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US judge rules Guantánamo military tribunal can proceed
By John Burton
19 July 2008
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After holding a two-hour hearing Thursday, a federal judge
brushed aside constitutional objections and refused to delay the
July 21 start of the military tribunal at Guantánamo Bay
for Salim Ahmed Hamdan, allegedly a driver for Osama bin Laden,
on charges of conspiracy and providing support for terrorism.
Earlier in the day, at the US base in Cuba, the military judge
presiding over the drumhead proceedings, Navy Captain Keith Allred,
turned down a similar request for postponement, rejecting claims
by Hamdans military lawyers that his rights would be violated
if he had to present a defense in a trumped-up judicial system
that allows hearsay and statements obtained through torture to
be used against an accused.
The rulings give the Bush administration a green light to make
Hamdan, a citizen of Yemen, the first of the 265 remaining Guantánamo
prisoners to be tried before a military tribunal, an extraordinary
procedure widely denounced as violating numerous constitutional
guarantees and international human rights treaties.
The rulings fly in the face of recent Supreme Court decisions,
holding that both the US Constitution and the Geneva Conventions
apply to Guantánamo Bay prisoners.
Hamdan denies that he participated in any terrorist conspiracies,
claiming he was no more than a servant who for $200 a month provided
personal services to bin Laden. If convicted, Hamdan could receive
a life sentence.
The US military has indicted another 18 prisoners as war criminals
and announced plans to drag some 80 captives in all before the
military commissions.
Hamdans lawyers argued that before his trial
the constitutionality of the tribunals procedures should
be determined because of the Supreme Courts June 12 decision
in Boumediene v. Bush, which established that the US Constitution
applies to Guantánamo prisoners. (See: US Supreme
Court upholds habeas corpus for Guantánamo Bay prisoners,
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jun2008/cour-j13.shtml)
The highly anticipated ruling by Judge James Robertson, a 1994
Clinton appointee to the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia, surprised some who expected that the Guantánamo
tribunals would be brought to a halt while the constitutionality
of the military commissions and their procedures are reviewed
in US courts.
Robertson said, Hamdan is to face a military commission
designed by Congress acting on guidelines handed down by the Supreme
Court. He argued that Hamdan could raise any objections
to the military tribunal jurisdiction and procedures on appeal
after the tribunal issued its verdict. Robertson emphasized that
he was not finding any of the procedures constitutional, but did
not want to delay the proceedings any further.
The notion that Hamdans own request for a postponement
should be denied to avoid further delay is preposterous, as the
Bush administration has spent the last seven years doing everything
in its power to prevent Guantánamo cases from being resolved
quickly.
Hamdan was captured at a roadblock in Afghanistan during the
October 2001 US invasion and has been imprisoned ever since. Bush
issued an executive order in July 2003 declaring him eligible
to be tried by a military commission for alleged war crimes, but
charges were not leveled until July 2004, almost three years after
his capture.
In late 2004, Judge Robertson ruled that the Bush administrations
proposed military tribunals were illegal because they were not
authorized by Congress. A Court of Appeals panel which then included
the current chief justice of the US Supreme Court, John G. Roberts,
Jr., reversed Robertson, and the Supreme Court subsequently reversed
the Court of Appeals, 5-3, reinstating the original ruling.
In response, the Bush administration and Congress, with significant
Democratic legislative support, rammed through the Military Commissions
Act of 2006 (MTA), authorizing the military tribunals and stripping
Guantánamo prisoners of their habeas corpus rights so they
could not go to any US court with legal challenges to the proceedings.
In Boumediene, the Supreme Court, after ruling that
the Constitution applies to Guantánamo prisoners, struck
down the MTA provision barring their habeas corpus petitions.
Hamdans injunction sought to postpone his military tribunal
until after his constitutional claims could be addressed. His
motion papers raise a number of significant challenges to the
proceedings, including the fact that he is charged with conspiracy
and material support for terrorism based on the MTA,
making the proposed charges unconstitutional under the Constitutions
prohibition of ex post facto laws.
Other patent constitutional deprivations include the use of
hearsay evidence, which violates the confrontation clause
of the Fifth Amendment, and the fact that the MTA provides military
tribunals only for non-US citizens, a clear violation of the Equal
Protection clause guarantee that aliens receive equal treatment.
Captain Allred, the military judge, rejected all of Hamdans
constitutional claims with the legally absurd ruling that Boumediene
did not give Guantánamo prisoners any constitutional protection
beyond the right to habeas corpus.
The political charade behind the tribunals was exposed when
Air Force Colonel Morris Davis, the former chief prosecutor at
Guantánamo, resigned last October, claiming in a Washington
Post interview that Bush administration officials pressured
him to pursue sexy and high interest cases
in the run-up to the 2008 elections, and in a subsequent interview
with The Nation said that the trials were going to be rigged.
Davis said that Pentagon general counsel William Haynes, who oversees
the tribunals for the Defense Department, had told him We
cant have acquittals. If weve been holding these guys
for so long, how can we explain letting them get off? We cant
have acquittals. Weve got to have convictions.
The international opposition to the show trials was underscored
by the unusual friend of the court (amicus curiae) brief filed
in support of the injunction request by 375 current and former
members of European parliaments, charging that the military tribunals
contravene the standards set by international humanitarian
law and human rights law. The brief objects, in particular,
to any trial on vague conspiracy charges, which are
not recognized under international law except in the case of genocide,
because of their potential for political abuse, and the admission
of evidence obtained through torture.
Neal Katyal, the Georgetown University law professor who represented
Hamdan, said after the hearing that no decision has yet been made
whether to appeal the ruling to the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit. Any such motion would have to be made immediately
and, because of the short time involved, be acted upon before
Monday.
A statement issued by Jameel Jaffer, director of national security
matters for the American Civil Liberties Union, said: It
doesnt make sense to conduct a trial under rules that are
likely to be found unconstitutional later on. Proceeding with
this trial now will only draw out a legal process that has taken
far too long already and further discredit a system that has been
a disgrace from the start.
Robertsons ruling is a clear victory for the Bush administration,
which is using Hamdan to clear a legal path for trying other Guantánamo
detainees, including the death penalty trial of the alleged September
11 mastermind, Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, before the November presidential
elections. The entire process is so legally deficient that that
any court-ordered delay to allow judicial scrutiny could derail
the military tribunals altogether.
See Also:
US Supreme Court hearing
on Guantánamo tribunals bares attacks on basic rights
[1 April 2006]
Supreme Court rules
against Bush administrations military commissions
[30 June 2006]
The Hamdan dissents:
US Supreme Court justices argue for presidential dictatorship
[6 July 2006]
Guantanamo Bay, habeas
corpus and the Texan who would be king: Some legal observations
[5 January 2004]
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