By enacting new legislation this week governing
the treatment and trial of suspects in Washington's "global war on terror,"
Congress has turned its back on both international law and the U.S. Constitution,
according to the country's major human rights groups.
The legislation, which cleared the Senate Thursday and is expected to be signed
into law by President George W. Bush in a high-profile ceremony over the next
several days, will also do further damage to Washington's declining moral authority
around the world, according to the groups, as well as many Democratic and a
handful of Republican lawmakers who opposed the bill or tried to amend it.
"This was the moment for Congress to pass legislation that reflects the
fundamental values of this country," said Elisa Massimino, Washington director
of Human Rights First (HRF), a national attorneys' group. "Instead, it
rushed to adopt an ill-considered law which history will judge harshly."
"The many flaws in this law raise fundamental constitutional issues (and)
will result in prolonged legal challenges, instead of fair trials that ensure
justice," she predicted.
Indeed, one group that has represented hundreds of detainees held at the U.S.
Guantánamo Bay naval base in Cuba said it will immediately challenge
the new law, the Military Commissions Act of 2006 (MCA), and particularly its
denial of the right of suspected terrorists to challenge their detention before
a court that is independent of the executive branch. The groups noted that the
provision could lead to indefinite detention without charges.
"Since the nation's founding the writ has been suspended only four times
each only briefly and in a territory that was an active combat zone,"
said the director of the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), Vincent Warren.
"This bill would suspend it for all non-citizens inside and outside of
the U.S. even if they have not been charged with any crime."
"This unprecedented and expansive suspension of habeas corpus is utterly
unconstitutional," he asserted, "and we will challenge it."
Even the Republican chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Sen. Arlen
Specter, predicted that the courts will rule the elimination of habeas corpus
which dates back to the English Magna Carta in 1215 under the
MCA unconstitutional. "What this bill will do is take our civilization
back 900 years," he warned.
Despite those warnings, the Senate voted 51-48 to reject Specter's amendment
to restore habeas corpus and went on to approve the MCA by a 65-34 margin. Twelve
Democrats, most of whom face re-election in November, voted with the majority
Republicans, while one moderate Republican, who also faces a tough reelection
fight, voted with 33 Democrats to oppose it.
The House of Representatives had voted 253-168 to approve the identical bill
on Wednesday on a mainly party-line vote.
Passage of the MCA, which Bush said will "ensure (that U.S. troops) are
prepared to defeat today's enemies and address tomorrow's threats," puts
an end to a three-week Congressional debate over what to do about a July Supreme
Court decision that found that, contrary to the administration's position, suspected
terrorists in U.S. custody were entitled to the protections of Common Article
3 of the Geneva Conventions as a matter of both U.S. and international law.
Among other provisions, Article 3 requires humane treatment of detainees "in
all circumstances" and bans "cruel treatment and torture" or
"outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading
treatment." It also requires that all detainees be given a fair trial with
all the guarantees "recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples."
That decision required the administration to seek legislation to establish standards
for the treatment and trial of detainees, including 14 so-called "high-value"
al-Qaeda suspects who had been held incommunicado by the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) and subject to what Bush called "alternative interrogation
procedures" before the Court's decision. They have now been transferred
to Guantánamo and are expected to face trial under military commissions
established by the new law.
As a result, Bush submitted new legislation earlier this month. But several
senior Republican senators with distinguished military records, backed by former
military lawyers, rights groups, and most Democrats, strongly objected to many
of draft's provisions which, they claimed, redefined Article 3 standards in
ways that would permit abusive treatment and unfair trials.
There ensued lengthy negotiations between the three Republican rebels and the
administration. Those negotiations resulted in a compromise that, on the one
hand, appeared to reaffirm Article 3 as the law governing the treatment of detainees
and, on the other hand, also provided the executive branch considerable latitude
in how it would be interpreted, particularly with respect to CIA interrogation
tactics.
Some groups notably HRF and Human Rights Watch (HRW) hailed changes in
the bill that they said would preclude the use of especially harsh methods,
such as waterboarding, prolonged stress positions or sleep deprivation, hypothermia,
and mock executions. However, their overall opposition to the bill particularly
with respect to the denial of habeas corpus, various procedural aspects of the
military commissions, and proposed changes in the 1996 War Crimes Act remained
unchanged.
One particular item of concern was the bill's expansion of the definition of
"unlawful enemy combatants" who could be subject to detention under
the MCA to cover persons including U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents
who have "purposefully and materially supported hostilities against
the United States or its cobelligerents," or anyone deemed as such by a
"Combatant Status Review Tribunal," which is overseen by the Pentagon.
"This provision expands the concept of combatant way beyond anything that
is traditionally accepted, and it could come back to haunt Americans,"
said HRW director Kenneth Roth. "It would make every civilian cafeteria
worker at a U.S. military base, and every worker in an American uniform factory,
someone whom enemy forces could shoot to kill."
Among other objectionable provisions, the groups assailed changes to the War
Crimes Act that could permit CIA interrogators to use "humiliating and
degrading (interrogation) practices" proscribed by Common Article 3 but
that fall short of causing "serious" physical or mental pain or suffering.
Other amendments to the 1996 act would provide retroactive immunity to U.S.
officials for serious violations of Common Article 3, including for using or
authorizing tactics, such as waterboarding, that most groups consider torture,
and serious violations of Common Article 3.
Moreover, it bars the Geneva Conventions from being invoked in any lawsuit
against the U.S. government.
Yet another provision permits the government to introduce evidence in military
tribunals that was coerced under torture or gathered illegally either here or
abroad or based on hearsay.
"Nothing could be less American than a government that can indefinitely
hold people in secret torture cells, take away their protections against horrific
and cruel abuse, put them on trial based on evidence they cannot see, sentence
them to death based on testimony literally beaten out of witnesses, and then
slam shut the courthouse door for any habeas corpus petition," said Christopher
Anders, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union. "But
that's exactly what Congress just approved."
(Inter Press Service)