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Clinton Declares Religious Freedom a National Interest


On July 30, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton provided a stalwart rationale for U.S. foreign policy on worldwide religious freedom, which is rooted in the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act (IRFA) signed by her husband. Secretary Clinton asserted: “For the United States . . . religious freedom is a cherished constitutional value, a strategic national interest, and a foreign policy priority.” This statement—of religious freedom as a strategic national interest—is the most powerful statement on this issue made by this administration.

Secretary Clinton continued: “Religious freedom is both an essential element of human dignity and of secure, thriving societies. It’s been statistically linked with economic development and democratic stability.” But, she noted while introducing the latest State Department annual report on international religious freedom, “the world is sliding backward” in many quarters.

Perhaps the best part of Secretary Clinton’s speech was when she took on arguments against religious liberty made by authoritarians in places like Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia, Cuba, and China. Typically, these regimes claim that it is their citizens who demand they impose restraints on religious minorities, and that easing these restrictions would foster social chaos, resulting in sectarian violence and terrorism.

Clinton riposted that religious freedom and other human rights are a “birthright by the mere fact of us being who we are—thinking, acting human beings, men and women alike. They are not granted to us by any government, rather it is the responsibility of the government to protect them.” Furthermore, Clinton called religious freedom and related liberties “safety valves,” and asserted that when “people have a say over important aspects of their lives,” society can release pent up tension through free speech, assembly, petition, corporate worship, and other civic channels, rather than through violence.

Is this only another example of the lofty rhetoric of the Obama Administration? The president’s 2009 Cairo Speech, for example, eloquently called for human rights but lacked any plan to actualize its words. Indeed, just months after that speech, millions of Iranians took to the streets to protest rigged elections and political repression, begging for help from Obama’s “open hand.” That eruption of dissent was crushed without much effort on the part of the American government apart from further rhetoric. Similar cries for help continue from minorities in Bahrain, Pakistan, Iraq, and elsewhere.

What identifiable actions, in addition to speeches and reports, can be undertaken? The State Department should begin by supporting three initiatives: the development of an academic sub-discipline of international religious freedom studies, the engagement of big business, and the building of partnerships with other, like-minded governments.

First, when a policy conundrum is poorly understood, Washington has often begun by supporting academic research so that wise policies can eventually be formulated. Because there is only a small amount of academic literature on religious freedom (including virtually no mention of it in the four major academic human rights journals) the State Department should make a short-term commitment to provide seed funds to better understand the linkages between religious freedom, national economics, political development, and other fundamental liberties. Over time, this will not only inform policy but also spur increased scholarly activity on the issue.

Second, partnerships between big business, civil society, and national governments have scored victories against human trafficking, environmental degradation, and sweatshop labor. The Secretary of State should rally corporate America and multinational companies to consider religious liberty along with other human rights concerns when companies decide where to invest. Indeed, it should come as no surprise that some of our biggest strategic competitors routinely violate the religious liberty of their citizens, just as they routinely violate intellectual property standards and intrude in our encrypted digital networks.

Third, the U.S. can do more to develop an international coalition to promote religious freedom abroad. It is significant that religious liberty’s profile has increased in Europe over the past two years, but few European countries have put a law on the books that is the equivalent to IRFA. The U.S. must more robustly lead a coalition that includes our natural allies on these issues, including Latin American and sub-Saharan African nations, in identifying and sanctioning gross religious liberty abusers worldwide.

If religious freedom is truly a “strategic national interest,” then it is time to act on this conviction by engaging the academy, business, and other governments, lest our credibility on the issue evaporate totally.

Eric Patterson is Associate Professor and Dean of the Robertson School of Government at Regent University. His most recent book is Politics in a Religious World: Building a Religiously Informed U.S. Foreign Policy (Continuum, 2011).

Comments:

9.12.2012 | 2:16am
Rick says:
Yes, indeed, this a stirring call for more action to support religious freedom around the world. However, please don't scold the Obama administration for not rescuing the election protesters in Iran. What, in fact, could we have done? Drop the 101st Airborne? Send in Navy Seals by boat under cover of darkness? Certainly we couldn't have put stress on their economy with the help of big business, since our companies are banned from doing business in Iran. Called in their ambassador to Washington for a tongue-lashing? Called home our ambassador to Tehran? Nope, we have no diplomatic relations with them. When you severe all ties with a country, it limits your leverage, short of a military strike, and Obama was apparently too sane to try that. A military attack would have cemented support around the mullahs and made the protesters look like traitors.
9.12.2012 | 7:49am
Joe DeVet says:
The author left out the very first step, which is "Madame Secretary, tear down this wall!" That is, the wall of hypocrisy which separates her words for the rest of the world from her words and actions at home in the USA--where she herself, along with the rest of this administration, has reduced religious freedom to "freedom of worship". And, of course, where religious freedom is under direct attack via the HHS mandate and many other administration policies.

Instead, the author puts academic study up front as the first priority. Good grief!
9.12.2012 | 9:46am
The issue of international religious freedom does not stand by itself as events going on in the Mid-East as we blog show. There are many connections between religious freedom throughout the World and other values, such as Freedom of Speech at home (e.g., can a US citizen say anything about Mohammed that an Islamic might find disrespectful without an impact on Christians in the Mid-East?). Likewise, can the US State Department try to impose on non-Western countries currently dominant US views on the acceptability of homosexual conduct without some impact on the reception of Western values (and Christians) in other countries? Likewise, should the President of the US be going to Muslim countries--as, among other things, a representative of American Muslims as he did in Cairo in 2009--and attacking other Western countries ("Likewise, it is important for Western countries to avoid impeding Muslim citizens from practicing religion as they see fit -- for instance, by dictating what clothes a Muslim woman should wear")?

These are complicated and interrelated issues that require nuanced expression and an awareness that American mores are not the mores of the rest of the World. The US diplomatic position on other nations' mores should not be dictated by the vagaries of the latest election cycle.
9.13.2012 | 7:03am
Michael PS says:
partricksarsfield

Your quotation from Mr Obama on "what clothes a Muslim woman should wear" shows a lamentable failure on his part to grasp the issues involved in « l’affaire du foulard » [The headscarf business]

He should have listened to the voices of Muslim women themselves, such as the president of the Muslim women’s movement, Ni Putes Ni Soumises [Neither Sluts nor Door-mats] Sihen Habchi, who, in a forceful attack on “multiculturalism,” has demanded “No more justifications of our oppression in the name of the right to be different and of respect toward those who force us to bow our heads”

Likewise, Fadela Amara, another Muslim and former Secretary of State for Urban Policies has declared that “For this generation, the crucial issues are laïcité, gender equality and gender desegregation, based upon living together in harmony throughout the world, and not only in France.”

Similarly, It was Rachida Dati, another Muslim and former garde des Sceaux [Minister of Justice] who told the National Assembly that “The Republic is alone capable of uniting men and women of different origins, colours and religions around the principles of tolerance, liberty, solidarity and laïcité, making the Republic truly one and indivisible”

There is something rather patronising about Mr Obama’s disregard for the authentic voices of Muslim women themselves.
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