Military tribunals, monitoring of lawyers: Bush

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Military tribunals, monitoring of lawyers: Bush
NewJehad
11/20/01 at 14:16:30



                                                       News / Reportage





                    Military tribunals, monitoring of lawyers: Bush announces
                    new police-state measures
                     

                    In the space of little more than a week, the Bush administration has issued a
                    series of executive orders that amount to the most far-reaching assault on
                    democratic rights in modern legal history. The directives violate protections laid
                    down in the US Constitution and upheld by judicial precedent over many
                    decades.

                    On Tuesday, Bush issued an executive order allowing for the use of special
                    military courts to try suspected terrorists. This followed by days the
                    announcement that Attorney General John Ashcroft had authorized the
                    monitoring of conversations between lawyers and clients in federal custody,
                    including people who have been detained but not charged with any crime.

                    Other recent executive orders include the following:

                    * A directive empowering the attorney general to authorize the indefinite detention
                    of some non-citizens, a rule that could affect “hundreds of individuals,” according
                    to the Justice Department.

                    * An order to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to carry out “voluntary” interviews
                    of more than 5,000 mostly Middle Eastern men, ages 18 to 33, who are living in
                    the US, ostensibly to gather information concerning future terrorist attacks.

                    * A new policy on visa applications affecting men, ages 16 to 45, from 25 Middle
                    Eastern and African countries. All such applicants will face intense scrutiny and
                    long delays in the processing of their requests. Their names will be checked
                    against databases maintained by the FBI.

                    * The suspension of running tallies by the Justice Department of the number of
                    people rounded up by law enforcement agencies in the anti-terror dragnet. The
                    last figure released by federal authorities was 1,187.

                    These sweeping changes have been enacted by executive proclamation, over
                    the heads of the people, with no discussion or vote in Congress. Coming on top
                    of the far-reaching provisions of the “anti-terrorism” bill passed last month by
                    Congress, they are major steps toward establishing the institutional and legal
                    framework for police-state rule in America.

                    Seizing on the events of September 11 as a pretext, the Bush administration has
                    instituted measures that would have been politically unthinkable prior to the
                    terror attacks. They are components of a reactionary agenda long-sought by the
                    most right-wing sections of the political establishment.

                    The military tribunals authorized by Bush would be the envy of any totalitarian
                    state. According to Bush’s order, they can be employed against suspects who
                    are non-citizens, with the proceedings being held in the US, abroad or even at
                    sea. Trials conducted by these tribunals will be held in secret. The military
                    prosecutors will not be required to reveal any information about the proceedings
                    to the public. The tribunals can render sentences up to and including life
                    imprisonment or execution.

                    The president will designate who is to be tried by these tribunals. According to
                    the November 15 New York Times, the Pentagon is already preparing for the
                    possible transfer to military custody of immigrants currently detained by federal
                    authorities.

                    The accused will have no recourse to appeal, and will be barred from seeking
                    remedy from any US state or federal court, any foreign court or any international
                    tribunal, such as the World Court at The Hague. This means that, on George W.
                    Bush’s directive, a suspect could be arrested, tried in a foreign country in a
                    secret trial, and summarily executed.

                    A unanimous verdict is not required to convict. Defendants can be convicted and
                    sentenced by a two-thirds majority of the military officers presiding, who will be
                    selected by the secretary of defense. The qualifications of these officers are not
                    specified by the presidential order, and their identities could be concealed from
                    the public. The effect would be similar to the use of hooded army officers in Latin
                    American military courts, as in the recent trial in Peru of American Lori Berenson,
                    a left-wing journalist.

                    The tribunals will not be required to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and
                    will not be obligated to follow established rules of evidence. This license for
                    frame-up violates the most elementary principles of legal justice and discards
                    procedures that are required not only in civilian courts, but also in existing
                    military courts.

                    According to Eugene R. Fidell, president of the National Institute of Military
                    Justice, “The accused in such a court would have dramatically fewer rights than
                    a person would in a court-martial.”

                    In comparison to the process laid down in Bush’s executive order, the 1999 trial
                    of Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan by a Turkish military
                    court—condemned around the world as a judicial frame-up—looks like a model
                    of due process. In the Ocalan trial, representatives of the media and international
                    observers were permitted, and the defendant was able to appeal his death
                    sentence to a Turkish appeals court.

                    Bush’s military tribunals and all of his other “anti-terror” measures violate one of
                    the most basic democratic principles of US law: the presumption that the
                    accused is innocent until proven guilty. Now defendants can be stripped of their
                    right to due process by virtue of presidential fiat. If the president names a
                    non-citizen as a terrorist suspect, he can be turned over to the military for
                    summary conviction and execution.

                    Defending Bush’s order, Vice President Dick Cheney said terrorism suspects
                    “don’t deserve the same guarantees and safeguards that would be used for an
                    American citizen going through the normal judicial process,” and that a military
                    tribunal “guarantees that we’ll have the kind of treatment of these individuals that
                    we believe they deserve.”

                    While the executive order specifically refers to Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda
                    network, these kangaroo courts could be used against any non-citizens alleged
                    to be involved with terrorism. It should be kept in mind that Bush—who wields
                    absolute power in deciding who is to be prosecuted by these
                    tribunals—demonstrated his instincts for fair play and compassion by presiding
                    over 152 executions during his five-year term as governor of Texas.

                    The official justifications provided by the Bush administration for establishing
                    these military star chambers do not hold water. The major claim is that civilian
                    trials of terrorists would compromise US intelligence. This assertion, however, is
                    belied by the existence of provisions allowing federal courts to keep sensitive
                    information sealed from the public record.

                    What the government is really concerned about is concealing from the American
                    people the truth about its operations. The holding of swift, secret trials would
                    allow the authorities to continue to keep the public in the dark.

                    In particular, military tribunals would serve two purposes:

                    First, the government would be able to prosecute and convict those, such as bin
                    Laden, who it alleges are guilty of terrorist crimes, without having to prove its
                    charges. Various government spokesmen have acknowledged since September
                    11 that they do not have sufficient evidence to convict bin Laden in a court of law.
                    By bringing terrorist suspects before secret military tribunals, where the outcome
                    is guaranteed and the defendant has no legal rights, the government would be
                    able to claim it “proved” its allegations without fear of public scrutiny or
                    independent review.

                    Such a legal farce has obvious political advantages, since the Bush
                    administration’s justification for going to war against Afghanistan hinges on the
                    claim that bin Laden and Al Qaeda are responsible for the September 11
                    attacks, and the Taliban regime is guilty of sponsoring and protecting them. A
                    public trial which revealed that the government had no serious evidence to back
                    up the claim that bin Laden and Al Qaeda organized the hijack-bombings would
                    have serious political consequences, both in the US and abroad.

                    Second, a closed military process would negate the possibility of information
                    emerging that might undermine the government’s version of the September 11
                    disaster. A host of unanswered questions remain about the strange and murky
                    circumstances that allowed men identified as Islamic terrorists to organize and
                    execute a complex plot to attack key centers of American economic and military
                    power, supposedly without any advance knowledge on the part of American
                    police and intelligence agencies.

                    A normal trial might expose facts suggesting that US authorities were not as
                    oblivious to the terrorist conspiracy as they claim, or even the existence of prior
                    contacts between some of the perpetrators and American intelligence
                    operatives. In one way or another, a normal trial would be certain to bring forward
                    politically damaging information about the greatest security breach in US
                    domestic history.

                    The authorization of secret military tribunals clearly flies in the face the Bill of
                    Rights of the US Constitution, which applies to “persons,” not just citizens. Under
                    current legal standards, anyone in the US—citizens and non-citizens alike—can
                    file a writ of habeas corpus, asking for a judge to take up his or her case.

                    Inevitably, Bush’s authorization of military tribunals will be challenged in the
                    courts and end up before the Supreme Court. It is likely, however, that a majority
                    on the high court will back the measure.

                    Comments made in the aftermath of the terror attacks by Associate Justice
                    Sandra Day O’Connor—generally considered a “swing vote” on the
                    Court—indicate that behind-the-scenes discussions have been going on about
                    sanctioning “military justice.” In a speech on September 30, O’Connor said the
                    terror attacks “will cause us to reexamine some of our laws pertaining to criminal
                    surveillance, wiretapping, immigration and so on.”

                    She continued, “It is possible, if not likely, that we will rely more on international
                    rules of war than on our cherished constitutional standards for criminal
                    prosecutions in responding to threats to our national security.”

                    Predictably, the fascist-minded editorialists of the Wall Street Journal defend the
                    tribunals “as a matter of common sense, as a way to shield an essential part of
                    the war effort from the excesses of the modern US criminal justice system.” The
                    Journal, which reflects the views of major sections of the corporate elite, adds in
                    a November 16 editorial: “Do we really want to give people bent on destroying the
                    US the right to throw out evidence based on the exclusionary rule?”

                    However, Bush’s barrage of executive orders has provoked unease and concern
                    within parts of the political establishment and sections of the press. In a column
                    in the November 15 New York Times, entitled “Seizing Dictatorial Power,”
                    long-time Republican operative William Safire writes that “a president of the
                    United States has just assumed what amounts to dictatorial power ... with the
                    replacement of the American rule of law with military kangaroo courts.” “On what
                    legal meat does this our Caesar feed?” he asks.

                    A November 16 editorial in the Times, headlined “A Travesty of Justice,”
                    comments, “With the flick of a pen, in this case, Mr. Bush has essentially
&jbsp;                   discarded the rulebook of American justice painstakingly assembled over the
                    course of more than two centuries.”

                    That the Times, which has disgraced itself in the recent period by praising
                    Bush’s “statesmanship” and political “maturity,” should feel obliged to make
                    such a pointed comment, testifies to the vast scope and extreme character of the
                    Bush administration’s assault on democratic rights.

                    Some senators from both parties have called for hearings on the setting up of
                    military tribunals, the monitoring of lawyer-client discussions and other
                    measures enacted by the Bush administration without congressional input.
                    However, working people can place no confidence in the liberal media or the
                    Democrats to wage a struggle against the assault on democratic rights. They
                    have consistently adapted themselves to the drive by the most reactionary layers
                    of the ruling elite to curtail basic rights.

                    While the current rash of anti-democratic measures largely targets non-citizens,
                    mainly of Middle-Eastern descent, they constitute a fundamental attack on the
                    basic rights of the entire population. These attacks will be extended to American
                    citizens, especially those who oppose the government’s policies, sooner rather
                    than later.
                     
                    Source:  ICFI
                     


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