The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Opinion Why redefine U.S. policy on human rights?

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August 23, 2019 at 6:51 p.m. EDT
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Aug. 22. (Sebastien St-Jean/AFP/Getty Images)

IN ANNOUNCING plans for a major reexamination of human rights in foreign policy, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo wrote in the Wall Street Journal that too many people have pursued an expansionist definition, accepting “new categories of rights,” “ad hoc rights” and “the proliferation of rights claims.” Mr. Pompeo suggested the United States should go back to fundamentals, to “unalienable rights.”

What is deeply puzzling is that Mr. Pompeo hasn’t really spelled out what he means, either in the Journal or in his comments last month announcing the new Commission on Unalienable Rights. Mr. Pompeo bemoaned “contrived rights for political advantage,” yet did not offer a single concrete example of what rights he wants to curtail.

From the outside, critics worry that Mr. Pompeo is quietly trying to rewrite the definitions to exclude women’s reproductive rights or LGBT rights. Certainly, there are conservative interest groups that regard these with disdain. But this year, the U.S. ambassador to Germany, Richard Grenell, said he wanted to launch a global campaign to decriminalize homosexuality worldwide. Also, a State Department official told The Post’s Carol Morello that the commission “will not make any pronouncements on gay marriage and abortion.” If this is true, then Mr. Pompeo’s goals and intentions are even murkier. It is not at all clear why decades of U.S. policy on human rights should be redefined or curtailed.

What’s quite clear is President Trump does not adhere to principle on human rights. He and Mr. Pompeo have singled out abuses when it suits their purpose, such as pressuring Iran and Venezuela. But they have turned a blind eye toward the unsavory activities of regimes they favor. Mr. Trump and Mr. Pompeo flirt with the leader of North Korea while he maintains concentration camps for his own people. They embraced the kingdom of Saudi Arabia despite the imprisonment of dissidents and the killing and dismemberment of Post contributing columnist Jamal Khashoggi. Grotesque abuses of human rights are unfolding in the Philippines and Egypt with barely a whimper from the White House.

While Mr. Trump has devoted much energy to trade negotiations with China, he has remained largely silent about the ongoing cultural genocide against the Uighurs and others in Xinjiang province. Mr. Trump refrains from even the slightest lament about violations of free speech and religion in Russia under President Vladimir Putin, including the persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses. The ethnic cleansing by security forces in Myanmar against the Rohingya Muslim minority has hardly been noticed by Mr. Trump.

Mr. Pompeo says the time has come to “step back and reflect seriously.” Sure, a fresh look is always helpful, and human rights is just one of many factors in foreign policy. But rather than tweak definitions, Mr. Pompeo should start honestly speaking the truth about the world’s most frequent and serious rights violators.

Read more:

Kenneth Roth: Beware the Trump administration’s plans for ‘fresh thinking’ on human rights

The Post’s View: Trump should focus more on defending human rights than redefining them

Chad Griffin: The Trump administration’s silence on LGBTQ rights is unconscionable

Hugh Hewitt: The forces against religious freedom are ascendant. The Trump administration mounts a defense.

Alexandra Petri: Do these human rights spark joy?