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The Betrayal of Omar Khadr – and of American Justice
Yesterday morning, wearing a dark suit, a white shirt and a dark tie, Omar Khadr, the Canadian citizen who was just 15 years old when he was seized after a firefight in Afghanistan in July 2002, ended an eight-year struggle — first by the Bush administration, and then by the Obama administration — to convict him in a war crimes trial at Guantánamo, when he accepted a plea deal in exchange for a reported eight-year sentence.
Khadr’s guilty plea enables the Obama administration to disguise the many fundamental flaws with the Military Commissions, which might have been exposed during a trial.(Courtroom sketch by Janet Hamlin courtesy of Janet Hamlin Illustration.) According to an article in the Miami Herald,
drawing on comments made by “two legal sources with direct knowledge”
of the deal, Khadr said he “eagerly took part in a July 28, 2002
firefight with US Special Forces in Afghanistan that mortally wounded
Sgt 1st Class Christopher Speer.” This was the crux of the case against
him, and a charge that he had always previously denied. He also said
that he had “aspired as a teen to kill Americans and Jews,” and
described his father, Ahmed Said Khadr, who had been responsible for
taking him on numerous visits to Pakistan and Afghanistan as a child,
leading to the events on the day of his capture, as “a part of Bin
Laden’s inner circle, a trusted confidant and fundraiser.”
Khadr’s plea was submitted to the judge, Army Col. Patrick Parrish, by his military defense lawyer, Army Lt. Jon Jackson, and Col. Parrish made sure that he knew what he was doing as he ran thought the charges. “Yes,” Khadr replied. “You should only do this if you truly believe it is in your best interests,” Col. Parrish then told him. “Yes,” Khadr replied again. According to the Miami Herald, his voice was “a near whisper,” but became stronger as Col. Parrish read out the charges.
As the Globe and Mail described it, Khadr “assented to knowing that he was attacking civilians, that he wanted to kill US troops, that he planted mines and that he received one-on-one terrorist training from an al-Qaeda operative.” He also agreed that he was a member of al-Qaeda, and was an “alien, unprivileged, enemy belligerent,” who was “unqualified therefore to shoot back or engage in combat hostilities with US or other coalition forces,” and also said that he understood that he was guilty of “murder in violation of the laws of war.”
For the United States, the plea deal means that a trial has been avoided, dimming the glare of the global media spotlight on the embarrassing prospect of the first war crimes trial of a child soldier since the Second World War. Instead, according to the Military Commission rules, a limited amount of evidence will be submitted this week — including testimony from Tabitha Speer, the widow of the Special Forces soldier killed by the grenade in the firefight that led to Khadr’s capture, and statements by mental health professionals for both the prosecution and the defense — before a seven-member military jury will deliver its own sentence. As the details of Khadr’s plea deal have not been made public, this strange formality (which involves a sentence without a trial) will only mean anything if the jury delivers a less severe sentence than the one negotiated in secret.
This, however, is not the main problem with yesterday’s outcome, which blurs the parameters of justice horribly, creating the impression that Khadr is guilty, even though he may only have agreed to confess in order to secure a favorable sentence. This is something that Daphne Eviatar, an observer for Human Rights First, noted in an excellent article in the Huffington Post, when she explained that “it was clear that prosecutors had taken the opportunity to throw the kitchen-sink-full of charges at him — including far more crimes than he’d even been charged with. Most importantly, Khadr pled guilty to killing two Afghan soldiers who accompanied US forces in the 2002 assault on the compound. The government has never presented any evidence whatsoever that Khadr was responsible for that, and did not claim he was in its opening statement at trial.”
In addition, Khadr’s guilty plea enables the Obama administration to disguise the many fundamental flaws with the Military Commissions, which might have been exposed during a trial.
Because Khadr’s plea deal is presumed to stipulate that he cannot appeal, the administration will be able to tell the world that the Commissions are “fair and just,” although they are no such thing. One problem, of course, is that a former child prisoner has been subjected to a trial after eight years of imprisonment in an experimental prison devoted to arbitrary detention and coercive interrogation, when he should have been rehabilitated, according to the UN Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict (which the US ratified in December 2002), but another concerns the nature of the crimes to which he confessed.
This second problem — which focuses on the fundamental legitimacy of the Commissions — was illustrated starkly in the Globe and Mail’s description of how Khadr agreed that he was an “alien, unprivileged, enemy belligerent,” who was “unqualified therefore to shoot back or engage in combat hostilities with US or other coalition forces,” and also how he reportedly understood that he was guilty of “murder in violation of the laws of war.”
Back in April, Lt. Col. David Frakt, a law professor and the former military defense attorney for two other Guantánamo prisoners, Mohamed Jawad and Ali Hamza al-Bahlul, spelled out the problems with these charges in no uncertain terms. Writing of the central charge of “murder in violation of the law of war,” Lt. Col. Frakt explained that, even if Khadr did throw the grenade, “there is no evidence that he violated the law of war in doing so.”
As I explained in an article about Khadr two months ago, he added that “the confusion arose initially because the Bush administration wanted to find a way to ensure that ‘any attempt to fight Americans or coalition forces was a war crime,’ and that Congress, in enacting two pieces of legislation relating to the Military Commissions in 2006 and in 2009, maintained this unjustifiable position by refusing to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate actions during wartime.”
Lt. Col. Frakt also explained that the Bush administration’s original invented charge for the Commissions — “Murder by an Unprivileged Belligerent” — was, essentially, replaced by the Congress-endorsed “Murder in Violation of the Law of War,” even though it “conflated two different concepts — unprivileged belligerents and war criminals.”
He continued:
Under Article 4 of the Geneva Prisoner of War Convention it is clear that while a member of an organized resistance movement or militia may be an unprivileged belligerent (because of not wearing a uniform or failing to carry arms openly, for example) he may still comply with the laws and customs of war, so not all hostile acts committed by unprivileged belligerents are war crimes. Attacks by unprivileged belligerents which comply with the law of war (in that they attack lawful military targets with lawful weapons) may only be tried in domestic courts. In Iraq, for example, insurgents who try to kill Americans by implanting roadside bombs are properly arrested and tried before the Central Criminal Court of Iraq as common criminals. Attacks by unprivileged belligerents which violate the law of war, such as attacks on civilians or soldiers attempting to surrender, or using prohibited weapons like poison gas, can be tried in a war crimes tribunal.
With Khadr’s plea deal, the uncomfortable truth about the Commissions — that they have been established to try non-existent war crimes — has been swept aside as thoroughly as it was in the case of Ibrahim al-Qosi, who accepted a plea deal in July. As a result, Omar Khadr may have taken the only realistic route open to him, but the price has been the apparent validation of a fundamentally lawless process, which could have been legally challenged had he been subjected to a full trial.
Back in July, Omar Khadr refused to accept a plea deal, and, in a letter to Dennis Edney, one of his Canadian lawyers, wrote, “there must be somebody to sacrifice to really show the world the unfairness [of the Commissions], and really it seems that it’s me.” It is understandable that — faced with an eight-year sentence, or the possibility of a life sentence in exchange for a “sacrifice” — Khadr chose the former option.
However, it remains deeply depressing that the Obama administration will be able to maintain the fiction that the Military Commissions are capable of delivering justice, and also that it now appears to be irrelevant that Khadr was a juvenile prisoner, subjected to horrific treatment, because he has conceded, in circumstances that may not have been conducive to telling the truth, that he was in fact a terrorist.
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24 Comments so far
Show AllFrom Geneva convention: "Attacks ...which violate the law of war, such as attacks on civilians or soldiers attempting to surrender, ...can be tried in a war crimes tribunal"
So are those helicopter attacks on Reuters people and civilians chatting on cell phones and also those attempting to surrender going to be prosecuted as war crimes?
Not likely, some nations have double standards.
Betrayal of American justice: yes. Also, unfortunately, betrayal of Canadian justice. For a good summary of the failure of the Supreme Court of Canada in this case see lawyer Gail Davidson's article "Torture as Foreign Policy," here:
http://jurist.org/forumy/2010/02/torture-as-foreign-policy-omar-khadr.php
duplicate post! sorry
After EIGHT YEARS of psychological and physical torture, it is no surprise that Omar Khadr now openly parrots whatever line his captors tell him to say.
Yeah. If I was American I would be so damn proud of the destruction of a child's mind.
Eight years of hell in Gitmo, held illegally, in violation of US law, international law and the Geneva Conventions, betrayed by the lapdog Canadian Government, forced into a guilty plea which sentences him to eight more years of hell in an American prison, only to face the prospect of being declared a 'danger' to the US if he is ever released, and thus condemned to rot in prison until he dies.
All for allegedly defending himself from US soldiers who were doing their best to slaughter Afghan civilians.
Those facts must make every red-blooded patriotic 'Murica feel just prouder'n'shit!
Non Serviam - I will not serve.
He did not parrot whatever line his captors told him to say. He merely said 'yes' and nodded at the pre-scripted points in Parrish's regurgitation, as his lawyers instructed him he must...which is not infrequently the case with others forced to accede to plea-bargains.
Little difference.
Saying 'Yes' and agreeing to trumped-up charges after being threatened with 'Do this or we barbeque you testicles' is hardly justice.
duplicate, sorry
Not only was there no evidence against Khadr, who was wounded in a building attacked by U.S. forces, but U.S. law required that Khadr be treated as a victim, not a combatant, because he was only 15 years old.
Dave Lindorff puts it very well:
"...The biggest outrage in this case is that Khadr was 15 when he was captured. Under the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, a treaty that was signed by the US and that is thus part of US law, all children under the age of 18 captured while fighting in wars are to be offered “special protection” and treated as victims, not as combatants.
"The “special treatment” afforded to Khadr after his capture, however, was to be tortured, as has been recounted even by US military witnesses, who have described his being chained with his arms above his head, despite being seriously wounded, threatened with rape, interrogated only hours after being operated on for his wounds, kept in solitary confinement, and so on....
"This is simply a disgusting case that offends any sense of decency, and makes both America and this president look no better than Iraq under Saddam Hussein"
"America and Obama Hit Bottom: Pressuring Child Soldier to Plead Guilty to Murder Violates International Law and Basic Common Decency,"
http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/node/271
What a tragic and horrific travesty of justice!
It wasn't the first, and it won't be the last one perpetrated in the Amerikan Imperium's quest for a thousand-year Reich. But custom cannot stale the righteous outrage, revulsion, and despair such unremitting state-sponsored iniquity prompts in fair-minded, compassionate observers after each and every heinous injustice.
I watched some vile military spokesperson on teevee-- I can't remember his name, but "Colonel Eichmann" will do-- blithely assert that this "verdict" utterly refutes that Khadr is a victim, and incontrovertibly establishes that he is in fact a heinous criminal properly convicted by his own freely-given testimony.
Regrettably, the "colonel"'s forked tongue did not swell up and protrude until it wrapped around his own neck like a boa constrictor and choked him. I would gladly have suffered the challenge to my skeptical agnosticism for the privilege of seeing it.
I suppose I should give "Colonel Eichmann" credit for not adding that another benefit of this conviction is that it proves, against all criticism, that torture DOES TOO work!
For a rogue terrorist security state like Amerika, my native land, such wanton obscenities are gifts that never stop giving.
Absurdities now pile up as news. A 15 year old child, in the US legal system, is a "war criminal" in the same category as Nazi leaders like Goring and Tojo, is a danger to humanity and needs to be locked up for our safety. But Bush, Blair and others in their administrations, with the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians on their hands, are not war criminals and need to hit the lecture circuit to earn millions telling their tales and giving us advice. Absurd.
Well said. Interestingly, Bu$h seem to be relatively unwanted as a lecturer (with the exception of the "motivational speech" circuit (selling Ronco juicers)...ya gotta admit he was driven in his quest to cut brush on his "ranch") and may be doomed to spend the rest of his life picking up Barney's feces on his afternoon walks in Dallass.
Again, a major Obama disappointment.
While campaigning he stated that confessions obtained by torture would not be acceptable - it would have been a simple matter as C-in -C to pass a regulation for the military tribunals to that effect.
Instead he allowed this travesty of a judicial process to determine by its outlandish terms that the statements of this teenager obtained under circumstances that clearly constituted torture to be found to be admissible against him.
Where has the Obama of pre-Nov. 2009 disappeared to ?
Thank goodness Obama and Biden won in 2008, and with large Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress. Think if McCain and Palin had won, and/or if the Republicans had won control of one or both Houses . . .
If McCain/Palin had won, the Tea Party idiots would be burning gays at the stake right about... now.
Non Serviam - I will not serve.
Good thing for you, Hector, that snideness doesn't make your nose grow.
(Or did it?)
Daphne Eviatar http://www.huffingtonpost.com/daphne-eviatar/gitmo-guilty-plea-is-a-sa_b_773549.html
According to Eviatar:
...as part of his plea agreement Omar Khadr has waived his right to appeal his conviction or to sue the United States for his confinement or treatment...
Of course, the US would raise the 'contractual' provision if he tried to sue, but couldn't he plead contract of adhesion (for unconscionability) against that?
And of course, he couldn't do anything while in US custody. They'd just dig a mineshaft under Guantanamo and stick him in it forever.
May the good lord bless and keep our Beloved Leader...far away from us.
How does a citizen of a nation invaded by a foreign power get convicted of being a war criminal when he shoots back at the foreign invaders?
Come on Rainborowe, read the fine print. As the article states, Lt. Col. David Frakt said that “the Bush administration wanted to find a way to ensure that ‘any attempt to fight Americans or coalition forces was a war crime.'" Case closed.
From a legal perspective, I suppose that the fact that Mr. Khadr was a Canadian citizen played a role in the judgment, but the complete disdain that the U.S. government has shown for the rule of law makes any legal arguments on its part preposterous.
This story has been played somewhat differently in the Canadian media.
Apparently the main point of the plea agreement was not reduction in the length of sentence, but that after one (post-sentencing) year served in Gitmo he could be remanded to Canada to finish serving his time there.
So he goes from one fascist Corporate lackey state to another... how is that 'justice'?
Had I, as a teenager, been subjected to "eight years of imprisonment in an experimental prison devoted to arbitrary detention and coercive interrogation," I would say anything that a lawyer and a court would expect of me, particularly that I willingly participated in an activity that involved killing that torturous enemy. If I hadn't seriously entertained the feeling before, I certainly would do so now... Because yes, by that point, I would hate them.
Why is this man on trial in the first place? He was in Afghanistan - HIS HOME - fighting against an armed invasion force that had taken over his country. Only America can be so fucking blatantly pompous as to call anyone who has the balls to fight back against it when it invades another country "a terrorist."
If China invaded the U.S. tomorrow, and I grabbed a gun and fought back against the invaders killing my countrymen and blowing up my neighbors' homes in the streets, would I be a terrorist or a patriot defending my homeland?
America's hypocrisy is legion. They think they have the right to invade any country then want, and expect the inhabitants to roll over and sit on their hands. And then if anyone actually fights back, they arrest them, torture them, then charge them with terrorism.
Good lord, I despise this country.
"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag, carrying a cross."
Sadly, Demonstorm, you may want to read this timeline, though I still feel Khadr was an adolescent 'obeying' his dad:
http://news.nationalpost.com/2010/10/26/the-khadr-family-a-timeline
(The National Post is a Toronto newspaper.)
The world is not bound by Nazi German laws of the 1930s and 1940s, and the world will not be bound by US regime "laws."
Prisoner Khadr played along with the freaks of US militarized socialism in order to extract himself from their clutches.
If he is required to serve another year of imprisonment in the US Gulag, there is a possiblity that he will suffer a fatal "accident." But if not, he can escape to Canada, and begin his legal defense against the US regime.