We don't know yet the full extent of the damage to America's
international reputation thanks to the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison.
But one thing we do know: The world's dictatorships are exploiting
this scandal: They're using it to deflect criticism of their own
records of repression and murder.
Take Sudan, ruled by a radical Islamic government notorious for
acts of genocide during a 20-year civil war. This same Sudan gave
America a tongue-lashing over Abu Ghraib at the most recent meeting
of the United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva.
Yet the Khartoum government has been charged with ethnic
cleansing, widespread rape, and massacres by government militias. A
U.N. high commissioner has denounced the regime for waging a "reign
of terror" against its civilian population. Tens of thousands of
people have been killed and nearly 1 million displaced in the
latest round of violence.
And where is the focus of international attention? All eyes are on
Abu Ghraib. Meanwhile, some of the world's most repressive
governments-including Burma, China, Nigeria, and Syria-continue to
escape criticism.
In the United States, election-year politics is making matters
worse. Some Republicans have shrugged off the prison abuses as
fraternity house antics. They dismiss Administration critics as
America bashers. Shame on them. This scandal is a deep stain on the
United States, on the military, and on its democracy-building
agenda in Iraq.
But liberal Democrats such as Senator Ted Kennedy are recklessy
inflating the scandal. Kennedy complains that the wretched prison
system of Saddam Hussein has simply come under new management. The
editors of the New Republic demand that all of America's prisons be
thrown open to global inspection. By obsessing over the Iraq
violations, these critics are undermining U.S. credibility abroad.
They're making it harder for America to mobilize international
pressure against truly heinous regimes.
Where is the indignation over the treatment of prisoners-especially
women-who are brutalized and raped throughout the Arab world? While
the American abuses are the result of negligence and incompetence,
the torture and executions occurring in states like Sudan or North
Korea are a matter of government policy. Those who pretend
otherwise are handing America's enemies a potent propaganda
weapon.
It was to prevent these horrors that America helped establish the
U.N. Human Rights Commission after World War II. Communist
officials tried to stonewall the organization by invoking America's
racial problems as proof that it had no business defending freedom
of speech or religion or the right to assemble.
Eleanor Roosevelt, head of the commission, acknowledged America's
faults, but knew the evils occurring in the Soviet Union were
altogether different. She invited their delegates to tour the
United States, as long as U.S. officials could go to Russia. The
Soviets declined, and America secured support for a widely
acclaimed international bill of rights.
We need a full account of what happened in Iraq's prisons. American
democracy owes much of its success to its commitment to the rule of
law-a rule that was shattered at Abu Ghraib. Yet it is a moral
perversion to blur the distinction between America's imperfect
democracy and genocidal dictatorships. That tactic might score
cheap political points, but it will further weaken America's
standing and influence in the world.
The irony is that overblowing the abuses in Iraq will set back the
cause of human rights. That process, in fact, already has
begun.
Joseph Loconte is the William E. Simon Fellow in Religion and a
Free Society at the Heritage Foundation and editor of the
forthcoming book, The End of Illusions: America's Churches and
Hitler's Gathering Storm.
First appeared on NPR's "All Things Considered"