Leaked drafts show Trump administration scrubbing out human rights violations of favored nations

This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on Aug. 08, 2025. It is shared here with permission.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration earned condemnation from Amnesty International on Thursday over its leaked plans to downplay human rights violations in countries favored by the American government.

News of the plan was originally reported on Wednesday by The Washington Post, which documented how the administration has been revising State Department reports on human rights in El Salvador, Israel, and Russia to “strike all references to LGBTQ+ individuals or crimes against them.” The Post also added that “the descriptions of government abuses that do remain have been softened.”

In the case of El Salvador, where the administration earlier this year began lawlessly shipping immigrants deported from the United States, the administration’s report stated that were “no credible reports of significant human rights abuses” there, even though a State Department report under former President Joe Biden’s administration issued last year documented “significant human rights issues” in the country.

Human rights violations against LGBTQ+ people were deleted from the State Department’s report on Russia, while the report on Israel deleted references to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s corruption trial and to his government’s threats to the country’s independent judiciary.

Amanda Klasing, Amnesty International USA’s national director of government relations and advocacy, ripped the administration for selectively whitewashing human rights records of nations favored by the president.

“The leaked chapters of the latest Annual Human Rights Report reveal a disturbing effort by the Trump administration to purposefully fail to fully capture the alarming and growing attacks on human rights in certain countries around the globe,” she said. “Alarmingly, we understand that the mandate from Secretary Rubio was… to go back and wipe out portions of the reports that had already been written—to delete stories from survivors of human rights violations.”

Klasing went on to accuse the administration of turning the human rights report “into yet another tool to obscure facts to push forward anti-rights policy choices.”

She also emphasized that “it would be a travesty and subversion of congressional intent to downplay or ignore human rights violations faced by marginalized populations including refugees and asylum seekers, women and girls, Indigenous people, ethnic and religious minorities, and LGBTQI+ people throughout the world.”

An unnamed State Department official this week told the Post that the administration was merely simplifying the human rights reports to make them more “readable.”

“The 2024 Human Rights report has been restructured in a way that removes redundancies, increases report readability, and is more responsive to the legislative mandate that underpins the report,” the official said. “The human rights report focuses on core issues.”

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