OrByte
Diamond Member
- Jul 21, 2000
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Originally posted by: Genx87
Originally posted by: OrByte
From POWs to DEFs and eventually to criminals found guilty and sentenced (not enslaved) to carry out their punishment.
Thanks for helping prove my point.![]()
You do realize when eisenhower changed their status they were stripped of their geneva convention rights? Sound familiar? Secondly it wasnt a few. It was millions. And it is estimated nearly 1 million died in the camps and another 1.3 million are listed as missing. There was no trial. The last of them were released from the Soviet Union in 1956, 11 years after the war ended. They also worked in France, Britain, and Holland.
I didnt prove your point. I dont think you understand the history of renaming prisoners. All Obama did unless he shows otherwise is change the name of these Enemy Combatants.
According to statements made about the change the admin is moving towards reinstating "international laws of war" So it sounds like the exact opposite is what is occuring with this administration as opposed under the GWB admin and what Eisenhower did in the past.
This is a maneuver, no matter how you slice it, to move away from indefinite imprisonment.
Reading more about this story seems to reveal that by removing the term "Enemy Combatant" the administration may have moved closer to removing the authority of the Military Commissions created under GWB to try and sentence these individuals.
The Military Commissions Act of 2006 was created to "establish procedures governing the use of military commissions to try alien unlawful enemy combatants engaged in hostilities against the United States for violations of the law of war and other offenses triable by military commission."
wiki
So, how does changing the name of these individuals from enemy combatants to "detainees" impact the MCA of 2006 and the Military Commissions?
Now, does this still sound like simply a name change? Interesting legal questions will be asked over the coming days I'm certain.
