
Formerly admired almost universally as the preeminent champion of human
rights, our country has become the foremost target of respected international
organizations concerned about these basic principles of democratic life.
We have ignored or condoned abuses in nations that support our anti-terrorism
effort, while detaining American citizens as "enemy combatants,"
incarcerating them secretly and indefinitely without their being charged
with any crime or having the right to legal counsel.

"...This policy has been condemned by the federal courts, but the
Justice Department seems adamant, and the issue is still in doubt."
. Several hundred captured Taliban soldiers remain imprisoned at Guantanamo
Bay under the same circumstances, with the defense secretary declaring
that they would not be released even if they were someday tried and
found to be innocent. These actions are similar to those of abusive
regimes that historically have been condemned by American presidents.
When While
the president has reserved judgment, the American people are inundated
almost daily with claims from the vice president and other top officials
that we face a devastating threat from Iraq's weapons of mass destruction,
and with pledges to remove Saddam Hussein from office, with or without
support from any allies. As has been emphasized vigorously by foreign
allies and by responsible leaders of former administrations and incumbent
officeholders, there is no current danger to the United States from
Baghdad. In the face of intense monitoring and overwhelming American
military superiority, any belligerent move by Hussein against a neighbor,
even the smallest nuclear test necessary before weapons construction),
a tangible threat to use a weapon of mass destruction, or sharing this
technology with terrorist organizations would be suicidal. But it is
quite possible that such weapons would be used against Israel or our
forces in response to an American attack.
We cannot ignore the development of chemical, biological or nuclear weapons,
but a unilateral war with Iraq is not the answer. There is an urgent need
for U.N. action to force unrestricted inspections in Iraq. But perhaps
deliberately so, this has become less likely as we alienate our necessary
allies. Apparently disagreeing with the president and secretary of state,
in fact, the vice president has now discounted this goal as a desirable
option.
We have thrown down counterproductive gauntlets to the rest of the world,
disavowing U.S. commitments to laboriously negotiated international accords.
Peremptory rejections of nuclear arms agreements, the biological weapons
convention, environmental protection, anti-torture proposals, and punishment
of war criminals have sometimes been combined with economic threats against
those who might disagree with us. These unilateral acts and assertions
increasingly isolate the United States from the very nations needed to
join in combating terrorism.
Tragically, our government is abandoning any sponsorship of substantive
negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis. Our apparent policy is
to support almost every Israeli action in the occupied territories and
to condemn and isolate the Palestinians as blanket targets of our war
on terrorism, while Israeli settlements expand and Palestinian enclaves
shrink.
There still seems to be a struggle within the administration over defining
a comprehensible Middle East policy. The president's clear commitments
to honor key U.N. resolutions and to support the establishment of a Palestinian
state have been substantially negated by statements of the defense secretary
that in his lifetime "there will be some sort of an entity that will
be established" and his reference to the "so-called occupation."
This indicates a radical departure from policies of every administration
since 1967, always based on the withdrawal of Israel from occupied territories
and a genuine peace between Israelis and their neighbors.
Belligerent and divisive voices now seem to be dominant in Washington,
but they do not yet reflect final decisions of the president, Congress
or the courts. It is crucial that the historical and well-founded American
commitments prevail: to peace, justice, human rights, the environment
and international cooperation.
Former president Carter is chairman of the Carter Center in Atlanta.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company.
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