Rights to remember

How has September 11th changed America's approach to human
rights? Dangerously, suggests Harold Hongju Koh, but perhaps only
temporarily

Oct 30th 2003 | NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT 
>From The Economist print edition

   Harold Hongju Koh is professor of international law at Yale Law
   School, and was assistant secretary of state for human rights in the
   Clinton administration. This is extracted from the 2003 John Galway
   Foster lecture delivered in London on October 21st.

I WOULD argue that September 11th ended the euphoria brought on by
the fall of the Berlin Wall, the belief that American-led global
co-operation could solve global problems. The American administration
responded to the twin-towers tragedy with a sweeping new global
strategy: an emerging "Bush doctrine", if you will.

One element of this doctrine is what I call "Achilles and his
heel". September 11th brought upon America, as once upon Achilles,
a schizophrenic sense of both exceptional power and exceptional
vulnerability. Never has a superpower seemed so powerful and so
vulnerable at the same time. The Bush doctrine asked: "How can we use
our superpower resources to protect our vulnerability?"

The administration's answer has been "homeland security". To preserve
American power and prevent future attack, the government has asserted
a novel right under international law to disarm through "pre-emptive
self-defence" any country that poses a threat. At home it has instituted
sweeping strategies of immigration control, security detention,
governmental secrecy and information awareness.

The administration has also radically shifted its emphasis on human
rights. In 1941, Franklin Delano Roosevelt called the allies to arms by
painting a vision of the world we were trying to make: a post-war world
of four fundamental freedoms: freedom of speech, freedom of religion,
freedom from want, freedom from fear.

This framework foreshadowed the post-war human-rights construct --
embedded in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequent
international covenants.that emphasised comprehensive protection of
civil and political rights (freedom of speech and religion), economic,
social and cultural rights (freedom from want), and freedom from gross
violations and persecution (the Refugee Convention, the Genocide
Convention and the Torture Convention). But Bush administration
officials have now reprioritised "freedom from fear" as the number-one
freedom we need to preserve. Freedom from fear has become the obsessive
watchword of America's human-rights policy.

Witness five faces of a human-rights policy fixated on freedom from
fear. First, closed government and invasions of privacy. Second,
scapegoating immigrants and refugees. Third, creating extra-legal zones,
most prominently at the naval base at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba. Fourth,
creating extra-legal persons, particularly the detainees of American
citizenship labelled "enemy combatants". Fifth, a reduced American
human-rights presence through the rest of the globe.

The following vignettes illustrate this transformation of human rights.

 -Closed government and invasions of privacy. Two core tenets of a
  post-Watergate world had been that our government does not spy on its
  citizens, and that American citizens should see what our government is
  doing. But since September 11th, classification of government documents
  has risen to new heights.

  The Patriot Act, passed almost without dissent after September 11th,
  authorises the Defence Department to develop a project to promote
  something called .total information awareness.. Under this programme,
  the government may gather huge amounts of information about citizens
  without proving they have done anything wrong. They can access a
  citizen's records.whether telephone, financial, rental, internet,
  medical, educational or library.without showing any involvement with
  terrorism. Internet service providers may be forced to produce records
  based solely on FBI declarations that the information is for an
  anti-terrorism investigation.

  Many absurdities follow: the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights,
  in a study published in September, reports that 20 American peace
  activists, including nuns and high-school students, were recently
  flagged as security threats and detained for saying that they were
  travelling to a rally to protest against military aid to Colombia. The
  entire high-school wrestling team of Juneau, Alaska, was held up at
  airports seven times just because one member was the son of a retired
  Coast Guard officer on the FBI watch-list.

 -Scapegoating immigrants. After September 11th, 1,200 immigrants were
  detained, more than 750 on charges based solely on civil immigration
  violations. The Justice Department's own inspector-general called the
  attorney-general's enforcement of immigration laws "indiscriminate and
  haphazard". The Immigration and Naturalisation Service, which formerly
  had a mandate for humanitarian relief as well as for border protection,
  has been converted into an arm of the Department of Homeland Security.

  The impact on particular groups has been devastating. The number of
  refugees resettled in America declined from 90,000 a year before
  September 11th to less than a third that number, 27,000, this
  year. The Pakistani population of Atlantic County, New Jersey has
  fallen by half.

 -The creation of extra-legal zones. Some 660 prisoners from 42 countries
  are being held in Guantánamo Bay, some for nearly two years. Three
  children are apparently being detained, including a 13-year-old,
  several of the detainees are aged over 70, and one claims to be over
  100. Courtrooms are being built to try six detainees, including two
  British subjects who have been declared eligible for trial by military
  commission. There have been 32 reported suicide attempts. Yet the
  administration is literally pouring concrete around its detention
  policy, spending another $25m on buildings in Guantánamo that will
  increase the detention capacity to 1,100.

 -The creation of extra-legal persons. In two cases that are quickly
  working their way to the Supreme Court, Yasser Hamdi and José Padilla
  are two American citizens on American soil who have been designated as
  "enemy combatants", and who have been accorded no legal channels to
  assert their rights.

  The racial disparities in the use of the "enemy combatant" label
  are glaring. Contrast, for example, the treatment of Mr Hamdi, from
  Louisiana but of Saudi Arabian ancestry, with that of John Walker
  Lindh, the famous "American Taliban", who is a white American from a
  comfortable family in the San Francisco Bay area. Both are American
  citizens; both were captured in Afghanistan in late 2001 by the
  Northern Alliance; both were handed over to American forces, who
  eventually brought them to the United States. But federal prosecutors
  brought criminal charges against Mr Lindh, who got an expensive lawyer
  and eventually plea-bargained to a prison term. Meanwhile, Mr Hamdi
  has remained in incommunicado detention, without a lawyer, in a South
  Carolina military brig for the past 16 months.

 -The effect on the rest of the world. America's anti-terrorist
  activities have given cover to many foreign governments who want
  to use "anti-terrorism" to justify their own crackdowns on human
  rights. Examples abound. In Indonesia, the army has cited America's
  use of Guantánamo to propose building an offshore prison camp on
  Nasi Island to hold suspected terrorists from Aceh. In Australia,
  Parliament passed laws mandating the forcible transfer of refugees
  seeking entry to detention facilities in Nauru, where children as
  young as three years old are being held, so that Australia does
  not (in the words of its defence minister) become a "pipeline for
  terrorists".

In China, Wang Bingzhang, the founder of the pro-democracy magazine
China Spring, was recently sentenced to life imprisonment for
"organising and leading a terrorist group", the first time, apparently,
that the Chinese government has charged a democracy activist with
terrorism. In Russia, Vladimir Putin on September 12th 2001 declared
that America and Russia "have a common foe" because Osama bin Laden's
people are connected to events in Chechnya. Within months the American
government had added three Chechen groups to its list of foreign
terrorist organisations.

In Egypt, the government extended for another three years its emergency
law, which allows it to detain suspected national-security threats
almost indefinitely without charge, to ban public demonstrations, and
to try citizens before military tribunals. President Hosni Mubarak
announced that America's parallel policies proved that "we were right
from the beginning in using all means, including military tribunals, to
combat terrorism".

What's wrong with this picture? Each prong of the Bush doctrine places
America in the position of promoting double standards, one for itself,
and another for the rest of the world. The emerging doctrine has placed
startling pressure upon the structure of human-rights and international
law that the United States itself designed and supported since 1948. In
a remarkably short time, the United States has moved from being the
principal supporter of that system to its most visible outlier.

Around the globe, America's human-rights policy has visibly softened,
subsumed under the all-encompassing banner of the "war against
terrorism". And at home, the Patriot Act, military commissions,
Guantánamo and the indefinite detention of American citizens have placed
America in the odd position of condoning deep intrusions by law, even
while creating zones and persons outside the law.



Nothing natural about it

At this point, you are surely asking: "Why did this happen?" and
"What can we do about it?" People living outside America sometimes
suggest that the reason is rooted in the American national culture of
unilateralism, parochialism and an obsession with power. With respect,
let me urge you to see it differently. The Bush doctrine, I believe,
is less a broad manifestation of American national character than
of short-sighted decisions made by a particularly extreme American
administration.

Many, if not most, Americans would have supported dealing with September
11th in a different way. Imagine, for example, the Bush administration
dealing with the atrocity through the then prevailing multilateralist
strategy of using global co-operation to solve global problems. On
the day after the attack, George Bush could have flown to New York to
stand in solidarity with the world's ambassadors in front of the United
Nations.

He could have supported the International Criminal Court as a way of
bringing the Osama bin Ladens and Saddam Husseins of the world to
justice. He could have refrained from invading Iraq without a second UN
resolution and he could have maintained a host of human-rights treaties
to signal the need for even greater global solidarity in a time of
terror. I am convinced that the American people would have supported him
in all those efforts.

So to those who would blame American culture for America's
unilateralism, let me remind you that not every American is equally
well-placed to promote American unilateralism. In recent years, such
individuals as Mr Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, John Bolton, Jesse Helms and
Justice Antonin Scalia have held particularly strategic positions that
enabled them to promote this sea-change in human-rights policy.

But if particular politicians and judges are part of the problem,
they are also part of the solution. For, in recent months, American
human-rights lawyers have launched multiple efforts to counter these
trends, particularly through lawsuits seeking to persuade judges to
construe American law in light of universal human-rights principles.

What are the signs of this trend? With each passing day, I see growing
resistance to these policies among ordinary Americans. Some promising
examples:

 -Career bureaucrats have started to challenge the administration's
  policies for undoing years of hard work.

 -Military judges and former federal prosecutors have expressed dismay
  over military commissions.

 -A group of former federal judges filed a brief in the Padilla case
  challenging the president's detention of American citizens without
  express congressional authorisation. They were joined in those efforts
  by two conservative libertarian groups: the Cato Institute and the
  Rutherford Institute.

 -Career diplomats have told me of early retirements by those who
  refuse to implement what they view as discriminatory visa policies.

 -A group of former American diplomats and former American
  prisoners-of-war have challenged the administration's flouting of the
  Geneva Conventions before the Supreme Court.

 -Librarians and booksellers have joined a bipartisan group of 133
  congressional representatives to press for a law, called the Freedom
  to Read Protection Act, that would shield library and bookstore
  records from government surveillance.

These grassroots efforts are finally reaching the political actors. The
public outcry following the leak of a proposed second Patriot Act has
put that legislation on hold. Resolutions opposing the first Patriot
Act have passed in three states and 162 municipalities. The House of
Representatives has refused to provide funding for the part of the
Patriot Act that allows so-called "sneak and peek" searches of private
property without prompt notice to the resident. A battle is brewing in
Congress over whether parts of the current act should be eliminated in
2005.


The Supreme Court to the rescue?

Most important, the key cases are finally starting to make their way
to the United States Supreme Court. Now you may ask: what influence
can a combination of international pressure and protest from ordinary
Americans have on such a conservative court?

But recent cases may give hope. For instance, last June in Lawrence v
Texas, the Supreme Court finally overruled its 17-year-old decision in
Bowers v Hardwick, which had permitted states to ban same-sex sodomy
among consenting adults. Representing Mary Robinson, the former UN Human
Rights High Commissioner, and several other human-rights groups, I had
filed an amicus curiae brief urging the court to consider two decades
of European human-rights precedent rejecting the criminalisation of
same-sex sodomy as a violation of the European Convention's right to
privacy.

In a six-to-three vote, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote, citing our
brief, that the rationale of Bowers had been rejected by "values we
[Americans] share with a wider civilisation". The court noted that "the
right petitioners seek in this case has been accepted as an integral
part of human freedom in many other countries" and that "[t]here has
been no showing in [the United States] that governmental interest in
circumscribing personal choice is somehow more legitimate or urgent".

What this may mean is that when the September 11th cases get to the
Supreme Court, American human-rights lawyers can similarly argue that
the legality of our policies must be evaluated by "values we [Americans]
share with a wider civilisation". Citing Lawrence, human-rights
advocates can urge the court to decide whether the rights being asserted
by detainees like Mr Hamdi, Mr Padilla and those on Guantánamo "have
been accepted as an integral part of human freedom in many other
countries" and can argue that our government has not demonstrated "that
the governmental interest in circumscribing [these freedoms] is somehow
more legitimate or ugent" in the United States than in other countries
that have seen fit to forgo such legal restrictions.

Whether our Supreme Court will accept these arguments remains
unclear. But these cases may well determine whether historians will
remember these past two years as a fundamental change, or as only a
temporary eclipse, in America's human-rights leadership. I, for one,
have neither given up hope, nor accepted as inevitable a 21st-century
American human-rights policy that is increasingly at odds with core
American and universal values.

In our Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson wrote: "When in the
course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people...to assume
among the Power of the Earth, the separate and equal Station to which
the Laws of Nature...entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of
mankind requires that they should declare the causes..". Most patriotic
Americans, I believe, still think that our human-rights policy should
pay "decent respect to the opinions of mankind". As a nation conceived
in liberty and dedicated to certain inalienable rights, our country has
strong primal instincts to address the world not just in the language of
power, but through a combination of power and principle.

In 1759, Benjamin Franklin wrote: "They that can give up essential
liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither". In the
months ahead, I believe, we can both obtain our security and preserve
our essential liberty, but only so long as we have courage from our
courts, commitment from our citizens, and pressure from our foreign
allies. Even after September 11th, America can still stand for human
rights, but we can get there only with a little help from our friends.

***



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