Overplaying Its Hand
By denying Gitmo detainees basic legal protections, the Bush administration forced the high court to act.
PHOTOS
The Detainees' Stories
When it comes to national security—fighting wars and defending the nation—the courts have long deferred to the president and Congress. After 9/11, the Bush administration counted on judges staying out of the way as it figured out what to do with suspects rounded up in the War on Terror. The administration built a prison at the U.S. Navy base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, because it was secure, but also because administration lawyers figured (and legal precedents suggested) that American courts had no power to meddle there. Just as the true believers in the Bush White House have done so often, they overreached.
As Charles Fried, solicitor general in the Reagan administration, has reportedly put it, the Bush administration "badly overplayed a winning hand." Bush and his advisers so flouted ordinary, and old, ideas of justice and liberty that they put the Supreme Court in an impossible position: either rubber-stamp denials of due process to detainees who say they were seized by mistake, or step in and create a new set of problems by making rules on a slow, messy, case-by-case basis. In effect, that's what happened last week when the court ruled in Boumediene v. Bush. If ever there was proof of the adage "hard cases make bad law," this is it.
Historically, prisoners of war have no rights in U.S. courts. But even so, they are released when the war ends. The War on Terror has no foreseeable end. What's more, since the terrorists don't wear uniforms, it can be hard to discern who the real enemies are. Under the four 1949 Geneva Conventions, prisoners of war have some rights. But after 9/11, hard-liners in the administration decided that terror suspects brought to Guantánamo and various secret prisons around the world lacked any of the protections of the Geneva accords because they were "unlawful combatants."
Under pressure from the courts, the Republican Congress passed laws in 2005 and 2006 giving terror suspects minimal opportunities to challenge their detention in federal court. Detainees were not allowed to have defense lawyers in initial military hearings to determine their status as enemy combatants, or to see or rebut evidence deemed secret by the government.
The potential for unfairness was so great that last week the Supreme Court stepped in and struck down the federal laws, ruling that terror detainees must be given full access to federal courts, under the ancient principle of habeas corpus, which roughly means that government cannot hold you without proving to the courts a legal basis for the detention.
The decision was close, 5-4; writing for the majority, Justice Anthony Kennedy said, "The laws and Constitution are designed to survive, and remain in force, in extraordinary times." In his dissent, Justice Antonin Scalia pointed an accusatory finger at Kennedy and the justices who agreed with him. The decision will mean the release of dangerous terrorists, he warned, "and almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed." Chief Justice John Roberts, who also dissented, was less alarmist. He predicted that the detainees' cases would rattle around the courts and that the outcome—in terms of detainees ultimately released—would be about the same as if the justices had upheld the existing process. Scalia, Roberts and the other two conservatives chided the majority for a judicial power grab.
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »


Loading Menu
Member Comments
Posted By: sprues2 @ 09/03/2008 6:15:50 PM
Comment: Reading this, I find myself, a little puzzled. We live in a country, that allows the law to force us to wear seat belts.
We live in a country where police forces can come to your home, on the basis of an anonymous phone call and examine your children.
We live in a country that allows the law, to force us to move from our homes, if deemed necessary.
We live in a country, where police forces are allowed to set up roadblocks and examine our documentation, where no probable cause exists.
The reasoning is the same, the state has an overiding interest.
The state, has an overriding interest? I'm so silly, that, I thought the state, existed, for my benefit.
I'm, also,so silly, that, I think, the state, has an overriding interest, in holding these people as long as is necessary, in their judgement
Posted By: paulte @ 07/24/2008 10:41:13 AM
Comment: It all revolves around the question of defining a POW. Congress should define the subjects at Gitmo as POWs or as qulaifying for POW status and that would remove them from the jurisdiction of the US Courts. The Supreme Court could only put its 2# in because the subjects were in a gray area.
Posted By: Cliff-N-Cali @ 06/30/2008 12:51:07 AM
Comment: Personally I am in full support of the ruling. I believe that bringing these people to the public court system will bring the public eye back to the War on Terrorism. Sure why not? Lets let each detainee tell their story of why they will not stop fighting until the Western Society falls. Lets let them tell there story of how they were able to kill American and Allied soldiers while they conducted their war to promote their radical Islamic beliefs. Oh, yes this is really going to wake up all of you sleepy heads.