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The case of Yaser Esam Hamdi
Bush claims right to jail US citizens indefinitely, without
charges or hearing
By Bill Vann
24 June 2002
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In a legal argument that could as easily be used to justify
a declaration of martial law, the Justice Department last week
asserted the right of the president and the military to indefinitely
hold US citizens deemed enemy combatants incommunicado,
without formal charges, the right to a hearing or legal counsel.
This assertion of extra-constitutional powers came in a protracted
legal tug-of-war over Yaser Esam Hamdi, a 21-year-old detainee
who was captured in Afghanistan and brought to the US detention
camp at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba. Earlier this year,
after it was discovered that he was born in Louisiana and in all
likelihood is entitled to US citizenship, he was transferred to
a Navy brig in Virginia.
The Bush administration has waged a ferocious battle to block
any judicial hearing to determine Hamdis status and any
contact between the detainee and public defenders seeking to represent
him.
While a lower court ruled that he had the right to consult
with a lawyer, the Justice Department filed an appeal barring
any meeting. After blocking Federal Public Defender Frank W. Dunham
Jr. from seeing Hamdi, it argued in court that the attorney had
no standing in the case because he has no relationship
with the detainee.
The 46-page government brief affirms that the military
has the authority to capture and detain individuals whom it has
determined are enemy combatants in connection with hostilities
in which the Nation is engaged, including enemy combatants claiming
American citizenship. Such combatants, moreover, have no right
of access to counsel to challenge their detention.
It goes on to assert that it makes no difference whether the
alleged combatants are captured overseas or in the United States.
In a derisive attack on the US District Court Judge who ordered
the military to allow Hamdi to meet with an attorney, the Justice
Department insisted that once deemed an enemy combatant, an individual
has no rights, and that the courts have no business questioning
the decisions of the military.
A courts inquiry should come to an end once the
military has shown ... that it has determined that the detainee
is an enemy combatant, the brief states. [T]he court
may not second-guess the militarys enemy-combatant determination.
For the courts to question in any way an order by the military
or the president to grab someone off the street and lock him up
for life as an enemy, the Justice Department argued,
would constitute interference in an area in which they have
no competence, much less institutional expertise, and would
intrude upon the constitutional prerogative of the Commander
in Chief.
The brief goes on to warn ominously against creating a
conflict of military and judicial opinion highly comforting to
the enemies of the United States.
The legal arguments for such sweeping police-state powers are
unprecedented, as are the actions that have already been taken
by the Bush administration in holding individuals prisoners of
the military without hearings or trial.
In addition to Hamdi, the government has announced plans to
continue holding Jose Padilla, the Brooklyn-born US citizen who
was grabbed by FBI agents last month as he deplaned from an international
flight to Chicago. Padilla likewise is being held in a military
brig without charges or a hearing, and the government has refused
to allow his attorney to see him. Justice Department officials
admit that they lack sufficient evidence to indict Padilla on
allegations that he was part of a plot to detonate a radioactive
dirty bomb.
In its brief in the Hamdi case, the government leaned heavily
on a 1942 Supreme Court decision allowing a military trial of
German saboteurs arrested in the US. That decision, however, affirmed
the defendants right to appeal their status in federal court,
a right the Bush administration is abrogating. Nor did the high
court then allow for indefinite detention and denial of counsel.
In the Hamdi and Padilla casesas with those of the hundreds
of immigrants who have been rounded up without charges or hearingsthe
government has invoked the war effort to justify its
riding roughshod over constitutional rights.
There has been no congressional declaration of war, of course,
and Bush and other administration officials have asserted that
their war on terrorism could last for decades. This
raises the specter of a permanent suspension of such core constitutional
guarantees as freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures,
and the right to due process, a jury trial and legal counsel.
The Justice Departments position likewise upends the
fundamental principle of civilian control of the military, placing
unprecedented power over American citizens in the hands of generals
who are unelected and answerable to no one.
It should be recalled that the dirty wars of torture,
massacres and disappearances carried out by US-backed
military dictatorships throughout Latin America over the course
of more than two decades beginning in the 1960s were all waged
in the name of a war on terrorism.
The right of the military to detain individuals indefinitely
without charges or hearings now asserted by the Bush administration
in the US was upheld by the courts in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay,
Chile and other countries, resulting in the torture and murder
of hundreds of thousands of workers, intellectuals and youth deemed
enemies of the military regimes.
Responding to the governments arguments, the lawyers
seeking to represent Hamdi pointed to this threat.
The Executive Branch of the Government does not have
the authority to detain an American citizen incommunicado and
to unilaterally withdraw from the courts the power to inquire
into the propriety of his detention, wrote Assistant Federal
Public Defender Robert J. Wagner in his brief to the court.
He added, A contrary conclusion would eliminate any limitation
upon [the governments] power to indefinitely detain any
American citizen, under a state of war or peace, as long as the
military determines that the detainee is an enemy.
Quoting the governments argument that the courts have
no business questioning the militarys designation of a detained
US citizen as an enemy combatant, the Washington
Post editorialized: These words were not written by
some petty dictator whose kangaroo courts rubber-stamp his every
whim and whose whims may include locking up citizens he regards
as enemies. They were filed yesterday by the U.S. Department of
Justice ...
The editorial, entitled The I-said-so test, goes
on to warn: If this is correct, any American could be locked
up indefinitely, without a lawyer, on the presidents say-so.
You dont have to believe that Mr. Hamdi is innocent to see
grave peril in this.
What the Washington Post and others within the political
establishment who have voiced muted protests over the Bush administrations
assumption of dictatorial powers deliberately obscure, however,
is the connection between this grave peril to democratic
rights at home and the eruption of US militarism abroad.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), for example, issued
a condemnation of the military detention of Jose Padilla, criticizing
it from the standpoint of weakening the war on terrorism.
For the United States to maintain its moral authority
in the fight against terrorism, declared Anthony D. Romero,
ACLU executive director, its actions must be implemented
in accordance with core American legal and social values.
In reality, the moral authority of the Bush administrations
military campaigns is entirely consistent with its adoption of
forms of police-state rule. Both are the expression of an increasingly
desperate and disoriented ruling elite that has determined to
defend its wealth and interests by means of naked force.
See Also:
New Jersey appeals court upholds secret
detentions
[17 June 2002]
Another step towards presidential dictatorship:
Bush orders US citizen held indefinitely by military
[12 June 2002]
Bushs new Department of Homeland
Defense: the scaffolding of a police state
[8 June 2002]
Amnesty says US leads in human rights
violations following September 11
[8 June 2002]
Bush administration cites September 11
failures to attack democratic rights
FBI gets blank check for domestic spying
[7 June 2002]
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