Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by PeZook »

TheHammer wrote:
Americans are overwhelmingly opposed to closing the detention center for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay and moving some of the detainees to prisons on U.S. soil, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds.
By more than 2-1, those surveyed say Guantanamo shouldn't be closed. By more than 3-1, they oppose moving some of the accused terrorists housed there to prisons in their own states.
Great, Americans are panicky amoral fucks. Funny how Obama managed to get elected while promising to close the prison, hmm? By your logic, he should've been crucified.
The Hammer wrote:And to your point, say for someone was abducted someone who was innocent, but after 6-8 years in the Bush controlled GITMO, he swears to Allah that if he ever gets out he's going to make the US pay in blood. Should he just be let go? An idealist might say "absolutely" but a realist would most likely say "absolutely not". I'm not saying he should be locked up for the rest of his life or killed, but you have to deal with that situation.
Oh, awesome.

So if you imprison an innocent man for 15 years, and he quietly swears to God he'll kill the judge who stuck him in there, the correct thing to do is to keep him imprisoned indefinitely?

Because that's what you're suggesting here. There are only two options for such men: let them go or keep them in prison. There's no other way to "deal" with the situation. Well, except for murder, but you (thankfully) think that's out.

Is it really so hard to, you know, send them home? Hand them some money as reparations (say, the cost of keeping them locked up for another decade that you just saved), some food and a letter of apology and just put them in the place you abducted them from. Or any other they point out as long as it's in Iraqistani territorry you control.

They won't be able to significantly endanger the US from Iraqistan, and maybe some of them will abandon thoughts of vengeance this way. You guys could've also set up a proper court of law, rather than kangaroo military "tribunals". Or at least fucking decide which goddamn laws apply to them. By fiat, if necessary: you're already pissing all over any conceivable legal system by just keeping them in gitmo.

HOLY SHIT A SOLUTION

But that would require a spine.

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I always found it very amusing how the Greatest Country In The World (TM) is so scared of being attacked and destroyed by terrorists that it ends up killing more people than all the terrorists in the XXth century combined.

No western country was ever destroyed or even significantly destabilized by terrorism. Ever. And we've had a lot of it in the XXth century.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Serafina wrote:
I didn't say damaging. I said political suicide. If he threw open the doors and let them all out, Republicans would crucify him in the media with the terrorist boogeyman. If even ONE of them was later found to have been guilty of an act of terror, Then you'll get a fine Republican President in there who will reverse the progress Obama has made to this point.
So what? Your argument is still "it would give us a bad image, therefore it's okay to wrongfully imprision lot's of people".
They are already imprisoned. Everyone seems to see the Military tribunals as a bad thing, but the reality is that the trials represent an opportunity for that to end for those found not guilty. As opposed to the trialess indeterminate detentions from the Bush era.

What I want people to recognize the fact that Obama could not realisitically go in and grant freedom to everyone detained at Guantanom because the reality is many of them DO deserve to be imprisoned.
Because the word innocent might be too strong. I'd prefer the term "not guilty" I suppose.
:roll: They ARE innocent in regard to the crimes they are accused of (at least some of them most likely, obviously not everyone).
Fine. I really don't want to debate the semantics. I will grant that some people there are innocent, but in the severe minority.
I believe the point of the article is that most of them are now getting trials. Military trials certainly, but they are trials none the less. Ironically, many of them probably have more chance at a fair trial now than they would have had in their own countries of Iraq, Afghanistan, et. al.
And that makes it any better? Their countries would not have them imprisoned in the first place. And while they MIGHT get a fair trial, they certainly did NOT get a fair procedure.

Your major point seem to be "Obama can't release them, because the american public would hate him for it". That is likely true. However, if that is the case, then the american public is at fault for what is happening , because they are ultimately the ones responsible for it. Furthermore, Obama hasn't actually made an effort to convince the public that releasing those in Guantanamo would be the right thing to do, which is something that he can and should do.
My major point is that you are seeing significant progress under Obama that you did not see under Bush in the realm of giving these men a chance to be heard in court.

I don't agree with your notion that "releasing those in Guantanamo would be the right thing to do". Again, while SOME of them are innocent who should and will be released, a good number of them deserve to be imprisoned whether its at Guantanamo or some other maximum security prison. The trials is the beggining to sorting out who belongs in which group.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Serafina »

They are already imprisoned. Everyone seems to see the Military tribunals as a bad thing, but the reality is that the trials represent an opportunity for that to end for those found not guilty. As opposed to the trialess indeterminate detentions from the Bush era.
:roll: Stop nitpicking. You are KEEPING them imprisoned. Heck, falsely imprisoning someone is understandable, keeping him in prison despite being innocent is not.
What I want people to recognize the fact that Obama could not realisitically go in and grant freedom to everyone detained at Guantanom because the reality is many of them DO deserve to be imprisoned.
No one here is arguing "just release them all". But if you do not have enough evidence to convict them in a trial, you have NO legal or moral ground to keep them imprisoned.
Fine. I really don't want to debate the semantics. I will grant that some people there are innocent, but in the severe minority.
As evidenced by what?


Also, i would like you to adress PeZooks point - Obama run while stating that he WOULD hold fair trials for those in Guantanamo, so your argument that it would be "political suicide" is clearly bullshit.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

PeZook wrote:
TheHammer wrote:
Americans are overwhelmingly opposed to closing the detention center for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay and moving some of the detainees to prisons on U.S. soil, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds.
By more than 2-1, those surveyed say Guantanamo shouldn't be closed. By more than 3-1, they oppose moving some of the accused terrorists housed there to prisons in their own states.
Great, Americans are panicky amoral fucks. Funny how Obama managed to get elected while promising to close the prison, hmm? By your logic, he should've been crucified.
While I can't speak for "all Americans" I do feel like the long term goal is for the prison to be closed. But not that the doors be thrown open so everyone there can go free regardless of who they are. I think most Americans want it done in a controlled manner, so that the guilty are punished and locked away, while the innocent are set free and compensated.
The Hammer wrote:And to your point, say for someone was abducted someone who was innocent, but after 6-8 years in the Bush controlled GITMO, he swears to Allah that if he ever gets out he's going to make the US pay in blood. Should he just be let go? An idealist might say "absolutely" but a realist would most likely say "absolutely not". I'm not saying he should be locked up for the rest of his life or killed, but you have to deal with that situation.
Oh, awesome.

So if you imprison an innocent man for 15 years, and he quietly swears to God he'll kill the judge who stuck him in there, the correct thing to do is to keep him imprisoned indefinitely?
That's not what I said. I said you have to deal with that situation. You in fact proposed a method to deal with the situation below:
Because that's what you're suggesting here. There are only two options for such men: let them go or keep them in prison. There's no other way to "deal" with the situation. Well, except for murder, but you (thankfully) think that's out.

Is it really so hard to, you know, send them home? Hand them some money as reparations (say, the cost of keeping them locked up for another decade that you just saved), some food and a letter of apology and just put them in the place you abducted them from. Or any other they point out as long as it's in Iraqistani territorry you control.
If that's going to be sufficient then I think that would be one way to go. And perfectly reasonable in some cases. If compensation for wrongful detention is adequate to "buy them off" so to speak, then great.
They won't be able to significantly endanger the US from Iraqistan, and maybe some of them will abandon thoughts of vengeance this way. You guys could've also set up a proper court of law, rather than kangaroo military "tribunals". Or at least fucking decide which goddamn laws apply to them. By fiat, if necessary: you're already pissing all over any conceivable legal system by just keeping them in gitmo.
I've already acknowledged its not an ideal situation. However, I think its the best to hope for given the circumstances. Steps were taken to alleviate complaints from the defense about fairness.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Eleas »

TheHammer wrote:Because you have to first determine if they were in fact at the wrong place at the wrong time. I would guess that this group would be in the minority of the people held at Guantamo.
  1. That's not how due process should work. First, you have to determine if they in fact should be imprisoned at all.
  2. Your "guess" is immaterial. Given the flagrant human rights abuses and complete disregard for human rights and justice shown by the US in handling this, I could speculate that nobody held at these facilities was at the moment of capture either a terrorist or a member of al-Qaeda. Of course, it would be bollocks, but it is certainly less unlikely than your blithering idiocy.
You don't fucking get it. These people are innocent, because you can't very well call them "guilty" without inviting the question "of what?"
What massive comfort for the people that were sold as terrorists to the US by greedy warlords.
I agree that sucks. Hopefully, after trial, most of those people will be set free and compensated as best they can be.
Now who's being naïve? What evidence is there that the US would do such a thing? Take the naturalised American citizens of Japanese descent who happened to be imprisoned in camps far less abominable than these current prisons. Know when they were given compensation? 1989. They were treated far better and held for far shorter than the current victims are. And they were US citizens.

I'm saying the answer to injustice is prudence. What specifically must be done depends greatly on the individual involved.
It also depends on a basic sense of said justice. Which is so clearly lacking, else your country would be able to explain whether these people (POWs of countries you have unjustly invaded) even are what you say they are (let alone that the US has any business detaining them).

...except these are, of course, not POWs at all. You can't torture POWs, and the US really needs to torture its prisoners.


TheHammer, on particularly bad days, I'm ashamed to say I find myself wishing people like you would fall afoul of the very system you support. You have not shown that any of these prisoners is guilty, preferring instead to rely on your own gut feeling. You have furthermore not shown that the US has any right to punish anyone involved, being as it is so vastly bankrupt in terms of its own involvement in the situation. You have, not to put too fine a point on it, not explained how any charges the US cares to make could hold legitimacy, given that the US is also jury and executioner.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Rahvin »

the reality is many of them DO deserve to be imprisoned.
As determined by who?

Isn't that what a trial \ is for?

On what basis, other than their imprisonment, are you basing that statement? If I stick you in prison, is that good enough reason by itself to presume that you're probably guilty? Even if I haven;t accused you of a specific crime?

Do the words "cognitive dissonance" mean anything to you?
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Serafina wrote:
They are already imprisoned. Everyone seems to see the Military tribunals as a bad thing, but the reality is that the trials represent an opportunity for that to end for those found not guilty. As opposed to the trialess indeterminate detentions from the Bush era.
:roll: Stop nitpicking. You are KEEPING them imprisoned. Heck, falsely imprisoning someone is understandable, keeping him in prison despite being innocent is not.
What I want people to recognize the fact that Obama could not realisitically go in and grant freedom to everyone detained at Guantanom because the reality is many of them DO deserve to be imprisoned.
No one here is arguing "just release them all". But if you do not have enough evidence to convict them in a trial, you have NO legal or moral ground to keep them imprisoned.
They are getting trials now. And I read your statements to mean "just release them all". If you aren't saying that, then maybe we don't disagree as much as either of us thinks.
Fine. I really don't want to debate the semantics. I will grant that some people there are innocent, but in the severe minority.
As evidenced by what?
Common sense tells me that there is a greater likliehood of the majority being guilty rather than innocent. Admittedly that is my opinion. If the results of the trials show most of them going free, then I'll admit I was wrong.
Also, i would like you to adress PeZooks point - Obama run while stating that he WOULD hold fair trials for those in Guantanamo, so your argument that it would be "political suicide" is clearly bullshit.
My contention is that Obama is doing just that, specifically re-writing rules that the defense had objected to in order to make the trials more fair. What would be political suicide would be to simply let them go as some have contended.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Eleas wrote:
TheHammer wrote:Because you have to first determine if they were in fact at the wrong place at the wrong time. I would guess that this group would be in the minority of the people held at Guantamo.
  1. That's not how due process should work. First, you have to determine if they in fact should be imprisoned at all.
Bullshit.

If I'm seen running down the street near a robbery and fit the description of the robbery suspect I'll be arrested. Maybe I was just out jogging. But the police don't know that. I'm detained, questioned, and will likely spend time in jail even while innocent. Later at trial it is determined whether I should have been imprisoned at all. And while the timing may be different for gitmo detainees, the "process" is the same.
[*] Your "guess" is immaterial. Given the flagrant human rights abuses and complete disregard for human rights and justice shown by the US in handling this, I could speculate that nobody held at these facilities was at the moment of capture either a terrorist or a member of al-Qaeda. Of course, it would be bollocks, but it is certainly less unlikely than your blithering idiocy.[/list]
You're right my "guess" is immaterial. The trials will determine who is guilty and who is innocent. Therefore we can't let any of them go until they've had their trial.
You don't fucking get it. These people are innocent, because you can't very well call them "guilty" without inviting the question "of what?"
I get it perfectly. It will be determined "of what" at the trials which will now be occuring.
What massive comfort for the people that were sold as terrorists to the US by greedy warlords.
I agree that sucks. Hopefully, after trial, most of those people will be set free and compensated as best they can be.
Now who's being naïve? What evidence is there that the US would do such a thing? Take the naturalised American citizens of Japanese descent who happened to be imprisoned in camps far less abominable than these current prisons. Know when they were given compensation? 1989. They were treated far better and held for far shorter than the current victims are. And they were US citizens.
So your argument is what exactly? That ths US has in fact compensated people it wrongly imprisoned or detained?
GITMO detainees might not get a damned thing, but its not beyond the realm of possibility. I said that I HOPED they would be compensated.
I'm saying the answer to injustice is prudence. What specifically must be done depends greatly on the individual involved.
It also depends on a basic sense of said justice. Which is so clearly lacking, else your country would be able to explain whether these people (POWs of countries you have unjustly invaded) even are what you say they are (let alone that the US has any business detaining them).

...except these are, of course, not POWs at all. You can't torture POWs, and the US really needs to torture its prisoners.
Common sense tells me otherwise. I highly doubt that the government detained a bunch of innocent people at great expense just for the hell of it. The more LIKELY scenario is that the majority of these people are guilty, and that a minority of them were unjustly captured.

But, like I said, if it comes out later that the majority were all innocent then I'll gladly admit I was wrong.
TheHammer, on particularly bad days, I'm ashamed to say I find myself wishing people like you would fall afoul of the very system you support. You have not shown that any of these prisoners is guilty, preferring instead to rely on your own gut feeling. You have furthermore not shown that the US has any right to punish anyone involved, being as it is so vastly bankrupt in terms of its own involvement in the situation. You have, not to put too fine a point on it, not explained how any charges the US cares to make could hold legitimacy, given that the US is also jury and executioner.
As I've said over and over again, I'm not presuming to pre-judge any of the prisoners, therefore I don't need to fucking show they are guilty.

And you are trying to drag this into a debate about international rights which quite frankly is beyond the scope of what I'm arguing which is as follows:

The Obama adminstration has made great progress in giving GITMO detainees the right to trials that they did not have under the Bush administration. Detainees now have a right to trial under rules that were re-written with the specific intent of making things "more fair" for the defense. While not an ideal scenario, it is the best that could be hoped for given the current political climate in the United States.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Rahvin wrote:
the reality is many of them DO deserve to be imprisoned.
As determined by who?

Isn't that what a trial \ is for?

On what basis, other than their imprisonment, are you basing that statement? If I stick you in prison, is that good enough reason by itself to presume that you're probably guilty? Even if I haven;t accused you of a specific crime?

Do the words "cognitive dissonance" mean anything to you?
I can't see why the government would spend the time, money, and effort to detain these people if it had "no reason" to do so. And I'm a big believer that when there is smoke there is usually fire. Does that preclude a mistake being made? Certainly not, but I'd dare say most of the people there will be proven at trial to have been deserving of being imprisoned. As stated previously, if it turns out I'm wrong I'll come back and admit it.

I do feel that these trials should have happened long before now. But they are happening now. Evidence is going to be presented from both sides. And in the end we'll see why these people were detained to begin with and whether or not it was warranted.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Rahvin »

Common sense tells me that there is a greater likliehood of the majority being guilty rather than innocent. Admittedly that is my opinion.
You use "common sense" like the word "magic" - you've presented no argument. You're really just saying that your gut tells you that these guys are guilty. You have no evidence that suggests their guilt beyond the fact that they've been imprisoned. You established your opinion the moment you knew they were Gitmo detainees, and are now trying to defend that initial reaction, without any actual evidence or reasoned argument for the belief that "most" of them are "probably" guilty.

Without evidence and argument, your opinion is invalid. "Opinion" doesn't mean "I just get to say whatever I want, and it's just as valid as any other person's opinion." If your "opinion" is that the Earth is flat, your "opinion" is wrong as a matter of simple fact. If your "opinion" is that there exists a teacup orbiting Mars, with no evidence giving you a reason to hold that opinion, your opinion is worthless.

So think about it. Why do you think that "most" of the detainees are "probably" guilty? What do you think they're "probably" guilty of, since no actual charges have been filed? Give us an actual reason - what's your evidence and chain of logic?
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Edi »

You're so full of shit it's oozing out of your ears, mouth and nose, TheHammer.

The overwhelming preponderance of evidence shows that a lot of people in Guantanamo are innocent of anything they have been accused of and the US government even knows this. As far as the US compensating anyone for anything it might have done, especially foreign citizens, look up the name of Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen who was detained by US authorities without basis, shipped off to Syria to be tortured only to be returned months later and finally tossed back to Canada, then denied standing in US courts by the government based on the ridiculous state secrets doctrine. He got sweet fuckall from the US and the only compensation he got was from the Canadian government.

If you want to dig deeper into the mire of Guantanamo, there's heaps, piles, stacks and mountains of material to back it up. As early as 2005, there were articles in Time Magazine where military personnel who oversaw the Bagram prison and the transfers from there to Gitmo said that the process was broken. People who got detained were put on a list and the most dangerous ones shipped off to Guantanamo. The ones below them moved up the list regardless of their threat level and were then sent to Gitmo in their turn. Some of these people raised it with their superiors and said they knew these people were no threat and had no business being on the list. They were told that since these people were on the list, they must have been guilty of something. Once on the list, there was no fucking way off of it.

That's the goddamn level of incompetence that has pervaded the entire process from the get-go.

PeZook is entirely correct in characterizing the US as a nation of amoral cowards where this issue is concerned. Grow a fucking spine and stop with the evasions already. All you have is a gut feeling about "common sense" and the fairytales about American exceptionalism and infallibility that you've been forcefed since birth. They just don't cut it here.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Edi wrote:You're so full of shit it's oozing out of your ears, mouth and nose, TheHammer.

The overwhelming preponderance of evidence shows that a lot of people in Guantanamo are innocent of anything they have been accused of and the US government even knows this. As far as the US compensating anyone for anything it might have done, especially foreign citizens, look up the name of Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen who was detained by US authorities without basis, shipped off to Syria to be tortured only to be returned months later and finally tossed back to Canada, then denied standing in US courts by the government based on the ridiculous state secrets doctrine. He got sweet fuckall from the US and the only compensation he got was from the Canadian government.

If you want to dig deeper into the mire of Guantanamo, there's heaps, piles, stacks and mountains of material to back it up. As early as 2005, there were articles in Time Magazine where military personnel who oversaw the Bagram prison and the transfers from there to Gitmo said that the process was broken. People who got detained were put on a list and the most dangerous ones shipped off to Guantanamo. The ones below them moved up the list regardless of their threat level and were then sent to Gitmo in their turn. Some of these people raised it with their superiors and said they knew these people were no threat and had no business being on the list. They were told that since these people were on the list, they must have been guilty of something. Once on the list, there was no fucking way off of it.

That's the goddamn level of incompetence that has pervaded the entire process from the get-go.

PeZook is entirely correct in characterizing the US as a nation of amoral cowards where this issue is concerned. Grow a fucking spine and stop with the evasions already. All you have is a gut feeling about "common sense" and the fairytales about American exceptionalism and infallibility that you've been forcefed since birth. They just don't cut it here.
As I've said, if its shown through the various trials that this was the case I'll admit I was wrong. What more do you want?

I still stand by my earlier assertions regarding GITMO under Obama vs GITMO under Bush .
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Rahvin wrote:
Common sense tells me that there is a greater likliehood of the majority being guilty rather than innocent. Admittedly that is my opinion.
You use "common sense" like the word "magic" - you've presented no argument. You're really just saying that your gut tells you that these guys are guilty. You have no evidence that suggests their guilt beyond the fact that they've been imprisoned. You established your opinion the moment you knew they were Gitmo detainees, and are now trying to defend that initial reaction, without any actual evidence or reasoned argument for the belief that "most" of them are "probably" guilty.

Without evidence and argument, your opinion is invalid. "Opinion" doesn't mean "I just get to say whatever I want, and it's just as valid as any other person's opinion." If your "opinion" is that the Earth is flat, your "opinion" is wrong as a matter of simple fact. If your "opinion" is that there exists a teacup orbiting Mars, with no evidence giving you a reason to hold that opinion, your opinion is worthless.

So think about it. Why do you think that "most" of the detainees are "probably" guilty? What do you think they're "probably" guilty of, since no actual charges have been filed? Give us an actual reason - what's your evidence and chain of logic?
All I'm saying is this If I have to place an even money bet on the majority of the GITMO detainees being "innocent" vs them being "dirtbags worthy of imprisonment", I'm betting on them being dirtbags.

Where are you placing your money?

Really this whole fucking thing is a distraction from my real point - that what we are seeing now at GITMO is significant progress from what we saw under Bush.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Simon_Jester »

TheHammer wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:
TheHammer wrote:The fact is that many of the people held at Guantamo ARE dangerous. Obama can't simply throw open the doors and let all of them go.
Why not? Seriously, why not? There are people now free who have done far more harm, both to the world and to America in particular.
Don't be naive. On top the fact that it would be political suicide, chances are high that many of these men ARE in fact terrorists. Some may have simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time, but again simply letting them go is not an option.
That is not an answer to the question.

Why can't they simply be let go? Are they so dangerous that it is worth keeping this vile, festering sore in our nation's human rights record open? Who is so dangerous? If we know who they are, why don't we simply let everyone else go and keep the people we know to be dangerous? If we don't know who they are, why are we holding hundreds of people on the presumption that a handful of them are dangerous?

There comes a point at which yes, the government has to accept that what it's doing will in some tiny, incremental way make the country a hair's breadth less invulnerable. Security is not the only reason we have a government, nor is everything the government does in the name of security justified by its invocation of security. Some prices are too high to pay for that little extra nugget of security we gain.

Dozens of innocent people locked in a prison camp for the rest of their lives and beaten for information they don't have... that's too high a price to pay to keep a handful of unnamed dangerous people who may or may not even exist locked up.
Who is located in Guantanamo that it is so absolutely vital they stay in jail indefinitely even if that means keeping dozens of innocent people in there with them? Is America so brittle and feeble a state that a few hundred people who hate us* pose some kind of existential threat?
As noted, steps have been taken to give most of them a trial. Additional steps were also taken to make sure those trials were more fair than the trials done under the Bush administration. I'd dare say that most of the "innocent" ones will be released following their trial. For the ones wrongly accused/convicted? Well it sucks, but we have innocent people in prison here in the United States as well. No justice system in the world is perfect.
Ours happens to be unusually shitty, partly because of anti-democracy elements who shrug whenever the system breaks and say 'no need to change anything, no one's perfect.'

And again, you didn't answer my question. Are we so feeble that releasing these people would actually pose a big enough risk to justify keeping them imprisoned? Given that we don't even know which of them are dangerous, or how many are dangerous, or indeed if any of them are all that dangerous?

At what point should the government err on the side of openness rather than on the side of police-state thinking?
Again, it's like as soon as we call someone a terrorist, our ability to rationally assess the size of the threat they pose disappears. On the one hand we refuse to take serious steps to rationalize our anti-terrorist efforts; on the other, we treat every single designated-terrorist we find as if they present an imminent risk of going on a Godzilla-like rampage. It doesn't add up.

*(at this point, not without reason since we've been beating and imprisoning them for ten years)
I think the steps the Obama administration has taken are very rational. A balance between giving the prisoners at GITMO their right to be heard, while at the same time protecting the United States.

And to your point, say for someone was abducted someone who was innocent, but after 6-8 years in the Bush controlled GITMO, he swears to Allah that if he ever gets out he's going to make the US pay in blood. Should he just be let go? An idealist might say "absolutely" but a realist would most likely say "absolutely not". I'm not saying he should be locked up for the rest of his life or killed, but you have to deal with that situation.
You are still ignoring my questions.

What are we protecting the United States from? Are these people that dangerous? How do we know they are dangerous?

Also, you're lying, or at least failing to think through your own arguments to the point where they become self-contradictory. You are saying he should be locked up for life, because he's not going to love us more after we lock him up for another year.

By the way, you do realize that the argument you are now promoting was presented as a parody of arguments for keeping Guantanamo open, by the Colbert Report, some years ago? It's kind of sad that this has become more or less the only argument for the prison: "We've made the people inside the prison into our enemies, therefore we must lock them up to keep them from hurting us."

Do you see how Kafkaesque that is?

Do you hate the idea of legal due process that much? Are you that afraid of these people?

TheHammer wrote:
Metahive wrote:
The Hammer wrote:Don't be naive. On top the fact that it would be political suicide, chances are high that many of these men ARE in fact terrorists. Some may have simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time, but again simply letting them go is not an option.
Why not?
Because you have to first determine if they were in fact at the wrong place at the wrong time. I would guess that this group would be in the minority of the people held at Guantamo.
Guess. That's the key word. You have no fucking clue how many of the people at Guantanamo are random innocent people, how many of them were random Taliban foot soldiers who joined up because the food was good and not because they hate America, how many of them are random fuckwits who, even if they are strongly anti-American, are not a real threat on that basis.

Instead, you assume they are all dangerous terrorist masterminds who, when released, would immediately be embraced into the welcoming arms of terrorist organizations they've been out of touch with for ten years, and immediately become dangerous, lethal opponents for us.

What the hell?
As noted, steps have been taken to give most of them a trial. Additional steps were also taken to make sure those trials were more fair than the trials done under the Bush administration. I'd dare say that most of the "innocent" ones will be released following their trial. For the ones wrongly accused/convicted? Well it sucks, but we have innocent people in prison here in the United States as well. No justice system in the world is perfect.
What massive comfort for the people that were sold as terrorists to the US by greedy warlords.
I agree that sucks. Hopefully, after trial, most of those people will be set free and compensated as best they can be.
And you don't really care if that happens or not, do you? You're so busy thinking of reasons to put people in jail that you can't be bothered with whether they belong there. No one has any reason to trust the military tribunals being used here, because those tribunals are going to think the same way you are: everyone is guilty until proven innocent, evidence presented by the prosecution automatically counts for more than evidence by the defense, and the best thing to do is keep 'em all locked up forever because it's better they die in our prison camps than that we take the risk that they might conceivably be dangerous enemies capable of landing pinprick guerilla raids on us later.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Rahvin »

"If you are not guilty, Comrade, then why have you been arrested?"

Your reasoning is absurd. You have no evidence of guilt other than detention.
TheHammer wrote:I can't see why the government would spend the time, money, and effort to detain these people if it had "no reason" to do so.
Simply because you're personally unable to think of another reason doesn't mean there isn't one. Perhaps the reason is purely political - officials didn't have enough evidence for a trial, but couldn't release the detainees due to an anticipated political backlash from people like yourself who think that simply being arrested implies guilt, even when no actual charges have been filed.
And I'm a big believer that when there is smoke there is usually fire. Does that preclude a mistake being made? Certainly not, but I'd dare say most of the people there will be proven at trial to have been deserving of being imprisoned. As stated previously, if it turns out I'm wrong I'll come back and admit it.
But why?

Let me be really simple, because it seems like you aren;t understanding.

To have a valid (not necessarily true) belief, you need to have evidence supporting that belief. A belief supported by evidence can still be proven wrong by the introduction of new evidence. It can still be rational to hold an incorrect belief before acquiring the knowledge that disproves it. But it's irrational to hold a belief if you cannot demonstrate any evidence that discriminates that particular belief from alternatives.

Is A greater than B, if you don;t know the value of A or B?

It would be irrational to state that A is most likely greater than B, since you don;t have any evidence that differentiates that hypothesis from the hypothesis that B is probably greater than A, or that A is equal to B.

So again - what evidence specifically do you think makes the hypothesis that "most" of the detainees are guilty of unspecified crimes more likely than the hypothesis that they're all innocent, or that only one is guilty, etc?
I do feel that these trials should have happened long before now.
Pause. Why, then, have they not happened?

If you had a criminal of any sort in custody, and you had sufficient evidence to convict him of a crime, why would you delay? Wouldn't you at minimum be able to file charges and state which specific crime the individual is guilty of? In absolutely any other criminal case, charges would have been filed within days at a minimum. Trials can sometimes take a while to put together, but even for the worst offenders, like McVeigh or the Unibomber or whatever, you give them access to a lawyer, file specific charges of specific crimes, and at least begin the process to mvoe toward a trial!

Why, then, would these individuals be treated differently? Can anyone honestly say that these detainees are more dangerous than known mass-murderers and previous terrorists?

As you said: where there's smoke, there's usually fire.

I see the lack of specific charges and the long delays as strong evidence that the government does not feel that it has sufficient evidence to guarantee conviction in a fair trial - hence indefinite detention in violation of domestic and international law, followed by military tribunals instead of civilian court.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Rahvin »

TheHammer wrote:All I'm saying is this If I have to place an even money bet on the majority of the GITMO detainees being "innocent" vs them being "dirtbags worthy of imprisonment", I'm betting on them being dirtbags.
WHY?!

What do you think they're guilty of? Why do you think they're guilty?

I understand your "conclusion" very well. What I'm questioning is whether you have any fucking reason at all for making that conclusion in the first place.

It would seem that you do not.

The phrase "All I'm saying is..." does not relieve you from the burden of evidence. It's just code for "I don't have any reason for my belief, I'm totally just spewing shit out my mouth, but hey, I think my belief is still just as valid or more than yours."
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Eleas »

TheHammer wrote:
Eleas wrote:
  1. That's not how due process should work. First, you have to determine if they in fact should be imprisoned at all.
Bullshit.

If I'm seen running down the street near a robbery and fit the description of the robbery suspect I'll be arrested. Maybe I was just out jogging. But the police don't know that. I'm detained, questioned, and will likely spend time in jail even while innocent. Later at trial it is determined whether I should have been imprisoned at all. And while the timing may be different for gitmo detainees, the "process" is the same.
Small problem: the US isn't a policeman in this little story. There has been no evidence that any "robbery" (whatever the fuck that's supposed to be analogous to - your country doesn't like to specify these things, remember?) occurred. Finally and most damning, the one pressing the charge is the same guy who a) actually arrested you and b) has not just a proven history of outright sadism in the past but is right now setting fire to other people's buildings. Oh, and he's also your judge, and hates you for the colour of your skin.

As long as we're playing with analogies, that is.

CaptainHammer wrote:You're right my "guess" is immaterial. The trials will determine who is guilty and who is innocent. Therefore we can't let any of them go until they've had their trial.
You don't fucking get it, child. There is no possibility of impartial behaviour from the US in this instance. The US has no right to be their judge, because the US was the one fucking with them in the first case.

You don't fucking get it. These people are innocent, because you can't very well call them "guilty" without inviting the question "of what?"
I get it perfectly. It will be determined "of what" at the trials which will now be occuring.
I'd call it a kangaroo court, but since the expression isn't popular in right-wing talking points I doubt you'd comprehend it. Instead, I think I'll furnish you with the best representation of this trial's impartiality that I can find. Here.

TheHammer wrote:
Now who's being naïve? What evidence is there that the US would do such a thing? Take the naturalised American citizens of Japanese descent who happened to be imprisoned in camps far less abominable than these current prisons. Know when they were given compensation? 1989. They were treated far better and held for far shorter than the current victims are. And they were US citizens.
So your argument is what exactly? That ths US has in fact compensated people it wrongly imprisoned or detained?
GITMO detainees might not get a damned thing, but its not beyond the realm of possibility. I said that I HOPED they would be compensated.
My argument is that the US has treated these people far worse (meaning the compensation would have to be higher, not that it would in any way be equitable) for far longer time than the interned Americans of Japanese descent. The US, furthermore, does not recognize the GITMO detainees as US citizens (or, going by the reports, as human beings). The Americans of Japanese descent had to wait thirty-five fucking years before they gained some meagre amount of restitution, and they lived in the US and could campaign for the thing.

GITMO detainees won't get shit. There's no way in hell if we go by the precedent I gave.

I'm saying the answer to injustice is prudence. What specifically must be done depends greatly on the individual involved.
Common sense tells me otherwise. I highly doubt that the government detained a bunch of innocent people at great expense just for the hell of it. The more LIKELY scenario is that the majority of these people are guilty, and that a minority of them were unjustly captured.
Your posts have demonstrated no sense, common or otherwise. It is as I said: you base your arguments on gut feelings, emotional preference, and a vague sense of 'the way things oughter be.' However, since this is literally the pillar on which your counter rests I don't need to attack it; all I need to do is watch it topple under its own massive ineptitude.
But, like I said, if it comes out later that the majority were all innocent then I'll gladly admit I was wrong.
How would you know that, given that you apparently have no concept of what actual guilt or innocence would mean?

As I've said over and over again, I'm not presuming to pre-judge any of the prisoners, therefore I don't need to fucking show they are guilty.
But you have already judged them -- the majority of them -- as being guilty for the crime of being captured by the US.

The rest of your drivel, while largely worthless, contains one small thought which I will address: yes, I welcome any lessening of the indignities heaped on the detainees. Calling it justice, however, is an obscenity, for reasons anyone with even a vestigial sense of ethics would grasp.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by MKSheppard »

Smarmy answer ahead:

They told me if I voted for John McCain, people would be held without trial and tortured at Gitmo in addition to being put on trial by the Military!

THEY WERE RIGHT!
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Aaron »

Eleas wrote:
TheHammer wrote:
Eleas wrote:
  1. That's not how due process should work. First, you have to determine if they in fact should be imprisoned at all.
Bullshit.

If I'm seen running down the street near a robbery and fit the description of the robbery suspect I'll be arrested. Maybe I was just out jogging. But the police don't know that. I'm detained, questioned, and will likely spend time in jail even while innocent. Later at trial it is determined whether I should have been imprisoned at all. And while the timing may be different for gitmo detainees, the "process" is the same.
Small problem: the US isn't a policeman in this little story. There has been no evidence that any "robbery" (whatever the fuck that's supposed to be analogous to - your country doesn't like to specify these things, remember?) occurred. Finally and most damning, the one pressing the charge is the same guy who a) actually arrested you and b) has not just a proven history of outright sadism in the past but is right now setting fire to other people's buildings. Oh, and he's also your judge, and hates you for the colour of your skin.

As long as we're playing with analogies, that is.
Your also supposed to be charged within a set period of time or released from custody. The police can't hold you indefinitely without trial, that's for shitholes like Libya.

Of course the US could hand them over to the International Criminal Court but then they might have to face the fact that they might get off.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Rahvin wrote:"If you are not guilty, Comrade, then why have you been arrested?"

Your reasoning is absurd. You have no evidence of guilt other than detention.
TheHammer wrote:I can't see why the government would spend the time, money, and effort to detain these people if it had "no reason" to do so.
Simply because you're personally unable to think of another reason doesn't mean there isn't one. Perhaps the reason is purely political - officials didn't have enough evidence for a trial, but couldn't release the detainees due to an anticipated political backlash from people like yourself who think that simply being arrested implies guilt, even when no actual charges have been filed.
And I'm a big believer that when there is smoke there is usually fire. Does that preclude a mistake being made? Certainly not, but I'd dare say most of the people there will be proven at trial to have been deserving of being imprisoned. As stated previously, if it turns out I'm wrong I'll come back and admit it.
But why?

Let me be really simple, because it seems like you aren;t understanding.

To have a valid (not necessarily true) belief, you need to have evidence supporting that belief. A belief supported by evidence can still be proven wrong by the introduction of new evidence. It can still be rational to hold an incorrect belief before acquiring the knowledge that disproves it. But it's irrational to hold a belief if you cannot demonstrate any evidence that discriminates that particular belief from alternatives.

Is A greater than B, if you don;t know the value of A or B?

It would be irrational to state that A is most likely greater than B, since you don;t have any evidence that differentiates that hypothesis from the hypothesis that B is probably greater than A, or that A is equal to B.

So again - what evidence specifically do you think makes the hypothesis that "most" of the detainees are guilty of unspecified crimes more likely than the hypothesis that they're all innocent, or that only one is guilty, etc?
I do feel that these trials should have happened long before now.
Pause. Why, then, have they not happened?

If you had a criminal of any sort in custody, and you had sufficient evidence to convict him of a crime, why would you delay? Wouldn't you at minimum be able to file charges and state which specific crime the individual is guilty of? In absolutely any other criminal case, charges would have been filed within days at a minimum. Trials can sometimes take a while to put together, but even for the worst offenders, like McVeigh or the Unibomber or whatever, you give them access to a lawyer, file specific charges of specific crimes, and at least begin the process to mvoe toward a trial!

Why, then, would these individuals be treated differently? Can anyone honestly say that these detainees are more dangerous than known mass-murderers and previous terrorists?

As you said: where there's smoke, there's usually fire.

I see the lack of specific charges and the long delays as strong evidence that the government does not feel that it has sufficient evidence to guarantee conviction in a fair trial - hence indefinite detention in violation of domestic and international law, followed by military tribunals instead of civilian court.
I've answered this as much as I'm willing to. I don't have anything new to say at this point. I'll refrain back to what I said earlier in that if I were placing a bet, I'd bet on most of them being dirt bags. Yeah its a gut feeling since we haven't seen the evidence presented at trial yet. But deep down I think most people would make that same bet.

I will point out that your final assertion is no more valid than mine. In the end, we'll have to wait and see how these tribunals shake out.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Eleas wrote:
TheHammer wrote:
Eleas wrote:
  1. That's not how due process should work. First, you have to determine if they in fact should be imprisoned at all.
Bullshit.

If I'm seen running down the street near a robbery and fit the description of the robbery suspect I'll be arrested. Maybe I was just out jogging. But the police don't know that. I'm detained, questioned, and will likely spend time in jail even while innocent. Later at trial it is determined whether I should have been imprisoned at all. And while the timing may be different for gitmo detainees, the "process" is the same.
Small problem: the US isn't a policeman in this little story. There has been no evidence that any "robbery" (whatever the fuck that's supposed to be analogous to - your country doesn't like to specify these things, remember?) occurred. Finally and most damning, the one pressing the charge is the same guy who a) actually arrested you and b) has not just a proven history of outright sadism in the past but is right now setting fire to other people's buildings. Oh, and he's also your judge, and hates you for the colour of your skin.

As long as we're playing with analogies, that is.
Your point on due process was that before we can imprison anyone you have to "determine if they in fact should be imprisoned at all". You are incorrect. Individuals are often detained on suspicision of committing an offense, and it is not until trial that guilt or innocense is determined and thus if they should have been imprisoned at all.

The rest of your comment is irrelevent.
There is no possibility of impartial behaviour from the US in this instance. The US has no right to be their judge, because the US was the one fucking with them in the first case.
Evidence of impartiality being impossible?
[GITMO detainees won't get shit. There's no way in hell if we go by the precedent I gave.
Says what? Your gut feeling?
As I've said over and over again, I'm not presuming to pre-judge any of the prisoners, therefore I don't need to fucking show they are guilty.
But you have already judged them -- the majority of them -- as being guilty for the crime of being captured by the US.
I said that many of them are probably deserving of imprisonment. That's just playing the odds. I'm reserving actual judgement until after evidence has been presented. As I said, if I'm wrong I'll admit it. I'll be shocked, but I'll admit it.

Are you betting that most of them are probably not deserving of imprisonment?
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by TheHammer »

Aaron wrote: Your also supposed to be charged within a set period of time or released from custody. The police can't hold you indefinitely without trial, that's for shitholes like Libya.

Of course the US could hand them over to the International Criminal Court but then they might have to face the fact that they might get off.
I agree the long period of detention without trial is regretable. Bush clearly showed no desire to let any of these people see the let of day anytime soon. At least things are moving towards the other direction.

I wouldn't have a problem handing them over to the ICC, and I don't know why that hasn't been proposed in Lieu of civilian courts. Possibly its because the US is not a member of the ICC, but I don't know for sure.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Andrew J. »

Thanas wrote:Given the descriptions of the military courts so far by lawyers, it is not a day in court at all.
Are you sure you're not thinking of the Bush-era commissions? I've heard the procedures for the new ones are significantly more protective than they were, although not quite the same as they are in civilian trials.
And this still does not excuse the fact that the US holds people with no trial, which is an egregious violation of Human Rights.
Okay, instead of reading off a list of exceptions to that general principle, I'm just going to say the we should have held these guys as POWs from the very beginning; they'd have been guaranteed better standards of treatment and the executive wouldn't have had to try to create some new regime of preventive detention capable of passing constitutional and international law standards.
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Thanas »

PeZook wrote: I always found it very amusing how the Greatest Country In The World (TM) is so scared of being attacked and destroyed by terrorists that it ends up killing more people than all the terrorists in the XXth century combined.

No western country was ever destroyed or even significantly destabilized by terrorism. Ever. And we've had a lot of it in the XXth century.
Oh, and let us not forget the 19th century. Where there was an actual stateless terrorist ideology with significant percentages of support among every western population, which actually managed to kill several head of states and inspire violent uprisings. (If anybody does not know it, I am talking about anarchists and violent socialists). Anarchism was a far more serious threat than all Islamist terrorist before and now taken together.

I suggest that when the islamists have murdered three US presidents and committed at least thirty assassination attempts (that actually were committed) then Islamic terrorism is on the same level.



TheHammer wrote:I've answered this as much as I'm willing to. I don't have anything new to say at this point. I'll refrain back to what I said earlier in that if I were placing a bet, I'd bet on most of them being dirt bags. Yeah its a gut feeling since we haven't seen the evidence presented at trial yet.
My gut tells me it is spelled with two ts. Who is merriam webster to disagree with my gut?
But deep down I think most people would make that same bet.
Most people also elected Hitler.
I will point out that your final assertion is no more valid than mine. In the end, we'll have to wait and see how these tribunals shake out.
On the contrary. There are dozens of cases where people have been imprisoned for no reason. There are also dozen of cases the US handed over to other countries because they were innocent. All in all, the evidence does not support your belief that your ignorance is just as valid as the others.

Andrew J. wrote:
Thanas wrote:Given the descriptions of the military courts so far by lawyers, it is not a day in court at all.
Are you sure you're not thinking of the Bush-era commissions? I've heard the procedures for the new ones are significantly more protective than they were, although not quite the same as they are in civilian trials.
Brief description of a new improved military court:
The United States now has more than 1,500 Afghans and other countries’ nationals imprisoned at the Bagram Air Field, where I visited last week, at the invitation of the U.S. military. The administration has significantly improved conditions. They have built a new prison to house the growing number of detainees — which has almost tripled since 2009.

The administration has also improved transparency — allowing journalists and human rights organizations to visit. Its means of determining whom to detain, however, has not kept pace with the physical improvements.

To be sure, detainees now get a hearing approximately every six months. This alone represents important progress. Under the Bush administration, detainees had no opportunity to make their case. They languished in a cramped, windowless Soviet-era prison for years — not even knowing the charges against them. Many were subjected to “enhanced interrogation techniques,” including systematic sleep deprivation and stress positions. That practice appears to have been eliminated as well.

But these current hearings, known as Detainee Review Boards, still don’t offer the minimum required elements of due process. This is not only a violation of international law; it’s a major obstacle to the U.S. military’s critical campaign to win “the hearts and minds” of the Afghan people.

Take the case of Gulalet, whose hearing I saw at Bagram earlier this month. The U.S. military holds up to a dozen such hearings a day. I was permitted to sit in on four.

The prisoner, wearing a white shalwar kamiz and wrapped in a gray blanket, sat facing a board of three military officers in a Bagram hearing room. His hands and feet were shackled. He’d been imprisoned since last spring and informed of the charges against him in June.

A military lawyer summarized the case, saying Gulalet owned a compound, which was raided by Afghan and NATO forces. The troops discovered explosives and bomb-making materials in the house next to his. Gulalet’s clothes did not test positive for explosive residue, but he was assessed to be a facilitator for improvised explosive devices.

When Gulalet spoke, however, this story unraveled. “Yes, that’s my house, where I was detained,” he said, through a Pashto interpreter. He explained that he lives there with his father, mother, uncles and his wife. “The other house I don’t know,” Gulalet said, “It doesn’t belong to me.”

The judge asked for clarification: “So do you own the house or the compound?”

Gulalet said he owns only the house, not the compound — and not the other house where the explosives were found. That house is owned by “an old man who lives in Kandahar city.” Gulalet said he barely knows him.

The officer who read the charges then asked him a series of questions.

“What do you think of the Taliban? Do you like the Taliban, or do you hate the Taliban? Do you have friends who have engaged in anti-coalition activity?”

“I am busy with my family,” Gulalet replied. “I swear I don’t understand this business of Taliban. I am a farmer; this is the first time I am detained.”

Gulalet was then asked questions about his neighbors — which he said he couldn’t answer because he doesn’t really know them. Then an officer assigned to act as his “personal representative” stood up.

“How have you been treated here?” the soldier asked.

“I’ve been treated very well,” Gulalet answered.

His personal representative had no further questions.

This is what passes for justice at the U.S. prison at Bagram. T
hough the detainee can make a statement, he is not represented by a lawyer and usually cannot see much of the evidence against him — because it’s classified. Though the review board can recommend his release, the commander of the detention facility can ignore that recommendation.

Many defense lawyers and former detainees I interviewed in Afghanistan said that, frequently, the classified “evidence” against a detainee consists of a false accusation made by an enemy of the detainee or his family — often based on a tribal feud or land dispute.

By not knowing the exact charges, or who made them, and unable to cross-examine the incriminating witness, the detainee cannot fully defend himself.

Meanwhile, the prisoner has no lawyer, only a “personal representative” — a uniformed U.S. soldier, who the detainee has little reason to trust. In the cases I observed, the personal representative asked a few questions at most, usually with no evident aim. One said nothing.

Under international law, a detainee in the Afghan armed conflict has the right to challenge the grounds for his detention to an impartial body with authority to enter final decisions on continued detention or release. The Detainee Review Board process does not meet that standard.
“I am busy with my family,” Gulalet replied. “I swear I don’t understand this business of Taliban. I am a farmer; this is the first time I am detained.”

Gulalet was then asked questions about his neighbors — which he said he couldn’t answer because he doesn’t really know them. Then an officer assigned to act as his “personal representative” stood up.

“How have you been treated here?” the soldier asked.

“I’ve been treated very well,” Gulalet answered.

His personal representative had no further questions.

This is what passes for justice at the U.S. prison at Bagram. Though the detainee can make a statement, he is not represented by a lawyer and usually cannot see much of the evidence against him — because it’s classified. Though the review board can recommend his release, the commander of the detention facility can ignore that recommendation.

Many defense lawyers and former detainees I interviewed in Afghanistan said that, frequently, the classified “evidence” against a detainee consists of a false accusation made by an enemy of the detainee or his family — often based on a tribal feud or land dispute.

By not knowing the exact charges, or who made them, and unable to cross-examine the incriminating witness, the detainee cannot fully defend himself.

Meanwhile, the prisoner has no lawyer, only a “personal representative” — a uniformed U.S. soldier, who the detainee has little reason to trust. In the cases I observed, the personal representative asked a few questions at most, usually with no evident aim. One said nothing.


Under international law, a detainee in the Afghan armed conflict has the right to challenge the grounds for his detention to an impartial body with authority to enter final decisions on continued detention or release. The Detainee Review Board process does not meet that standard.[/quote]


http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0211/49884.html

Great defence there. "Have you been treated well?" Any civilian defence attorney would deal with this differently. The prosecution has no case, but instead of pointing out inconsistencies you get numbnuts like this "personal representative" doing stuff like that.


Okay, instead of reading off a list of exceptions to that general principle, I'm just going to say the we should have held these guys as POWs from the very beginning; they'd have been guaranteed better standards of treatment and the executive wouldn't have had to try to create some new regime of preventive detention capable of passing constitutional and international law standards.
They'd also have been released by now if they were POWs. And they wouldn't have been able to have been tortured, which of course is what the USA wanted to do right from the start.




Glenn Greenwald on this:

link.
None of this is the slightest bit unexpected. The new Executive Order has been previewed for months and merely codifies what has long been Obama's policy: "long" in the sense of "since he's inaugurated" -- not, of course, "when he was a Senator and presidential candidate." I'm writing about this merely to address the excuse from the White House and its loyalists that the fault for this policy, this inability to "close Guantanamo," lies with Congress, which forced the President to abandon his oft-stated campaign pledge. That excuse is pure fiction.

It is true that Congress -- with the overwhelming support of both parties -- has enacted several measures making it much more difficult, indeed impossible, to transfer Guantanamo detainees into the U.S. But long before that ever happened, Obama made clear that he wanted to continue the twin defining pillars of the Bush detention regime: namely, (1) indefinite, charge-free detention and (2) military commissions (for those lucky enough to be charged with something). Obama never had a plan for "closing Guantanamo" in any meaningful sense; the most he sought to do was to move it a few thousand miles north to Illinois, where its defining injustices would endure.

The preservation of the crux of the Bush detention scheme was advocated by Obama long before Congress' ban on transferring detainees to the U.S. It was in May, 2009 -- a mere five months after his inauguration -- that Obama stood up in front of the U.S. Constitution at the National Archives and demanded a new law of "preventive detention" to empower him to imprison people without charges: a plan the New York Times said "would be a departure from the way this country sees itself." It was the same month that the administration announced it intended to continue to deny many detainees trials, instead preserving the military commissions scheme, albeit with modifications. And the first -- and only -- Obama plan for "closing Guantanamo" came in December, 2009, and it entailed nothing more than transferring the camp to a supermax prison in Thompson, Illinois, while preserving its key ingredients, prompting the name "Gitmo North."

None of this was even arguably necessitated by Congressional action. To the contrary, almost all of it took place before Congress did anything. It was Barack Obama's position -- not that of Congress -- that detainees could and should be denied trials, that our court system was inadequate and inappropriate to try them, and that he possessed the unilateral, unrestrained power under the "laws of war" to order them imprisoned for years, even indefinitely, without bothering to charge them with a crime and without any review by the judiciary, in some cases without even the right of habeas review (to see why claims of such "law of war" detention power are so baseless, see the points here, especially point 5).

In other words, Obama -- for reasons having nothing to do with Congress -- worked from the start to preserve the crux of the Bush/Cheney detention regime. Even with these new added levels of detention review (all inside the Executive Branch), this new Executive Order is little more than a by-product of that core commitment, and those blaming it on Congress either have little idea what they're talking about or are simply fabricating excuses in order to justify yet another instance where Obama dutifully "bolsters" the Bush War on Terror template. Indefinite detention and military commissions are continuing because Obama worked from the start for that goal -- not because Congress forced him to do so.

As as happened over and over, while progressives and civil libertarians are furious about the new Order, former Bush officials and right-wing Warriors are ecstatic. The anti-Muslim McCarthyite Rep. Peter King (R-NY) issued a statement this morning, as quoted by The Post, which lavished Obama with praise: "I commend the Obama Administration for issuing this Executive Order. The bottom line is that it affirms the Bush Administration policy that our government has the right to detain dangerous terrorists until the cessation of hostilities." That perfectly captures the legacy of Barack Obama on civil liberties.

It's certainly possible to claim that none of this much matters because other issues are more important. It's coherent to argue that -- everyone has to prioritize what matters most -- but that wasn't an argument I ever heard prior to January 20, 2009, when Democrats generally and Obama specifically aggressively touted these issues for substantial political gain.

As always, the most harmful aspect of the Obama legacy is that he has converted what were once controversial right-wing Bush policies into unchallenged bipartisan consensus, to endure indefinitely and without any opposition from either party. And, to underscore the point once more: Obama's plan as President (as opposed to as a candidate) was never to dismantle the Bush/Cheney system at Guantanamo; before Congress acted at all, his only objective was to preserve its core, defining features and then move that system to Illinois.
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Dark Hellion
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Re: Ban on Gitmo military trials to end

Post by Dark Hellion »

You know, I am not too sure why the various Europeans are so surprised that there will be knee-jerk defenses of America. Every nation has their dark little secrets and skeletons in their closets and if people were poking at your's there would probably be a similar response. I will add the caveat that America's hypocritical attitude of moral superiority doesn't help, neither does the fact that America is such an easy target because we apparently removed all our closet doors to make beer pong tables but at the same time I think you should recognize that some of the frustrations of posters are not due to the actual contents of the threads but the manner in which they are presented (as well as other frustrations about our inability to affect positive change to a society that is for all important purposes out of control).

I think I should also point out that political ideals are exactly that: ideal. Ideally Gitmo should not exist in its present form because it is immoral from nearly any self-consistent reasonable moral framework. But the political reality is such that attempts to close it down would have to be done in a circuitous route, even if they were done in good faith (which given Obama is a Chicago politician should never have been expected). This is precisely because as someone put it many Americans are "panicky, amoral fucks" and many others are easily-cowed and ignorant. I think given this situation anything that isn't "one step forwards, two steps back" should be looked at as at least an improvement and discussion should focus on the improvement and the dis/satisfaction with it as opposed to condemnation of the fact that the improvement was not sufficient. That being said I have not read this article well enough to know whether there was any improvement at all but I think the above points stand well in general.

I have generally avoiding posting in N&P and have tended to skim threads much more often over the last month or so because there has been a swelling of rhetoric that is not being matched by analysis and I would like to see more actual discussion instead of this conversation over and over again:

Poster A: European Ideal
Poster B: But American! Political Reality!
Poster A: American Bad! European Ideal
Poster B: Fuck You, America RAR!

For all the fancy words and links too many threads seem to be just this. I know Sanchez and Simon have discussed similar recently and I think that a general period of 'chilling out' a bit would help the forum a bit.
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