In the second category, the Clinton administration's inconsistency
undermines the credibility and efficacy of its foreign policy. The State
Department issues an annual report on human-rights, but it has come to
resemble a ritual that few people value. And the first people to undermine
it are some government members.
Thus, the Immigration and Naturalization Service has built a
questionable record with its treatment of immigrants. The State Department
puts economic globalism ahead of promoting democracy and human rights. And
the Justice Department provides shelter for certain despots and genocidal
criminals and tries to justify the inconsistencies of other government
agencies.
The latest example is the Clinton administration siding with Cuba and
U. S. telephone companies in the compensation battle being waged by
the relatives of three Brothers to the Rescue pilots executed by Cuban
MiGs over the Straits of Florida. Federal Judge James Lawrence King
adjudged the Castro government guilty of terrorism and awarded the
relatives $187 million. Because Havana won't pay, King has said that the
indemnification can be paid out of Cuban funds in this country.
The White House could have endorsed the judge's decision and displayed
unequivocal support for Americans who are victimized by state-sponsored
terrorism. In 1996 it made a big show of apparent solidarity with the
relatives of the victims. Now it joins the telephone companies and -- with
spurious arguments -- defends Cuba.
One such argument is that ETECSA, the Cuban telephone company from
which the first $6 million would be taken, is not an enterprise of the
Castro regime. You be the judge: Havana controls more than 80 percent of
its shares and keeps the company in the hands of Cuba's military brass.
The contacts that the administration promotes between the people of the
United States and Cuba should not be pursued at any cost, certainly not at
the cost of covering up terrorist acts against American citizens. Clinton
earned a sharp tongue-lashing from Judge King: ``The executive branch's
approach to this situation has been inconsistent at best. It now
apparently believes that shielding a terrorist foreign state's assets is
more important than compensating for the loss of American lives.''
Worse, there's a pattern of our government taking the wrong side of
justice. Washington also is fighting a court order to indemnify, with more
than $247 million, an American family whose daughter was murdered in
Israel by Palestinian terrorists financed by Iran. And it opposes a $67
million suit from three Americans who were held hostage by Iran-sponsored
terrorists. It looks with suspicion at Terry Anderson, held captive for
seven years in Lebanon by pro-Iran Shiites, because he has sued Teheran
for $100 million. Other presidents treated Anderson like a hero.
It's always a pity to have to remind a government of the need to
respect and promote human rights. But it's pathetic to do so when it's a
democracy that pretends to exercise international leadership. By now,
human rights need no justification. What demands justification is the
inability of certain leaders to take human rights seriously.
The Clinton administration doesn't have to resort to guns to show
concern about human rights, as it has done in Yugoslavia. It might do
better by taking less spectacular and less risky steps. For example, it
could release information that could help try Augusto Pinochet for his
political crimes in Chile; it could help investigate the excesses that
were committed during the civil wars in Central America; it could
cooperate unhesitatingly with the World Court on War Crimes; and, of
course, it could support the lawsuits filed by its citizens against
terrorists disguised as legitimate chiefs of state.
U.S.'s inconsistency weakens its stand on human rights
Americans have grown accustomed to judging the
quality of their government and their President by the state of the
economy and the might of the military. Undoubtedly, both are important
indicators for a country exercising global leadership. But so are other
elements if a nation is to remain an effective and convincing leader.
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald