Totalitarian
Tony
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
DIGG THIS
This weeks
Supreme Court decision, affirming that Guantanamo prisoners have
habeas corpus access in domestic civil courts, raises vital questions
on the judiciarys role in checking executive power.
The writ of
habeas corpus, a process to scrutinize detentions, is an ancient
issue, seven centuries old. Members of the 17th-century English
Parliament resented the Kings circumvention of the writs
reach by sending prisoners to remote lands. The Supreme Court has
now sided with those who long ago opposed such dirty executive tricks.
In late 2001, the administration set up the prison camp in Cuba.
The idea was to have executive control but not be subject to U.S.
judicial checks. Since the prison is on Cuban sovereign territory,
American courts supposedly have no right to intervene.
But the U.S.
has had complete and uninterrupted control of the bay for
over 100 years, Justice Kennedy wrote for the Court. In
every practical sense Guantanamo is not abroad; it is within the
constant jurisdiction of the United States.
In 2004 the
Court affirmed the right of enemy combatants to challenge
their detention. In response, Congress and the president established
Combatant Status Review Tribunals to test whether a detainees
enemy combatant designation is proper. The 2006 Military
Commissions Act reasserted that habeas does not reach to the Bay.
The Court has now overruled this part of the law.
Kennedy says
the CSRTs are inadequate. They allow hearsay evidence and deny the
right to council. The executive has control and habeas is supposed
to provide independent scrutiny. The question of where habeas applies
must not be subject to manipulation by those whose power it
is designed to restrain.
Kennedy notes
that unlike the enemy combatant tribunals on the battlegrounds
of past foreign wars, Guantanamo is a secure prison facility
located on an isolated and heavily fortified military base
and its cases involve individuals detained by executive order
for the duration of a conflict that, if measured from September
11, 2001, to the present, is already among the longest wars in American
history.
The four conservative
justices dissented, including Justice Roberts, who argued that the
current federal court CSRT review process is not much different
from the majoritys somewhat vague idea of habeas corpus review.
But Justice
Scalia thinks it changes everything. Today, for the first
time in our Nations history, he dissented, the
Court confers a constitutional right to habeas corpus on alien enemies
detained abroad by our military forces in the course of an ongoing
war.
Scalia warned
of the disastrous consequences of the decision, given
the war with radical Islamists. Indeed, it will
almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed.
Most
tragically, Scalia concluded, it sets our military commanders
the impossible task of proving to a civilian court . . . that evidence
supports the confinement of each and every enemy prisoner.
Scalia as well
as Roberts accuses the Court of butting into foreign policy, yet
his own reasoning is informed by definite opinions on foreign affairs,
including a careless deference to executive power. Bush appreciated
such deference, saying the dissent was based upon . . . serious
concerns about U.S. national security.
Scalia refers
to the president as the Nations Commander in Chief.
This is wrong. Under the Constitution the president is only the
Commander in Chief of the Army and . . . and of the Militia
. . . when called into the actual Service of the U.S. The
president does not command the whole country, and it is frightening
that a Justice would say he does.
Why such blind
trust for the governmental branch that insisted after 9/11 that
all the Guantanamo prisoners were the worst of the worst
and has in six years since released hundreds and convicted only
one of terrorisma man who served nine months and is now free
in Australia?
And which is
it? Is the decision perilously revolutionary, as Scalia insists,
or vulgarly frivolous, as Roberts maintains? If frivolous, why is
Bush now considering additional legislation, seemingly
to get around the new ruling?
One certainty:
While excessive judicial activism is dangerous, without any such
activism, habeas corpus would have never been created, turned against
the King, and developed into a core principle of our legal tradition.
It would have never reached those who helped slaves escape or those
unjustly sentenced to death. Scalia might side with the King and
with Bush, but if the terrorists really hate our freedom, they must
be irked by this decision, however symbolic, which Scalia warns
the Nation will live to regret.
June
16, 2008
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2008 Independent Institute
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