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Bush administration claims police-state powers in Guantánamo
arguments before US Supreme Court
By John Andrews
28 April 2004
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On April 20, the United States Supreme Court held oral arguments
in the consolidated cases of Rasul v. Bush and Odah
v. United States, habeas corpus petitions filed on behalf
of prisoners held at the Guantánamo Naval Station in Cuba.
Although the cases supposedly turn on the narrow technical
issue of whether foreign nationals held by the US military abroad
can file habeas corpus petitions, the overriding political question
of whether the courts should regulate the Bush administrations
so-called war on terror dominated the lawyers
arguments and the comments of the justices. The dispute clearly
reflected in juridical form the deepening contradiction between
bourgeois democratic norms and the explosion of US militarism.
The Guantánamo facility is a concentration camp operated
by the US military since January 2002. Many, but not all, of its
prisoners were captured in Afghanistan following the fall of the
Taliban. While apparently no US citizens are currently held at
Guantánamoone identified there, Yasser Hamdi, was
transferred to a brig in South Carolina two years agothere
are nationals of at least 44 different countries, mostly from
US allies, including Australia and Great Britain. None has been
charged with any offense, given a trial or provided the opportunity
to consult with a lawyer. Although some have been released, those
remaining have no idea when they might be freed or what legal
or diplomatic efforts are being undertaken on their behalf.
Guantánamo prisoners are held under conditions that
flagrantly violate basic human rights. In addition to being isolated
from each other as well as the outside world, the captives are
subjected to lengthy interrogations and both mental and physical
abuse. Mistreatment has driven captives to admit to acts they
did not commit and to implicate falsely other prisoners in wrongdoing.
(See Britain: Freed
Guantánamo Bay detainees detail beatings and abuse.
The Guantanámo imprisonments violate multiple provisions
of the Geneva Conventions, which protect prisoners of war from
isolation and interrogation, and require their immediate release
following the cessation of hostilities. There are some exceptions
for illegal combatants, but the Conventions require
that a competent tribunal first make a finding that captured fighters
are, in fact, guilty of criminal wrongdoing and therefore do not
have a right to all of the protections guaranteed to regular prisoners
of war. All prisoners of war are presumed to be lawful combatants,
and the burden of proof is on the power holding the combatants
to prove otherwise.
There have been no tribunals for the Guantanámo prisoners,
and the Bush administration has never produced evidence that these
captives were combatants, much less war criminals.
All of the petitioners in the case before the US Supreme Court
allege that they never took up arms against the United States.
By claiming that the US courts do not have jurisdiction over
the prisoners habeas corpus petitions, the Bush administration
is seeking to deny them any procedure for disputing their imprisonment.
According to a lower courts ruling in a companion case,
[A]t 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 Guantánamo, the US government has never before asserted
such a grave and startling proposition. (See Two
appellate courts rule against Bush administration detentions).
Access to a court through a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
is among the most fundamental democratic rights of humanity. For
centuries in Anglo-American jurisprudence, courts have issued
the great writits literal meaning is to
have the bodyso that persons in custody can challenge
the legality of their confinement.
As the late Associate Justice William Brennan explained in
a famous 1963 decision (Fay v. Noia), during the high courts
more liberal Warren Court phase, Although in form the Great
Writ is simply a mode of procedure, its history is inextricably
intertwined with the growth of fundamental rights of personal
liberty.... Its root principle is that in a civilized society,
government must always be accountable to the judiciary for a mans
imprisonment: if the imprisonment cannot be shown to conform with
the fundamental requirements of law, the individual is entitled
to his immediate release.
The federal habeas corpus statute, enacted in 1789, makes the
writ available to any prisoner detained under the authority
of the United States. In 1842, it was explicitly made applicable
to foreign nationals. Following the Civil War, in 1867, Congress
expanded the scope of the statute to include all cases where
any person may be restrained of his or her liberty in violation
of the constitution or of any laws or treaties of the United States.
The Geneva Conventions are, of course, just such treaties.
A simple reading of the statute would seem to leave no question
that the Guantánamo prisoners are entitled to a hearing
on whether their imprisonment violates the Geneva Conventions,
the US Constitution or federal law. The Bush administration,
however, is claiming that Johnson v. Eisentrager, a 1950
Supreme Court decision denying habeas corpus to German spies captured
in China after World War II, established a precedent that federal
courts do not have jurisdiction over habeas corpus petitions of
aliens being held by the US military outside the sovereign
territory of the United States. The brief filed on behalf of the
Guantánamo prisoners explained why that case does not apply:
In Johnson, the Court was asked to grant post-conviction
habeas review to enemy aliens who were convicted of war crimes
by a military commission. The commission had been created pursuant
to explicit Congressional authorization during a declared war.
The prisoners were convicted, sentenced, and imprisoned in occupied
enemy territory temporarily controlled by the US military as an
incident of our wartime operations. At trial, the prisoners had
the right to challenge the lawfulness of their detention. They
also enjoyed due process protections that insured against the
conviction of an innocent person. In fact, six of the original
twenty-seven defendants were acquitted and released.
None of the Johnson factors appears in the Guantánamo
cases. The US Congress has not voted on and passed an official
declaration of war. Nor has it authorized the creation of any
commission to try soldiers captured in the Afghan conflict. The
Guantánamo prisoners are not enemy aliens,
but are, for the most part, citizens of US allies. The territory
is not one temporarily controlled by the US military,
but a permanent US base. Most importantly, there are no charges
and no procedures whatsoever by which prisoners can establish
their innocence.
The oral argument in the Guantánamo cases was widely
anticipated as providing the first opportunity for an insight
into the thinking of the Supreme Court justices on the Bush administrations
sweeping assertion of war-time powers following the
September 11 terrorist attacks. As a result, a line of people
waited overnight for a seat in the gallery, a highly unusual occurrence
for the Supreme Court.
New Jersey lawyer John J. Gibbons, a former chief judge of
the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, argued first, stating the
case for the prisoners. He began by hammering on the central political
issue: Whats at stake is the authority of the federal
courts to uphold the rule of law. He explained that under
the administrations legal theory, these prisoners could
be kept out of court and neither the length of the detention,
the conditions of their confinement nor the fact that they have
been wrongfully accused makes the slightest difference.
Gibbons accused the administration of creating a lawless
enclave, insulating the executive branch from any judicial scrutiny,
now or in the future.
United States Solicitor General Theodore Olson, arguing for
the Bush administration, began his remarks with the assertion
that The United States is at war. (The Constitution
provides that only the Congress can declare war, and it has not
done so.) Associate Justice John Paul Stevens quickly asked Olson
whether the existence of a state of war made any difference in
his legal position, and Olson conceded that it did not.
Nevertheless, Olson continued with his argument that the war
on terror rendered the democratic right to habeas corpus
inexpedient, warning that stepping across that linethat
is, acknowledging the Guantánamo prisoners right
to habeas corpuswould be impossible to go back from
with respect to prisoners in the battlefield, with dangerous
implications for battlefield decisions in Iraq.
His argument amounted to the assertion that the Bush administration
has the unfettered right to seize anyone it wants anywhere in
the world in its open-ended, undefined and indefinite war
on terror and to lock him or her up indefinitely, subject
to interrogations and torture, without charges or access to lawyers.
Some of the nine justices made their positions fairly clear.
Associate Justice Antonin Scalia, the ideological leader of the
courts extreme right wing, who is frequently touted as a
strict constructionist (i.e., one who supposedly adheres
to the letter of the Constitution and federal laws), said he did
not believe the statute provided for habeas jurisdiction, and
sarcastically described the Supreme Court as the wrong place to
rewrite laws. Gibbons shot back that jurisdiction couldnt
be plainer.... Its been plain for 215 years. If there is
a federal detention...there is habeas jurisdiction. I dont
see any ambiguity in that statute.
Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who usually votes with Scalia,
seemed prepared to rule that foreigners detained outside the United
States were not entitled to habeas corpus. He questioned whether
Guantánamo qualifies as US sovereign territory
because the lease-treaty with Cuba provides that the island nation
retains ultimate sovereignty.
Cuban law has never had any application inside that base,
Gibbons replied, referring to his own service there while in the
Navy. He quipped that a stamp with Fidel Castros picture
on it wouldnt get a letter off the base.
Associate Justice Clarence Thomas followed his usual practice
of saying nothing, and can be expected to vote with Scalia and
Rehnquist to deny habeas corpus.
All four of the so-called liberals seemed sharply
opposed to Olsons positions. Besides Stevens, who said he
rejected the Johnson precedent on the basis that those
prisoners received hearings, Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
was openly hostile to Olson. She rejected his warnings of dire
consequences for the US military. The prisoners advocates
were not asking to have a lawyer there, she told Olson.
They are saying, Look, we are claiming that our people
are innocent...and all we want is some process to determine whether
they are indeed innocent, and it doesnt have to be a court
process.
Associate Justice David Souter was skeptical of the claim that
the prisoners were not within US jurisdiction, observing that
bringing them to Guantánamo was the same thing in
functional terms as bringing them to Washington, D.C.
Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, referring to the importance
of several hundred years of British history, said,
Im still honestly most worried about the fact that
there would be a large category of unchecked and uncheckable actions
dealing with the detention of individuals that are being held
in a place where America has the power to do everything.
Later, he added, It seems rather contrary to an idea
of a constitution with three branches that the executive would
be free to do whatever they want, whatever they want without a
check.
Associate Justices Sandra Day OConnor and Anthony Kennedy,
the Supreme Courts so-called swing votes, both
appeared uncomfortable with Olsons arguments. OConnor
seemed to agree with Stevens that the Johnson precedent
did not apply because the German captives had hearings. Kennedy
at one point stressed that the language of the habeas corpus statute
extends jurisdiction to any prisoner detained under the
authority of the United States, suggesting that he would
apply the law literally and allow the petitions. It is highly
likely that their votes will determine the outcome of the cases.
It is an ominous indication of the frailty of democratic rights
in contemporary America that their retention, for the present,
rests with the likes of OConnor and Kennedy, conservative
Republicans responsible for many of the High Courts most
reactionary decisions over the last 15 years, including halting
the Florida vote count to hijack the 2000 election for George
W. Bush.
Regardless of the Supreme Courts final vote on the casea
decision is expected by the end of Junethe US political
and military elite will not willingly submit to any legal restraints
on its conduct. Moreover, its unlawful actions are not restricted
to aliens abroad. The same police-state measures employed in Guantánamo
Bay are being implemented against US citizens in the United States.
On April 28, the Supreme Court will be hearing oral arguments
in the cases of Yasser Hamdi, a US-born man captured with other
Taliban fighters in Afghanistan and declared an enemy combatant
by the Bush administration, and Jose Padilla, the Brooklyn native
picked up in Chicago two years ago, who has been imprisoned by
the Bush administration ever since without charges. As in the
case of Hamdi, the Bush administration asserts it has a right
to hold Padilla indefinitely, without filing charges or allowing
him legal counsel, simply because President Bush has declared
him an enemy combatant.
See Also:
The political questions raised by Justice
Scalias attack on the media
[20 April 2004]
Families come to US to demand
release of Guantanamo detainees
[15 March 2004]
Bush seeking Supreme Court
precedents to dismantle democratic rights
[19 January 2004]
Friend of court
applications denounce Guantanamo Bay detentions as illegal
[19 January 2004]
Guantanamo Bay, habeas corpus
and the Texan who would be king: Some legal observations
[5 January 2004]
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