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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Two appellate courts rule against Bush administration detentions
By John Andrews
23 December 2003
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Two separate appellate court panelsone on the east coast
and the other on the westlast week ruled 2-1 against the
Bush administrations policy of indefinitely imprisoning
people it deems enemy combatants.
Both cases are headed to the Supreme Court, where the outcome
is uncertain. Three of the nine high court judges, Chief Justice
William Rehnquist and associate justices Sandra Day OConnor
and Antonin Scalia, have given public speeches since the September
11, 2001, terrorist attacks indicating their support for the abridgment
of civil liberties during periods of war.
In Padilla v. Rumsfeld, the Second Circuit Court of
Appeals, which reviews cases arising in New York and surrounding
states, ruled unlawful the Bush administrations ongoing
incommunicado detention of Jose Padilla, who is being held in
a military brig without criminal charges or access to a lawyer.
Padilla is a US citizen. A native of New York, he was arrested
in Chicago in May 2002.
The court found that the imprisonment exceeded the presidents
constitutional powers and violated a federal law prohibiting detentions
not authorized by Congress. It gave Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld 30 days to release Padilla or turn him over to civilian
authorities for criminal prosecution.
In Gherebi v. Bush, the Ninth Circuit, which covers
the western United States, held that US courts have jurisdiction
to review petitions for habeas corpus challenging the legality
of incarcerating foreigners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The
decision will have no immediate effect because the Supreme Court
has already agreed to review the same issue in a case from the
Fourth Circuit. The opinion is notable, however, for the manner
in which it berates the Bush administration for its disregard
for US and international law
While employing an approach more understated than the Ninth
Circuits, the Second Circuits rulingon the Padilla
caseis potentially the more explosive of the two, as it
represents the most direct repudiation to date of any Bush administration
measure taken in connection with the so-called war on terror.
Padilla was arrested at Chicagos OHare Airport
on May 8, 2002, as a material witness for a New York
grand jury investigating the September 11 terrorist attacks. A
month later, after his court-appointed lawyer brought a motion
for his release, Attorney General John Ashcroft went on national
television to claim that Padilla was part of a plot to detonate
a nuclear dirty bomb for Al Qaeda. Bush declared Padilla
an enemy combatant, and he has been held ever since
in a naval brig in Charleston, South Carolina.
After 18 months, the Bush administration is still denying that
Padilla even has the right to speak to an attorney. The implications
of the governments position in Padilla are staggering.
The Bush administration is claiming that the September 11 attacks
transformed the territory of the United States into a battleground,
and Bush, as commander-in-chief, has unlimited authority to capture
persons, including US citizens, it designates enemy combatants
and hold them indefinitely.
The fact that Padilla is thus far the only US citizen arrested
on US soil to be designated an enemy combatant indicates that
the Bush administration is using him as a test case to establish
a precedentmost likely in the Supreme Courtto disappear
more people, citizens and non-citizens alike, in the future.
An amicus curiae friend of the court brief
filed by the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
correctly labeled the Bush administration position tantamount
to martial law. If sanctioned by the courts, there
would be nothing stopping the Bush administration from using charges
of support for terrorism to round up political opponents
and jail them indefinitely without lawyers or hearings. The very
fact that the Bush administration is asserting it has such power
and one of the Second Circuit judges, Richard C. Wesleya
former Republican officeholder appointed by Bush last Junevoted
to sustain it demonstrates beyond question that a substantial
section of the ruling class is ready to break entirely with constitutional
norms and establish a form of presidential dictatorship in the
United States.
A second amicus brief filed by a group of experts on
the law of war analyzed the Geneva Conventions and other relevant
treaties to demonstrate that the Bush administrations characterization
of Padilla as an enemy combatant has nothing to do with international
law, which requires that combatants be either acknowledged soldiers
or civilians directly supporting troops in a combat zone. The
experts say that Padilla must be treated as an alleged criminal,
with all the protections afforded by the Constitution.
The Bush administration is effectively inventing new rules
to put Padilla in a legal black hole outside both domestic and
international law, where it can do to him whatever it likes.
Additional amicus briefs condemning the Bush administrations
position were filed by groups as diverse as the right-wing, libertarian
Cato Institute and the liberal People for the American Way, along
with a group of retired federal judges and the American Bar Association,
which represents over 50,000 lawyers throughout the United States.
There were no amicus briefs filed in support of the Bush
administrations positions.
Judge Rosemary S. Pooler, a Clinton appointee, and Judge Barrington
Parker, Jr., whom Bush himself recently elevated to the Second
Circuit, jointly authored the majority opinion. They dispensed
with a slew of government procedural challenges, including a contention
that Padilla had to bring his challenge personallya physical
impossibility since he is locked up without access to attorneys
or family. Next, they ruled the President lacks inherent
constitutional authority as Commander-in-Chief to detain American
citizens on American soil outside a zone of combat. Finally,
they relied on the Non-Detention Actenacted by Congress
in 1971 to prevent a recurrence of the World War II internment
in California of persons of Japanese ancestrywhich requires
specific Congressional authorizations for the detentions of citizens.
Somewhat ominously, however, the Second Circuit did not decide
whether Congress could specifically authorize a president to carry
out such detentions without charges or trials. A California Democratic
congressman, Adam Schiff, has already introduced legislation to
allow Bush to arrest combatants. The court also did not determine
the rights of persons seized in combat zones, such as Yaser Hamdi,
a US citizen captured in Afghanistan. The Fourth Circuit upheld
Hamdis incarceration as an enemy combatant, and his appeal
is pending before the Supreme Court.
The Ninth Circuits decision in Gherebi arose from
a habeas corpus petition filed on behalf of a Libyan man
apparently captured in Afghanistan during the US invasion who
is being held along with over 600 others at what is essentially
a concentration camp in Guantánamo Bay. In a similar case
decided earlier this year, Al Odah v. United States, the
ultra-conservative Fourth Circuit ruled that US courts had no
jurisdiction to decide whether foreigners were being held in violation
of US or international law on the grounds that the nation of Cuba
had sovereignty over the military base. The Supreme Court granted
review of Al Odah last month, and its decision will supercede
Gherebi. Nevertheless, the points made by the author of
the Ninth Circuit opinion. Steven Reinhardt, a Carter appointee
who has emerged over the last several years as a leading liberal
juristand focus of attacks by the Republican rightare
worth examining.
Reinhardt describes the background of the case as follows:
Starting in early January 2002, the Armed Forces began transferring
to Guantánamo, a United States naval base located on territory
physically situated on the island of Cuba, scores of individuals
who were captured by the American military during its operations
in Afghanistan. The captured individuals were labeled enemy
combatants. Now, for almost two years, the United States
has subjected over six hundred of these captives to indefinite
detention, yet has failed to afford them any means to challenge
their confinement, to object to the failure to recognize them
as prisoners of war, to consult with legal counsel, or even to
advance claims of mistaken capture or identity. Despite US officials
recent stated intention to move to begin a sorting of the detainees,
electing which to release and which to try before military tribunals
on criminal charges, and the administrations designation
several months ago of six detainees (including two Britons and
one Australian) deemed eligible for military trials, no military
tribunal has actually been convened. Nor has a single Guantanamo
detainee been given the opportunity to consult an attorney, had
formal charges filed against him, or been permitted to contest
the basis of his detention in any way. Moreover, top US officials,
including Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, have made it clear that
the detainees may be held in their present circumstances until
this countrys campaign against terrorism ends. The administration
has, understandably, given no indication whether that event will
take place in a matter of months, years, or decades, if ever.
Reinhardt continued, Under the governments theory,
it is free to imprison Gherebi indefinitely along with hundreds
of other citizens of foreign countries, friendly nations among
them, and to do with Gherebi and these detainees as it will, when
it pleases, without any compliance with any rule of law of any
kind, without permitting him to consult counsel, and without acknowledging
any judicial forum in which its actions may be challenged. Indeed,
at oral argument, the government advised us that its position
would be the same even if the claims were that it was engaging
in acts of torture or that it was summarily executing the detainees.
To our knowledge, prior to the current detention of prisoners
at Guantanamo, the US government has never before asserted such
a grave and startling proposition. Accordingly, we view Guantanamo
as unique not only because the United States territorial
relationship with the Base is without parallel today, but also
because it is the first time that the government has announced
such an extraordinary set of principlesa position so extreme
that it raises the gravest concerns under both American and international
law (Emphasis added).
The two decisions have generated howls of protests from the
usual quarters. The White House issued a statement calling the
Padilla ruling troubling and flawed and said
it would seek a stay of the ruling. The Wall Street Journal
editorial page, after calling Reinhardts Guantánamo
opinion grandstanding, attacked the Second Circuit
for the view that the US is not a zone of combat.
As these cases underscore, the US is becoming a battlefield,
not between the people of the United States and Al Qaeda, but
between an increasingly rabid and militaristic ruling elite and
the broad masses of the population.
See Also:
Pentagon fired military lawyers assigned
to defend Guantánamo prisoners
[19 December 2003]
US high court to hear Guantanamo
appeal
[12 November 2003]
Guantanamo detainees face
military tribunals: Bush picks six for drumhead trials, possible
execution
[10 July 2003]
Pentagon rules for
military tribunals violate constitutional rights
[2 April 2002]
Military tribunals,
monitoring of lawyers: Bush announces new police-state measures
[17 November 2001]
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