EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Report: Toxic Chemicals Found in Thousands of Children's Products
- Move Over, Koch Brothers: A Bigger, Darker Rightwing Funder Is Out to Destroy Public Education
- You and Your Family Are Guinea Pigs for the Chemical Corporations
- The Life and Death of Words, People, and Even Nature
- After Boston, Eyes-Wide Open Hope?
Popular content
Today's Top News
Hamdan Case Tests Military Tribunals
NEW YORK - As the long-awaited trial of Guantanamo detainee Salim Ahmed Hamdan opened this week at the U.S. naval base in Cuba, human rights groups filed suit demanding that the Department of Justice (DOJ) produce documents related to the U.S. government's ghost detention, torture, and extraordinary rendition programme.
Attorney-General Michael Mukasey also called on Congress to quickly pass new legislation to guard against judges imposing a patchwork of conflicting rules that could produce confusion, more court challenges and even lengthier delays for prisoners who have been held at Guantanamo for as long as seven years.
Hamdan, Osama bin Laden's alleged former driver, is the first terror suspect to face trial at Guantanamo in seven years and the first test of whether that system can dispense fair and impartial justice. The charges against the Yemeni father of two will proceed before a military commission -- the first since the end of World War II -- with a jury of uniformed officers and rules that many constitutional authorities believe give great deference to the prosecution.
Evidence obtained from "cruel" and "inhuman" interrogation methods as well as hearsay evidence will be admissible under certain circumstances. Hamdan faces a maximum of life in prison if convicted.
"This was supposed to be the premier system for bringing to justice the masterminds of the worst crime ever committed on U.S. soil," said Tom Malinowski, Washington advocacy director for Human Rights Watch. "The only result in seven years was the conviction of an Australian kangaroo trapper, who is now free."
He was referring to Australian David M. Hicks, who last year pleaded guilty to a terrorism charge in the only Guantanamo case to be fully adjudicated. Hicks was sent to Australia as part of a political deal and was later released from prison there.
Hamdan's lawyers have argued he was beaten and abused at Guantanamo and subjected to a programme of systematic sleep deprivation that they said constitutes torture.
Hamdan is one of about 20 prisoners whose cases are scheduled to be heard by juries composed of military service members rather than civilians.
The Hamdan trials, as well as those that are to follow, have been widely criticised by constitutional scholars. For example, Brian J. Foley, visiting associate law professor at Boston University, told IPS, "The basic problem underlying all the tribunals at Guantanamo (military commissions and Combatant Status Review Tribunals) is that the rules are rigged for easy U.S. 'victories.'"
"But when we let tribunals use coerced confessions and hearsay, and when we make it hard for defendants to call witnesses and cross-examine, the joke is on us," he said. "At the end of the day, we cannot know if the people the tribunals say are terrorists are really terrorists at all, or if the plots they confess to participating are not merely fantasies."
Other legal experts, including Columbia University law professor Scott Horton, are questioning whether the government can obtain convictions without using evidence obtained through torture.
Horton told IPS he believes the process used to establish the military commissions -- criminal courts run by the U.S. armed forces -- is likely to result in what says will be "a series of show trials" timed to strengthen the Republican Party's chances in the 2008 presidential election.
Defenders of the military commissions point to the multi-layered due process procedures -- including the right to appeal a conviction to federal court -- that Congress added since Bush proposed the panels. Proponents of the new system say people who committed heinous acts against the United States do not deserve the constitutional protections of its federal courts.
Even if Hamdan is acquitted of conspiracy and material support of terrorism charges -- an unlikely outcome -- he probably would not be released because he has been designated an "enemy combatant" by the military. The military contends that prosecutors would be unchanged by an acquittal even if international pressure mounts for his release.
Such international pressure came last week, when hundreds of European legislators filed a court motion to postpone Hamdan's trial while he challenges the legality of military commissions.
In a new legal brief, the Europeans said they were "concerned that (Hamdan's) imminent military commission trial will not exclude evidence that contravenes international standards of fair trial, due process and the protection of human rights."
But last week, a federal judge ruled that Hamdan's military commission trial should continue, and suggested that appellate relief could come from the military's own internal process or from the U.S. Federal Court of Appeals.
Hamdan has already become something of an icon in U.S. constitutional history. In a lawsuit brought by Hamdan's attorneys, the Supreme Court in 2006 struck down the military commission system, ruling that it was not authorised by federal law and violated the Geneva Conventions. Congress reacted by passing the Military Commissions Act of 2006, under which Hamdan is being tried.
The act banned evidence obtained using torture but said statements derived from harsh interrogations are allowable if the judge finds the evidence reliable and relevant. In 2005, Congress banned "cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment," but statements made under such duress before that date could be admissible. Many of Hamdan's interrogations occurred before the congressional action, according to court testimony.
The Hamdan proceedings are seen by observers as a way to test the long-delayed military system on an alleged low-level al Qaeda foot soldier and thus be primed for the trials of "high value" terrorist leaders to come. These include proceedings against Khalid Sheik Mohammed, self-proclaimed mastermind of the Sep. 11, 2001, attacks, Abu Zubaydah, and other accused planners.
One of the most prominent figures to argue for delay of Hamdan's case is Air Force Colonel Morris Davis, the former chief prosecutor at Guantanamo. He resigned his position late last year in protest over what he said was political interference.
"My policy as chief prosecutor had been that we would not offer any evidence obtained by waterboarding, specifically, or any other interrogation techniques that were unduly coercive," Davis said, adding, "I felt I couldn't ensure full, fair and open trials, and I resigned -- asked to resign." In April, he testified as a witness for Hamdan and offered a harsh critique of the military commission system.
Attorney General Mukasey's plea to Congress related to legislating rules to avoid confusion and further delays in the large number of habeas corpus suits already filed with the federal appeals court in which Guantanamo detainees are challenging the basis of their detention. But with only five weeks remaining in its legislative calendar, it is doubtful that the current Congress could develop a plan that would be acceptable to the Bush administration and to both Republican and Democratic lawmakers.
As the Hamdan trial began, leading human rights groups filed a court motion under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) for a preliminary injunction to compel the Department of Justice and other agencies to release information requested in 2004 and 2006. The requested information relates to the government's programme of secret or irregular detention.
The groups are Amnesty International USA (AIUSA), the Centre for Constitutional Rights (CCR), and the International Human Rights Clinic at NYU School of Law's Centre for Human Rights and Global Justice (NYU IHRC/CHRGJ).
"The more the DOJ stalls in admitting its role in the rendition, disappearances, and torture programme, the more obvious it becomes that it has greatly contributed to the illegality that has come to define this administration over the past seven years," said Jayne Huckerby, research director of the CHRGJ.
© 2008 Inter Press Service
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

38 Comments so far
Show AllWhat amazes me is the complete stupidity of the Bush administration. Here you've got a show trial, and no cameras to broadcast the event. Stalin made sure to film and distribute the trials he staged, as did the Nazi regime. These clowns can't win a war, can't find bin Laden and can't even put on a show trial properly. No wonder New Orleans is still missing.
For some reason, as I read this article I began to picture kangaroos and Cardassians.
This entire process is a complete disgrace from beginning to end. What, in the name of all that's holy, is the purpose of a "trial" where acquital has no result other than continued captivity and maltreatment?! Disgusting!!!
So, they want to put Bin Laden's chaffeur on trial for terrorism?
Was he really THAT bad of a driver?
What next? Bin Laden' butler charged with fashion terrorism?
He pedacurist charged with possessing hangnails of mass destruction?
How frigging ridiculous....too bad Bush and the Oil Masters of the Universe let all the bin Ladens go scott free on 9/12....and continue to protect the man himself
When I was a child growing up in the U.S., I believed that the U.S. was the moral leader of the world and that others looked to us for ethical guidance. It was the Nazis or the Commies who were capable of torture, not us. We were the role model. Man, was I mistaken! The U.S. has lost all claims to providing a model for moral behavior. I don't know that Americans yet realize this, but the rest of the world sure does.
One line gives the game away. "The constitution should not apply to people who have committed atrocious crimes against the US." This assumes guilt without any test of the facts. A fair trial is what decides if the person is in fact guilty of a crime.
out of the loop, the Bush family had extensive ties to the Nazis during WWII, and imported former KGB personnel into the G. W. Bush "intelligence" (hard to use that word in association w/Dubya) infrastructure after Dubya was appointed president. Dubya's grandfather, Senator Prescott Bush, was implicated by the BBC last summer in a plot to assassinate FDR. It's quite interesting, when you put the pieces together, to see how the Bush family has never been pro democracy, or stood in any way for any of what the USA supposedly stood for. Their ties to fascism go way back, and in this case the apple hasn't fallen far from the tree.
In terms of Star Trek lore, the Bush regime has become Cardassian:
According to Wikipedia:
"In Cardassian criminal trials the defendant is presumed guilty and in fact the punishment is already decided before the trial begins; the purpose of the trial (effectively a show trial) is merely to help the defendant acknowledge his wrongdoing. In Cardassian mystery novels, everyone is always guilty, the puzzle being to work out who is guilty of what."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardassian
Our truth is stranger than Star Trek fiction.
from the article:
"Proponents of the new system say people who committed heinous acts against the United States do not deserve the constitutional protections of its federal courts."
in other words, the "new system," designed for those already labeled "the worst of the worst," does away with the presumption of innocence upon which our familiar adversarial system had been based.
coupled with the revealing memo quoted here a few weeks ago (in which a senior officer at gitmo advised that any acquittal was an unacceptable outcome), it appears the trials exist to validate the system, not to establish the guilt of the accused.
behold the future of u.s. jurisprudence. today a hapless raghead, tomorrow the patriotic dissenters---er, "peace terrorists."
Those who are producing this Kafkadian Farce should be the ones on war crimes trial in the Hague. Hitler would be so proud!
I've got an idea. The US is getting very good at labeling ex: "worst of worst" "enemy combatant". Why doesn't the US government label one of their prisoners "Osama Bin Laden"? Plus, they can introduce testimony from interrogations, attesting to the fact that Bin Laden realizes that he was wrong, the US is in fact not the "great satan" and he personally finds Mr. Bush very charming and would like to have a beer with him.
Center for Constitutional Rights
American justice is bunk. Hey Hague... please come show BushCo. and Conspirators Incorporated some real justice.
Those concerned by the events described in this article should read and give wide dissemination to Bob Herbert's column in today's (Tuesday, July 22) NYTimes, from which I quote: "Donald Rumsfeld described the detainees at Guantánamo as the worst of the worst.' A more sober assessment has since been reached by many respected observers. Ms. [Jane] Mayer [whose book, 'The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals,'is central to Bob Herbert's column]mentioned a study conducted by attorneys and law students at the Seton Hall University Law School.
'After reviewing 517 of the Guantánamo detainees' cases in depth,' she said, 'they concluded that only 8 percent were alleged to have associated with Al Qaeda. Fifty-five percent were not alleged to have engaged in any hostile act against the United States at all, and the remainder were charged with dubious wrongdoing, including having tried to flee U.S. bombs. The overwhelming majority — all but 5 percent — had been captured by non-U.S. players, many of whom were bounty hunters.'"
"having tried to flee U.S. bombs" = "the worst of the worst". Think of the little Vietnamese girl trying to flee the napalm burning her alive, a photograph that should be as iconically shameful as any in history -- but not more so than many taken, or not taken, in Afghanistan, Iraq, or Palestine.
He maybe guilty of something, but what?
The law under which he is being tried may be an "ex post facto" law. We cannot have any faith is a legal system which tries people after the fact, or with a rigged legal proceeding.
Simply, it is not fair.
Ah! That old chestnut - the winners never lose, and the defeated will continue to be humiliated.
I have seen a few Americans refer to the "British colonialism" of old in various threads, but it seems as though the US is using the same tactics against people of a different race and skin colour.
Guantanamo Bay was set up to perform these very acts. Why has the UN not spoken against it?
Watch Bush miraculously produce Osama shortly before the election.
Jurisprudence as we know it went missing the day bush or his keepers thought up that "enemy combatant" label. Once they pin that thing on, nothing else makes any difference. remember Jose Padilla? they never found his alledged "dirty bomb" but he was still an e. c., so they kept him in jail until he was a little batty, poor guy, and sentenced him to 20 years for... well here's where we jump down the old rabbit hole. the language they use to describe the make believe crimes or whatever they think they might have done, if they think, has no connection to anything concrete or real.
And yes what an innovation we have, getting exonerated and going straight back to the cage. Kafka never had such a nightmare.
what is this for anyway? what purpose does any of it serve? can anyone explain it?
From our shared consent to remain rational and patient with the forces of darkness and evil, I will refrain from commenting too honestly.
Otherwise, suffice to say that we have much to thank the neocons for, specifically now the willingness to openly display to the world the depths to which this nation has fallen. If there is no viable political justification for this charade we are into deeper doodoo that even the Russians under Stalin! ( I have been under the impression that the whole thing was a need to frighten the "american" voters into voting RePug..... or the need to assure that tortured suspects don't get real trials hence avoiding embarrassing revelations regarding governmental conspiracy with 911...)
BUT the way things are going it appears that total chaos now ensues....does this mean that the MACHINES have won and are toying with us?
At the very least every citizen of the USA is now obviously a member of the largest terrorist organization in the world....
We have an amendment to the Constitution that provides that no one can be forced incriminate themselves. The 5th Amendment. The logic behind including that in the Constitution was and is that if self incrimination is allowed, torture will follow behind in short order.
This poor guy, Hamden, has a 4th grade education and knew how to fix motors so he was Bin Laden's driver in Afghanistan. He may have been present when discussions were taking place in Arabic, but I am guessing that he mostly communicates in Pashtu or whatever his tribal language is and probably had no clue of what was being discussed. That would only make sense from Bin Laden's point of view. Have a driver that didn't speak the language they plotted in.
I am willing to hear evidence that can show that these guys actually were behind the airplanes on 9/11, but at some point they are going to have to produce evidence that they were also responsible for the explosives that were used to bring down the buildings to convince me that the offical story of 9/11 is not just a sham cover story.
Plus, Muhammad Atta, if indeed he had anything to do with the planes on 9/11 (show me some evidence please) came from Germany and most of the other people we are told hijacked those planes and burned up that day were from Saudi Arabia.
What the hell are we doing in Afghanistan then?
Of course it is to facilitate the pipeline through the Pashtun area that UNOCAL was trying to negotiate with the Taliban until the negotiations broke down on 9/10/2001.
I too would like to see evidence supporting the official 9/11 story.
BTW, if steel framed skyscrapers can collapse due to fire, we'd better evacuate every city in America.
Don't bother analyzing this show trial. We all know justice was booted out of the airplane in the chimp's initial response to 9/11. If the "authority" lacks the backing of the world community, which the USA lacks, then it's really no authority at all. The detainment of prisoners in Gitmo has been completely illegitimate from the start. Any punishment the USA attempts to inflict on any of the prisoners will be a crime itself.
"The military contends that prosecutors would be unchanged by an acquittal even if international pressure mounts for his release."
Why bother with a trial then? Evidence is unnecessary and so they might as well skip the charges too -just declare him an enemy of the Glorious Peoples' Bushdom.
It is rather pathetic that after the untold billions spent on the "Phoney war on terror" all these losers can come up with to prosecute(persecute)at the American Gulag is a chauffeur and a kid.
Anybody know when the cases for Bush et al are set to go to trial?
This is the point in the movie where THE SHIT HITS THE FAN!
The most powerful country ever seen FINALLY after all these years goes to court against a feared enemy "terruwrist", some bloke's chauffer?? And they are not even slightly embarrasssed by this ridiculous spectacle, this risible debacle??
Next we will see Ahmadinejad's tea lady arraigned for her part in building (NON EXISTENT) nuclear weapons..
You could not make this stuff up, could you??
Pathetic, pathetic and worrying.
.."The only result in seven years was the conviction of an Australian kangaroo trapper, who is now free."..
Hicks, a rather silly young man who went adventuring in the wrong places at the wrong time, copped a plea to escape from the hell of Guantanamo..
HELL... . I'd have said I was one of Shrubya's gay lovers to escape from that place. I might even have done nasty things to try and prove it.... UUgghhhhhh...
An "Enemy combatant" by definition is someone not in any regular army, but acting to appose the USA's illegal aggression, hence war crimes, invasion, occupation, or in other words defending themselves from America's extra territorial imperial conquest.
I freely admit to being an enemy combatant.
The only question left is; will the jails be filled with me, those like me, including all those who make up the "lists" of "suspected terrorists" (they better have an awful lot of jails and guards) or whether we all wake up and put in jail those few elitist sociopathic criminals who have perpetrated this abhoration for their power and greed.
In the end, as in any great battle in history, it will come down to what we can afford to do and what we cannot afford not to do!
The GOP White House is now staging show trials to help the republican party's chances for the White house in 2008? Pathetic, absolutely pathetic!
Support the Kucinich Impeachment Hearing on Friday
Tell your Representatives to support impeachment by cosponsoring H. Res. 1345:
http://www.democrats.com/peoplesemailnetwork/142
When Speaker Pelosi refused to allow hearings on any of the 38 Articles, Kucinich returned to the floor of Congress to introduce one more Article of Impeachment against President Bush (H.Res. 1345).
Thanks to massive pressure from Democrats.com and our pro-impeachment allies, Speaker Pelosi finally allowed Chairman Conyers to hold a hearing this Friday. Kucinich will get a few minutes to argue for impeachment along with Rep. Robert Wexler, former Rep. Liz Holtzman, and former Salt Lake City mayor Rocky Anderson. Kucinich made a video to thank us for our efforts.
This is not the first time that a prisoner has to prove his innocence in a court that has already decided he's guilty.
And you don't have to look at the fictional 'Cardassians' from Star Trek (tm).
Just remember your history.
France had the same procedure.
They also had Devil's Island.
And it was France that invented the execution method called 'la garrote', where the condemned was strapped to a chair with a high back, a cord was placed around his neck, passed through two holes and tied off, then tightened by twisting the resulting loop to the point of fatal strangulation at the whim of the executioner.
Hmm. I think I see a trend here...
This is not the first time that a prisoner has to prove his innocence in a court that has already decided he's guilty.
And you don't have to look at the fictional 'Cardassians' from Star Trek (tm).
Just remember your history.
France had the same procedure.
They also had Devil's Island.
And it was France that invented the execution method called 'la garrote', where the condemned was strapped to a chair with a high back, a cord was placed around his neck, passed through two holes and tied off, then tightened by twisting the resulting loop to the point of fatal strangulation at the whim of the executioner.
Hmm. I think I see a trend here...
"Hamdan faces a maximum of life in prison if convicted"
And if acquitted.
Many posters seem to think that the capture of Karadzic and his shipment to "the Hague" is an example of justice. "The Hague" is not the International Criminal Court, but the International Criminal Tribunal of the Former Yugoslavia, set up as a kangaroo court after the US and NATO attacked and dismembered Yugoslavia.
In "Travesty" John Laughland documents an incredible misuse of a court and a true travesty of justice and lack of a fair trial towards Milosevic.
The demonization of Milosevic and the justification of the attack on Yugoslavia (including the use of depleted uranium and the targeting of cilivian infrastructure) is widely accepted by so-called progressives in the US.
In "How the US Gets Away with Murder" Michael Mandel shows how when a group of lawyers tried to get the prosecutor at the ICTY to also prosecute ,ongoing NATO war crimes, she refused, showing the bias for which she was hired. (This was Louise Arbour, who then moved on to be the UN Human Rights Commissioner!!)
Pay attention. If the US gets away with war crimes, show trials and takeover of other countries to stage massive bases, it repeats the successful script.
Sorry, Louise Arbour was the judge, not the prosecutor, although her actions showed a concert of purpose with the prosecution.
A jury of uniformed officers? Hmmm that sounds fair.
Why are we suprised? The "fair trial" system in the U.S. is a joke - unless you have wads of cash.
Why do we need DOJ (department of Justice)when there is no justice
kangroo court of a banana republic
Maybe no one but me cares, but Louise Arbour was the chief prosecutor. I can't stand to let the mistake go uncorrected. Sorry.