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Bush signs Military Commissions Act authorizing police-state
tribunals, torture
By Patrick Martin
18 October 2006
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President Bush signed the Military Commissions Act into law
Tuesday morning, establishing a system of military tribunals to
try prisoners designated as unlawful enemy combatants.
This category will include both those now imprisoned at Guantanamo
Bay and anyone else, citizen or non-citizen, whom the Bush administration
so designates.
The most sweeping legal change wrought by the act is to eliminate
the habeas corpus rights of any non-citizen seized by the US government
and imprisoned as an unlawful enemy combatant. These
individuals will have no right to a judicial hearing to examine
whether there is sufficient evidence to warrant their detention.
Habeas corpus is the most elementary defense against arbitrary
state action, and it has never been permanently repealed for any
section of the American populationuntil now. This action,
a blatant defiance of the Constitution as well as the Supreme
Courts decision last June in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld,
was approved by the Senate and House of Representatives last month,
with significant numbers of Democrats joining a near-unanimous
Republican majority.
In his remarks at the signing ceremony, Bush gave first place
to the bills authorization of CIA interrogations of prisoners
using methods not permitted by the Geneva Conventions, calling
it a vital tool to protect the American people for years
to come. He was referring to a provision that gives a green
light to CIA torture of prisoners and retroactively legalizes
the torture committed by CIA operatives from 2001 to 2005.
Bush declared that the bill would make it possible to put on
trial the Al Qaeda operatives currently in US custody, like Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, whom the administration says orchestrated the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. He did not discuss the
fact that Mohammed, Ramzi bin al-Shidh and other suspected Al
Qaeda figures have been in US hands for several years. The main
barrier to their trial was that their purported confessions, extracted
after lengthy CIA torture including water-boarding, would not
be admissible as evidence in any court in the world.
So long as they could be held indefinitely in secret CIA prisons,
the Bush administration was not unduly concerned that the alleged
perpetrators of 9/11 were not being prosecuted. This only became
an issue after the existence of the CIA prisons was made known
through leaks to the Washington Post, and the European
Union began an investigation into CIA flights to move the prisoners
into and out of prisons in the EU. Then came the Supreme Courts
Hamdan decision, which restated the primacy of constitutional
rights such as habeas corpus over Bushs claim of unlimited
authority for the commander-in-chief.
In his signing statement, Bush portrayed the issue of CIA interrogation
techniques as one of legal complexity. The new law allows
for the clarity our intelligence professionals need to continue
questioning terrorists and saving lives. In actuality, the
clarity provided by the bill is an amnesty for the
past actions of CIA torturers and a green light for similar actions
in the future.
Bush claimed that the CIA interrogations had disrupted dozens
of terror plots and saved American lives. These claims
have the most dubious credibility. None of the plots to which
he referred has resulted in a prosecution of a single terrorist,
nor has there been any independent confirmation of the existence
of these plots.
Bush also claimed that the military commissions which are the
centerpiece of the bill will provide a fair trial, in which
the accused are presumed innocent, have access to an attorney,
and can hear all the evidence against them. These claims
are a mixture of half-truths and outright lies.
* The trials will be patently unfair, permitting evidence extracted
by torture as well as hearsay testimony.
* The accused are not really presumed innocent, since all defendants
will have the status of unlawful enemy combatants,
making them presumptively guilty of taking up arms against the
United States.
* The attorneys will be military officers under the discipline
of the commander-in-chief, and they will have in front of them
the example of Commander Charles D. Swift, the military attorney
for Guantanamo prisoner Salim Hamdan. Two weeks after winning
a victory for his client in the Supreme Court, Swift was denied
promotion and compelled to end his military career.
* As for hearing all the evidence, this is a lie. In the case
of classified materials, the prisoners will be allowed only an
unclassified summary, forcing them to defend themselves against
secret evidence.
The most cynical pretense is Bushs closing comment that
in memory of the victims of September the 11th, it is my
honor to sign the Military Commissions Act of 2006 into law.
In reality, this law has nothing to do with avenging the deaths
of the innocent victims of 9/11 or punishing those responsible
for that act of mass murder.
There has still been no serious investigation of the events
of 9/11, and particularly of the role of US intelligence agencies.
Reports continue to emergeas in the recent book by Bob Woodwardof
a deliberate policy on the part of the administration of refusing
to heed warnings of an imminent terrorist attack during the summer
of 2001. The most plausible explanation is that the Bush administration
permitted or directly facilitated a terrorist attack so that it
would have the necessary pretext to swing public opinion behind
its planned campaign of military aggression in the oil-rich regions
of the Persian Gulf and Central Asia.
The White House orchestrated the timing of the signing ceremony
with an eye to the November 7 elections, seeking to portray those
Democrats who voted against the law as soft on terrorism.
The McCarthy-style smears poured out of the White House, the Republican
congressional leadership and the Republican campaign machine.
Bush himself took an indirect approach, declaring at the ceremony,
Every member of the Congress who voted for this bill has
helped our nation rise to the task that history has given us.
Some voted to support this bill even when a majority of their
party voted the other way.
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, eager for a diversion from his
involvement in the cover-up of the behavior of Republican Congressman
Mark Foley, denounced the slightly less draconian alternative
offered by his Democratic opponents, saying, The Democratic
plan would gingerly pamper the terrorists who plan to destroy
innocent Americans lives. The Republican National
Committee, within minutes of the signing of the bill, issued a
press release headlined, Democrats Would Let Terrorists
Free.
While a group of religious pacifists staged a protest outside
the White House, shouting Bush is the terrorist, and
Torture is a crime, and about 15 were arrested, the
Democratic Party in no way shares such concerns about the implications
of the new law for democratic rights. Although the Military Commissions
Act is the most fundamental assault on constitutional rights enacted
by Congress in at least a century, Senate Democrats made a calculated
decision to allow the bill to become law, refusing to mount a
filibuster, which could have been sustained by the votes of 40
senators (the Democrats now hold 44 seats, and one independent
votes with them.)
More fundamentally, every leading Democrat accepts the framework
of the Bush administrations war on terror, in
which democratic rights and constitutional norms must be sacrificed
in the interests of an indefinite struggle in which the entire
world is the battlefield. On this basis, the Bush administration
can justify any crime, from the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq,
to its support for the Israeli war in Lebanon, to new wars against
Iran, Syria or North Korea.
In the three weeks since the passage of the Military Commissions
Act, further information has come to light on the arbitrary character
of the arrests and detentions that brought prisoners to Guantanamo,
and on the sweeping scale of the attack on democratic rights that
has accompanied the Bush administration.
On October 15, press reports detailed the plight of Abdul Rahim
al Ginco, a college student from the United Arab Emirates who
had been imprisoned by the Taliban and tortured by Al Qaeda while
visiting Afghanistan in 2000. He was freed from the Taliban prison
only to be seized by the American military and, as an Arab found
in Afghanistan, presumed to be an Al Qaeda operative and shipped
to Guantanamo, where he remains after five years.
The same day, the Los Angeles Times reported that the
US Marine Corps has sought to silence two members of the military
legal team representing a Guantanamo Bay prisoner because they
have spoken publicly about reports of prisoner abuse by guards
at the base. The gag order was issued against Lt. Col. Colby Vokey
and Sgt. Heather Cerveny by the chief defense counsel of the Marine
Corps, a Marine spokeswoman revealed.
On October 13, the New York Times reported that internal
military documents, obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union
under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, showed that military
officials had labeled antiwar activities within the United States
as potential terrorist activity.
The activities cited included a Stop the War Now
rally in Akron, Ohio in March 2005. An internal military report
in May 2005 on antiwar actions at the University of California,
Santa Cruz, flatly asserted that the Students for Peace
and Justice represent a potential threat to D.O.D. (Department
of Defense) personnel.
Material suggesting that antiwar activities posed the threat
of criminal terrorism were widely shared among analysts
from the military, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the
Department of Homeland Security, the Times reported.
The implication of such reports is clear: plans are well under
way, in the Bush administration and the military and intelligence
agencies, to criminalize political dissent and treat those who
oppose the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and those who defend
democratic rights, as potential terrorists, who can be branded
as unlawful enemy combatants, arrested, and locked
away in a new American gulag.
See Also:
US Congress legalizes torture
and indefinite detention
[29 September 2006]
Republican senators
resistance to Bush torture bill reflects tension between White
House and military brass
[22 September 2006]
After the Supreme Court
ruling
Congressional Democrats join with Republicans to maintain
military commissions at Guantánamo
[1 July 2006]
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