Some of Our Best Friends Are Authoritarians
by Patricia Derian
www.thenation.com, June 7, 2004
(November 7, 1981 issue)
The Reagan Administration has made faint
efforts to fake an attitude toward human rights; it has made no
effort to implement a policy. Let's look at the record.
§ U.S. representative to the United
Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick put forth the theory that authoritarianism
is better than totalitarianism. Irving Kristol and other neoconservatives
were quick to rally behind this construct. Kirkpatrick claimed
that in some places, notably Latin America, the people were not
ready for democracy and that authoritarian governments were therefore
an understandable, if regrettable, development. Despite right-wing
efforts to resuscitate it, the authoritarian-totalitarian dichotomy
has, blessedly, been laid to rest. The outrage generated by the
description of torture and anti-Semitism in Argentina in Jacobo
Timerman's Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number
and the Polish workers' courageous struggle for economic and human
rights in a "totalitarian" country showed how false
the distinction was.
§ In his mid-January confirmation
hearings before the Senate, Secretary of State Alexander Haig
responded to a question about his position on the U.S. law prohibiting
military and economic assistance to governments that violate human
rights by saying, "In general, I support this provision of
the Foreign Assistance Act. I do not believe we should, other
than in the most exceptional circumstances, provide aid to any
country which consistently and in the harshest manner violates
the rights of its citizens. " But even before the transcripts
of that hearing were released, Administration officials were lobbying
members of Congress to repeal legislation prohibiting military
assistance to Argentina, where the ruling junta and its supporters
are responsible for the murders of countless citizens. This same
government routinely confiscates property, detains people in prison
without pressing charges and practices torture, and it has been
charged by human-rights groups with causing the disappearance
of approximately 15,000 Argentines.
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§ At a late January press conference, Haig said, "International
terrorism will take the place of human rights [in] our concern,
because it is the ultimate abuse of human rights." At the
time Haig made that statement, the United States was continuing
its attempt to extradite the terrorists it believes participated,
with the approval of the Chilean government, in the Washington,
D.C., assassinations of Orlando Letelier, a former minister in
Salvador Allende's government, and Ronnie Moffitt, an American
citizen and an associate of Letelier's at the Institute for Policy
Studies. Immediately after Ronald Reagan's inauguration, the extradition
efforts were abandoned, and Chile began to feel the warm sun of
American friendship. Chile took part in the annual U.S.-South
American naval exercise this year, the ban on Export-Import Bank
loans to Chile was lifted, and U.S. representatives to international
banks were ordered to support loans to Chile. In addition, Kirkpatrick
recently visited August0 Pinochet, Chile's president. So much
for Chilean terrorism. Then, the Reagan Administration, after
declaring the Soviet Union to be the greatest supporter of terrorism
in the world, abandoned the wheat embargo imposed by Jimmy Carter
in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and negotiated
new grain sales with the U.S.S.R. No further policy to combat
Soviet-supported terrorism has been proposed.
§ On April 30, The New York Times
quoted President Reagan as having said that "even at the
negotiating table, never shall it be forgotten for a moment that
wherever it is taking place in the world, the persecution of people
for whatever reason...persecution of people for their religious
belief...that is a matter to be on that negotiating table or the
United States does not belong at that table." In the same
edition of The Times, a front-page story reported that
"after the speech, a White House spokesman said Mr. Reagan
had not meant to alter his policy of playing down the rights issue
in foreign relations."
§ The President nominated Ernest
Lefever to be Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights and
Humanitarian Affairs. Lefever's publicly stated views on the subject
were (a) that all legislation making foreign aid conditional on
a nation's observance of human rights should be repealed and (b)
that human rights had no place in U.S. foreign policy. The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, with a Republican majority, handed
the President his first important defeat by voting 13 to 4 to
reject the nomination. Lefever's name was withdrawn even though
he modified his views during the confirmation hearings, and no
one else has been named to fill the position. (Lefever is now
a consultant to the State Department.)
§ Soon after he took office, President
Reagan said he thought that South Africa's government was making
a good-faith effort to improve its treatment of blacks. Apparently
through the error of an inexperienced consular officer, the chief
of South Africa's military intelligence and three of his colleagues
were granted visas to enter the United States, even though the
South African military is barred from this country by law. When
their presence here became known, the State Department said that
the South Africans had not been received by any U.S. officials.
But they were received by Kirkpatrick, whose staff said she had
not known who the visitors were, and by a U.S. military intelligence
officer, who was described as "an old friend.'' In October,
several South African police officials were allowed to enter the
United States to attend an international police conference, and
it is rumored that Prime Minister P.W. Botha may soon pay a state
visit.
§ The Administration has shown itself
to be extremely hospitable to dictators and human-rights abusers.
President Chun Doo Hwan, the strongman who ended South Korea's
hopes for democracy, was welcomed by Reagan in February. And President
Roberto Eduardo Viola of Argentina--elected in 1980 by the three
members of Argentina's military junta--was warmly received when
he visited Washington in March. Vice President George Bush fawned
on President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines, pronouncing
him a champion of democracy in his remarks last June at Marcos's
inauguration for another six-year term.
§ The Administration has so far
evaded the human-rights provisions of the International Financial
Institutions Act of 1977. By way of explaining its support for
loans to South Korea, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay,
the Administration has claimed that "there have been significant
improvements in the human rights situations in these countries...the
Department has...determined that they do not now fall within the
standard that would require a 'no' vote or abstention on loans
not serving basic human needs."
While some members of the Administration
maintain that the defeat of Carter was a direct repudiation of
his human-rights policy, others argue that little has changed
since the Carter Presidency. Actually, U.S. human-rights policy
was not an issue in the election and so was not "repudiated."
But it is also false to say that a reversal of the Carter Administration's
policies on human rights has not taken place.
The Reagan Administration's intentions
are evident in its warm embrace of dictators and its efforts to
eliminate Congressional human-rights reports and to restore and
increase aid to repressive governments. Reagan is banking on his
ability to keep the public's attention focused on domestic--particularly
economic--matters. He is also counting on a post-Iran eagerness
to turn away from foreign affairs.
Reagan has made foreign affairs relatively
simple. The Soviet menace is so overwhelming and the United States
is so weak that we must blindly embrace all anti-Communist governments
in order to defend liberty, justice and democracy.
The message to the world is clear: the
United States is not serious about human rights. Although it will
continue to mouth pieties, this country will not act on behalf
of human rights.
But the Administration has been challenged.
Democrat Don Bonker, chairman of the House Human Rights and International
Organizations Subcommittee, and a handful of others in Congress
have repeatedly urged Reagan not to abandon the U.S. commitment
to human rights. Senator Christopher Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut,
who recently visited El Salvador to discuss U.S. military aid,
succeeded in making such aid contingent on peace negotiations
and an improvement of the Salvadoran record on human rights. Though
the Argentine regime is being courted by the U.S. military, arms
sales and economic aid are contingent on improvements in the human-rights
situation there. The policy is having some effect. The most recent
U.S. general to call on the Argentines was reported to have carried
a list of conditions for arms sales, including moves toward a
democratic government and progress on human rights.
It is likely that even before Reagan's
bid for the Presidency, some of his industrialist friends had
complained to him of the losses American business had suffered
because of human-rights restrictions. They may have convinced
Reagan that those off-limits governments with which they wanted
to do business had had just provocation for their repressive actions.
Given his preoccupation with the supposed
Soviet threat, U.S. business interests abroad and propping up
anti-communist governments, a man who thinks only that the Russians
are dangerous, China is big and Africa black (except for the little
white tip) will inevitably come up with a disastrous human-rights
policy.
I find it difficult to imagine that this
can continue for three more years or that the American people
will stand for it. Our allies are frightened and may desert us.
Our enemies, we can only hope, will not figure out the extent
of our disarray before we get back on track. I am far less worried
about regaining military superiority over the Soviet Union than
I am about a United States that has not been able or willing to
develop a foreign policy, and that now has a President who does
not care.
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