requests based on “a well-founded fear of persecution” violate international and U.S. law and conventions. (A U.S. district judge on July 3 slammed the administration for ignoring its own regulations on asylum seekers, and ordered that these detainees be either freed from detention or granted asylum.) Trump’s executive order of June 20, 2018, according to these UN experts, “does not address the situation of those children who have already been pulled away from their parents. We call on the Government of the U.S. to release these children from immigration detention and to reunite them with their families based on the best interests of the child, and the rights of the child to liberty and family unity. Detention of children is punitive, severely hampers their development, and in some cases may amount to torture. Children are being used as a deterrent to irregular migration, which is unacceptable.”
“State-sanctioned child abuse” is the way Congressman Tim Ryan (D-OH) put it on MSNBC on July 5.
Of course such criticism is meaningless to a president who touts “America first” and believes a harsh immigration policy is the key to his reelection. He has already withdrawn the U.S. from the UN Human Rights Council and rejected the critique of poverty in America by the special rapporteur, with U.S. ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley deriding it as “patently ridiculous.”
These actions, along with reduced U.S. contributions to the UN budget, put the U.S. on China’s and Russia’s side. Beijing and Moscow likewise want to force major reductions in the human security side of the UN budget, including peacekeeping missions and protection of women and children from sexual exploitation.
Dancing with Dictators
Meantime, the Trump administration has continued the sordid U.S. practice of supporting authoritarian regimes, making the U.S. party to repression of human rights abroad and, on occasion, a collaborator in crimes against humanity and war crimes.
The usual pretext for such support is to maintain “stability,” counter terrorism, or align against some other equally authoritarian regime.
Vietnam reflects the latter case: Washington, backing Vietnam’s territorial case against China, hasn’t said a word about repression of dissent and trials of human-rights activists there. “Support” often takes the form of selling arms, as in the cases of Turkey despite widespread repression, Saudi Arabia in its bombing campaign in Yemen, and the Philippines despite its unrestrained drug war.
Israel should be added to this list, since the far-right Netanyahu government receives about $1.5 billion annually in arms that give it license to violently suppress Palestinian protests. Not surprisingly, the equally far-right U.S. ambassador to Israel has said Israel should be exempt from U.S. law that requires a State Department report on whether or not U.S.-supplied weapons are being used to repress human rights. “Israel is a democracy,” Amb. David Friedman said, “whose army does not engage in gross violations of human rights.”
Even when serious violations of human rights are occurring in adversarial countries that have something to benefit Trump, such as China, North Korea, and Russia, expect very little comment from him.
Yes, he said he had brought up human rights when he met with Kim Jong-un, and insisted that U.S. missile attacks in response to Assad’s use of chemical weapons were motivated by concern about Syrian children. But does anyone take those assertions seriously? After all, Trump has publicly excused Kim, Xi Jinping, Putin, and other authoritarian leaders he considers great friends for their bad behavior, noting that they have a tough job and that there are “bad guys” in all political systems.
Trump’s beef with China is about trade; human rights has yet to get a hearing.
And how about Russia? While several of Trump’s top officials have criticized Putin over arbitrary arrests and even assassinations of critics, Trump has been silent. (Remember how he ignored the advice of his national security council — “Do Not Congratulate” — when he telephoned Putin on his reelection?) Or Poland and Hungary, where Trump-like leaders are busy burying democracy?
Trump reserves his professed concern about human rights for antagonistic rivals, notably Cuba and Iran — the very countries, not coincidentally, that Obama successfully engaged. Those countries are important either because of their domestic political value (Cuba) or (for Iran) because of Trump’s ties to Israel and Saudi Arabia.
But aligning against Cuba and Iran only worsens human rights conditions. In a word, the more antagonistic U.S. policy becomes — imposing sanctions and promoting regime change — the more are human rights threatened, because hard-line elements in Cuba and Iran have ammunition to increase repression in the name of national security.
In the spirit of forming “a more perfect Union,” please consider contributing to a group that is fighting for human rights.
Mel Gurtov, syndicated by PeaceVoice, is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Portland State University.