Tainted Legacy
Dancing with Dictators
by William F: Schulz
Amnesty International Amnesty
- Now, Fall 2003
Washington has much to learn from Algeria
on ways to fight terrorism," said William Burns, assistant
secretary of state for Near Eastern and Northern ~ African Affairs
in December 2002. In 1992 the Algerian government declared an
election null and void because Islamists were poised to win it.
If the Islamists had been allowed to assume power peacefully and
forced to cope with the challenges of governing one of the world's
poorest and most fractious countries, it is entirely conceivable
that, as in Iran today, the extremists might have split into factions,
a viable opposition have arisen naturally, and the radicals eventually
driven from power. (Islamists are very good at mounting protests
but have an abysmal record at actually running countries.) Instead,
tens of thousands of people, many of them civilians, were killed
by the Algerian government over the next decade in the name of
restoring "order." Algerian militants were responsible
for manifest atrocities as well, but the government's response
to terrorism is hardly one that the United States ought to emulate.
Yet since the events of September 2001,
the United States, never a purist when it has come to aligning
itself with human rights-abusing regimes, has appeared even less
cognizant of the bitter fruit such alliances yield, even less
willing than in past years to challenge repressive rulers as long
as they were on the right side in the war on terrorism. And one
authoritarian government after another, taking their cue from
President Bush's declaration of all-out war on all terrorists
everywhere, has used that war as an excuse to further erode human
rights.
Robert Mugabe's notoriously repressive
regime in Zimbabwe, for example, has expelled foreign journalists
who have reported critically on his rule. "We would like
them [the journalists] to know," a government spokesperson
explained, "that we agree with President Bush that anyone
who in any way finances, harbors, or defends terrorists is himself
a terrorist. We, too, will not make any difference between terrorists
and their friends and supporters." Burma (Myanmar), one of
the world's most brutal dictatorships, was quick to enroll in
the antiterrorist club, declaring it "has been subject to
terrorism in the past," no doubt including at the hands of
its great democracy advocate, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
China has in effect extracted a quid pro
quo from Washing-ton, saying shortly after 9/11, "The United
States has asked China to provide assistance against terrorism.
China, by the same token, has reasons to ask Washington to give
its support and understanding in the fight against terrorism and
separatism," which is Chinese code language for those who,
usually nonviolently, seek independence for Tibet and the Muslim
province of Xinjiang.
President Megawati Sukarnoputri of Indonesia
has used the threat of terrorism as an excuse for that country's
abusive crackdown in the provinces of Aceh and Irian Jaya. Under
cover of fighting terrorism, even Australia is refusing entry
to political asylum seekers and holding them in deplorable conditions
on Christmas Island, 1,400 miles from Darwin.
The United States has continued to speak
out against some of these regimes-notably, those less central
to the war, like Zimbabwe and Burma-but has far too often given
new found allies a "pass." Washington is eager, for
instance, to resume military contacts with Indonesia that had
been severed because of human rights abuses committed by the Indonesian
military in the past and, even more tellingly, has argued in court
against a lawsuit that seeks to hold ExxonMobil responsible for
rape, torture, and murder committed by that military in conjunction
with its protection of ExxonMobil assets in the province of Aceh.
Though the State Department was not required to take a position
one way or the other on the lawsuit, it chose to do so because
"initiatives in the ongoing war against A1 Qaeda" could
be "imperiled. . . if Indonesia. . . curtailed cooperation
in response to perceived disrespect for its sovereign interests."
Malaysia and its outspokenly anti-Semitic
prime minister, Mahathir bin Mohammad, have long been objects
of criticism by both private human rights groups and the State
Department, but in May 2002 the U.S. attitude toward this enemy
of democracy changed markedly when President Bush received him
at the White House and was effusive in his praise of Malaysia's
support for antiterrorism efforts.
Nor was the president reticent in December
2001 to embrace President Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan,
despite his government's continuing harassment and torture of
its Uighur minority and Nazarbayev himself being suspected by
the Justice Department of having extorted millions of dollars
from American oil companies. "We . . . reiterate our mutual
commitments to advance the rule of law and promote freedom of
religion and other universal human rights," the two presidents
said in their joint statement, though critics might be excused
from the cynical observation that this friendship was founded
more upon U.S. desire to secure access to an airbase in Kazakhstan
than a sudden discovery that ~e two both loved human rights. (Not
surprisingly, within the following six months some 20 newspapers
in Kazakhstan were shut down and opposition leaders beaten.)
But perhaps the most dramatic reversal
of field had to do with Russia, whose brutality in Chechnya candidate
Bush had regularly decried. "Russia cannot learn the lessons
of democracy from the textbook of tyranny," he said during
the 2000 presidential campaign, and he had vowed no cooperation
without "civilized self-restraint from Moscow" strong
language which in his May, 2002 trip to Russia had warped into
"We will work to help end fighting and achieve a political
settlement in Chechnya," his sole comment on the matter.
It goes without saying that gaining the
cooperation of other governments to fight terrorism is a legitimate
foreign policy goal. But what the United States seems to forget
with great regularity is that by identifying itself with those
who abuse human rights-particularly when the rights being abused
are those of Uighur Muslims in China, Acehnese Muslims in Indonesia,
Uighur Muslims in Kazakhstan, and Muslims in Chechnya-we invite
the conclusions that U.S. rhetoric about democracy and freedom
is no more than that, and that the war on terror is in fact a
war on Islam.
And one thing more: We seed a new generation
of terrorists. In Uzbekistan, to take one of the most egregious
cases, the United States has cultivated a military alliance with
a government that is renowned for the grotesque nature of its
human rights record: people detained without access to lawyers,
families, or medical assistance; widespread torture; regular reports
of deaths in custody; no dissent; no real elections. "Needless
to say," explains one informed observer, "U.S. military
aid for antiterrorist activities in countries like Uzbekistan
will invariably provide their leaders with resources that can
be turned indiscriminately against their own populations. And
that, paradoxically . . . will end up driving the discontented
toward the only political alternatives that are radical enough
to put up a fight."
Jeffrey Goldfarb, who teaches democracy
to foreign students all over the world, reports that, more and
more, those students (from South Africa to Ukraine to Indonesia),
potentially our strongest allies, are turning against the United
States. They see the war on terrorism "being used as a cover
by dictators around the world to justify crackdowns on democracy
advocates.... Suddenly the strategic resources of. . .dictatorships
are more important than the lives of human rights activists. Suddenly
the defense of the American way of life and our democracy seems
predicated upon a lack of concern for the democratic rights of
people in less advantaged countries."
It doesn't have to be this way. How much
wiser it would be to look to some of our great human rights successes
for guidance. In 1987 when the United States was closely identified
with an autocratic regime in South Korea, anti-American demonstrations
were commonplace among pro -democracy advocates, in spite of the
sacrifice American soldiers had made in the Korean War. Gradually
that changed. And what made the difference? "The antipathy
declined as the United States was no longer seen as supporting
repressive military regimes in Korea," said the U.S. ambassador,
Thomas C. Hubbard. "Korea is an example of how democratic
currents can dissipate heat and anger."
Of course no parallel is perfect: Korea
was relatively prosperous; it was not threatened by terrorism;
and American influence was pervasive. And that support for Korean
strongmen still grates: When two 14-year-old South Korean girls
were run over and killed by an American armored vehicle in 2002,
it unleashed an outpouring of resentment attributed at least in
part to lingering indignation at the past U.S. alliance with South
Korean dictators. But there is still a lesson to be learned here:
It does matter what company you keep. The United States would
fare far better fighting terrorism if it fought more consistently
for human rights.
And not just in the civil and political
realm. Failed states obviously provide fertile soil for terrorism,
but states fail for many reasons. The United States' support for
the global fight against AIDS bolsters the struggle against terrorism.
Governments whose armies are decimated and budgets drained as
a result of the disease can hardly be expected to be paragons
of stability or effective stalwarts against violence. Stopping
the trade in illegal diamonds in West Africa means stopping the
use of proceeds from those sales used to purchase weapons by terrorist
cells, including, reportedly, Al Qaeda. And development assistance,
if administered wisely and not wasted, can be a powerful tool
against terrorism, mired as the retinue often is in poverty and
hopelessness. As President Bush's former ambassador to Pakistan
put it, "I really believe that creating jobs in this country
is a way to protect American lives."
The United States would fare far better
if it were a more principled and consistent advocate for human
rights. But to be that, we would first need remove the mote in
our own eye. We would need to climb out of the cellar when it
comes to foreign aid. We are the nation with the smallest aid
budget relative to the size of its economy (about 0.1 percent
of GDP) of all the rich nations in the world. We would need to
do away with the death penalty, our insistence upon which is already
handicapping the "war on terror" as one European ally
after another, scandalized by our continued use of a punishment
they regard as barbaric, refuses to extradite or assist in the
prosecution of terrorist suspects who may be subject to execution.
Most of all, we would need to employ tactics that respect human
rights in the war against those who would destroy them. But one
of the reasons we are so ambivalent about those who have cracked
down on human rights overseas is that we have so badly compromised
them here at home. It is very difficult to clean another's face
if you are trying to do so with your own dirty hands.
William F. Schulz is executive director
of Amnesty International USA. This excerpt is from his book, Tainted
Legacy: 9/11 and the Ruin of Human Rights, to be published in
October by Nation Books.
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