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Federal appeals court upholds indefinite detention of US citizen
By John Andrews
14 January 2003
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On January 8, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth
Circuit ruled that the Bush administration could continue to detain
Yaser Esam Hamdi as an enemy combatant. Hamdi is a
US citizen discovered among men taken prisoner in late 2001 by
Northern Alliance forces allied with the US military in Afghanistan.
The decision in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld sanctions the indefinite,
incommunicado imprisonment of US citizens on US soilwithout
criminal charges, legal representation or meaningful judicial
review.
The ruling was widely denounced by human rights organizations,
charging that it dismantled basic constitutional safeguards against
police state methods. The decision is a shocking abdication
of responsibility by the court, said Elisa Massimino, director
of the Washington office of the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights
(LCHR). The court has adopted a well-look-the-other-way
posture in this case, which leaves unfulfilled its duty to act
as a check on administrative power.
Born of Saudi parents in Louisiana but raised in the Middle
East, Hamdi was captured near Konduz, Afghanistan. Like John Walker
Lindh, the Californian sentenced to 20 years in prison for aiding
the Taliban, Hamdi survived the massacre of Taliban prisoners
at the Qala-i-Janghi fortress near Mazar-i-Sharif. His citizenship
was discovered during interrogations at Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, and he has been held incommunicado at the Norfolk (Virginia)
Naval Station Brig since last April.
After Hamdis identity became public, his father, Esam
Fouad Hamdi, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the
standard procedure for challenging the legality of a detention.
The Bush administration responded by claiming that no one other
than Hamdi himself could bring such an action (an impossibility
since he is held incommunicado), and that regardless, the court
did not have any jurisdiction to review the administrations
determination that Hamdi was an enemy combatant. These contentions
were rejected in an earlier appeal, and the government was required
to provide evidence.
The trial court judge, Reagan appointee Robert Doumars, ordered
the government to allow Hamdis lawyer access to his client,
explicitly comparing the Bush administrations legal isolation
tactics to those of the infamous Star Chamber. That ruling was
reversed by the Fourth Circuit, however, which ruled that Doumars
had to consider the circumstances of Hamdis detention before
allowing him access to counsel.
The Bush administration then submitted a cursory nine-paragraph
declaration by Michael Mobbs, a defense department official, stating
that Hamdi received military training from the Taliban, was captured
by the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan, and has been designated
an enemy combatant. Doumars ruled Mobbs statement
to be inadequate and ordered the governments lawyers to
provide details of Hamdis capture so he could determine
whether Hamdi should have access to his lawyer and, ultimately,
whether he should be released. The government then filed the appeal
that was the subject of last weeks ruling.
The Fourth Circuit not only reversed Doumars disclosure
orders, it dismissed the habeas corpus proceedings entirely, writing
that despite his status as an American citizen currently
detained on American soil, Hamdi is not entitled to challenge
the facts presented in the Mobbs declaration. This means
Hamdi will stay isolated in the brig as long as the Bush administration
wants him there, unless the Fourth Circuit is overruled on appeal
by the US Supreme Courtan unlikely outcome given the publicly
stated support for Bushs anti-democratic measures by both
Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Associate Justice Sandra Day
OConnor.
The Fourth Circuit claimed to base its ruling on the
importance of limitations on judicial activities during wartime.
Relying almost exclusively on a once obscure decision, Ex Parte
Quirin, arising from the capture of Nazi saboteurs on US soil
during World War II, the court ruled that it had to give deference
to executive branch decisions regarding the detention of
a citizen during a combat operation undertaken in a foreign country
and a determination by the executive that the citizen was allied
with enemy forces.
To uphold the Bush administration in the Hamdi case, the Fourth
Circuit dismissed whatever legal obstacles stood in its path.
The first is a federal law, 18 USC. § 4001, which states
that no citizen shall be imprisoned or otherwise detained
by the United States except pursuant to an Act of Congress.
This statute is a clear statement of the principle that people
can lose their freedom only for violations of express rules. That
did not happen in Hamdis case, as he is not being prosecuted
for violating any law. The court instead said that Bush had the
power to incarcerate enemy combatants because of a generally written
September 18, 2001 congressional resolution authorizing a military
response to the September 11 terrorist attacks.
The Fourth Circuit similarly disposed of Article 5 of the Geneva
Convention, which provides that prisoners of war are entitled
to formal determinations of their status by a competent
tribunal. The court ruled that this provision did not give
prisoners any rights, and that violations of the provision by
the United States could only be addressed by diplomatic
means.
In Hamdis case, as well as in those of many other prisoners
of war from the Afghan conflict, the US military is flaunting
the Geneva Convention, which requires prisoners to be housed together
and prohibits their interrogation unless a tribunal first determines
them to be illegal combatants. Hamdi is being held
alone and subjected to questioning despite the fact that no tribunal
has determined him to be an illegal combatant.
Finally, the Fourth Circuit brushed aside the argument that
Hamdi could no longer be held as an enemy combatant because the
Afghan hostilities were over. It did so with the claim that the
executive branch was in the best position to appraise the
status of the conflict.
At the core of the Fourth Circuits decision is an absurd
contradiction. The court wrote: Drawing on the Bill of Rights
historic guarantees, the judiciary plays its distinctive role
in our constitutional structure when it reviews the detention
of American citizens by their own government, and therefore
the detention of United States citizens must be subject
to judicial review. In its next breath, however, the court
denied Hamdi the right to rebut the factual assertions that
were submitted to support the enemy combatant designation
because Hamdi was captured in a zone of active combat operations
in a foreign country and because any inquiry must be circumscribed
to avoid encroachment into the military affairs entrusted to the
executive branch.
In other words, Hamdi has the right to have a court review
the lawfulness of his detention, but he does not have the right
to present his case to the court. This sort of empty democratic
trapping is a hallmark of authoritarian regimes.
Moreover, while the Fourth Circuit spoke repeatedly about a
general need to give deference to the executive branch
in military matters, it did not even address what specific harm
would come to the United States were Hamdi allowed to air his
claim in court. This underscores the fact that the governments
declared reasons for stripping Hamdi of his constitutional rights
are dishonest and cynical. The Bush administration is not driven
by military necessities relating to its mopping-up operations
in Afghanistan, but rather by its determination to use its open-ended
and undeclared war on terrorism as a pretext for dismantling
basic democratic rights.
The Fourth Circuit is widely viewed as the most conservative
in the United States, and the Bush administration has deliberately
brought key cases within its geographic area. The three-judge
panel that decided the case consisted of two Reagan appointees
and one judge elevated by Clinton.
The decision has generated uneasiness in sections of the press.
Both the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times
ran editorials arguing that the decision went too far. However,
neither newspaper questioned the legitimacy of the Bush administrations
war policy, concealing the inseparable link between the administrations
war-mongering abroad and its anti-democratic, authoritarian methods
at home. As with all of the anti-democratic measures taken by
the government and the courts since 9/11, the response from the
ostensibly liberal sections of the establishment and the Democratic
Party was barely audible.
The usual right-wing outlets defended the decision. The Wall
Street Journals January 9 editorial deserves special
attention for its shoddy treatment of the facts. The Journal
claimed that Hamdi was trained by al Qaeda and captured
... when his Taliban unit surrendered to the Americans. No one,
including Hamdi, disputes these facts.
According to the Mobbs declaration, however, Hamdi received
military training from the government of Afghanistan, not al
Qaeda, and his unit surrendered to the Northern Alliance,
not the Americans. More importantly, no one aside
from a few military interrogators and those with access to their
reports has any idea whether Hamdi disputes these facts.
None of his lawyers has spoken to him, and under the recent ruling,
none will be allowed to do so. According to the Fourth Circuits
decision, Hamdi will never be given an opportunity to dispute
these facts in a court of law.
After dismissing overwrought alarms about [Attorney General]
John Ashcrofts intent to ransack the Constitution,
the Journal concluded with the claim that the Fourth Circuit
decision indicated that the Bush Administration is striking
the correct Constitutional balance between liberty and security.
In fact, the Fourth Circuit did not accept in whole the Bush
administrations claim of immunity from judicial oversight
in dealing with so-called enemy combatants who are
US citizens. It rejected the Bush administration claim that it
could prevent Hamdi from filing habeas corpus motions through
his father. More fundamentally, it rejected the administration
claim that courts have no jurisdiction to rule on the propriety
of any executive branch designation of enemy combatant.
The Fourth Circuit held that courts must review such claims, and
stated it was upholding the designation in Hamdis case only
because he was captured while with a fighting unit by forces allied
with the US military in a foreign military theater.
The Bush administration is already seeking to broaden the reach
of the Hamdi decision to citizens not seized on a foreign
battlefield. Government lawyers filed court papers the day after
the decision was rendered asking US District Judge Michael Mukasey
of the New York District Court to rescind his December 4 decision
that Jose Padilla could meet with an attorney. Citing Hamdi,
government lawyers are asserting that such a meeting would set
back his interrogation by months, if not derail the process permanently.
Padilla is the United States citizen who was taken into custody
as a material witness in Chicago last spring, and
one month later designated an enemy combatant after
Attorney General Ashcroft accused him of plotting to detonate
a nuclear device. Although the Bush administration backed down
on the allegations of nuclear terrorism, Padilla remains in military
custody without access to an attorney, and legal proceedings are
ongoing.
The Hamdi case is different from Padillas because,
as the Fourth Circuit noted several times in its opinion, Hamdi
was captured in a foreign theater of war during a period of active
hostilities. If the Bush administration succeeds in treating Padilla
too as an enemy combatant, then any US citizen can
be subjected to indefinite, isolated detention based solely on
a presidential declaration that he or she is an enemy combatant.
See Also:
WSWS interview
with defense attorney
John Walker Lindh sentenced to 20 years
[7 October 2002]
White House defends
CIA killing of US citizen in Yemen
[12 November 2002]
Bush presses ahead
with enemy combatant detentions
[16 August 2002]
The case of Yaser
Esam Hamdi
Bush claims right to jail US citizens indefinitely, without charges
or hearing
[24 June 2002]
Another step towards
presidential dictatorship: Bush orders US citizen held indefinitely
by military
[12 June 2002]
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