Salim Hamdan's Sentence Signals the End of Guantanamo
In a decision that will shock those watching the conclusion of the first full US war crimes trial since the Nuremberg Trials, the military jury that yesterday convicted Salim Hamdan of providing "material support for terrorism" has sentenced him to serve five and a half years in prison.
Given that the judge in his case, Navy Capt. Keith Allred, had earlier ruled that he would be given credit for time served since he was first charged under the Commission system in July 2003, this means that he will be eligible for release in five months' time.The verdict will do nothing to convince the many critics of the Military Commission trial system that it is valid -- as there remain too many issues with the Commissions' use of hearsay and coerced evidence, of secret testimony, and of attempts to justify elevating "material support for terrorism" to the level of a war crime, despite no precedent for doing so -- but it must surely come as a relief to those who thought that the jury might have been persuaded by prosecutor John Murphy, who argued that Hamdan's "penalty" should be a sentence of at least 30 years, something "so significant that it forecloses any possibility that he reestablishes his ties with terrorists."
Instead, the sentence is close to the length of time proposed by Hamdan's defense lawyer Charles Swift, the former military lawyer who brought down the Commissions' first incarnation as illegal in the Supreme Court in June 2006. Swift argued that Hamdan should receive a sentence of less than four years because "his cooperation with US intelligence services more than outweighed his culpability as a member of [Osama] bin Laden's motor pool."
This is, I believe, an extremely important point, as it was apparent during Hamdan's two-week trial that he had been exploited by those seeking to prosecute him, who had built a case against him through his own words. At issue was the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination, which has been denied to all those deemed "enemy combatants" in the "War on Terror." While this remains unacceptable -- and is intimately connected with the dark heart of the administration's deliberate policy of shredding the Geneva Conventions to facilitate the illegal interrogation of prisoners (whether coercively or not) -- what made it particularly troubling in Hamdan's case was that, whereas other, non-cooperative prisoners had been released from Guantánamo without ever incriminating themselves, Hamdan was being punished for his cooperation.
While legal challenges to the system will be more muted as a result of this verdict, it is unlikely that Hamdan's defenders will be persuaded not to pursue their many, valid complaints about a system which, as Charles Swift explained today, remains nothing more than "a made-up tribunal to try anybody we don't like."
However, what this sentence also achieves, which was previously unconceivable, is to cap the disturbingly open-ended nature of the administration's detention policies, in a way that was only previously managed through a plea bargain -- that of the Australian David Hicks, who, in the first of the Commission trials following their resuscitation in the fall of 2006 in the Military Commissions Act, received a nine-month sentence to add to the five years and three months he had already spent in US custody.
Until now, the administration has maintained that, if it wishes, it has the right to hold "enemy combatants" without charge or trial until the end of hostilities, which, it has also admitted, might last for generations. A sentence has now superseded that open-ended policy. If one of Osama bin Laden's drivers gets a sentence of seven years and one month in total (five and half years plus the 19 months of his imprisonment before he was charged) in a system specifically established by the administration to try and convict "terror suspects," it is surely now inconceivable that those who planned the whole post-9/11 detention policy can maintain that they can still continue to hold him as an "enemy combatant" after his sentence has been served -- or, for that matter, that they can continue to hold any of the 130 or so prisoners in Guantánamo who have not been cleared, and who are not scheduled to face a trial by Military Commission, beyond the end of the year.
With this sentence, it appears that the death knell has just been sounded for the whole malign Guantánamo project.
Andy Worthington is a journalist and historian, based in London. He is the author of The Guantánamo Files, the first book to tell the stories of all the detainees in America's illegal prison (published by Pluto Press/the University of Michigan Press). For more information, visit his blog here.
Copyright © 2008 HuffingtonPost.com, Inc.
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8 Comments so far
Show AllI am afraid I do not share his optimistic outlook about the closing of Gitmo. The military and the Bushites are determined to have their cake and eat it as well. This has nothing to do with justice or even the appearance of justice. It is about a group of people who have set themselves up as dictators, above the law (of any country) and are absolutely convinced they do not have to worry about consequences to their own conduct or behavior. They lack morality. Conscious. They have holes in their souls-- Put simpler:
Hold on, I need to refresh my drink of kool-aid...
AAAgghhh, that's better. Now, what was the problem? Him, who? A driver for one of the Bin Ladens? What's he doing in Guatfuckalo? Don't you fools know how much they contributed to my election? I don't care which Bin Laden, urp, get the fuck outa my office, urp..urp...
You can't do nuttin' to me. I be da preznut..urp..urp...
Death knell for Gitmo is not good enough. The great american gulag is holding around 30,000 people in secret prisons all over, plus prison ships. None of these has ever been charged. 95% were handed over by Pakistanis and other bounty hunters. Among them are old men and little kids who could not be suspects. bush's determination to lock up lots of people seems relentless and unyielding. Also this whole gulag thing was apparently planned from the beginning- gitmo opened in January 2002, just a couple months after the bombing of Afghanistan started.Which means halliburton had to have been working on them for a while. All of this does not seem to serve any real purpose except to reinforce bush's war on terror mantra. Shut it all down.
guy named Clive Stafford Smith knows a lot about all this, his site is called reprive
http://www.reprieve.org.uk/press_Hamdan_sentence_08.08.08.htm
I wish I could share Worthington's optimism about this being a death knell for Gitmo. After Jan 20, 2009, maybe, but before then? NFW.
So, Bin Laden's Driver gets 5 months...at a cost to the USA of millions of dollars....
I cant wait to see what Bin Laden's Butler gets!!!
They can't let this guy out.
Who knows who he might end up being a driver for!
(Maybe they can teach him a less dangerous trade in the months he has left to serve...)
Bush will make Hamdan rot in jail. Where's the justice in that? This is fascism, boys and girls. Get your asses out in the streets or bend over and accept the fact that you kids lives will suck because of your inaction. Because YOU did nothing! We need national strikes, boycotts, civil disobedience on a huge scale. Enough with the games.
Pastor Martin Niemoeller,
"First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out--
because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out--
because I was not a socialist;
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out--
because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out--
because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me--
and there was no one left to speak out for me."
I am NOT a Muslim. I am NOT Arab. but GOD DAMN it I WILL SPEAK OUT!!!! Mr. Hamdan is me and you. WAKE UP!
It is also ridiculous that the U.S. Military has become a kind of International Court like the one in The Hague. Mij hunch is that the Army does not like to be involved.