(CNN)The
way in which America -- for years a self-proclaimed role model for
human rights -- projects its values to the rest of the world has
real, tangible effects on the global stage. In the age of Donald
Trump, the US State Department has turned its back on the fight
against racism and xenophobia. Even worse, the agency seeks to remove
anti-racist language from international documents. The US government
has a racism issue, and it is a dangerous problem with international
implications.
In
a letter
to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, six House Democrats said they are
"extremely alarmed" the administration has remained silent
regarding racism and xenophobia in international fora and has not
condemned hate speech and incitement. They also noted that Andrew
Veprek, the deputy assistant secretary for refugees and migration,
rejected the notion that leaders have a "duty to condemn hate
speech and incitement," and, according to a report
by CNN,
Veprek sought changes to UN human rights documents that denounce
racism as a threat to democracy.
"The
drafters say 'populism and nationalism' as if these are dirty words,"
Veprek wrote of one document. "There are millions of Americans
who likely would describe themselves as adhering to these concepts.
(Maybe even the President.) So are we looking to here condemn our
fellow-citizens, those who pay our salaries?"
Further,
Veprek took issue with language in a UN Human Rights Council
resolution, which said national leaders have a duty to condemn hate
speech. Veprek insisted that "'duty to condemn' goes too far.
Our public figures can't be obliged to police every intolerant
thought out their (sic) at the risk of being condemned for
intolerance themselves."
"This
is dangerous policy," the lawmakers wrote to Pompeo. And they
are right.
These
members of Congress are justifiably angry over America's retreat from
world leadership under this President, and "his racist and
xenophobic policies have slammed America's door on some of the
world's most desperate people," the Democrats wrote.
"Ultimately, this latest blunder amplifies the increasingly
widespread perception that some officials in the Trump administration
are racist and support an anti-foreigner, anti-Muslim discriminatory
agenda and further erodes our credibility on the world stage."
However
outrageous the actions, words and silence of the Trump White House on
hate and intolerance, the current situation is by no means
surprising.
Since
President Trump once said that there were "some
very fine people on both sides"
when referring to violent white supremacists and Nazis marching with
tiki torches in Charlottesville, Virginia, last year, why would he
downplay racism on the world stage?
In
his interview this past July with The Sun, a British tabloid, Trump
decried immigration, saying that migrants have "changed
the fabric of Europe."
"And
I don't mean that in a positive way," he said. "I think
allowing millions and millions of people to come into Europe is very,
very sad. I think you're losing your culture. Look around. You go
through certain areas that didn't exist 10 or 15 years ago."
Trump
has turned his beliefs into policy. Although the President hasn't
released a statement about Veprek's comments, the administration
announced its withdrawal
from the UN Human Rights Council shortly
after his proposed language changes.
And
some of Trump's current and former staff and advisers have been
accused of neo-Nazi
affiliations,
Islamophobia
and having ties to white
nationalists
and white
supremacists.
These people have the ear of the President and are shaping foreign
policy and immigration policy.
Stephen
Miller,
a White House adviser, who is instrumental in immigration policy,
played a part in the administration's Muslim travel ban and
separating undocumented migrant children and parents from each other.
He is also involved in plans to limit
citizenship
for documented immigrants and strip
immigrants of their citizenship.
Richard
Grenell,
US ambassador to Germany, faced calls for his expulsion for telling
the alt-right, white nationalist website Breitbart that he wanted to
"empower"
anti-establishment conservatives in Europe.
Ronald
Vitiello,
acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE),
recently attended an annual conference of the anti-immigration group
Federation for American Immigration Reform. At its conference this
month, the anti-Muslim group ACT
for America
honored former ICE Director Thomas Homan.
In
Trump, hard-right politicians around the world seem to have found a
common ground and have become more emboldened with their own racist
and xenophobic policies and rhetoric.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has cultivated ties
with white nationalist
politicians and groups in Europe and the United
States.
Italian Prime Minister
Giuseppe Conte
is a Trump
cheerleader
who supports hardline anti-immigration policies. Conte's interior
minister has called for a census
of the country's Roma people,
an ethnic group, in order to expel them.
Hungarian
Prime Minister Viktor
Orban
has found a friend in Trump, and has enacted anti-immigrant "Stop
Soros" laws
to criminalize anyone who helps an undocumented immigrant file an
asylum claim. Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz has called for an
anti-migration
axis with Germany and Italy.
Israeli
prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has touted
his country's own wall
on the southern border with Egypt to keep out African "illegal
infiltrators,"
who he said are worse
than Sinai terrorists and
threaten
the livelihood of Israel's Jewish majority.
Netanyahu's racist nation-state
law
declares self-determination for the Jewish people and encourages
segregated communities, but omits
any mention of equality and minority group rights.
Thanks
to a government that has abdicated its leadership on the fight
against hate, America's positive role on the international stage is
diminishing. How can the United States ever hope to combat racism in
the world when its leader seems to be helping to spread it?
This
commentary was originally published by CNN.com
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