In a Dignified and Professional MannerThe circus-like atmosphere of the military commissions in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, carried on yesterday in top form. Although the primary issue addressed selection of counsel for the accused routinely arises and is professionally dealt with in federal court, the hearing today left the proceedings against Omar Khadr in tatters. When all was said and done and most of it was said and done by the presiding judge, Colonel Parrish, who made little effort to conceal his anger and frustration with Khadr's lawyers the judge had slashed Khadr's trial team of three lawyers to a provisional one, depending on the outcome of yet another hearing set for July. The preliminary yet fundamental issue of representation for Khadr took center stage this morning amidst vitriolic infighting between the chief of the military-commissions defense office and one of the attorneys detailed from that office to represent Khadr. Although the particulars of the fight are secret, documented in a sealed filing, this much we know: the judge is not happy. And yet, shortly after criticizing Khadr's lawyers, the judge went to some effort to praise Khadr himself: "Mr. Khadr is coming across in a dignified and professional manner and is very well spoken this morning." As even the judge himself recognized, however, today's and July's proceedings might be wasted effort. President Obama might, for example, fundamentally alter the commissions or, more modestly, change the rules regarding selection of counsel for those tried before the commissions-both possibilities mentioned by the president in his speech at the National Archives. Perhaps more significantly for Khadr's case in particular, the president might decide not to try Khadr before a military commission at all. These possibilities left most present at today's hearing wondering why anyone bothered to show up, and they highlighted the essential failure of military commissions: they are ad hoc proceedings with few rules and even fewer precedents, with both rules and precedents, sparse as they are, subject to change at any time. It is difficult to imagine such a broken-down apparatus producing just results viewed with legitimacy by the American people, or by others whose respect we also need in our fight for our principles. But the apparatus continues to churn and sputter in Khadr's case, leaving a swath of confusion in its wake. (More Guantanamo dispatches here.)
Heads: Detention, Tails: DetentionIt is difficult to divine the purpose of today's closed-door session and tomorrow's on-the-record hearing of the military commissions at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. Although President Obama called for the suspension of the Bush-era commissions shortly after taking office four months ago, and despite his recent announcement of his plan to "fix" the commissions, the mystery that is Guantánamo marches on, seemingly oblivious to state-side developments. The ostensible goal of the hearings is to resolve two preliminary issues in the military-commission trial of Omar Khadr: his selection of counsel - an issue that has plagued virtually every military-commission proceeding - and the prosecution's request for a stay of the proceedings. But resolution of those two issues seems a meaningless endeavor in light of President Obama's decision to scrap the current military commissions and even more so given the replacement for them that President Obama outlined in his speech at the National Archives. In that speech, the president focused on one overriding theme: he will under no circumstances release someone who he considers to be "dangerous," whether or not he can prove it. Around that organizing principle, the president constructed a simple system of detention. If there is good evidence of a detainee's guilt, he will try that detainee in federal court. If there is perhaps some evidence, but it is tainted by coercion or for some other reason would not convince a federal court of the detainee's guilt, he will try the detainee before a military commission, where the rules are rigged in favor of the prosecution. And if there is no viable evidence of guilt, but the president really thinks the detainee is dangerous, the president will simply detain him - indefinitely and preventively. This plan, if carried out, would give President Obama the dubious distinction of being the first president in our nation's history to seek congressional codification of an expansive system of preventive detention. Perhaps even more telling, however, the plan amounts to a plea for Congress to enshrine into law, perhaps with some as-of-yet-undefined oversight, the power that President Bush asserted without any statutory support. It is in the shadow of this heads-I-win-tails-I-win system of guaranteed detention that this weekend's military-commission hearings take place. What purpose they serve is a mystery to most here. But on they will go. (More to come after tomorrow's on-the-record hearing.)
Court Orders Release of Detainee Abuse PhotosYesterday, the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the government to release 21 photographs depicting the abuse of detainees by U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. The decision comes as part of the ACLU's long-running battle to expose government misconduct at detention facilities, and is a clear victory for the public's right to know. It also joins a continually growing catalogue of judicial criticism of the Bush administration's handling of the so-called "war on terror." And there is no doubt that the 2nd Circuit's recent decision will not be the last judicial opinion on the matter. What is unique about the case, however, is that it puts in historical context this administration's ever-strained relationship with the Geneva Conventions. When the ACLU and others first requested access (PDF) from the government to the now-infamous photos of abuse at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, the government responded that disclosure would be an "unwarranted invasion of privacy" of the detainees in the pictures. According to the government, the detainees' privacy justified keeping the photos from the public, even if—as the ACLU requested—all identifying features in the photos were obscured. Not surprisingly, both the trial and appellate courts rejected the argument. After all, if you cannot recognize the detainees in the pictures because their faces and distinguishing features have been replaced by black boxes, how can their privacy be at stake? What is surprising, however, is the government's partial reliance on the Geneva Conventions to make this argument. The Third and Fourth Geneva Conventions protect prisoners of war and detained civilians from "insults and public curiosity." (An extreme example of subjecting a prisoner to "public curiosity" might be parading that prisoner in shackles down a street lined with jeering civilians.) The government argued, in the court's words, that "a photograph of abuse is so humiliating that its dissemination always opens the detainee to 'public curiosity.'" The argument is surprising, of course, because the same administration maintained for years that the Geneva Conventions do not apply to any of the detainees in Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay. It is surprising because the same administration relied upon its determination that the Geneva Conventions do not apply to justify its use of barbaric and inhumane interrogation methods in the first place. It is surprising because there would be no photos of abuse to request had the government cared this much about the Geneva Conventions before the abuses occurred and the photos were taken. What is not surprising is the 2nd Circuit's rejection of the government's attempt to seek refuge in the Geneva Conventions. The Geneva Conventions were designed to prevent the abuse of prisoners, not to derail efforts to hold the government accountable for those abuses. In fact, as the court recognized, the government's argument based upon the Geneva Conventions—that releasing photos of abuse violates the Geneva Conventions even when identifying features are redacted—is quite novel. Previous administrations have taken the opposite view. Most notably, after World War II, it was the U.S. government that widely released photos of prisoners in Japanese and German prison and concentration camps. Those pictures showed emaciated prisoners, subjugated detainees, and even corpses. But the United States championed the use of the photos as a means of holding the perpetrators accountable. It is therefore quite ironic that this administration has attempted to suppress efforts to use evidence of its misconduct to hold it accountable. And even more so that it cites the Geneva Conventions in support. Fortunately, the Geneva Conventions and their rationale were vindicated by the 2nd Circuit: "Release of the photographs is likely to further the purposes of the Geneva Conventions by deterring future abuse of prisoners." We can only hope. |
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