It was very odd, reading a Newsday article on the Patriot Act, to find myself wondering on whether said Act had restrictions on speculating in print/online about a person's identity, when that identity is being concealed from his lawyer by the government.

From: [identity profile] penngwyn.livejournal.com


So now we have *three* tiers of incarcerees: Persons, accorded rights by the Constitution; POWs, accorded different rights by International Law; and "whatever we're calling them this week" who, as neither fish nor fowl, can be denied either set of rights at whim.

AT VERY LEAST, the entrance requirements for the third category must be clearly and publicly declared -- or else we're ALL potentially in that class.


From: [identity profile] zsero.livejournal.com


Not three tiers. There are prisoners of the criminal justice system, which is subject to the jurisdiction of the civilian courts, habeas corpus, and the 4th, 5th and 6th amendments. And there are prisoners of war, which are subject to the sole jurisdiction of the military, and its own justice system. The judicial branch of government has no jurisdiction over these prisoners at all; what happens to them is simply none of its business. Such prisoners need not even be suspected of having committed a crime, let alone be charged with one, and they are held pretty much at the president's pleasure. This has always been the case, since the beginning of the constitution.

The Geneva Accords are an agreement that the USA entered into about half-way through its history, to treat some POWs according to certain defined standards, in return for the powers for which they were fighting agreeing to do the same to captured USAns. It is obvious that if any belligerent power does not treat captured USAns as the Accords demand, then the USA is not obliged to treat its soldiers any better. What would be the point? But in any case, the Accords specify which prisoners they protect, and anyone not covered is left as they were before the Accords were signed in the first place. Which is that the military can do to them anything it likes, including executing them.

If there is doubt about whether someone is indeed properly held as a prisoner of war, they have access to the military justice system, and can appeal their case all the way up to the CinC. They do not have access to the civilian courts, because the conduct of war belongs exclusively to the president, and the judicial branch has no right to a say on any aspect of it.

From: [identity profile] penngwyn.livejournal.com


That's all well and good, except for the tiny little nit that the current administration, after two years of going back and forth about whether the situation in Iraq, Afghanistan, et al, is or is not a war (depending on whether the legal implications favor their chosen course of action or not), seems to have finally decided that no, this is not a war.

Okay, I (like General Myer(s?)) live in the hope that the re-branding "Global Struggle Against Violent Extremism" actually mans something: that all rhetorical resort to "conduct of war", "war powers of the CinC", etc in this matter is MOOT.

There are no prisoners of war to whom to decide whether the Accords apply or not. There are prisoners of the justice system, and prisoners who are denied the justice system.

[I recognize that many Americans cynically assume that the rebranding of the conflict is no more meaningful than calling a screwdriver a "metal fastener installation tool" to justify paying 350 tax dollars for it. I'm trying to give the folks in charge some time to prove that cynicism wrong.]


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