Tripoli or Somalia, or even our own coastal waters, the Navy in particular has a long tradition of teaching pirates how to dance in the air. The rules are a bit different these days, but the military tribunals are not kangaroo courts or star chambers, and have never been limited to trying soldiers of nations we're at war with. Those pirates were never official members of some other country's navy. Indeed, all those treaties we have like the Geneva Convention are designed to give special protection to enemy military personnel, not the other way around. Enemy militaries are assumed to be composed of decent men and women operating under strict rules and guidelines themselves, and thus our treaties are designed to hold them accountable only for violations of those treaties. An enemy soldier can be captured after shooting up dozens of our troops and expect three square meals a day and release after the conclusion of hostilities, because they followed the rules. The ones who break those rules can subject to summary execution, like spies. These various terrorists and insurgents don't follow those rules, and you want to give them access to our court system?
When we are talking about foriegners captured in foriegn lands by military forces, it is a clear case for military tribunals not civilian courts, the exact terminology decribing the person - enemy soldier, terrorist, enemy combatant, insurgent - are just word games and we all know it.
When we are talking about foriegners captured in foriegn lands by military forces, it is a clear case for military tribunals not civilian courts, the exact terminology decribing the person - enemy soldier, terrorist, enemy combatant, insurgent - are just word games and we all know it.
No, the exact terminology has been made into word games in this case, and that's what bothers me. We had an administration declare, "We don't torture, " on the grounds of having redefined things we recognize under treaty as torture to be otherwise. This is not an arena in which we can afford to let anyone play word games, but we have. Johnson getting away with declaring "war" on poverty was annoying; this is dangerous.
That's why I fear a tribunal would turn into a star chamber, not because I distrust our military personnel, but because I distrust our civilian leaders. Members of our armed forces may object to illegal orders, may protest, may refuse to become accomplices by obeying them, but rarely can they prevent them being executed. To whom may they appeal for justice? The International War Crimes Tribunal we proposed and then rejected when it said we must be subject to it also?
And I still contend the Barbary Pirates were a navy, if an irregular one. Certainly they didn't observe the Geneva Convention first agreed upon in 1864. They gave allegiance to a country and political leader, not a cause, and not only did they obey that leader both when told to pirate and when told to cease, but other nations, including France and Britain as well as the US, negotiated relief from piracy with diplomatic envoys of nations and leaders they recognized as legitimate. They negotiated an end to the piracy with heads of state, not pirates (or at least, not shipboard pirates; whether the Pasha of Tripoli was a pirate or rightfully treated as a head of state is something to discuss with other contemporary heads of state, but the First Barbary War began not with an act of piracy, but a declaration of war from that Pasha when Jefferson refused to continue tributes on becoming President. )
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
No need to interrogate Osama bin Laden?
20/11/2009 12:48:27 AM
- 1064 Views
oO uhm, what?
20/11/2009 12:54:13 AM
- 546 Views
If they're tried INSIDE the US, then yes, they are entitled to due process.
20/11/2009 01:44:08 AM
- 460 Views
Yeah, a lot of people were fuzzy on that till this started.
20/11/2009 09:30:39 AM
- 571 Views
on the other hand, we're more than willing to take them out back with a confession.
20/11/2009 06:34:12 PM
- 568 Views
New York is now asking for $75 MILLION for the KSM trial
20/11/2009 01:43:26 AM
- 496 Views
If this trial were being held in any other country
20/11/2009 01:56:07 AM
- 519 Views
It's a terrible precedent no matter how you look at it.
20/11/2009 02:13:46 AM
- 544 Views
It IS a terrible precdent, hence you and others are citing it 65 years after WWII ended.
20/11/2009 09:23:45 AM
- 433 Views
Spare me the bullshit.
20/11/2009 01:57:16 PM
- 440 Views
I will if you will.
20/11/2009 02:55:30 PM
- 536 Views
No, you won't. You never will.
20/11/2009 06:14:30 PM
- 426 Views
You're putting your cart before your horse is the problem.
23/11/2009 05:40:46 AM
- 517 Views
You don't think this is a military struggle? Wow.
20/11/2009 02:52:26 PM
- 476 Views
Allow me to point out...
20/11/2009 03:02:33 PM
- 456 Views
That's the thing, they aren't a terrorist group
20/11/2009 04:54:31 PM
- 498 Views
It would help if you would offer any argument in favour of your stance.
20/11/2009 08:43:08 PM
- 441 Views
I only use the word army cause I can't think of a better one
21/11/2009 04:32:01 AM
- 458 Views
Military struggles involve militaries.
20/11/2009 03:23:14 PM
- 619 Views
Once again, bullshit.
20/11/2009 06:09:31 PM
- 580 Views
This is wrong
20/11/2009 07:41:35 PM
- 486 Views
We're a long way from the shore of Tripoli.
23/11/2009 05:59:19 AM
- 537 Views
Nevertheless, uniforms or a nation is not a requirement
23/11/2009 03:09:22 PM
- 496 Views
Rightly or wrongly, I disagree.
24/11/2009 08:48:25 AM
- 540 Views
Your little diatribe in the beginning only makes me glad...
22/11/2009 05:32:57 AM
- 606 Views
I understand your "jihadist narrative"
22/11/2009 06:36:41 PM
- 585 Views
No you don't
22/11/2009 11:16:18 PM
- 522 Views
Oh, so you know better than Army attorneys about Miranda rights?
22/11/2009 11:52:00 PM
- 562 Views
I can explain it to you right now if you want?
23/11/2009 08:21:48 AM
- 455 Views
Credible legal and moral justifications for not trying terrorists in civilian court:
23/11/2009 02:56:19 PM
- 527 Views
Re: Credible legal and moral justifications for not trying terrorists in civilian court:
24/11/2009 04:55:12 AM
- 661 Views
I'm glad that you will never be in a position where a decision you make can affect my life.
23/11/2009 12:27:35 AM
- 424 Views
Actually people of my thinking are already making decisions that affect your life.
23/11/2009 08:29:24 AM
- 558 Views
Please explain to me how military tribunals compromise my principles?
24/11/2009 02:54:18 AM
- 421 Views
And your little hyperbolic rant would make more sense if it were grounded in reality.
22/11/2009 11:47:17 PM
- 452 Views
Looks like we'll get a Not Guilty plea, and a defense focusing on condeming US foreign policy
23/11/2009 12:36:47 AM
- 678 Views
They'll publicly accuse us of tyranny and brutality in front of a jury and without our censorship.
23/11/2009 08:27:13 AM
- 580 Views
My main objection is the awful precedent set by trying prisoners of war here in America.
24/11/2009 02:57:13 AM
- 501 Views
"My main objection is the awful precedent set by trying prisoners of war here in America. "
24/11/2009 06:57:34 AM
- 500 Views
We've had Mohammed in custody for over 6 years...
23/11/2009 07:56:49 AM
- 524 Views
I've already responded to your absurd statements, but let me reiterate a few here
23/11/2009 02:59:09 PM
- 420 Views
And I've responded to yours
24/11/2009 04:57:58 AM
- 498 Views
It's not, at least for me, that we feel the civilian courts are inadequate
24/11/2009 05:28:51 AM
- 477 Views
Good analysis of the situation.
23/11/2009 08:17:01 AM
- 592 Views
It isn't about sending a message. It's about horrible war fighting strategy.
24/11/2009 02:59:31 AM
- 545 Views
No. It's about not using a horribly ineffective strategy just to send a message to terrorists.
24/11/2009 09:29:06 AM
- 465 Views
enemy combatants and terrorists
23/11/2009 08:03:25 PM
- 560 Views
They're not different because from the Third World, but because terrorists.
24/11/2009 08:09:13 AM
- 675 Views