The Mercury News

US withdrawal from UN Human Rights Council reflects hypocrisy of Trump

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a Philadelph­ia Inquirer columnist. © 2018, Chicago Tribune. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

How ironic that the White House chose to withdraw from the United Nations Human Rights Council on Tuesday just as President Trump was manipulati­ng the suffering of migrant children for his own political ends.

The Trump team quit the council on account of that body’s fixation with Israel and inclusion of member states with wretched human rights records. Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., called the council a “hypocritic­al and self-serving organizati­on that makes a mockery of human rights.”

But the U.S. decision to withdraw — rather than use the council as a forum to expose rights violators — reflects a White House that rejects America’s historic role as a global defender of human rights. That, combined with Trump’s policy of ripping migrant children away from their parents, makes the U.S. stance on the U.N. council look hypocritic­al. To borrow Haley’s phrasing, the president’s policies abroad and at home make a mockery of human rights.

Since World War II, U.S. presidents have balanced national security concerns and promotion of human rights abroad. Yet even when necessity required close ties with tyrants, presidents since Ronald Reagan have made support for human rights part of their calculus, assuming that more open regimes would be less threatenin­g.

“The American people cannot close their eyes to abuses of human rights and injustice, whether they occur among friend or adversary or even on our own shores,” Reagan said in 1988.

Trump has consigned Reagan’s principles to the trash.

“Under President Trump, we’ve seen a pretty dramatic shift in how the United States approaches human rights at home and abroad,” says Sarah Margon of Human Rights Watch. For one thing, no U.S. president has spoken about human rights in way Trump has.

Trump has extolled Kim Jong Un as “smart,” “honorable” and a man who “loves his people,” even though the dictator imprisons tens of thousands in labor camps. When asked about the murder of Russian journalist­s on Vladimir Putin’s watch, Trump snapped back, “Well, I think our country does plenty of killing.”

Such talk does more than undermine U.S. pretension­s at the U.N. It reveals a president who rejects the universal values enshrined in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and Bill of Rights.

“What we are looking at,” says Margon, “is a larger space in which the United States is backing away from any role as a human rights defender. Other states don’t bring the same kind of weight to counter the nefarious tactics of China or Russia.” The U.S. withdrawal enables Putin and Xi Jinping to promote their brand of authoritar­ianism as an alternativ­e to democracy, whose principles are being abandoned by the leader of the free world.

Trump’s abandonmen­t of those principles has been on view since his inaugurati­on. One need only cite the Muslim travel ban, the empowering of bigots in Charlottes­ville, and the constant whipping up fears of a refugee “invasion” that will submerge his base in an ocean of blacks and browns.

In a disturbing speech in Warsaw a year ago, the president trumpeted his defense of “Western” values, defined as having the courage “to protect our borders” from those who would “destroy our civilizati­on.”

Which brings me back to the hypocrisy of the administra­tion’s exit from the Human Rights Council. Yes, there is something very wrong with a human rights body that since 2006 has passed 70 resolution­s critical of Israel’s treatment of the Palestinia­ns and only 10 critical of Iran. However, there was a decrease in critiques of Israel after the U.S. joined the council, and it has done admirable reports on human rights violations in North Korea and Myanmar.

But the bigger point is the contradict­ion in Haley’s condemnati­on of the council for including rights violators such as China, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, who are all close allies of America that are given a pass by Trump.

And there was something even more egregious about denouncing the council while Trump was still refusing to reverse course on separating migrant families. By Wednesday, huge GOP and global pressure forced him to back down. But can America pretend to stand for anything, when its president uses babies as leverage to get a border wall?

“For many years the U.S. has been a hope for human rights activists around the world, and that is disappeari­ng,” says Margon. Those activists see what Trump is doing domestical­ly, and it shatters their dwindling belief that America remains a human rights beacon. The images of crying toddlers on the border will linger for a long time.

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