From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 16 May 2001 11:20:51 -0700
To: "CubaNews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [CubaNews] Rogue Nation

Rogue Nation
Editorial Staff, The Nation
May 15, 2001
----------------------------------------------

News that the United States has been voted off the UN Human
Rights Commission and the UN international drug monitoring
board has elicited vows of revenge from conservatives in
Congress. They threaten to withhold payment on the long-unpaid
dues owed the UN. They blame our adversaries -- China,
Cuba, Sudan and others -- for the insult. But the secret votes
enabled allies as well as adversaries to vent their mounting
exasperation with US policies. At the last session of the
commission, the United States stood virtually alone as it
opposed resolutions supporting lower-cost access to HIV/AIDS
drugs, acknowledging a human right to adequate food and
calling for a moratorium on the death penalty, while it
continued to resist efforts to ban landmines.

The global outrage is by no means limited to US policies on
the Human Rights Commission. In barely 100 days in office, the
Bush Administration has declared the Kyoto accords on global
warming dead, spurning eight years of work by 186 countries.
It banned US support for any global organization that provides
family planning or abortion services, even as an AIDS pandemic
makes this a matter of life and death. It bade farewell to the
antiballistic missile treaty, while slashing spending on
nuclear safety aid for Russia. It casually bombed Iraq, helped
shoot down a missionary's plane over Peru and enforced an
illegal and irrational boycott of Cuba. It sabotaged promising
talks between North and South Korea, publicly humiliating
South Korea's Nobel prizewinning president, Kim Dae Jung.
The nomination as UN ambassador of John Negroponte, former
proconsul in Honduras during the illegal contra wars, is an
insult. "There is a perception," said one diplomat in
carefully parsed words, "that the US wants to go it alone."

Our lawless exceptionalism is a deeply rooted, bipartisan
policy that didn't begin with the Bush Administration. Under
previous Presidents, Democratic and Republican, Washington
denounced state-sponsored terrorism while reserving the right
to bomb a pharmaceutical plant in Sudan or unleash a contra
army on Nicaragua. It condemned Iraq for invading Kuwait while
reserving the right to invade Panama or bomb Serbia on its own
writ. The United States advocated war crimes tribunals against
foreign miscreants abroad while opposing an international
criminal court that might hold our own officials accountable.
Our leaders proclaim the value of law and democracy as they
spurn the UN Security Council and ignore the World Court when
their rulings don't suit them. The Senate refuses to ratify
basic human rights treaties. The US international business
community even opposes efforts to eliminate child labor. And
of course, there are those UN dues, which make us the world's
largest deadbeat.

Worse is yet to come. US policy is a direct reflection of its
militarization and the belief that we police the world, we
make the rules. The Bush Administration plans a major
increase in military spending to finance new weapons to
expand the US ability to "project" force around the globe -- stealth
bombers, drones, long-range missiles and worse. The tightly
strung Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld sounds increasingly
like an out-of-date Dr. Strangelove as he pushes to open a new
military front in space, shattering hopes of keeping the
heavens a zone of peace.

As the hyperpower, with interests around the world, America
has the largest stake in law and legitimacy. But the ingrained
assumption that we are legislator, judge, jury and executioner
mocks any notion of global order. From the laws of war to the
laws of trade, it is increasingly clear that Washington
believes international law applies only to the weak. The weak
do what they must; the United States does what it will.

After the cold war, we labeled our potential adversaries
"rogue nations" -- violent, lawless, willing to trample the
weak and ignore international law and morality to enforce
their will. Now, in the vote at the UN, in the headlines of
papers across Europe, in the planning of countries large and
small, there is a growing consensus that the world's most
destructive rogue nation is the most powerful country of them
all.

This is not a role most Americans support. Public interest
groups and concerned individuals will vigorously remind
Congress of the widespread popular backing in this country for
paying our UN dues, for global AIDS funding and other forms of
international involvement. Unilateralism must be opposed in
all its guises, from national missile "defense" to undermining
efforts to curb global warming. The United States was founded
on a decent respect for the opinions of mankind. Let's keep it
that way.



 
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