Third Party & Independents: Archives

April 08, 2005

Military Commissions and Inalienable Rights

Thursday, a three judge panel of the D.C. Circuit Court heard oral arguments in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, a challenge to the first military tribunal convened by our national government since the WWII-era. I have helped Hamdan-s co-counsel, Professor Neal Katyal, in this case since August. In this article, I will only try to explain why a federalist or conservative should care that Mr. Hamdan, a driver for Osama Bin Laden and an alleged terrorist, is being tried in a military commission whose rules, procedure and composition are all created under the complete and total discretion of one man- the President of the United States.

I start from first principles. Since all men are naturally equal and free, no man may have his liberty taken from him by another without proper justification. As a result, the central tenant of a just regime that claims the moral authority to take the liberty of an accuser is the correct differentiation between the guilty and the innocent. That is, people can argue about what should or should not be a crime- but a regime that ultimately makes a determination of this threshold inquiry must provide adequate process to anyone, citizen or not, that it subjects to its legal adjudicative force. Mr. Hamdan has been accused of conspiring to commit terrible crimes- whether those conspiracy charges even state a recognizable charge under the current laws is a tricky issue- but even assuming those charges are valid, the onus is on the authority that purports to have the right to brand him guilty. That authority must prove that its adjudicative process is transparent and fair, and that he has really done what they accuse him of.

The obvious follow-up question is what does -proper process- entail? The customary/legal argument encompasses certain traditionally protected and statutory rights that accused generally enjoy. One such notable right is the right to be present- something that was denied to Mr. Hamdan already, and will be denied again if the D.C. Circuit rules against him. I think the moral requirements are more messy than these formalistic traditional procedures, but also more expansive. That is, when a person is accused of committing a crime, he must have a fair, independent decision-maker determine whether he is guilty or innocent based on transparent procedures that are set up to get the factual issue correct. I do not think many of the Presidents supporters disagree with the previous statement, in theory. Yet, if one were to take the governments arguments on their face, the president could label any person (at least any non-citizen) as an enemy combatant, draw up novel charges against him, appoint his commissioners, lay out the procedures and have final review authority over the execution. I do not think this comes even close to meeting the threshold for determining guilt or innocence.

The decision of the Circuit Court will address more than these rather uncontroversial moral dictates. There are issues about whether this challenge to the tribunal is timely, what level of protections the Universal Code of Military Justice offers, and what rights a person who has been designated -Al Qaeda- but claims to be a civilian has under the Geneva Conventions. Yet, the principle that is being vindicated is not nearly as complicated- the regular, proper and just differentiation between the guilty and innocent is the ultimate hallmark of how just our regime is.

As to why a federalist should care, I will close with a quote from one of the greatest federalists (a quote the co-counsel I worked for liked to use), Chief Justice John Marshall: -[The] government of the United States has been emphatically termed a government of laws, and not of men.- A system of determining guilt and innocent based on a law written by one man, prosecuted by that mans authority, and decided by that same authority is not a -government of laws.- Those of us who believe in absolute right and wrong, and that government is set up to protect inalienable rights, should care most of all that a fair process decide whether those our government brands as criminals are truly guilty. That many of our friends do not seem to care about these principles when it comes to people presumptively labeled as -terrorists- makes me wonder whether they truly understand what inalienable rights are.

Posted by Misha Tseytlin at April 8, 2005 03:47 AM
Comments
Comment #50250

The laws become meaningless when they are easily changed according the powerful’s ends. The laws become meaningless, when we maintain one set of laws regarding process for one class of citizens, and another set of laws regarding process, for another class of citizens.

Every decade of my 55 year old life has witnessed further degradation of the meaning of our laws. Most of that degradation has been caused by expanding executive powers, and this story is just another in a long historical list. Yes, there have been brief periods of exception, but, the trend toward a nation of men, not laws, is very well along now. And going back may soon no longer be a peaceful option.

Posted by: David R Remer at April 8, 2005 04:46 AM
Comment #50255

This is just like Terri Schiavo. There is now talk of punishing the Judges who defied the Conservatives. I find it especially galling that only foreigners are subject to this nonsense. When I think of how the USA squeals like a stuck pig everytime an American is imprisoned, it is degrading.

Posted by: Aldous at April 8, 2005 09:00 AM
Comment #50262

Misha -
As someone connected to these trials, perhaps you can enlighten me: why in the world is the administration making this stink about the prisoners? Why can’t they just throw people like Hamdan (a driver, not a conspirator, apparently) into a P.O.W. camp and let them rot? I’m not deeply familiar with the political/legal facts of this case and others, but there’s obviously some powerful reasons driving this apparently high-effort, low-result push by the administration. My question is ‘why?’ What are the those reasons?

Posted by: Chops at April 8, 2005 11:44 AM
Comment #50296

Chops:
“My question is ‘why?’ What are the those reasons?”

Hm, some sort of political agenda perhaps?

Posted by: Zeek at April 8, 2005 04:03 PM
Comment #50349

Misha,

Where do you think this guy should be tried?

If he’s not an American citizen, and captured on a battlefield, he can be put in a POW camp forever or he can go before a military court.

I don’t think he was just a taxi driver in a cab that Bin Laden just happened to ride in once.

I’d just put him in one of those dog-kennels in GITMO and let him rot.

If he is an American citizen, send him to NYC for a jury trial, charged with treason and 3,000 counts of murder#1.

I have a hard time feeling sorry for him.

Posted by: Beagle at April 9, 2005 11:40 AM
Comment #50355

Hm, whatever did happen to Osama?

Posted by: Zeek at April 9, 2005 01:05 PM
Comment #50381

Beagle:

And if he is innocent of conspiring to commit the crimes he is accused of? That is the one possibility you seem to have forgotten, and the presumption of innocence is probably one of the most important hallmarks of our normal due process.

Posted by: Jarin at April 9, 2005 08:20 PM
Comment #50404

Chops:

There are several possibilities. First, the president may be tryign to establish this legal authority to hold these tribunals- something no president has done since the WWII-era. He wants to establish precedent that they are legal. A less cynical approach is simply that he wants to get them out of the legal limbo of detention, and wants to prove their guilty.

Beagle- how woudl you charge a man with 3K counts of MURDER 1 (which is intentional murder with premediation) for being someone’s drive. The worst the government has even charged him with is conspiracy, which is far for murder 1. In any case, I would prefer he be tried in a federal court, with certain procedures they currently use to keep information secret being employeed. Barring that, I would like to see him tried before a court martial, as a court martial is independent from the president, and purposefully avoids the problem of command influence, and ever-changing rules are the president’s whim… Also, you dont need to feel sorry for him- thats not the point. due process aought to be afforded to every person, regardless of your emotions toward them…

Posted by: Misha Tseytlin at April 10, 2005 02:17 AM
Comment #51077

No, Beagle, what you have a hard time with is the Constitution and the Bill of Rights with their presumption of innocence until proven guilty. Your verdict is in without due process. How anti-American is that? Very!

Posted by: David R. Remer at April 14, 2005 11:56 PM
Comment #51479

I have to agree

Posted by: Sports Betting at April 19, 2005 09:44 PM