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Bush Administration to Congress: We're Not Budging on Military Tribunals
JB
The New York Times reports that the Administration's new proposal for military tribunals is largely based on the model the Supreme Court struck down in Hamdan. It allows detainees to be excluded from their own trials and it states that the Geneva Conventions "are not a source of judicially enforceable individual rights." Although it bans the introduction of statements obtained through "torture", it allows introduction of statements made under "coercion" (i.e., anything the Administration regards as less than torture-- which turns out to be a wide array of forms of prisoner mistreatment) unless a military judge finds that the evidence would be "unreliable." It is no accident, then, that the draft demands that Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions not be judicially enforceable.
"This draft shows that the executive branch doesn't think the Supreme Court got the questions on the Geneva Conventions right in Hamdan," said John C. Yoo, a law professor at the University of California, Berkley, who as a Justice Department lawyer helped draft the president's original order establishing the military commissions.
On this matter, at least, Professor Yoo and I agree.
The interesting question will be whether Congress will give up and give the President what he wants or whether it will demand significant changes in how the military tribunals are conducted. As we've noted in this blog, Senator Specter's response to the NSA controversy has been to legalize what President has been doing illegally. Much of the American public probably cares more about their privacy being violated by domestic surveillance than about the rights of detainees at Guantanamo, which suggests that Congress would be more likely to give in here. However, in the case of military tribunals, unlike the NSA case, the Supreme Court has declared the President's plan illegal.
Well I have some reading suggestions for Senator Graham et al...
Justice Stevens clerked for Justice Wiley Rutledge in 1946 and wrote an article about him ten years later. Rutledge is best remembered for his great dissent in Application of Yamashita, 327 U.S. 1 (1946), which along with his dissent in Ahrens v. Clark, 335 U.S. 188 (1948), has figured significantly in the recent Supreme Court opinions in HAMDI, RASUL, and HAMDAN.
See: Allison Dunham and Philip B. Kurland (eds.), MR. JUSTICE, The University of Chicago Press (Chicago 1956); chapter MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE by John Paul Stevens, pages 177-202.