Are you a potential terror suspect? How would you know if you were? Would attending anti-war rallies be a black mark against you in the Fed’s eyes? Would making nasty references to the administration on your blog qualify? We generally assume that the answer would be a resounding “NO!” to those questions, but can you be sure?
For example, we know that innocent people can be put on the government’s terror watch list for “acting suspiciously” during a domestic or international flight, merely so some US Air Marshals can meet their monthly quotas. We know that local police and government intelligence agencies are actively engaged in widespread surveillance, and even infiltration by undercover police officers of groups that oppose the war in Iraq.
And now we learn that the Bush administration is proposing legislation that would allow the government to discard the protections under the Bill of Rights to which you are entitled should someone in federal law enforcement determine you are a terror threat:
WASHINGTON — U.S. citizens suspected of terrorism ties might be detained indefinitely and barred from access to civilian courts under legislation proposed by the Bush administration, say legal experts reviewing an early version of the bill. […]
According to the draft, the military would be allowed to detain all “enemy combatants” until hostilities cease. The bill defines enemy combatants as anyone “engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners who has committed an act that violates the law of war and this statute.”
Legal experts said Friday that such language is dangerously broad and could authorize the military to detain indefinitely U.S. citizens who had only tenuous ties to terrorism networks.
“That’s the big question … the definition of who can be detained,” said Martin Lederman, a law professor at Georgetown University who posted a copy of the bill to a Web log.
Scott L. Silliman, a retired Air Force judge advocate, said the broad definition of enemy combatants is alarming because a U.S. citizen loosely suspected of terrorism ties would lose access to a civilian court — and all the rights that come with it.
Cont.
What constitutes “terrorist ties?” In other words, what specific acts or “associations” could land you in a cell at Guantanamo Bay, with no access to your family, friends or legal representation. With no official policy to prevent “coercive interrogation techniques” just short of death or major organ failure to be used against you. The proposed legislation doesn’t say, so I imagine it would be up to whomever is in charge of the Department of Justice to decide. Now who could that be? Oh yes. This guy:
Gonzales authored a controversial memo in January of 2002 that explored whether Article III of the Geneva Convention even applied to Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters captured in Afghanistan and held in concentration facilities around the world, including Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The memo made several arguments both for and against providing Article III protection to Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters. He concluded that Article III was outdated and ill-suited for dealing with captured Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters. He described as “quaint” the provisions that require providing captured Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters “commissary privileges, scrip, athletic uniforms, and scientific instruments”. He also argued that existing military regulations and instructions from the President were more than adequate to ensure that the principles of the Geneva Convention would be applied. He also argued that undefined language in the Geneva Convention, such as “outrages upon personal dignity” and “inhuman treatment”, could make officials and military leaders subject to the War Crimes Act of 1996 if mistreatment was discovered.
A secret 2002 Justice Department memorandum cleared by Gonzales argued that laws prohibiting torture do “not apply to the president’s detention and interrogation of enemy combatants”, and that the pain caused by interrogation must include “injury such as death, organ failure, or serious impairment of body functions — in order to constitute torture”. […]
Gonzales faced further controversy when he authored the Presidential Order which authorized the use of military tribunals to try terrorist suspects. He fought with Congress to keep vice-president Dick Cheney’s Energy task force documents from being reviewed. Gonzales was also an early advocate of the controversial USA PATRIOT Act. He is also accused of being involved in the decision to allow foreign combatants in U.S. custody to be deported to nations that allow torture, in order to extract further information from them; despite the mounting evidence, he denies that he has ever supported this measure. […]
Need I remind you, Abu Gonzales has also been the administration’s point mean in defense of the federal government’s secret and unprecendent warrantless electronic surveillance of American citizens by the NSA and your local telecom providers? We still don’t know the full extent of those programs, but we do know he has been their most avid defender. Indeed, he is responsible for the grand jury investigations into the whistleblowers who provided the information to the New York Times, and has even threatened prosecutions of the reporters involved in these stories.
So. Not exactly someone who is overly concerned with protecting the rights of American citizens, is he? Yet, he would be responsible for determining the standards to be used for the arrest and detention of “terror suspects” should this bill, as presently constituted, pass Congress and be signed into law by the President. A rather chilling prospect, if I do say so.
I can see the right wing spin already. You have to trust your President in a time of war. Or maybe something along this line: You don’t have any civil liberties if you’re dead. In other words, they will argue that we should abandon our Constitution, and our precious “freedoms” (which we are supposedly fighting for in Iraq and Afghanistan) and put our trust and faith in George Bush to do the right thing.
Well I’m sorry, my conservative friends but I don’t belong to the Church of Dubya. I don’t worship at the shrine of all things Bush. And I certainly don’t trust him to act responsibly when my civil liberties are on the line.
Frankly, anyone who defends this legislation is committing treason in my eyes. Treason to our Constitution and to each and every American whose hopes and dreams are tied into the very rights and liberties that document insures. And that is precisely the message I am going to send to my representatives in Congress. Because we don’t need to sell our birthright for a false sense of security.
For the day we do is the day America dies.
This leaves me..just.. wordless.
And stunned, long after I thought nothing else this nightmare of an adminstration could possibly come up with could stun me any more.
you eventually self-destruct in American politics!
I do believe the majority of Americans are socially conservative and not overly informed or bright, but there is a pale line or limit that can be crossed by out-of-control (with respect to constitutional rights and laws) politicians. Nixon was high flying and quickly self-destructed because of his own paranoia. Bush may or may not be paranoid, but he is not too informed about Americans desire for basic freedoms. Just the proposal of this law will put another stake into the heart of the Repub conservative vampire, IMO. Just let the info get out there and let the voters digest it a while longer.
The problem with the Nixon analogy is that this administration has two primary players–Cheney and Rumsfeld–who think that Nixon’s mistake was not that he overstepped but that he backed down. They don’t intend to let Bush make the same “mistake.”
Nixon did not back down! He did not have a Repub Congress so that when he tried to fire certain folks and “take over” the government through executive contgrol, he failed! He did try, however.
You are correct that Bush will have more initial potential success in his executive takeover attempts because of the tainted, constitutionally inept Congress. That is why the November elections this year and in 08 are so important because if people really do value freedom and constitutional protections of that freedom, they will TAKE CONTROL of the Congress from the repubs. Then Bush’s endeavors will be doomed.
I must be confident that such Congressional control will eventually (06 or 08) be taken away from the fascist repubs. What other realistic hope could an optimist have unless fascist theocracy is really our fate. I do not believe this is our fate, but we get what we deserve in the end, I guess.
Canadian citizen,Maher Arar?
Enemey combatants according to the fascist warpigs
Military families speak out
Iraq War Veterans Against the War
Veterans for Peace
Raging Grannies
CodePink
anyone with a fucking brain or library card
You have to trust your President in a time of war.
I think Republicans are aware they need better spin than that, the vast majority of American no longer trust this President.
This kind of crap should be easy to counter, Republicans have been venerating the founding fathers as the source of all good for more than a generation, and chucking the constitution completely is the greatest possible crime under the “original intent” doctrine Scalia and the like have been promoting. Piggybacking on their prior efforts to demagogue the issue shouldn’t be that hard.