2 January 2002
Source: http://usinfo.state.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=02010201.tlt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml


US Department of State
International Information Programs

Washington File
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02 January 2002

Senator Lieberman on "No Excuse for Second-Class Justice"

(A public domain column from The Washington Post 01/02/02) (1180)

(This column by U.S. Senator Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut first
appeared in The Washington Post on January 02, 2002 and is in the
public domain. No republication restrictions.)

No Excuse for Second-Class Justice
by Joseph I. Lieberman

President Bush's Nov. 13 order authorizing military tribunals to
detain and try foreign nationals accused of committing terrorist acts
against the United States unleashed a firestorm of criticism, most of
it suggesting that military trials grossly violate America's
commitment to civil rights and civil liberties. That's truly
unfortunate, because military tribunals have a long-settled and
appropriate role to play in wartime, and the focus on whether to have
military tribunals has obscured the far more important questions of
what procedures those tribunals should follow and who should be
subjected to them.

Although it may sound like an oxymoron to many, there is a body of
international norms commonly referred to as the "law of war." It
recognizes that armed conflict exists and inevitably involves death
and destruction, but it also insists that combatants adhere to certain
rules. Among the most sacred of those rules is that warriors not
target civilian populations and that they not conceal their weapons or
try to pass as noncombatants as they prepare for attack.

The attacks of Sept. 11 were acts of war. Because they were carried
out against defenseless civilians by terrorists posing as
noncombatants using concealed weapons, the perpetrators were guilty of
heinous war crimes, not simple domestic crimes.

Throughout our history, both alone and in conjunction with other
nations, we have used military tribunals to prosecute those accused of
such crimes, and the Supreme Court has more than once upheld the
executive branch's right to do so. The choice of military tribunals
reflects a recognition that military venues are the appropriate place
to understand, enforce and uphold our -- and the international
community's -- decision to adopt rules to which all combatants must
adhere.

Practical reasons also argue for accepting military tribunals. As
others have pointed out, we can't expect those gathering evidence in a
war zone to comply with all elements of the Supreme Court's Miranda
decision or the Fourth Amendment's search-and-seizure rules. Nor is it
apparent why triers of fact should be barred from hearing testimony
about certain events simply because the testimony may not comply with
the strict version of the hearsay rule found in the federal rules of
evidence. And, given the threat al Qaeda poses to our civilian
population, it is unclear why we would subject our judicial personnel
and citizen jurors to the potentially lifelong consequences of
involvement in a war crime trial when there is an accepted and
legitimate alternative available.

Military tribunals must, of course, apply fair rules, consider only
evidence that is truly trustworthy and accord defendants due process.
But strict adherence to a process and a set of rules created for the
prosecution of a completely different type of crime investigated under
a completely different set of circumstances is neither necessary nor
rational.

While the decision to authorize military tribunals is plainly
appropriate, the consternation over the manner in which the
administration has thus far addressed the issue is understandable.
Military tribunals are a legitimate and accepted forum in which to
accord alleged war criminals fair and impartial trials; they are not
nor should they become an avenue in which to mete out second-class
justice to any foreign national the government desires to detain. Yet
no one can be blamed for reading the president's Nov. 13 order as
allowing for just that.

The order did not clearly limit its application to those accused of
war crimes, leaving open the possibility that the administration
wrongly sought to extend military jurisdiction beyond its settled
limits. The order left unstated whether a presumption of innocence
would apply and what rights defendants would have to know the charges
and evidence against them and to see their families or attorneys.
Elemental aspects of due process such as the requirement that suspects
not be held indefinitely without trial went unmentioned, as did any
statement about whether proceedings would be open to the public.

Recent press reports indicate that the Defense Department is
responding to these concerns and planning to issue regulations
providing that fair procedures will govern in its military tribunals.
Although it is impossible to reach a firm conclusion prior to the
release of those regulations, the reports are encouraging.

But the administration's misguided decision to charge Zacarias
Moussaoui in federal district court rather than bring him before a
military tribunal only makes it harder to convince the American people
and the world of the fairness of our military tribunals. According to
the government's indictment, Moussaoui willfully and knowingly
conspired to kill and maim people in the United States, "resulting in
the death of thousands of persons on September 11, 2001." In other
words, the government believes Moussaoui took part in the preeminent
war crime of the al Qaeda-Taliban engagement thus far, yet the
government chose not to charge him in a tribunal established for
precisely such actions.

When members of the Senate Armed Services Committee asked Defense
Department officials for an explanation, those officials acknowledged
that they hadn't even been consulted in the charging decision.
According to a Washington Times article, Vice President Dick Cheney
explained the decision as "primarily based on an assessment of the
case against Moussaoui, and that it can be handled through the normal
criminal justice system without compromising sources or methods of
intelligence.... And there's a good, strong case against him."

With all due respect to the administration, these explanations of the
Moussaoui charging decision cannot help giving ammunition to those who
see the military forum as an arbitrary weapon rather than a fair
tribunal. The decision to pursue a military trial should be based on
the type of crime alleged -- whether it is a war crime -- and not the
quality of the evidence against the accused. Regardless of whether the
crime is a war crime, we should pursue individuals only when we have a
"good, strong case" against them.

Military tribunals should not be used as leverage over those accused
of war crimes or as a means to signal to those from whom we seek
information or assistance that if they cross us they may disappear and
receive second-class justice. Nor should such tribunals become a sign
to either our own people or the world that the United States has
abandoned its commitment to the rule of law and is willing to resort
to more lax forums when it feels it can't make its case.

Properly constituted, military tribunals can provide now what they
provided in the past: a fair, impartial means of trying and, if
appropriate, punishing those who violate the laws of war.

(The writer is a Democratic Senator from Connecticut.)

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