[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Jimmy Dore: CHINA & 20 Nations To Intervene & End Israel’s Genocide!

20,000 Women. 350 Kilometers. Zero Pay. In One Week. How Did Ibrahim Traore Pull This Off?

Spain is in CHAOS! Revolution is in the air

Joe Rogan Ambushes Gavin Newsom Via Text With A COVID Question He Never Saw Coming

Batman Vs The Joker: Democrats Will Double Down On Chaos To Save Their Party

US Vows To Quit IEA If The Agency Keeps Pushing Green Transition

Tucker Carlson: People Are Frustrated That Certain Commit Crimes With Impunity

No news again, but the battle of the machines marches on...

Cash Jordan: Rioters ATTACK ICE HQ… Troops FLATTEN Uprising With ‘Zero Mercy’

Doctor Reveals What COVID Vaccines Do to the Lungs in Just One Week

Sorry paid off influencers, MAGA bot accounts, and Satan....but I'm not going to just "move on"

Marjorie Taylor Greene Bombshell Interview

Welcome To The Land Of The Free... Until You Express An Opinion

Putin ‘tells Iran to accept nuclear deal with no enrichment’

76% of Honey at Stores is Fake

"225,000 Ukrainians have now DESERTED the war" Ukraine is in a death spiral Col. Dan Davis

The New York Times Finally Stops Avoiding The G-Word

The Gaza Water Massacre: What Israel Just Confessed About Shooting Children

Powerful ERUPTION spit out volcanic mud and debris - Army Personnel ran for their lives

Another 'Conspiracy Theory' Comes True: California Bill Passes To Buy Fire-Ravaged Palisades For Low-Income Apartments

A 1,600-year-old church in the Holy Land has been torched. But not by ISIS.

More civilians have been killed while seeking aid in Gaza than were killed on 7 October.

MORE TRANS VIOLENCE

WAYNE ROOT: Here’s How Trump Turns the Epstein List Fiasco into Home Run

Maxwell Says Epstein Client List Implicates Top Democrats

Medical Record Review Of the Twins Who Died After Vaccination

New federal secrets exposed as Republican unravels Lee Harvey Oswald's hidden ties to CIA

Protest outside migrant hotel in Essex erupts into violence

Congressman Faces Eviction Over $85k Back-Rent For Luxury DC Penthouse

This Is Not Normal! We Just Had Four “1-In-1,000-Year Storms” In A Single Week!


Dead Constitution
See other Dead Constitution Articles

Title: Why Does the Government So Desperately Want Indefinite Detention for Terror Suspects?
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.fff.org/comment/com1209p.asp
Published: Sep 24, 2012
Author: Andy Worthington
Post Date: 2012-09-24 07:59:23 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 113
Comments: 1

What is the government doing? Last year, when Congress passed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), with its contentious passages endorsing the mandatory military detention of terror suspects, there was uproar across the political spectrum from Americans who believed that it would be used on U.S. citizens.

In fact, it was unclear whether or not that was the case. The NDAA was in many ways a follow-up to the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), which was passed by Congress the week after the 9/11 attacks and which authorized the president “to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.”

As confirmed by the Supreme Court in June 2004, in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, the NDAA also allowed those seized — who were said to be involved with al-Qaeda or the Taliban — to be held until the end of hostilities. The AUMF was and remains the basis for the detention of prisoners at Guantánamo, and on two occasions George W. Bush decided that it applied to U.S. citizens — in the cases of Jose Padilla and Yaser Hamdi, who were held on U.S. soil as “enemy combatants” and subjected to torture.

When challenged in court, however, Bush never attempted to defend holding U.S. citizens without charge or trial. He transferred Padilla to the federal court system and sent Hamdi back to Saudi Arabia, where he had lived for many years before his capture in Afghanistan and his initial transfer to Guantánamo. In the case of the legal U.S. resident Ali al-Marri, a third man held as an “enemy combatant” on the U.S. mainland, and also subjected to torture, Bush avoided making a decision about him. His case was left to Barack Obama, who transferred him into the federal court system soon after taking office in January 2009.

If the muddled nature of these precedents made it difficult to establish whether or not the new legislation applied to U.S. citizens as well as to foreigners, the changes in wording from the AUMF were also inconclusive. Section 1021 was similar to the AUMF in that it applies to anyone “who planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored those responsible for those attacks,” but it also expanded the AUMF’s remit, stating explicitly that the military custody provisions also apply to anyone “who was a part of or substantially supported al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners, including any person who has committed a belligerent act or has directly supported such hostilities in aid of such enemy forces.”

The problem, as anyone capable of looking at the legislation objectively has realized, is that the “associated forces” included with al-Qaeda and the Taliban are not defined and could, therefore, be applied to anyone regarded as a threat, who could, however tangentially, be claimed to be associated with al-Qaeda or the Taliban. As the New York Times explained last week, the NDAA’s enactment “was controversial in part because lawmakers did not specify what conduct could lead to someone’s being detained, and because it was silent about whether the statute extended to American citizens and others arrested on United States soil.”

When Obama signed the NDAA into law on December 31 last year, he tried to allay fears about the military-detention provisions. He claimed that Section 1021 “breaks no new ground and is unnecessary,” because “[the] authority it describes was included in the 2001 AUMF [the Authorization for Use of Military Force], as recognized by the Supreme Court and confirmed through lower court decisions since then.”

He also sought to reassure those who feared that the provisions might be applied to U.S. citizens, stating, “I want to clarify that my administration will not authorize the indefinite military detention without trial of American citizens. Indeed, I believe that doing so would break with our most important traditions and values as a nation.”

However, after the president signed the NDAA into law, a number of journalists and activists decided to test whether or not he was being truthful, as they feared that the NDAA’s military custody provisions were, in fact, far more sweeping than the AUMF, and that “associated forces” could include Americans and could include journalists and activists. The lead plaintiff was the journalist Chris Hedges. Others included Noam Chomsky; Daniel Ellsberg; the Icelandic parliamentarian and WikiLeaks activist Birgitta Jónsdóttir; Kai Wargalla, one of the founders of Occupy London; and the U.S. journalists and activists Jennifer Bolen and Alexa O’Brien.

In May, as I explained here, Hedges and the others won a resounding victory, when, in the District Court in New York, Judge Katherine Forrest struck down, through an injunction, Section 1021 of the NDAA, agreeing with the plaintiffs that it was “constitutionally infirm, violating both their free speech and associational rights guaranteed by the First Amendment as well as due process rights guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution.”

Judge Forrest’s actions were not permanent. Technically, as she explained in her ruling, she “preliminarily [enjoined] enforcement of §1021 pending further proceedings in this Court or remedial action by Congress mooting the need for such further proceedings.” Those further proceedings led, last week, to another landmark ruling when, responding to further submissions by both parties over the last four months, she again sided with the plaintiffs, issuing a permanent injunction on Section 1021 of the NDAA, and explaining why:

The due process rights guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment require that an individual understand what conduct might subject him or her to criminal or civil penalties. Here, the stakes get no higher: indefinite military detention — potential detention during a war on terrorism that is not expected to end in the foreseeable future, if ever. The Constitution requires specificity — and that specificity is absent from §1021(b)(2) [the key passage that includes “associated forces”]. And yet, despite Obama’s supposedly soothing statements in December, the administration responded to Forrest’s ruling with hysteria, issuing an emergency appeal and arguing that her injunction “threatens irreparable harm to national security and the public interest by injecting added burdens and dangerous confusion into the conduct of military operations abroad during an active armed conflict.”

On September 17 — the 225th anniversary of the signing of the final draft of the U.S. Constitution — Judge Raymond Lohier of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals temporarily stayed Judge Forrest’s injunction in a brief, one-page ruling, a move that, as the New American noted, “effectively repealed many of that document’s fundamental protections of individual liberties.”

So why the urgency? As Chris Hedges asked this past Monday, “If the administration is this anxious to restore this section of the NDAA, is it because the Obama government has already used it? Or does it have plans to use the section in the immediate future?”

A plausible explanation was provided by one of the lawyers in the case, co-lead counsel Bruce Arfan, who stated, “A Department of Homeland Security bulletin was issued Friday claiming that the riots [in the Middle East] are likely to come to the U.S. and saying that DHS is looking for the Islamic leaders of these likely riots. It is my view that this is why the government wants to reopen the NDAA — so it has a tool to round up would-be Islamic protesters before they can launch any protest, violent or otherwise. Right now there are no legal tools to arrest would-be protesters. The NDAA would give the government such power. Since the request to vacate the injunction only comes about on the day of the riots, and following the DHS bulletin, it seems to me that the two are connected. The government wants to reopen the NDAA injunction so that they can use it to block protests.”

Arfan may be right, and it may be that the current unrest — blamed on an anti- Islamic video, but more honestly to do with the ongoing injustice of U.S. foreign policy and Obama’s extensive use of drones — has shaken the administration to such an extent that they fear reprisals in the United States and want to be prepared.

That does not explain why the administration has been fighting Judge Forrest for many months, although it does explain why reports from the plaintiffs suggest a recent spike in the level of the government’s hysteria. Unfortunately for the administration, though, the detention policies at Guantánamo that the provisions echo have, from the beginning, been a dangerous aberration. The Geneva Conventions and U.S. criminal statutes still provide all the tools necessary to detain people regarded as dangerous.

If the administration has other views regarding military detention without charge or trial — such as finding an excuse to hold people indefinitely on suspicion of what they might do — senior officials need to stop before they start down that road. After ten years, men against whom no actual evidence of wrongdoing exists are dying at Guantánamo. Their detentions and all the other ruinous lawlessness that was implemented by the Bush administration do not, in the end, make American safer. Obama once claimed to know that the kind of injustices enshrined at Guantánamo serve only to recruit enemies for America. Revisiting those injustices through the NDAA — if that is what the administration has in mind — is not the answer and should be avoided at all costs.

Andy Worthington is the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press) and serves as policy advisor to the Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his website at www.andyworthington.co.uk.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Ada (#0)

Detention without trial serves two purposes. It's a tactic to discourage individuals from helping Palestinians regain lands taken by Israeli terrorists. Also if "terror" suspects were tried in open court they could blow holes in Jewish anti-terrorism propaganda.

Tatarewicz  posted on  2012-09-25   0:23:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]