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In 1989, the United Nations put forth the Convention on the Rights of the Child
-- a treaty that protects the civil and economic rights of children
around the world.
To date, 192 nations have ratified the treaty. Only two have not.
A decade later, just seven countries voted against the Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), an independent body created
to prosecute genocide and crimes against humanity.
And in October of this year, members of the U.N. Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) voted overwhelmingly to pass a new treaty aimed
at protecting cultural diversity worldwide. Only two states voted against it.
The United States is the only nation to oppose all three. And the list
of U.N. treaties and conventions that Washington has not signed or has actively
opposed goes on and on.
While the vast majority of the world's governments support these treaties,
as well as other U.N. diplomatic efforts and conventions, the U.S. government
can almost be expected to stand in opposition each time such treaty proceedings
arise.
Indeed, the United States, especially in recent years, is increasingly
being seen in the world as a lone state, thumbing its diplomatic nose at international
pacts on everything from banning the use and production of landmines to curbing
global warming.
This staunch refusal to join with other nations on such a wide range of treaties,
experts say, is hurting the already tarnished image of the world's sole superpower
in the eyes of the international community.
"It sends the message that the United States has been the biggest violator
and thrasher of international law in the post-war period," Richard Du Boff,
a professor emeritus of economic history at Bryn Mawr College in the state of
Pennsylvania, told IPS.
Du Boff added that while the U.S. has often opposed U.N. conventions since
the end of the Second World War, its isolationist posture "has escalated
dramatically and reached a level never before challenged" during the presidency
of George W. Bush.
This, Du Boff said, makes the U.S. a "rogue" in the realm of international
law.
"The term is inspired by U.S. officials themselves," he said. "This
is a term that they constantly apply to any country that does something we may
not like: 'rogue state'."
However, it is the record of the U.S. and its stance on international legislation,
he said, that stands in such stark contrast to that of the rest of the world.
The U.S. stands alone with the East African state of Somalia in its refusal
to ratify the 1989 Convention on the Rights of a Child. The treaty, which the
U.N. calls "the most powerful legal instrument that not only recognises
but protects [children's] human rights", is one of the most widely supported
international agreements in the U.N.'s history.
While the U.S. government has publicly stated its support for the treaty, it
has not taken the necessary steps to ratify it.
Others that Washington has rejected include the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty,
the Treaty Banning Antipersonnel Mines, a protocol to create a compliance regime
for the Biological Weapons Convention, the Kyoto Protocol on global warming,
and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.
The U.S. is also not complying with the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the
Chemical Weapons Commission, and the U.N. framework Convention on Climate Change.
One of the touchiest areas in the rocky relationship between the U.S. and the
international community is Washington's overt hostility toward the International
Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague.
The U.S. was one of seven states to vote against the formation of the ICC in
1998. In taking this stance, the U.S. defied the rest of the democratic world's
support for the court and aligned itself with notorious human rights abusers
like China, Iraq, Libya and Yemen.
The U.S. continues to stand alone among even its closest allies in its refusal
to recognise the authority of the ICC.
The Bush administration maintains that U.S. personnel must be exempt from prosecution
by the court, and has pressured ICC member states to sign bilateral deals promising
not to hand over any U.S. nationals to the court's jurisdiction.
Human rights advocates and non-governmental organisations say the U.S. government's
stance toward ICC creates a two-tiered system of international law: one for
U.S. nationals and one for everyone else.
Organisations such as the New-York based Human Rights Watch (HRW) have blasted
the U.S. for its refusal to recognise the legitimacy of the court, saying such
a stance hurts the image of the U.S. in the world.
"U.S. ambassadors have been acting like schoolyard bullies," Richard
Dicker, director of HRW's International Justice Programme, said in a statement.
"The U.S. campaign has not succeeded in undermining global support for
the court. But it has succeeded in making the U.S. government look foolish and
mean-spirited."
The U.S. continues to reject the ICC, leaving no room for argument.
In the most recent example of the U.S.'s rejection of U.N.-backed treaties,
the U.S. and Israel voted against UNESCO's Convention on the Protection and
Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions in mid-October.
While the treaty is largely symbolic -- it doesn't carry any real means of
enforcement -- supporters say it is an important declaration of the importance
of cultural diversity and national aspirations.
Among other provisions, the treaty gives nations more leeway to support local
culture through subsidies of domestic films and publications to help them stand
up to foreign competition.
The U.S. government has called the treaty protectionist and says it could be
a barrier to international trade.
During the treaty negotiations, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, in
a letter to other governments, called for changes in the text, saying the treaty
would "sow conflict rather than cooperation".
The U.S. State Department has also said the treaty could be used by governments
to censor or block foreign films or other goods in the name of preserving cultural
diversity, a claim that supporters of the treaty deny.
"The United States is a culturally diverse country and a vigorous proponent
of cultural diversity, which is based on individuals' freedom to choose how
to express themselves and how to interact with others," the State Department
says. "Governments deciding what citizens can read, hear, or see denies
individuals the opportunity to make independent choices about what they value."
At the UNESCO meeting, Timothy Craddock, the ambassador from Britain, one of
Washington's staunchest allies, called the treaty, "clear, carefully balanced,
and consistent with the principles of international law and fundamental human
rights".
However, he added that Britain and the European Union had "agreed to disagree"
with "one country".