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Supreme Court rules against Bush administrations military
commissions
By John Burton
30 June 2006
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John Burton is the Socialist Equality Party candidate for
US Congress from Californias 29th Congressional District
The US Supreme Court on Thursday struck down by a 5-3 vote
the Bush administrations use of military commissions to
try prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The decision rejected
the Bush administrations use of the category of enemy
combatant to place its captives in a legal black hole, unprotected
either by the US criminal justice system or international treaties
on the laws of war.
While the decision was a judicial rebuke to the Bush administration,
it did not order the release of any of the more than 400 prisoners
still held at the US military base. Nor did it address the Bush
administrations claim that it can hold captives there or
at other US facilities around the world for the duration of active
hostilities in the so-called war on terror,
i.e., indefinitely.
Nevertheless, the high court ruling outlawed the Bush administrations
efforts to convene kangaroo courts where the accused do not have
the right to see the evidence against them, cross-examine witnesses
or seek judicial review for purported war crimes carrying sentences
up to and including execution.
At a pre-scheduled joint press conference with visiting Japanese
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, held Thursday morning shortly
after the court handed down its ruling, Bush responded to questions
about the decision, stating several times that We take the
findings of the Supreme Court seriouslya dismissive
concession given that rulings of the highest court in the country
immediately become the law of the land. Indicating that his administration
would seek to circumvent the substance, if not the letter, of
the ruling, Bush said he intended to work with the Congress
to determine whether or not the military tribunals will be an
avenue in which to give people their day in court.
Senator John Warner, Republican of Virginia, who chairs the
Senate Armed Services Committee, had declared even before Bushs
statement, Im sure we will look at the means to provide
them justice under our law, and Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist, Republican of Tennessee, promised to introduce legislation
to try terrorists only before military commissions, not
in our civilian courts.
The case was brought by Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni, captured
by US-allied militia forces following the November 2001 American
invasion of Afghanistan. He was transferred to Guantánamo
Bay in June 2002 and was among the first five prisoners to be
accused of war crimes and subjected to a military commission.
Bush ordered the creation of the military commissions after
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 to try prisoners whom
it labeled enemy combatants, rather than prisoners
of war. The invention of the category enemy combatant
and the establishment of military commissions were designed to
evade the rights and protections granted to captured soldiers
and fighters under the Geneva Conventions, as well as due process
provisions of US law.
Since Hamdan was charged, five more Guantánamo prisoners
have been charged, and the government is claiming that as many
as 70 more prisoners will be tried for war crimes.
Alleged to have been a driver and bodyguard for Osama bin Laden
in Afghanistan, Hamdan is facing a sentence of life imprisonment.
That the rules of the Bush administrations military commissions
provide no semblance of due process is obvious. Hamdan did not
have the right to see and hear the evidence against him, and could
be excluded from his trial altogether. Some of the most vociferous
objections against the commission procedures were raised by Lt.
Cmdr. Charles Swift, a Navy officer appointed to represent Hamdan,
and even the governments own prosecutors emailed complaints
to their supervisors that the procedures were unfair. (See Military commissions
prosecutors charge: trials rigged against Guantánamo detainees).
The exhaustive 73-page majority opinion in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld
was authored by Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, the high
courts senior member and, dating back to the theft of the
2000 election by a five-person Supreme Court majority allied to
Bush and the Republicans, the most strident opponent of Bush administration
power grabs. Stevens was joined by fellow liberals David Souter,
Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer, and the crucial fifth
vote was provided by Anthony M. Kennedy, who has emerged as the
swing justice since the retirement of Sandra Day OConnor
earlier this term.
Each of the three extreme right-wing associate justices wrote
dissents, defending the Bush White Houses assertion of virtual
dictatorial war-time powers. While that of newly appointed
Samuel A. Alito, Jr., was, like the man himself, cold and technical,
Antonin Scalias wondered aloud where the court derives
the authorityor the audacityto contradict the
Bush administration.
Clarence Thomas, to reinforce his opposition to the majority
ruling, took the unusual step of reading his dissent from the
bench. Thomas called the decision untenable and dangerous,
and accused those justices who today disregard the commander-in-chiefs
wartime decisions of hampering the presidents
ability to confront and defeat a new and deadly enemy.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., who ruled for the Bush
administration against Hamdan while still a justice on the Court
of Appeals, was not eligible to participate in the Supreme Courts
review.
The six opinionsKennedy and Breyer drafted separate concurrencesexposed
the deep, almost violent divisions that have arisen within the
US ruling elite over the most fundamental issues of democratic
rights and due process. The opinions suggest they were written
by judges barely able to speak to one another, and acutely aware
of the conflicted views among the powerful elites with whom they
hobnob in Washington, DC.
The case was not, as sometimes portrayed in the media, a frontal
attack on the Guantánamo Bay facility itself or the legality
of the Bush administrations policy of capturing people anywhere
in the world and jailing them indefinitely. Those issues remain.
Hamdan argued simply that if he was going to be charged with
war crimes carrying the possibility of life imprisonment, his
trial should at least conform to the rules of a court martial
constituted pursuant to the United States Uniform Code of Military
Justice (UCMJ), and be based on a charge, unlike the conspiracy
count against him, that is actually recognized as a war crime
by international law.
In his majority opinion, Stevens began by overruling both of
the Bush administrations jurisdictional arguments that the
Supreme Court should not even rule on the merits of Hamdans
claims. First, he dismissed its assertion that the Detainee Treatment
Act (DTA), a law passed by Congress last December, divested the
high court of jurisdiction. He then rejected the claim that the
court should wait until the military commission reached a final
decision on Hamdan before reviewing the matter.
Hamdan should know in advance, Stevens wrote, whether he may
be tried by a military commission that arguably is without any
basis in law and operates free from many of the procedural rules
prescribed by Congress for courts-martialrules intended
to safeguard the accused and ensure the reliability of any conviction.
Turning to the merits of the claims themselves, Stevens began
with the premise underlying much of the Bush administrations
attack on democratic rightsthat the presidents role
as commander in chief of the Armed Forces
frees him from any congressional or judicial restraint. The presidents
role is limited, Stevens pointed out, by Congressional power to
declare war and make rules concerning captures
on land and water, to define and punish... offenses
against the law of nations, and to make rules for
the government and regulation of the land and naval forces.
The rules that Congress imposed here, Stevens explained, were
the UCMJs due process requirements. Stevens rejected the
position, widely relied on by the Bush administrationfor
example, in its recent defense of the National Security Agency
domestic eavesdropping programthat the Authorization to
Use Military Force enacted by Congress shortly after the September
11 attacks freed Bush from the restrictions of legislation like
the UCMJ.
Noting that military commissions have no constitutional basis,
Stevens pointed out the absurdities in the Bush administrations
argument that one was necessary for Hamdan because he was captured
near a battlefield. Neither the purported agreement with
Osama bin Laden and others to commit war crimes, nor a single
overt act, is alleged to have occurred in a theater of war or
on any specified date after September 11, 2001.
In fact, Stevens added, None of the overt acts that Hamdan
is alleged to have committed violates the law of war. The
alleged war crime of conspiracy, he observed, does not appear
in either the Geneva Conventions or the Hague Conventionsthe
major treatises on the laws of war.
Stevens concluded, At a minimum, the government must
make a substantial showing that the crime for which it seeks to
try a defendant by military commission is acknowledged to be an
offense against the law of war. That burden is far from satisfied
here. As an example, he cited The International Military
Tribunal at Nuremberg, which, over the prosecutions
objections, pointedly refused to recognize as a violation of the
law of war conspiracy to commit war crimes, and convicted only
Hitlers most senior associates of conspiracy to wage aggressive
war.
In the final and most far-reaching part of the ruling, Stevens
overruled the Court of Appeals, which had held that Hamdan could
not invoke the protection of the Geneva Conventions in US courts.
(See: US court
upholds military trials for Guantánamo prisoners).
Breaking through the Bush administrations circular reasoning,
which placed enemy combatants in legal limbo, unprotected
either by criminal law or international law, Stevens explained
that a governmental decision to take people out of the protection
of the criminal justice system and subject them to military justice
necessarily meant that there must be full compliance with the
laws of war.
Stevens concluded that, at minimum, and regardless of whether
Hamdan qualified as a prisoner of war under Article
2 of the Geneva Conventionsthe Bush administration argued
that he fought for Al Qaeda rather than Afghanistan and was therefore
not affiliated with a signing powerhe was entitled to the
protections of Article 3, which covers captives in conflicts occurring
in the territory of a signing power, which would include
Afghanistan. In particular, Article 3 prohibits the passing
of sentences and the carrying out of executions without previous
judgment pronounced by a regularly constituted court affording
all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable
by civilized peoples.
As Stevens noted, The commission that the president has
convened to try Hamdan does not meet those requirements.
See Also:
US Supreme Court hearing on
Guantánamo tribunals bares attacks on basic rights
[1 April 2006]
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