|
Dr. Walid Phares
Are We at War or Prosecuting Criminals?
November 28, 2008
Last Thursday’s order by a federal judge to release
five Algerian detainees from Guantanamo Bay prison
reopens the complex debate about the principle of
holding prisoners of war during wartime. But, and
this may be even more important, it also reopens the
debate inside the three branches of government in
the United States over whether or not our nation is
actually at war.
The case at hand will certainly be discussed by
legal specialists on both sides of the debate. Here
is the chain of legal events that will be
scrutinized: The first "civilian court” ruling -–
for terrorism suspects who have challenged their
detention –- found that the five men "could not be
held indefinitely as enemy combatants.” Thus, in
this instance U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon
has essentially informed the government that failing
an official and legally declared war, one cannot
detain individuals who have not been proven guilty
of crimes or of material participation in terrorism.
Last summer the Supreme Court granted the Guantanamo
detainees (see the Boumediene case) "the right to
challenge their imprisonment.” The real statement
there was that since there is no legal basis for the
War on Terror, the so-called "prisoners of war” are
in fact detained under the principles of criminal
law not the international law of war.
So when U.S. forces arrest individuals suspected of
being enemy combatants the government must prove
that each individual was actually waging war. But
since civilian courts do not recognize the
"existence” of such war, the government must prove
that each person detained was physically involved in
an illegal act leading to violence against the
United States or its allied interests.
Judge Leon ruled that the U.S. government "failed to
prove that five of the six Algerians held at
Guantanamo Bay since January 20, 2002, were enemy
combatants headed to Afghanistan to fight against
the United States.” According to FOX News, "a senior
Department of Defense official said the government’s
case was hampered because the CIA would not hand
over the classified information it had obtained in
interrogating the 6 suspects.” If the CIA had
released the evidence, would the court have ruled
otherwise?
What these legal developments tell us is that the
United States’ counterterrorism campaign is squeezed
between two worlds: On the one hand, our nation’s
leaders have been acting as if we are in a state of
war with an enemy; and on another hand the Judicial
system is telling us that it is basing its rulings
solely on criminal law.
Meanwhile the Jihadists are winning. They meet U.S.
forces on the battlefield and ask to be treated
under the Geneva Conventions — which they do not
recognize to begin with. If they are apprehended and
brought into custody, they expect to swim through
the legal system. In conventional wars, when a unit
from the enemy forces is captured, the courts do not
rule on each fighter’s particular posture at the
time of capture. When you listen to the judges’
rulings on the detainees’ individual cases, they
appear to be on solid ground, upholding the
Constitution. But when you contrast their rulings
with the government’s view then the process seems
tragicomic.
A state of war with an enemy has its own logic and
its own procedures. Enemies are kept under the
Geneva Conventions’ protection until the conflict
ends. War criminals are tried under international
law. Fighters or enemy combatants cannot be tried in
civilian courts as criminals. But if there is no
state of war, then there shouldn’t be detention
centers to begin with. Apprehended criminals are
processed under the laws of the land and courts are
sovereign in dealing with the fate of each and every
suspect under arrest. In short we can’t have two
legal tracks at once. — Either the U.S. is at war
with a global enemy or is it not.
The Bush administration has struggled with the legal
consequences of its War on Terror. The Obama
administration will inherit the issue and must make
a decision. It can continue with the hybrid system
we have now, perhaps pushing it further towards a
criminal procedure while U.S. forces wage a
full-fledged war in Afghanistan –- if not elsewhere.
If America won’t withdraw from the region as
requested by Al Qaeda and Iran –- she will continue
to find herself in a confrontation with her enemies
some of whom may be captured. What lies ahead for
the United States will be more complicated than even
our current situation.
My advice to the forthcoming administration is to
begin at the top, where the current administration
has stopped: Identify the enemy and take a stand on
the global conflict. |