Terror War’s Legal Cost
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
The
Bush administration believes that habeas corpus is a luxury that
the US cannot afford in its war against terror.
Habeas
corpus is the legal principle that is the foundation of Anglo-American
freedom. It prevents the government from picking up a person and
holding him indefinitely without charge.
Joseph
Stalin and Adolf Hitler were not constrained by habeas corpus. They
were able to declare millions of people "enemies" and
send them off to death camps.
People
were declared enemies because of their class and race, or simply
because someone with the power to put their name on a list did not
like them or coveted their wife or property.
In
the Soviet Union many people disappeared in "street sweeps"
conducted by secret police under pressure to show results by arresting
more "enemies."
The
Bush administration’s attempt to legally suspend habeas corpus in
The Patriot Act was rebuffed by House Judiciary Committee chairman
James Sensenbrenner. Now the Department of Justice (sic) and the
Department of Defense are trying to assert the power to suspend
habeas corpus by bureaucratic decree.
The
Bush administration claims the power to declare suspected terrorists
"enemy combatants" and to hold them indefinitely without
bringing charges, presenting evidence or permitting suspects contact
with attorneys or any outside persons. The US Department of Justice
(sic) recently told the US Supreme Court that "the Court owes
the executive branch great deference in matters of national security
and military affairs."
In
other words, "buzz off and leave terrorism to us."
Harvey
Silverglate, a noted civil libertarian, recently explained in the
Boston Phoenix (March 6) that suspension of habeas corpus
leaves a suspect without hope and permits prosecutors to coerce
guilty pleas regardless of guilt.
Silverglate
points out that zeal in pursuing results in the war on terror is
creating a "Darkness at Noon" legal system in the US.
Suspects who can be coerced into making guilty pleas are given a
public show trial. Recalcitrants are declared to be "enemy
combatants" and shipped off to Guantanamo or held offshore
on ships outside the reach of the legal system. Even US citizens
are being dealt with in this way.
Show
trials have great propaganda value for the government’s "war
on terror," while the public never learns the fate of those
dealt with administratively in secret.
The
Bush administration’s claim to the right to conduct its war on terror
outside the framework of US law is before the Supreme Court. If
the Court fails to preserve habeas corpus, the ancient right dating
to the Magna Carta in 1215 will be vitiated. In Silverglate’s words,
"Tyranny will be clothed in the garments of legitimacy."
There
is more than one legal road to tyranny, and prosecutors and police
are making sure all roads to tyranny are open. On March 22 the Supreme
Court argued a case that will determine whether Americans still
have the right to remain silent. The Supreme Court requires police
to read your Miranda rights to you, but if you choose to remain
silent, Nevada prosecutors will indict you for "obstructing
an officer."
Nevada
rancher Dudley Hiibel was approached by a policeman demanding his
identification papers. Hiibel asked why. Not receiving much of an
explanation, he said that he didn’t want to talk. This is the case
now before the Court. Watch for the ruling in May or June.
Coercion
has replaced due process and legal rights. The public’s fear of
crime and terrorism is permitting police and prosecutors to escape
their leashes. Their jobs are budget-driven and results-oriented.
The more power they grab, the easier their jobs. The more high profile
cases they prosecute, the greater the naïve public’s confidence
in "law and order." Silverglate points out that in the
recent Detroit terrorist case, the government withheld exculpatory
evidence that indicated that the testimony against the defendants
was false.
Prosecutors
will willingly trade the public results in the terror war for Americans’
traditional legal rights. If Americans make this Faustian bargain,
they will discover that their rights are forfeit as well as those
of terrorist suspects.
American
prisons are full of wrongfully convicted people. Prosecutors fight
DNA testing of prisoners who claim innocence and resist even the
release of people whose innocence has been established.
One
reason is their fear of restitution. If innocent people are released,
their claims would put a different light on "law and order"
prosecutors, whose policy of conviction at all costs would be perceived
as expensive to taxpayers.
British
Home Secretary David Blunkett has hit on a way around the restitution
dilemma. He has instituted a policy of charging Britain’s wrongfully
convicted room and board for the time they spent freeloading in
prison.
The
Sunday Herald (March 14) reports four cases of wrongfully
convicted people including some who were intentionally framed
by the police who were charged enormous sums for the years
that they were wrongfully imprisoned. One had his compensation seized
and was charged interest on the money paid to him at 23%!
The
British are worried that their entry into the European Union will
cost them the fabled legal protections that William Blackstone called
the glory of England. But the British, like the Americans, have
already lost those protections.
The
pendulum has swung away from the rule of law. Arbitrary government
power has made a comeback.
March
24, 2004
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy, Senior
Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University,
and Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former
associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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