Wednesday, November 08, 2006

The Truth About The Military Commissions Act
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--They Hate Our Freedom--

Courtesy Of: OnLineJournal.com
By Aaron Sussman
OnLine Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 8, 2006

On October 17, with Dick Cheney, Alberto Gonzales, and Donald Rumsfeld standing behind him, George W. Bush solemnly announced, “in memory of the victims of September 11th, it is my honor to sign the Military Commissions Act of 2006 into law.”

It is apt that Bush invoked a terrifying assault on America as he signed the Military Commissions Act (MCA), legislation that chisels away at our civil liberties, abets and immunizes top-level torturers, and strikes at the core of American values and tradition.

The message that Bush gave when he signed the Defense Bill in 2005 is now truer than ever: “Our enemies are innovative and resourceful, and so are we. They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we.”

“In memory of the victims of September 11th,” Bush passed a law that Robyn Blumner of the St. Petersburg Times calls “an obscenity against liberty and decency” and that the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) calls “unconstitutional and un-American.”

A fitting tribute indeed for the victims whose names have been manipulated by this administration to justify everything from invading Iraq, to the USAPATRIOT Act, to torture, to tax cuts. This “honor” to the victims of September 11 is a national disgrace for which the Bush administration, both houses of Congress, and the media are to blame.

While the White House struggles to convince the nation that the MCA is perfectly legal and essential in order for the CIA to continue “one of the most successful intelligence efforts in American history,” the true implications of this act must be made clear.

Out of the many dubious clauses in the act, the most egregious is the one that eliminates the writ of habeas corpus (the right to challenge the legality of one’s imprisonment), a fundamental right that dates back to the Magna Carta.

In his First Inaugural Address in 1801, Thomas Jefferson said, “Freedom of the person under the protection of the habeas corpus I deem [one of the] essential principles of our government."

Ironically, the Supreme Court case, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, which held that Bush’s original military tribunals were illegal and made the congressionally approved MCA necessary, would never have occurred if the MCA had been in effect, as it was petitioned by a detainee.

According to the MCA, “No court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the United States who has been determined by the United States to have been properly detained as an enemy combatant or is awaiting such determination.”

This allows the president to seize a person who is in this country legally and detain that person indefinitely. Who, though, exactly are these “enemy combatants?”

The MCA says, “The term ‘unlawful combatant’ means . . . a person who has engaged in hostilities or who has purposefully and materially supported hostilities against the United States. . . . or a person who . . . has been determined to be an unlawful enemy combatant by a Combatant Status Review Tribunal or another competent tribunal established under the authority of the president or the secretary of defense.”

With such vague language as “purposefully and materially” and such ambiguous standards as “another competent tribunal,” it is not difficult to foresee the grave violations of human rights that the state can commit.

According to author and Yale Law Professor and author of Before the Next Attack: Preserving Civil Liberties in an Age of Terrorism Bruce AckermanAccording to Yale Law Professor and author of Before the Next Attack: Preserving Civil Liberties in an Age of Terrorism Bruce Ackerman, the MCA “authorizes the president to seize American citizens as enemy combatants, even if they have never left the United States. And once thrown into military prison, they cannot expect a trial by their peers or any other of the normal protections of the Bill of Rights.”

One of the few vociferous opponents of the MCA in the Senate, Patrick Leahy of Vermont, presented this chilling scenario: “Imagine, you are a law-abiding, lawful permanent resident. . . . You do charitable fund-raising for international relief agencies. . . . Then one day there is a knock at your door.

The government thinks that the Muslim charity you sent money to may be funneling money to terrorists, and it thinks you may be involved. . . . You are brought in for questioning. . . . You ask for a lawyer. But no lawyer comes. . . . Then you’re sent to Guantánamo. And then nothing, for years, for decades, for the rest of your life.”

Does giving money to this hypothetical charity fit the definition of “purposefully and materially?” Of course it does, because all the term really means is that Bush has, what Thomas Jefferson School of Law Professor Marjorie Cohn calls, “the power of a dictator.” According to Molly Ivins, “one person has already been charged with aiding terrorists because he sold a satellite TV package that includes the Hezbollah network.”

Once you are detained and denied the writ of habeas corpus, you effectively have no protections, no counsel, and no rights. Bush has repeatedly emphasized that “we do not torture” and “freedom from torture is an inalienable human right.”

This is only true if you allow the Bush administration to define “torture,” a definition that has become so nebulous that it might as well be changed to “whatever techniques are not being used by the U.S.”

The MCA gives the president the authority to define and apply Common Article 3 of the Geneva Convention, which refers to the treatment of detainees, and reconfigures the War Crimes Act to expunge this nation’s crimes.

The MCA, according to Amnesty International, will “narrow the scope of the War Crimes Act by not expressly criminalizing acts that constitute ‘outrages upon personal dignity, particularly humiliating and degrading treatment’ banned under [Common Article 3].” This is a considerable relief for the torturers in our government.

According to the Huffington Post’s Aziz Huq, “the Bush administration has gutted the no-torture rule. It has added the requirement that a person ‘specifically’ intend to cause the pain that amounts to torture . . . It means that any government agent who says his goal was to get information, not to cause pain, hasn’t tortured. . . ."

The Bush administration, then, does not think it is torture when federal government employees engage “in acts such as soaking a prisoner’s hand in alcohol and lighting it on fire, administering electrical shocks, subjecting prisoners to repeated sexual abuse and assault, including sodomy with a bottle, raping a juvenile prisoner, kicking and beating prisoners in the head and groin, putting lit cigarettes inside a prisoner’s ear, force-feeding a baseball to a prisoner, chaining a prisoner hands-to-feet in a fetal position for 24 hours without food or water or access to a toilet, and breaking a prisoner’s shoulders.” Combine those horrors with what other countries do to suspects seized by the U.S. under the “extraordinary rendition” program, and America’s shameful role as a violator of human rights is illuminated.

Yet, we are consistently told that opposing these acts and maintaining a basic level of humanity and decency is tantamount to treason.

Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert claimed that opponents of the MCA are “putting their liberal agenda ahead of the security of America” and that Democrats “would gingerly pamper the terrorists who plan to destroy innocent American lives.”

According to Hastert, we have the false dilemma of either “gingerly pamper[ing] the terrorists” or of criminally stripping Americans and non-Americans of their rights, torturing them, and committing the brutalities and excesses of tyrants.

This is one of the many logical fallacies employed by the GOP leadership to misconstrue the terms of the debate and cause people to vote out of fear; a strategy that weakens this country and undermines democracy.

The media, which has been uncritical and complicit in regard to torture has failed its democratic obligations once again with the MCA. When the legislation was first introduced, the media considered the “substance a yawn” and preferred to “focus on the sexy rift between George Bush’s White House and those roguish Republican mavericks headed by John McCain.”

Michael Ratner, who is the president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, pointed out on the Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting radio show, CounterSpin, “There was no internal rift about habeas corpus, which was barely covered in the press.”

By pitting these two ideologically similar contingents against each other as the only two sides of the debate, the media effectively erased the massive criticism leveled by constitutional law experts, human rights activists, watchdog groups, and everyone else who has a stake in preserving civil liberties and international law.

By the time the press addressed the real issues concerning the MCA, it was too late. A New York Times editorial, titled “A Dangerous New Order”, calls the MCA “an unconstitutional act.”

Unfortunately, the editorial, which could have influenced votes in the House and Senate, was run after the act was signed.

The editorial also erroneously states, “The law does not apply to American citizens, but it does apply to other legal United States residents.” In fact, as Robert Perry of Consortium News points out,

the Act states that “Any person is punishable as a principal under this chapter who commits an offense punishable by this chapter, or aids, abets, counsels, commands, or procures its commission.”

Another inaccurate statement was made on Fox News Special Report with Brit Hume, when Major Garrett said, “this bill does give detainees the right to appeal their status as enemy combatants, just not before civilian courts. They can appeal to a court of military review.” Detainees do not all have procedures to challenge their detention in court, an error that was addressed by the media watchdog group Media Matters.

The seamless couplings of the Bush administration, both houses of Congress, and the media, combined with the powerlessness of the judiciary, exposes this new era of anti-democratic collusion and the dissolution of “checks and balances.”

It is a harsh blow to democracy when the criminals in the highest offices of the government prove they are not criminals by changing the laws that they violated. The strategy of those who made the MCA into law is to erase their past crimes to pave the way for new ones.

The MCA effectively immunizes government officials against allegations of torture and other war crimes. Surely this was a consideration when Alberto Gonzales told Bush that denying the Geneva Conventions would “substantially reduce the threat of domestic criminal prosecutions under the War Crimes Act.”

Rosa Brooks wrote in the Los Angeles Times,“It’s far too late for Bush to have a legacy that won’t be a source of shame to future generations. So he’s going for second best: a congressionally delivered get-out-of-jail free card.”

This “get-out-of-jail free card,” while giving the Bush regime tyrannical powers and immunity for past crimes, has the reverse effect for all the co-conspirators who let Bush hurt this country: Congress (and all those Democrats who voted “aye”*), the media, the courts, and, of course, we, the voters, all of whom are now more culpable than ever.

The MCA is the latest link in a chain that increasingly shackles democracy and progress, that tarnishes the rights and dignity of every person in every country, and that, with every new link, makes us more complicit accomplices to the crimes committed by our government, by the ones who hate our freedom.

*Democrat Senators: Carper (D-DE), Johnson (D-SD), Landrieu (D-LA), Lautenberg (D-NJ), Lieberman (D-CT), Menendez (D-NJ), Salazar (D-CO), Rockefeller (D-WV), Nelson (D-FL), Nelson (D-NE), Pryor (D-AR), Stabenow (D-MI)

WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT

In a State Department Foreign Press Center Briefing, John Bellinger, the Legal Advisor to the State Department said: “And with respect to the Military Commissions Act, which is extremely complex, hard to understand, as wonderful a job as you all do in reporting this in the press, it is hard to understand the details of the law unless one gets down, lawyer to lawyer, to explain it.”

Articles and documents that actually help explain it:
Questions and Answers from the Center for Constitutional Rights
ACLU’s letter to the Senate
Unchecked Powers, by Anup Shah
Are You an Unlawful Combatant? From AntiWar.com
Habeas Corpus Sellout, by Nat Hentoff
Q & A about the MCA from Human Rights Watch
About the MCA from Human Rights First
“Take Back Essential Rights with Local Action” from the Bill of Rights Defense Committee
Pushing Back on Detainee Act, by Michael Ratner
Damage Control, from TomPaine.com

How Congress Voted on the MCA:
House of Representative
The Senate

Tell Congress What You Think:
Contact your Congressperson and Senator and demand your Constitutional rights
“Express Your Disappointment with your Senator Who Voted the Wrong Way” on the MCA; sign this form letter from the American Civil Liberties Union.

Organizations the Defend the Constitution:
American Civil Liberties Union
Center for Constitutional Rights
Human and Constitutional Rights

About Habeas Corpus:
Habeas Corpus Defined and Explained
Habeas Corpus, R.I.P (1215-2006), by Molly Ivins
Video: Keith Olbermann, “The Day Habeas Corpus Died”
A Brief History of Habeas Corpus, from BBC News
Federal Habeas Corpus Review

Law Reviews:
Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review
Journal of Constitutional Law

About Torture
The Torture Myth, by Anne Applebaum, Washington Post
Documents on America’s use of tortue, from the American Civil Liberties Union

Sign the Amnesty International pledge against torture, “The America I Believe In”
Host a viewing of Outlawd: Extraordinary Rendition, Torture, and Disappearances in the “War on Terror.”

Click link for free DVD.
A Crime, Not A War, by Aaron Sussman, about torture and the media
“U.S. Torture and Abuse of Detainees,” from Human Rights Watch
Why Retired Military Brass Don’t Want Torture, by Charles Kaiser, LA Times

Aaron Sussman is the co-founder and Executive Editor of Incite Magazine (http://www.incitemagazine.com/); he can be contacted at Aaron@InciteMagazine.org. For more of Sussman’s work, visit www.ACrowdedFire.com.

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