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Letter to President Obama on Human Rights

by: Julie Mertus  |  Foreign Policy In Focus

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On November 6, 2008, Chinese human rights petitioners gathered outside a police station in Beijing, China. (Photo: Ng Han Guan / AP)

    Dear President Obama:

    The Bush administration had eight years to run our country's reputation on human rights into the ground. It succeeded not only in tarnishing America's image, but also in derailing the entire international human rights movement. As a professor of human rights who has studied the opportunities and challenges for the White House in transition periods, I know that the window of opportunity for distinguishing yourself from your predecessor is open now, but you must act quickly and decisively if you are to get human rights back on track.

    Here are four steps that you can take:

    Step one: Create a relationship with U.S.-based human rights organizations.

    The Bush administration treated human rights advocates as enemies and shrugged off their reminders of international standards as inconvenient roadblocks. The Obama administration should consider these same groups to be allies and even partners in promoting human dignity and freedom at home and worldwide. Reaching out to human rights activists can be accomplished by calling to the White House a broad range of human rights advocates for regularly scheduled dialogues on human rights. Listen to the advocates. They know their constituencies, and many have fresh knowledge and experience from human rights frontlines and fault-lines. The kind of information they can provide is so central to the creation of your foreign policy strategies that you may wish to launch the dialogue before you take office.

    Step two: Repair your relationship with human rights bodies at the United Nations.

    Instead of seeking solutions to problems within UN structures designed to unify countries in a common quest for peace, President Bush took a "go-it-alone" approach. This "youre with us or against us" mantra was designed to separate and divide. The Obama administration can publically reaffirm its commitment to the UN human rights framework and reassert its interest in taking part in the Human Rights Council, the new centerpiece of the UN human rights system. The Bush administration pulled out of the running for a seat on the body because it feared being subjected to review. (The Council reviews its own members first and, thus, would have subjected the United States to review just as it was being criticized for its practices on torture). Although the Council is a deeply flawed institution, the United States has the responsibility to work with those who are trying to get it right. It would be exceedingly helpful if the new appointments of Americans to UN bodies shared a concern with making human rights mechanisms work. That would be a tremendous difference from the Bush administration appointees, who ranged between being skeptical to being openly hostile toward human rights.

    Step three: Do something that unequivocally demonstrates that the United States will no longer act as if it is above international law.

    A good start would be the creation of an independent body to investigate the role of military and civilian authorities, acting with direct or implicit approval of the U.S. government, in the torture and abuse of detainees. The investigation can start with Guantnamo, but its mandate should be broad. The Bush administration played one legal game after another to advance a distorted view of the proper usage of military courts and to assert a legally incorrect definition of torture. You can count on support from military lawyers on this one. During the first Bush administration, (especially during the Gulf War), U.S. military lawyers played a key role in overseeing the legality of the actions of not only the U.S. military, but also its allies. The second Bush administration, however, marginalized and ignored those same military lawyers. (George W. Bushs administration didnt like the legal answers it was getting from military experts on torture, so it turned elsewhere for lawyers willing to follow the administration's script). Your administration can reaffirm White House respect for military lawyers by hearing and valuing their analysis of the missteps in Guantnamo, Afghanistan, and Iraq.

    Step four: In your first week in office, get out your pen and begin signing some long overdue international human rights treaties.

    President Bush's scorn of international treaties went so far as to lead him to take the unprecedented move of "unsigning" the treaty establishing an International Criminal Court and the Vienna Convention on Treaties. You might begin by re-signing these, as well as signing on to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, a convention signed by every country in the world except for the United States and Somalia, and the Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities, a convention modeled largely on American disability law. These are no-brainers. As to the rest of the human rights treaties that are not signed and/or not ratified, or that are signed and largely ignored, you should appoint an independent board of experts to study and report on the likely outcome of greater American engagement in the treaty processes.

    Instead of being viewed as a magnanimous human rights leader, the United States is today considered to be an arrogant human rights cheater. Rebuilding the reputation of the United States and reestablishing its role as a global leader on human rights will take time. But these four steps will give your administration a good start.

    Sincerely yours,
    Julie Mertus

    ---------

    Julie Mertus is a Foreign Policy In Focus contributor, a professor at American University, and the author of the award-winning book "Bait and Switch: Human Rights and US Foreign Policy" (2nd ed. 2008).

  

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Comments

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Amen.

Amen.

Obama, On Sept. 11, 2001

Obama, On Sept. 11, 2001 the door to our humanity was slammed shut by "U.S. interest" (read: the self-interest of a few drunk on power), and we now have an opportunity for interest in justice, equality, and fairness to all. Make the door wider so we all can get through at the same time. Sounds like we have the same dream; now let's act, teach, act... Carpe diem, rest, carpe diem, rest, ad infinitum... I hope your foreign policy talk was only talk in order to get the so-called Republicrats on your side. Inner peace is the way. In wisdom, kindness, and humor, A nonviolent communication, liberal activist

Amen here, too. Do hope

Amen here, too. Do hope President-elect Obama receives a copy of this treatise.

Honestly, how could you

Honestly, how could you possibly have neglected to even mention the Patriot Act and the Military Commissions Act?

Step five: Serious

Step five: Serious prosecutions and serious penalties fitting the crimes. No impunity.

Human rights begin at home.

Human rights begin at home. I spent six years in prison, rightly convicted and sentenced to do so for a felony. After that time I received a pardon from the California Governor, the only one given to a violent crime in years. When convicted I rightly lost my rights including that of habeus corpus. I got that beck when I was released from parole and could vote again. Now this administration has destroyed that right and protection for ALL American citizens, not just those accused in terrorist issues. I want that right back for me and everyone else in this country. Without that right we are powerless against any accusation from anybody, especially the authorities everywhere and my person experience is that they are already abusive of their power and will fight to keep HC gone PF

What about homelessness and

What about homelessness and poverty in the US? I tend to agree with Mr. Fako's main point but for an additional reason. Worldwide human rights is certainly important but one thing wrong with this country is our focus on world problems before dealing with our own. Shouldn't we be a good role model and ensure human rights at home first?

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On Wed 11/12, the National Religious Campaign Against Torture (NRCAT) is organizing a National Day of Witness involving more than 50 delegations visiting more than 60 congressional offices across the country to build support for an Executive Order that would dismantle the torture infrastructure established by the current administration. There will also be solemn process and public witness in front of The White House. We are presenting a Declaration of Principles for such an Exec Order. Nearly 200 prominent faith leaders from Catholic, Protestant, Evangelical, Jewish, Muslim, and Sikh communities, as well top officials from every Administration since the 1970s, have joined together to endorse the Declaration of Principles. For more information about the National Day of Witness and the Declaration of Principles, visit our website: www.tortureisamoralissue.org. There will be a national press teleconference at 10:30am EST on Nov 12. John Humphries NRCAT's Dir for Program Coordination

The monetary system is one

The monetary system is one of our greatest problem,it must change.