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No Unlawful Enemy Combatants at Guantanamo
In 2002, Donald Rumsfeld famously called the detainees at Guantánamo "the worst of the worst." General Richard B. Myers, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned they were "very dangerous people who would gnaw hydraulic lines in the back of a C-17 to bring it down." These claims were designed to justify locking up hundreds of men and boys for years in small cages like animals.
George W. Bush lost no time establishing military commissions to try the very "worst of the worst" for war crimes. But four and a half years later, the Supreme Court decided in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld that those commissions violated the Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions. So Bush dusted them off, made a few changes, and rammed his new improved military commissions through the Republican Congress last fall.
Only three detainees have been brought before the new commissions. One would expect the people Bush & Co. singled out for war crimes prosecutions would be high-level al-Qaeda leaders. But they weren't. The first was David Hicks, who was evidently not so dangerous. The U.S. military made a deal that garnered Hicks a misdemeanor sentence and sent him back to Australia.
Salem Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni who used to be Osama bin Laden's chauffeur, was the second. Hamdan, whose case had been overturned by the Supreme Court, was finally brought before a military commission Monday for arraignment on charges of conspiracy and material support for terrorism.
The third defendant was Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen, who appeared for arraignment the same day as Hamdan. Khadr was 15 years old when he arrived at Guantánamo. He faced charges of conspiracy, murder, attempted murder, spying, and supporting terrorism.
On Monday, much to Bush's dismay, two different military judges dismissed both Hamdan's and Khadr's cases on procedural grounds.
The Military Commissions Act that Congress passed last year says the military commissions have jurisdiction to try offenses committed by alien unlawful enemy combatants. Unlawful enemy combatants are defined as (1) people who have engaged in hostilities or purposefully and materially supported hostilities against the United States or its allies; or (2) people who have been determined to be unlawful enemy combatants by a Combatant Status Review Tribunal (CSRT) or another competent tribunal. The Act says that a determination of unlawful enemy combatant status by a CSRT or another competent tribunal is dispositive.
But there are no "unlawful" enemy combatants at Guantánamo. There are only men who have been determined to be "enemy combatants" by the CSRTs. The Act declares that military commissions "shall not have jurisdiction over lawful enemy combatants." In its haste to launch post-Hamdan military commissions, Bush's legal eagles didn't notice this discrepancy. That is why the charges were dismissed.
The Bush administration may try to fix the procedural problem and retry Khadr and Hamdan. But regardless of whether Guantánamo detainees are lawful or unlawful enemy combatants, the Bush administration's treatment of them violates the Geneva Conventions. Lawful enemy combatants are protected against inhumane treatment by the Third Geneva Convention on prisoners of war. Unlawful enemy combatants are protected against inhumane treatment by Common Article Three.
Omar Khadr was captured in Afghanistan and brought to Guantánamo when he was 15 years old. In both places, he has been repeatedly tortured and subjected to inhumane treatment. At Bagram Air Base, Khadr was denied pain medication for his serious head and eye shrapnel wounds. At Guantánamo, his hands and feet were shackled together, he was bolted to the floor and left there for hours at a time. After he urinated on himself and on the floor, U.S. military guards mopped the floor with his skinny little body. Khadr was beaten in the head, dogs lunged at him, and he was threatened with rape and the removal of his body parts.
Khadr cried frequently. He has nightmares, sweats and hyperventilates, and is hypervigilant, hearing sounds that he can't identify. When Khadr's lawyer saw him for the first time in 2004, he thought, "He's just a little kid."
Why was Khadr treated this way? He comes from a family allegedly active in al-Qaeda. His charges stem from an incident where the U.S. sent Afghans into a compound where Khadr and others were located. The people inside the compound killed the Afghans and began firing at the U.S. soldiers. The Americans dropped two 500-pound bombs on the compound, killing everyone inside except Khadr. After Khadr threw a hand grenade which killed an American, the soldiers shot Khadr, blinding and seriously wounding him. Khadr begged them in English to finish him off. He was then taken to Baghram and later to Guantánamo.
According to Donald Rehkopf, Jr., co-chair of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers Military Law Committee, "The government has steadfastly refused to allow hearings on this alleged [unlawful enemy combatant] status because there are so many prisoners at GTMO that were not even combatants, much less 'unlawful' ones. Khadr is in an unusual situation because he has a viable 'self-defense' claim - we attacked the compound that he and his family were living in, and the fact that he was only 15 at the time."
If Khadr were a U.S. citizen, he would not even be subject to trial by court-martial because of his age. When the Supreme Court ruled in 2005 that children under 18 at the time of their crimes could not be executed, it said that youths display a "lack of maturity and an underdeveloped sense of responsibility" that "often results in impetuous and ill-considered actions and decisions." A juvenile, the Court found, is more vulnerable or susceptible to negative influences and his character is not as well-formed as that of an adult. "From a moral standpoint," Justice Kennedy wrote for the majority, "it would be misguided to equate the failings of a minor with those of an adult, for a greater possibility exists that a minor's character deficiencies will be reformed." The Bush administration's treatment of Omar Khadr flies in the face of the Court's reasoning.
The United States may be able to retry Khadr and Hamdan. They have a few days to file an appeal. But the Court of Military Commissions Review hasn't even been established yet, so it's unclear where the appeals would be brought.
The Military Commissions Act, which denies basic due process protections, including the right to habeas corpus, is a disgrace. But an even bigger disgrace is the concentration camp the United States maintains at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The Act should be repealed and the Guantánamo prison should be shut down immediately.
Marjorie Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, president of the National Lawyers Guild, and the U.S. representative to the executive committee of the American Association of Jurists. Her new book, Cowboy Republic: Six Ways the Bush Gang Has Defied the Law, will be published in July. See http://www.marjoriecohn.com/
© 2007 Marjorie Cohn

17 Comments so far
Show AllI know who should be really on trial for torturing poor Omar; and that person needs to be taken out of office immediately...you can't imprison random people indefinitely who have done nothing and claim they aren't subject to Geneva conventions!
http://www.dreamingearth.net
Like many international crimes the US initiates, this most recent crime against humanity was preceded by similar events here in the US.
About 2.3 million US citizens are imprisoned in the US in federal, state and local lock-ups. The conditions in a number of these facilities are as bad as the concentration camps at Guantanamo, in Iraq and Afghanistan and other places the US government and military disappear people to. Rape, torture and murder are commonplace occurrences in the US Gulag. Accused are often denied the most basic of rights, including habeus corpus.
A majority of young African-American boys and men are either in detention or under the control of the "criminal justice system" in most large urban areas, including the US Capital.
A disproportionate number of prisoners, parolees and probationers are people of color. Nearly all are poor.
The US regularly executes people who did not even commit the crime they were convicted of.
The situation is a direct outgrowth of slavery, white supremacy and the mania to be "tough on crime," that has grown in leaps and bounds since about 1980. The US public and our elected representatives have supported and continue to support this mania with billions of tax dollars and ever more draconian police-state measures.
Even so-called progressives such as Sherrod Brown of Ohio voted for this blatantly unconstitutional law, which violates the very concepts of law and justice at their roots. He should be impeached and imprisoned for this vile, venal act. Instead, the Progressive Caucus ignores his vote and continues to allow his membership.
Lock em up and throw away the key, ugh, ugh. I'm proud to be an Americun.
The (un)President of the United States of America calls himself a Christian.
Who could call themselves 'a Christian', - and then act in this way towards a little kid who is just 15 years old?
What would Christ have said about those who have so sadistically hurt this poor little boy -he who'd just had his family wiped out by illegal, purposeless marauders?
I'm not a Christian, (but do respect that teacher's work) and can be 100% sure that this is not the work of Christians.
This is more the work of some variety of devils. -Only satanic devils would purposely maim, blind, imprison and torture small children in this way, ~ (and many hundreds of others just like him).
ergo: **Satan is at work within, and through, the leadership of the USA today.**
Shouldn't the churches be doing something about this horrendous fact?
(-or are they fast asleep as well?)
Christ said, 'Suffer ye the little children...'
He didn't say: "Make little children suffer..."
He meant by that, that little kids should be loved, cared for and nurtured, -not chained to floors and driven insane by deliberately hurting and terrorising them.
Who elected Satan's diabolic helpers into governing America? -and will they, (that disastrous electorate) now wake up to the results of their selfishness and terrible ignorance, and try to undo the damage they have caused to the world, ~ by immediately ridding their country of the curse called 'Bush and Co', and putting in place someone who has a human heart and functioning wisdom, -instead of the current piles of dog waste?
I pray so... for no way is "God blessing America" for as long as this woe-begotten country is being ruled by the evil and perverse epitome of anything even _faintly_ resembling anything 'Christian' or 'Godly'...
xx
Who's up for gnawing hydraulic lines in a C-17? (Let's make sure the plane is on the ground first) The venerable C-17 is being misused as a weapon of terror. There's no need to lock anybody up. Recommission the C-17s, paint them ice white, perhaps a stylish dab of color on the tail fin, fly them to deliver food and medicine throughout the world.
At first they could describe the inhabitants of Gitmo as super xtra bad monster dudes. But then we found out there were no charges against them. So who were they really? Poor unfortunate doofuses that somebody ratted on when you could say "al-qaeda" and here come the hoods and cuffs and off you go. And it was all secrets. So really nobody could say anything about them, not the worst of the worst and not hydraulic line gnawers. Nothing. This is also the case with the 16000 other people in the greater gulag. If anything is going to be left of the country we learned about in school, that military commissions act has got to go. I mean now.
The Bush administration claims at most to be planning prosecution of 60 to 80 Gitmo prisoners. There are about three hundred more prisoners being kept in isolation cells than they ever plan to prosecute. This does not compute.
Why would anyone expect guards with experience in the US prison system to treat their foreign charges in military prisons remarkably differently than they have been trained to treat US citizens?
It might also be pointed out that the "Bill of Rights" is badly misnamed. It is not a list of rights held by US citizens. It is a list of things that the US government *may not do*, for the reason that no government has the right to do any of those things.
Thanks Professor for giving us insights into these cases lacking in most reporting. It's heartbreaking to have the reality of this administration's policies slap us in the face as the facts have done. I didn't know the facts. I knew I wanted GITMO closed, I knew abuses were rampant. But I didn't know about Omar Khadr. When I hear stories such as this I harken back to the days immediately following 9/11 when so many Americans asked "why do they hate us?" Why indeed.
"The (un)President of the United States of America calls himself a Christian.
Who could call themselves 'a Christian', - and then act in this way towards a little kid who is just 15 years old?"
easily. the bible is filled with massacres and violence. this same "teacher" - "christ" also said he came to bring not peace but a sword and other things. christianity is not a religion of peace at all, even if many christians are peaceful
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Guantánamo ©
by Robert Goldsborough
I think they did it just to show us they could, Guantánamo
Some stand in the boiling sun all day
Some shackled to cement lie in their excrement Guantánamo
In cages stripped of their clothes
A tragic lack of compassion
Jeered at and taunted day and night Guantánamo
Guantánamo, Guantánamo
There ain't no hope in Git'mo
I think they did it just to show us they could, Guantánamo
Kept in total darkness without a sound
Science-based torture techniques Guantánamo
Break the body and the spirit too
Deny even minimal rights
Train our young people into sadistic soldiers Guantánamo
Guantánamo, Guantánamo
Bright strobe lights and heavy metal songs
I think they did it just to show us they could, Guantánamo.
Destruction of the personality
Make them feel like they're never going to leave till they die Guantánamo
When they try to commit suicide
Shove a dirty tube down their throat to keep them alive
Anything short of direct murder is acceptable, Guantánamo
Guantánamo, Guantánamo
Despair, suicide a psychological hell
I think they did it just to show us they could, Guantánamo
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Powers of a military dictator
Elevate injustice to state policy Guantánamo
Tortured like laboratory rats
New methods of breaking the spirit are tried
A life of endless persecution Guantánamo
Guantánamo, Guantánamo
International law is gone
I think they did it just to show us they could, Guantánamo
George W's claim to fame,
There's no one he can't detain, Guantánamo
Sidesteps burdensome laws,
Doesn't need a judge.
To incarcerate and torture for the rest of their life Guantánamo
Guantánamo, Guantánamo
Horrendous conditions, despicable crimes.
I think he did it just to show us they could, Guantánamo
A world stripped of justice all law comes from Washington
What they do to them they can do to you and me.
© copyright All rights reserved by Robert R.Goldsborough III 3/1/2007
BrokenBear_renegades
Nice poem but what rights do you want to reserve? If I ever made a dime off the suffering at Gitmo I'd never look at myself in the mirror again. Period.
Yes, godlessrant, that miserable book has done a lot to encourage, demand, and condone the abuse of children over the ages, so this really isn't a stretch for their religion; it all needs to be stopped.
I want all white American men who read this to picture in their head what I am about to say. AND PICTURE IT GOOD. Imagine you need to go to the store to grab your beautiful wife something cool to drink on a 90degree summer day. You hold her hand and kiss her on the forehead and tell her you love her. You kiss your new born baby boy good bye. You make your way to your car for a short drive down the street to the local food mart. You slowly apply the breaks to stop at a red-light; when you are stunned by the loud crash of glass shattering all around you. A man in a mask punches you square in the nose and you can no longer see. Your vision is blurred by watery eyes. The butt of a Semi-automatic rifle smashes against your head and you are dragged out of your car and kicked in the sides and face and covered with a black hood; tossed in to a black SUV.
When you finally regain consciousness, you can't tell whether your eyes are open or closed. The blood has meshed with the cloth hood on your face. You can hardly breathe because of the 3 cracked ribs you have. You know that you are on a plane. You recognize the feeling from all the business trips you take. You hear people speaking in a language you don't understand. You try to scream but you are quickly silenced with a swift chop to the throat. As you gasp for air you hear someone say in English "Your life as you know it is over"!
You pass out from all the pain, only to awaken in a small room strapped to a folding chair; Naked. You can see a man in front of you…..Smiling. He says "Tell us what you know", you reply "I don't know what you are talking about, Where am I, What the hell is going on"!
He just nods and says "Wrong answer".
Thin plastic is wrapped over your face. You are thrown on a table and bucket after bucket or water is pored over your face. You feel the life being sucked out of you. Your heart beat quickening because of the panic; shortly thereafter, slowing because of the lack of air. Every memory of your loved ones passes through your mind in a split second. The first time you kissed. The day your child was born. High school, college, your job, your parents, your life as you knew it is over.
Just as you feel yourself passing out. Your snatched up and thrown on the floor. The soldiers start to laugh at you. And the only man that speaks your language says, "Its only been three minutes boy." "You better tell us what we want to know or you will be detained for a long, long time until you do."
Then imagine this and even worse happening for 3 years and you have know idea what is going on, or when it will end.
Think about it, and think hard.
Now do something to stop it from happening.
Gitmo symbolizes America and should thus have established, on site, a shrine to memorialize it, much as the Israeli's did at the grave of Baruch Goldstein, the rabbi who murdered 37 Moslems with a machine gun while they prayed. Why hide what you really are and what you really stand for?
It might be a revolutionary idea, but isn't it about time that statues and memorials reflect actual historical facts instead of romantic fictions? Let us begin at Guantanamo Bay.
Omar Khadr has been abandoned to the Guantanamo Bay torturers and the military show trials by his own government - the Canadian government. For Khadr is a Canadian citizen.
Unlike its fellow Bush-toady governments in Australia and the UK, Canada's neo-con government has not made any effort to have its own citizen repatriated to Canada. They are prepared to let the US have its way with Khadr, who has already been driven insane by his torturers.
"I want all white American men who read this to picture in their head what I am about to say. AND PICTURE IT GOOD."
How about changing that to "American People"? Men and women of all races are victimized within the American prison system, not only by the guards, but other inmates as well.