US turns blind eye on own violation of human rights
By ‘Snake’ Arbusto on Saturday 31 March 2012, 08:26 - Know Your Empire - Permalink
US media and political figures constantly attack China for alleged human rights violations, while conveniently turning a blind eye to human rights violations perpetrated by the United States in the name of its war on terror, for instance the use of torture at Abu Ghraib, the illegal detention of suspects at Guantanamo, the apprehension and extrajudicial transfer of individuals from one state to another, and the unauthorised surveillance of citizens are just some of the US' well-documented human rights abuses.
And as important as rights such as freedom of speech, freedom of press, and freedom of religion may be, these rights pale in significance beside the most fundamental of human rights, which is the right to live, with its corollary of security from actions or conditions which threaten life, such as military aggression, criminal acts, or similar threats that put people's lives at risk.
With this in mind let's compare China and the US, to see who is the real human rights violator.
US military forces have been responsible for thousands, possibly millions, of civilian deaths around the world in the past decade.While there are no accurate figures for the civilian death toll in Iraq, household surveys have been conducted asking Iraqis to list the family members they have lost and the results then extrapolated to the total population to give a nationwide estimate.
The prominent British medical journal, the Lancet, ran into a storm of controversy when it published an article by researchers from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore which extrapolated the results of a survey of a randomly chosen sample of 1,849 households to the total Iraqi population and estimated that there were 655,000 deaths between April 2003 and June 2006.
Yet in 2007, the British polling firm Opinion Research Business surveyed 1,720 Iraqi adults and extrapolated a figure that was even higher - a "minimum of 733,158 to a maximum of 1,446,063" - Iraqi civilaians killed.
The independent UK-based research group, the Iraq Body Count, which only counts civilan deaths where there is documentary evidence, such as cross-checked media reports, hospital, and morgue records - which is likely to be the minority seeing as so few bodies are recovered - has a minimum civilian death toll of 105,753.
Nor is there a single figure for the overall number of civilians killed by the 10-year war in Afghanistan, but according to the latest report from the United Nations, 12,793 have been killed in just the past six years.
And these figures do not include those that have been injured in the two wars, nor those killed or injured by the US military in Pakistan and Libya.
The US military, supported by the US government, defines its goal as "full
spectrum" - that is global land, sea and air and indeed space - military
dominance. In support of this goal, the US military is deployed in more than
150 countries and according to an official Pentagon accounting of US military
bases, the Base Structure Report, Fiscal 2010 Baseline the US has at least
662 overseas bases in 38 foreign countries,
although the figure is more because the list excludes bases in several nations
integral to active operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The Chinese government has emphasized that the Chinese military's role is
strictly defensive: protection of its sovereignty and territorial integrity and
peaceful economic development. China adheres to a policy of non-interference in
the internal affairs of other countries, and during the same period it has had
no military conflicts with other countries.
It also has no military bases in other countries. The US' rate of imprisonment
is the highest in the world: about 760 out of every 100,000 US citizens are in
jail. China, with a population very nearly four times as big, has a rate of
imprisonment that is one-seventh that of the US, about 118 out of every 100,000
of its citizens are in jail.
In the US there is unofficial media censorship by the central government -which
seeks control over news content relating to its military operations.
Mr Somer, a Canadian independent researcher, filed this analysis for Xinhua
from Beijing