For years, President Obama presented himself as a moderate Democrat who rejected his predecessor’s disdain for citizens’ rights and contempt for international law. However, since coming to office, he has pursued policies — both at home and abroad — that have dismayed his supporters. Former president Jimmy Carter’s scathing piece in The New York Times, “A Cruel and Unusual Record” (June 24, 2012) highlighted the damage that President Obama’s policies have done to the country’s core values. Writing with great conviction, Carter recalls that the systematic violation of human rights that began under former president George Bush has greatly expanded under President Obama, with the result that the US is now “clearly violating” many provisions of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, including “prohibition against cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment”.
The impact of these policies is being felt not only in the US but worldwide, with the indiscriminate use of drone attacks on Pakistan. Carter has strong reservations about this, warning that “the great escalation in drone attacks has turned aggrieved families toward terrorist organisations, aroused civilian populations against us and permitted repressive governments to cite such actions to justify their own despotic behaviour”. Characterising it as “America’s violation of international human rights”, Carter fears that this “abets our enemies and alienates our friends”.
Carter’s fears cannot be dismissed under the plea of “national security” — a much abused term, especially in authoritarian states. What this administration is doing by granting arbitrary powers to federal and state agencies, while curbing or reducing the powers of the judiciary, may end up abridging the fundamental rights of its own citizens. This would further reinforce the growing tendency in the US to ignore those international laws or conventions viewed inconvenient or awkward.
Pakistanis are right to worry about the indiscriminate use of drone attacks — which dozens of reputable lawyers, as well as the UN Special Rapporteur, have affirmed to be a violation of the UN Charter and could be regarded as war crimes. The sheer abandon with which the US and Israel have spawned two sophisticated computer viruses and inserted them in Iran’s nuclear programme has caused consternation even among powerful countries. Both Russia and China have urged the US to start global negotiations to manage this menace, stressing its lethal and uncontrollable reach and impact. In fact, experts have pointed out that the US has the most to lose from these attacks, as “no other country has so much of its economy linked to the online world”. President Obama would surely not want to be remembered for having introduced a cyber-arms race.
Jo Becker and Scott Shane, recently wrote in The New York Times, “Secret ‘Kill List’ Proves a Test of Obama’s Principles and Will” (May 29, 2012), of their amazement at “the liberal law professor who campaigned against the Iraq war and torture” but is now insisting on approving every new name on an expanding kill list. This remark took me back to my time in America when the Church Committee set up to probe charges of CIA involvement in the assassinations of foreign leaders, concluded with the observation that “whether or not respective presidents knew or authorised the plots, as the chief executive officer of the US, each must bear the ultimate responsibility for the activities of his subordinates”. The national revulsion at this revelation prompted former president Gerald Ford to issue an executive order specifically prohibiting the CIA from carrying out assassinations. No wonder President Obama’s Harvard Law professor, Roberto Unger, recently urged that President Obama “must be defeated”, because his policies “constitute a concerted attack on the bedrock values and laws of the US”. Sadly, many would want to echo this sentiment.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 4th, 2012.
COMMENTS (15)
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Obama is Osama.
The author has shown his colossal ignorance of US Constitution through the following: "What this administration is doing by granting arbitrary powers to federal and state agencies, while curbing or reducing the powers of the judiciary, may end up abridging the fundamental rights of its own citizens. " Every US President has expanded his powers in areas which are ambiguous until he/she reaches a wall beyond which he/she can't go. This is how American Democracy works. If President Obama has taken any unconstitutional decisions, these will be challenged before perhaps the most unfettered judiciary in the world. No one anywhere can curb or reduce the powers of the American judiciary! Carter has been a grand failure himself. He can moan all he wants. Neither he nor those who agree with him are the arbiters of human rights violations although he has anointed himself as the Grand Pontiff of Human Rights. The basic duty of any US President is to secure US. And, he/she will extend his/her reach as far as he can to fulfill that duty. If Carter has any problems with that, he should lead a PR campaign and ask the Congress to rein in the President. US Congress can do that because it holds the financial strings. Moaning does no good!
The writer has done well to inform the people of Pakistan that they need not have any illusions that the US President is any different from his predecessor. In fact, he could be more harmful and dangerous, given the fact that he presented himself in false colors to gain the votes of blacks, browns, latinos and other minority groups that looked up to him to pursue honest and fair policies. Either he never believed in what he said or he has sold himelf to the national security and intelligence agencies and the Big Business which he has begun to court once again.
He is the guy who blackened Pakistan's face by hunting down Osama. Enough introduction?
"Who is Barak Obama?" ------ yes, who is he? Ha! Look who is asking?!
One Rickshaw driver told me that Obama is a Gabol Baloch whose ancestor migrated from Lyari to Kenya. I believe him !
@Vasan
Carter, who initiated jihadi culture in Pakistan is no saint as well. He must bear some responsibility in addition to Reagan who should take the max responsibility for the menace in Pakistan.
Uh, Has anyone ever heard of someone called General Zia-ul-Haq and Gen Hamid Gul? Just wondering.
Unfortunately he is the un-official spokesperson of the establishment.
@kaalchakra: "Before attacking Difa-e-Pakistan again, one hopes liberals would realize that Carter and Roberto Unger are saying the same thing as Difa e Pakistan have been saying all along – about preserving the core values"
The core values that the good professor is talking about are the EXACT opposite of the ones DPC talks about. The core values the professor represents are tolerance for ALl irrespective of their faith and respect for life. The DPC asks to murder all people who do not share their faith. DO you see the difference between the core values the 2 represent?
I agree with most of the article's points. But for Carter, who initiated jihadi culture in Pakistan is no saint as well. He must bear some responsibility in addition to Reagan who should take the max responsibility for the menace in Pakistan.
Before attacking Difa-e-Pakistan again, one hopes liberals would realize that Carter and Roberto Unger are saying the same thing as Difa e Pakistan have been saying all along - about preserving the core values that Obama is destroying.
Yes, Sir he deserves to be brought to justice.
So you are not happy with Obama. Have you heard any of the Republican debates? If Romney is elected, things will be WORSE not better for Pakistan.. If you are a patriotic Pakistani better pray for Obama's re-election.