The Bush administration's "anti-terrorism"
policies have come increasingly under fire from civil libertarians across the
political spectrum, but the subject of civil liberties has not become a major
issue in this year's presidential campaign, leading some to question John Kerry's
position as well as whether Bush will act to remedy the rights violations brought
on by his policies.
Civil rights advocates point to the government's indefinite detention of citizens
and non-citizens as "enemy combatants," violations of the Geneva Convention
through torture and abuse in the name of intelligence-gathering, and the use
of military commissions to try suspected terrorists, disenfranchising defendants
of numerous rights afforded by civilian proceedings.
The USA PATRIOT Act, a broad legislative package ostensibly passed to give
domestic law enforcement increased anti-terrorism powers, has also generated
intense controversy. Several of its provisions, including wiretapping with no
evidence of criminal cause, "sneak and peek" searches of people's
homes without warrants, and the use of administrative subpoenas granting the
FBI access to people's library and other records, have inspired a broad grassroots
campaign to repeal or amend the PATRIOT Act.
Civil rights advocates look at this long and growing list of restrictions on
privacy and freedom so aggressively pursued by George Bush's administration
and see what appears to be a wide-open target for a progressive-minded candidate
to poke at. That leaves activists wondering why the Democratic challenger has
relatively little to say on the matter.
Michael Ratner, human rights lawyer and president of the Center for Constitutional
Rights in New York (CCR), said that the biggest departure from civil liberties
happened after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The CCR is a nonprofit legal
and educational organization based in New York.
"There's never been anything like this," Ratner said. "When
the Supreme Court criticized the Bush administration's actions in Guantánamo,
they cited the Magna Carta, from the year 1215, when King John was ordered to
bring people to court before jailing them. When a moderate, at best, Supreme
Court has to tell the president what to do by citing a document from 1215, you
know the situation is pretty bad."
Mary Rose Oakar, president of the American-Arab Anti Discrimination Committee
(ADC) in Washington, D.C., said that Arabs and Muslims face many civil liberties
violations. "The Constitution itself is our biggest civil liberty concern,"
she said. "ADC is very concerned about some sections of the Patriot Act,
such as Section 215, which allows them to arbitrarily search a person's library
records and such, without notifying the individual. We are also very concerned
about racial profiling. Arab-Americans have been profiled, and even those perceived
to be Arab, like Sikhs, have been targeted. There is harassment at airports
all the time."
Timothy H. Edgar, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU) said: "President Bush has consistently proven to us that civil liberties
are not an important issue for him.
[His] four years in office represent
a litany of poor policies that have diminished American civil liberties."
He added that in Congress, the ACLU's main concern right now is that Republicans
will add certain provisions to the bill implementing many of the 9/11 Commission
recommendations. House Republicans have in fact included several provisions
to increase surveillance and crack down on immigration in their draft of the
bill.
"By adding these harmful provisions in the 9/11 Recommendations Implementation
Act," he said, "the House leadership will effectively turn the 9/11
reforms into a lightning rod and the House leadership can then attack anyone
who criticizes the bill. This is extremely dangerous for civil liberties. While
making the country safe, we must preserve our freedoms."
President Bush's policies on civil liberties have come under fire from conservatives
as well. Ian Walters, Communications Director at the American Conservative Union
(ACU), a lobbying organization in Virginia, said: "No one knows exactly
how the provisions from PATRIOT I were enforced, because it's draped in national
security. They won't tell members of Congress how they're using those powers,
and our feeling is that until they come clean about it they shouldn't be given
new powers."
Edgar of the ACLU said that Kerry had a better record than Bush regarding civil
liberties.
"While we were certainly disappointed in Senator Kerry's vote for the
PATRIOT Act," he said, "Kerry supports adoption of the SAFE Act [Security
and Freedom Ensured Act of 2003], which puts much needed safeguards into the
PATRIOT Act to help protect people's privacy from the FBI or the Department
of Justice."
But Edgar added that the ACLU disagreed with Kerry on the 9/11 Commission's
recommendation of a national intelligence director. "We have serious concerns
about the potential of such a director to increase spying by intelligence agencies
on Americans," he said, "and believe it was irresponsible for Kerry
to have endorsed the 9/11 Commission's plans without changes to protect civil
liberties."
Ratner of the CCR agrees that Kerry's stance on civil liberties and national
security has been relatively moderate. Kerry has called for modifications of
the PATRIOT Act, and has also spoken against the military commissions in Guantánamo,
saying that the hearings should be along the lines of courts-martial instead.
"He doesn't say anything about keeping people as enemy combatants,"
Ratner said. "Hopefully, he would give people legitimate hearings. As to
whether he would hold them or not, he has not been 100 percent clear on that.
He also doesn't say anything about ending rendition," Ratner added, referring
to the practice of deporting suspects to other countries to be tortured.
"His remarks on civil liberties issues have not been significant in a
huge way," Ratner said, "and he has not gotten up and said that Bush's
actions are an embarrassment to the U.S. But it's still better to have someone
in office with the possibility changing things. My role as a human rights lawyer
is to fight no matter who's there. Pushing for change with Bush is like hitting
a brick wall."
Douglas Reed, associate professor in the Government Department at Georgetown
University said that he fears it would be too tempting for anyone to not exercise
the powers granted under the PATRIOT Act. "The existence of the PATRIOT
Act gives the government much broader powers than previously," he said.
"I only hope John Kerry wouldn't be abusive of those once you give
somebody power, it's hard not to use it."
Though the Bush administration has touted the effectiveness of its "anti-terror"
policies, Ratner insists that they have not helped combat terrorism.
On the contrary, those policies "are in fact making the situation even
more dangerous," he said. "What happened at Guantánamo Bay
and Abu Ghraib has made people angry and is making the situation worse. We need
to show the world that we really are a democracy that has civil rights and that
we adhere to law. Otherwise we're saying that it's a lawless world and we might
as well be in medieval times."
Other candidates, such as independent Ralph Nader and Green Party candidate
David Cobb, have won kudos from civil liberties activists for their more outspoken
stance. Cobb has called for a repeal of the PATRIOT Act, saying that civil liberties
in the country are threatened by corporate control of the government, economy
and media.
"Our country's current priorities are horribly skewed, and result in making
us less safe and secure," Cobb said in an e-mail interview. "Far more
people have died in this country from industrial pollution, car crashes, alcohol
and tobacco than from terrorist attacks. We need to redefine 'national security'
to take into account the health of our citizens, our democracy, and our economic
and environmental security."
Nader also supports a repeal of the PATRIOT Act, and has called for "an
end to secret detentions, arrests without charges, no access to attorneys and
the use of secret 'evidence,' military tribunals for civilians, noncombatant
status and the shredding of 'probable cause' determinations."
Speaking on what civil liberties policy should be, Ratner of the CCR said the
government should adhere to the Geneva Convention.
"It's very clear," he said. "We need to give people POW status
and hearings. We should obey the Geneva Convention with regard to humane treatment,
and ending torture, ending the practice of rendition, and ending the secret
interrogation facilities."
"On the domestic front, the government should not authorize detention
without a trial," Ratner continued. "And it should reorganize the
definition of terrorism so that it doesn't include demonstration activities."
Edgar of the ACLU said the government should be held responsible for ensuring
that laws do not violate people's civil liberties.
"The constitution is the highest body of law in the U.S.," he said,
"and the government is responsible in making sure that it is not violated
when dealing with anyone within the country.
We strongly support the
recommendation of the 9/11 Commission for a civil liberties protection board
that would have real authority to investigate and correct abuses."
In response to this recommendation, President Bush did create the Board on
Safeguarding Americans' Civil Liberties in late August 2004. However, civil
liberties advocates objected that the board was made up of representatives from
the very agencies accused of violating civil liberties in the first place, and
therefore could not effectively combat civil rights violations. According to
an ACLU press release, the president's panel was "a far cry from the civil
liberties board envisioned by the 9/11 Commission," and it called for an
independent board that would "have full subpoena powers, be composed of
experts in both security policy and constitutional law and be adequately resourced."
Ratner said it is "unfortunate that what's happening to fundamental human
rights law and the Geneva Convention has not been a major subject of the debate.
Not only does it affect people around the world but Americans, too."
He added, "What we do elsewhere eventually seeps down and undermines our
own constitutional rights."