America: Greatest champion or violator of human rights?

America: Greatest champion or violator of human rights?

Mohammad Mahdi Abbasi, researcher in the field of American Studies

Human rights is a concept that the United States has always claimed to champion worldwide, using it as a tool to expand its hegemony and criticize other governments over the past decades. Numerous nations have been accused of violating human rights by various US administrations over the past decades, and there are many lands that the United States has invaded in the name of establishing democracy and human rights. However, in reality, according to various reports and research findings, today the United States itself is the biggest violator of human rights in the world.

Human rights violations in the United States

  • In 2023, more than 1,200 people were killed by the police in the United States. While Black Americans make up only 13% of the US population, 27% of those killed by the US police were Black. Moreover, nearly 20% of the Black individuals killed by the police were unarmed.

Violation of human rights on a global scale

  • A recent study by Brown University reveals that the United States' post-9/11 wars have directly caused the deaths of over 940,000 individuals. Additionally, the study indicates that between 3.6 and 3.8 million people have also lost their lives indirectly as a result of these wars over the past 23 years
  • In Afghanistan alone, the 20-year US military operation and occupation resulted in the killing  of 174,000 people, including more than 30,000 civilians. A New York Times report from December 2021 revealed that over 50,000 US airstrikes in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians.
  • Despite widespread media and political pressure on the US government, the United States continues to operate clandestine prisons like Guantanamo Bay. The latest official reports indicate that nearly 40 individuals remain imprisoned at Guantanamo, many of whom have not faced trial.
  • US intelligence agencies, such as the CIA, are among the world's most egregious human rights violators. From establishing secret torture sites in various countries and conducting numerous kidnappings worldwide — victims including Khalil al-Masri and Osama Nasr — to unethical projects like MKUltra, which subjected hundreds of American and Canadian citizens to unlawful experimentation over a decade, the evidence is undeniable.
  • The centuries-long history of the United States, much like today, is replete with human rights abuses. Native Americans are a prime example of this. In the years when America was discovered, specifically in the year 1492, the population of Native Americans was approximately 5 million. Due to brutal massacres by settlers, this number plummeted to 250,000 within a few centuries. Today, Native Americans in the United States live as second-class citizens, while many of their human rights are easily violated.

In conclusion, while the United States positions itself as a leading global advocate for human rights, its track record reveals a troubling and concerning reality, as underscored by the extensive documentation presented. A country that undoubtedly lacks the moral authority to criticize the human rights records of other countries, the US has for years occupied the position of the primary accused. The Leader of the Islamic Revolution referred to this subject several years ago when he stated, “It is we who claim the government of the United States of America and many Western governments are violating human rights. It is we who claim this and who question them.”

 

(The views expressed in this article are author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of Khamenei.ir.)

Comment