You are an American. So am I. We
celebrate our freedoms and rights and we trust in our justice system to
safeguard those rights. So, if someone
we know is jailed for say, burglary, we would be concerned, but not panicked.
We would trust that his innocence (hopefully) would be vindicated or, at worst,
his guilt would receive a proportional penalty: nothing more. But if days of detention turned into weeks
and then months without trial or even formal charging, we would speak up and
demand answers. And if justice officials
should inform us he is to be held indefinitely, without trial or further due
process because, well, because he is, after all, a burglar, we would dial the
NRA hotline and demand a national call to arms.
Why then is there no sense of
outrage over 166 human beings, more than one hundred of whom are on a hunger
strike, held behind chain link and razor wire at Guantanamo Bay , Cuba ,
without evidence to prosecute or plan to release? When such a spectacle would
evoke the strongest pangs of sympathy and ire if the prisoners were uncharged
Americans, what can explain our indifference or justify Congressional action
barring their release? Have we accepted the harsh treatment because, well, because
they’re terrorists? Are they terrorists?
Allow me to shed some light
on the subject.
Since 2002, when the
facility’s metal gates creaked open to admit combatants captured on the
battlefields of Afghanistan or in other theaters of the war on terror, 779 men
have entered; 604 have been repatriated to their homelands or transferred to other
settlement countries, nine have died—six by suicide, and 166 remain, almost all
having spent ten or more years in captivity with only six facing formal
charges. Let’s review the kinds of men who comprise the shuffling, shackled
line who over time have witnessed some or all of the camp’s evolution from new
facility, to symbol of torture and interminable imprisonment, to number one
recruitment tool of Islamic terrorist groups in the world today.
Some, are terrorists. Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed is the confessed mastermind of the September 11 attack in the United States and the Bali nightclub bombings in
Indonesia .
He was captured ten years ago and awaits transfer to the U.S for a federal
court trial that may still be years away. Ramzi bin al-Shibh is another
September 11 conspirator, currently being tried before a military commission.
Most, however, entered Guantanamo as prisoners of
war of one stripe or another. Some were captured fighting Coalition forces on the
battlefield. Others were found on the
fringes: learning to fight in remote training camps or providing support of some
form or another to the anti-Coalition cause.
Together, they included hundreds not captured by U.S. forces but
handed over by our Pakistani or Afghan allies after American military officials
advertised bounties of $5,000 or more per head.
The torrent of Guantanamo-bound prisoners thus unleashed prompted our
own frustrated Secretary of Defense to complain in a memo reported by the
Washington Post, “We need to stop populating
Guantanamo Bay with low-level enemy combatants...GTMO needs to serve as an
[redacted] not a prison for Afghanistan.”
Many of these prisoners were tortured.
Our review completed, we ask
what to do with those remaining, a question that makes us face our heritage of
basic freedoms and our most deeply held conceptions of right and wrong.
Excepting those involuntarily
committed to mental institutions, American moral and legal tradition has
recognized only two classes of people we may lawfully hold against their will:
criminals and prisoners of war. This tradition and the justice it represents
should be applied to the 166 now languishing at Guantanamo .
The handful who are alleged to be criminals must be prosecuted, and sent
to U.S.
super-max prisons if convicted, otherwise, set free.
The POWs can be divided into two groups and dealt with accordingly. The first group comprises 86 prisoners who have been cleared for release and who are no longer deemed combatants nor security threats. Their continued detention is inexcusable, though Congress has taken action effectively preventing their release. Congress should reverese itself and leave the State Department free to work out details of their transfers with home countries.
The second group includes those the Department of Defense and other security agencies describe as ‘not feasible to prosecute but too dangerous to release.’ As emotionally evocative as it is vague, this classification will not do. It’s like taking that burglar I spoke of earlier and saying, ‘We have no evidence to convict you, but we won’t release you to burglarize again.’ Vivid labels must never serve as a substitute for justice or an excuse to abuse the basic rights of fellow human beings. Cases must reviewed once more for evidence of plots or crimes against theUnited
States .
Evidence must be followed with charges and prosecution; otherwise these
men should be treated as prisoners of war and repatriated.
The POWs can be divided into two groups and dealt with accordingly. The first group comprises 86 prisoners who have been cleared for release and who are no longer deemed combatants nor security threats. Their continued detention is inexcusable, though Congress has taken action effectively preventing their release. Congress should reverese itself and leave the State Department free to work out details of their transfers with home countries.
The second group includes those the Department of Defense and other security agencies describe as ‘not feasible to prosecute but too dangerous to release.’ As emotionally evocative as it is vague, this classification will not do. It’s like taking that burglar I spoke of earlier and saying, ‘We have no evidence to convict you, but we won’t release you to burglarize again.’ Vivid labels must never serve as a substitute for justice or an excuse to abuse the basic rights of fellow human beings. Cases must reviewed once more for evidence of plots or crimes against the
The world knows what values
we say we uphold and they see our inconsistency. The UN has
called the continued detention of so many people without trial a clear
violation of international law. Amnesty
International has called Guantanamo the gulag of our time.
Now that the war in Iraq is
over and we are beginning the drawdown of American forces in Afghanistan the
only practical value of continued operations at the Guantanamo prison falls to
those who use images of its prisoners and the legacy of its torture to draw
fresh recruits to the jihadist cause. We
must shut it down.
This we must do, because we
are Americans.
No comments:
Post a Comment