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The United States Needs a New Human Rights Policy
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11381 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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11 / 1986 |
2,342 Words |
| Author
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Robert S. Walker Robert S. Walker is a Republican representative in Congress
from Pennsylvania. |
Instead of being a consistent champion of a values oriented foreign policy that has at its center life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, America since World War II has played the superpower game of siding with immorality when it is convenient to do so. And in so doing we have largely lost our ability to champion human rights and lead by example.
A consistent human rights policy, founded on our own fundamental governing philosophy, should be the basis for addressing the foreign policy challenges that await us in the coming decades. A policy that champions human rights and extols democracy is philosophically consistent with the principles that anchor our own republic. It will herald the blessings of liberty to freedom-starved people across the globe. Such a policy is, in fact, essential if the United States is to maintain its leadership role in international affairs.
The desire for a consistent human rights policy is nothing new. President Carter made an aborted attempt to have human rights as the centerpiece of foreign policy, but this attempt fell short because it applied human rights standards on a selective basis and did not distinguish between authoritarian and totalitarian regimes. Similarly, conservatives can be faulted for not placing sufficient emphasis on the human rights aspect of foreign policy, and for a reluctance to take action against governments that profess pro-Western values. Our foreign policy must now go beyond the weak and flawed efforts of the past. A consistent human rights policy should be designed that will encourage the establishment of stable, democratic governments and pluralistic economies around the world.
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