Gitmo
‘Justice’
for US
Citizens?
By Robert
Parry
23/07/08 "ICH"
-- - A
conservative-dominated
U.S. Appeals
Court has
opened the
door for
President
George W.
Bush or a
successor to
throw
American
citizens -
as well as
non-citizens
- into a
legal black
hole by
designating
them “enemy
combatants,”
even if they
have engaged
in no
violent act
and are
living on
U.S. soil.
The federal
Appeals
Court in
Richmond,
Virginia,
ruled 5-4 on
July 15 that
Bush had the
right, while
prosecuting
the “war on
terror,” to
hold Qatari
citizen (and
Peoria,
Illinois,
resident)
Ali al-Marri
indefinitely
as an “enemy
combatant.”
But some of
the court’s
more liberal
judges
expressed
alarm,
saying the
legal
reasoning
that denied
al-Marri
meaningful
due process
not only
trampled on
American
legal
traditions
but could be
used to lock
up U.S.
citizens as
well.
“For over
two
centuries of
growth and
struggle,
peace and
war, the
Constitution
has secured
our freedom
through the
guarantee
that, in the
United
States, no
one will be
deprived of
liberty
without due
process of
law,” wrote
Judge Diana
Motz, a Bill
Clinton
appointee,
who
dissented
against the
court’s
approval of
sweeping
presidential
powers.
Motz noted
that al-Marri
has been
imprisoned
for more
than five
years,
“without
acknowledgement
of the
protection
afforded by
the
Constitution,
solely
because the
Executive
believes
that his
indefinite
military
detention -
or even the
indefinite
military
detention of
a similarly
situated
American
citizen - is
proper.”
Al-Marri’s
lawyers plan
to appeal to
the U.S.
Supreme
Court, and
the case
underscores
one of the
biggest
issues at
stake in the
November
elections:
whether
Republican
John McCain
will get to
fulfill his
promise to
appoint more
Supreme
Court judges
like Samuel
Alito and
John
Roberts, who
have
embraced
Bush’s
vision of an
all-powerful
President.
Currently,
the U.S.
Supreme
Court has a
slim 5-4
majority in
favor of
limiting
Bush’s
authority to
deny basic
constitutional
rights to
people
designated
“enemy
combatants,”
but the
replacement
of one
member of
the majority
with another
Alito or
Roberts
would tip
the balance
and
effectively
permit the
rewriting of
the U.S.
Constitution.
Though the
July 15
ruling was
convoluted
and did call
for a
federal
District
Court to
afford al-Marri
some more
rights, the
Appeals
Court
decision
effectively
upheld
Bush’s
assertion of
nearly
unlimited
power to
have people
detained as
“enemy
combatants.”
The ruling
suggested
that even
American
citizens -
if they are
deemed
“enemy
combatants”
- could be
subjected to
Bush’s
military
commissions,
where
truncated
legal rights
make proving
a person’s
guilt much
easier than
in civilian
courts.
Stunned
Realization
Previously,
the New York
Times
editorial
page and
some liberal
legal
experts had
criticized
Bush’s
high-handed
approach
toward
non-citizens,
but had
assured
Americans
that the
military
commissions
would not
apply to
them.
But at
Consortiumnews.com,
we noted
that
language
buried in
the Military
Commissions
Act of 2006
seemed to
cover -
indeed even
target -
U.S.
citizens.
[See “Who Is
‘Any Person’
in Tribunal
Law?” or our
book, Neck
Deep.]
For
instance,
one section
dealing with
penalties
stated that
“any person
is
punishable
as a
principal
under this
chapter who
commits an
offense
punishable
by this
chapter, or
aids, abets,
counsels,
commands, or
procures its
commission,”
according to
the law.
Another
clause
stated that
“any person
subject to
this chapter
who, in
breach of an
allegiance
or duty to
the United
States,
knowingly
and
intentionally
aids an
enemy of the
United
States …
shall be
punished as
a military
commission …
may direct.”
[Emphasis
added]
Presumably,
Osama bin
Laden has no
“allegiance
or duty to
the United
States.”
Such a
phrase seems
aimed at
American
citizens.
But it took
the Appeals
Court ruling
- and the
blunt
language
from Judge
Motz about
denying
constitutional
rights to
U.S.
citizens -
to catch the
New York
Times’
attention.
In a July 20
editorial,
the Times
wrote that
the Appeals
Court’s
“decision
gives the
President
sweeping
power to
deprive
anyone -
citizens as
well as
non-citizens
- of their
freedom. …
“The
implications
are
breathtaking.
The
designation
‘enemy
combatant,’
which should
apply only
to people
captured on
a
battlefield,
can now be
applied to
people
detained
inside the
United
States. Even
though Mr.
Marri is not
an American
citizen, the
court’s
reasoning
appears to
apply
equally to
citizens.”
Bush’s
victory in
the Marri
case
reflects his
continued
insistence
that for the
duration of
the “war on
terror,”
Bush or any
successor
can exercise
“plenary” -
or unlimited
- powers as
the
Commander in
Chief.
And, since
the “war on
terror” will
go on
indefinitely
and since
the
“battlefield”
is
everywhere,
Bush is
asserting
the
President’s
right to do
whatever he
wants to
whomever he
wants
wherever the
person might
be,
virtually
forever.
In effect,
Bush’s
interpretation
of his own
powers -
allowing him
to imprison,
torture and
kill at his
discretion -
trumps the
Founders’
vision that
everyone
possesses
certain
“unalienable
rights” that
a government
can’t take
away.
Despite some
reversals in
the U.S.
Supreme
Court - and
the loss of
Republican
control of
Congress in
2006 - Bush
still sees
himself as a
kind of a
global
monarch who
gets to
decide which
rights and
freedoms his
subjects
anywhere in
the world
can enjoy
and which
ones will be
denied them.
Al-Marri’s
Arrest
Al-Marri
entered the
United
States on a
legal
student
visa, along
with his
wife and
children,
only a day
before the
9/11
attacks. He
was arrested
amid the
panic and
fear that
followed the
attacks, and
was charged
criminally
in a
credit-card
scheme.
But the Bush
administration
then
asserted
that al-Marri
was an
al-Qaeda
“sleeper
cell” agent
planning
follow-up
attacks,
declared him
an “enemy
combatant,”
and locked
him up at a
Navy brig in
South
Carolina,
where he was
held
incommunicado.
Eventually,
al-Marri
challenged
his
indefinite
detention
through a
federal
court suit.
Bush’s
lawyers
countered by
citing the
Military
Commissions
Act in
seeking to
deny him
access to
civilian
courts.
In an
affidavit
submitted to
a District
Court, a
U.S.
counter-terrorism
official
alleged that
al-Marri had
received
al-Qaeda
training,
was prepared
to engage in
a suicide
attack, and
had met
personally
with Osama
bin Laden
and other
senior
terrorist
leaders.
However, the
original
source of
that
evidence was
kept secret,
since it
presumably
was derived
from
interrogation
of al-Qaeda
captives,
many of whom
have been
subjected to
brutal
interrogation
methods.
In siding
with Bush,
conservative
Appeals
Court judges
noted al-Marri
had offered
only a
general
denial of
the
accusations
against him
and failed
to rebut the
specific
charges. Al-Marri’s
lawyers
argued that
their client
should have
a right to
confront his
accusers and
not be put
in a
position of
having to
prove his
innocence.
However, the
Appeals
Court’s
majority
accepted the
validity of
the “sleeper
cell”
allegations
- since al-Marri
had not
disproved
them - and
ruled that
Bush did
have the
authority to
lock al-Marri
up
indefinitely
as an “enemy
combatant.”
“While I
would be the
first to
agree that
the criminal
justice
system
retains an
important
place in our
constitutional
system when
handling the
terrorist
threat, the
notion that
it is the
only manner
of dealing
with such
threats, or
is
constitutionally
compelled in
all cases
involving
apprehensions
on American
soil, is
simply
wrong,”
wrote Judge
Harvie
Wilkinson, a
Ronald
Reagan
appointee
who is often
cited as a
possible
Republican
Supreme
Court
nominee.
Wilkinson
said the
government
had many
good reasons
not to grant
an accused
terrorist a
public
trial.
“While a
showcase of
American
values, an
open and
public
criminal
trial may
also serve
as a
platform for
suspected
terrorists,”
Wilkinson
wrote.
“Terror
suspects may
use the
bully pulpit
of a
criminal
trial in an
attempt to
recruit
others to
their cause.
Likewise,
terror
suspects may
take
advantage of
the
opportunity
to interact
with others
during trial
to pass
critical
intelligence
to their
allies.”
However,
Motz and
other more
liberal
judges
dissented on
the grounds
that the
Constitution
spells out
basic
due-process
rights for
defendants
and that
denying
those rights
to
non-citizens
like al-Marri
means that
they would
be lost to
U.S.
citizens as
well.
“It is
likely that
the
constitutional
rights our
court
determines
exist, or do
not exist,
for al-Marri
will apply
equally to
our own
citizens
under like
circumstances,”
Motz wrote.
“This means
simply that
protections
we declare
to be
unavailable
under the
Constitution
to al-Marri
might
likewise be
unavailable
to American
citizens,
and those
rights which
protect him
will protect
us as well.”
Motz’s
conclusion
also wasn’t
simply based
on her
opinion. It
was a
little-notice
argument
that Bush’s
lawyers made
earlier in
the case.
“A citizen,
no less than
an alien,
can be an
enemy
combatant,”
administration
lawyer David
B. Salmons
told the
Appeals
Court in
oral
arguments on
Feb. 1,
2007, adding
that the
courts
cannot
interfere
with the
President’s
wartime
judgments on
such
matters.
Salmons
insisted
that Bush is
not
interested
in using
this power
too broadly,
but argued
that the
judgment on
whom is
deemed an
“enemy
combatant”
must solely
be at the
discretion
of President
Bush. [NYT,
Feb. 2,
2007]
What may be
decided in
Election
2008 is
whether the
U.S. Supreme
Court will
be stocked
with
like-minded
legal
theorists.
Robert
Parry broke
many of the
Iran-Contra
stories in
the 1980s
for the
Associated
Press and
Newsweek.
His latest
book, Neck
Deep: The
Disastrous
Presidency
of George W.
Bush, was
written with
two of his
sons, Sam
and Nat, and
can be
ordered at
neckdeepbook.com.
His two
previous
books,
Secrecy &
Privilege:
The Rise of
the Bush
Dynasty from
Watergate to
Iraq and
Lost
History:
Contras,
Cocaine, the
Press &
‘Project
Truth’
First
published at
Consortiumnews.com
