Originally posted by: Starbuck1975
Only this isn't hindsight being 20/20 so other than you trying to be dismissive I don't know what point you are trying to make. Even back when the Military Tribunals were created there was legal questions and arguments about the validity and the legal application of the tribunals. And no one is questioning the the handling of ALQ POWs....only, the position of this administration seemingly is that they are now willing to look at what rights these POWs are entitled to for trial purposes...something the previous administration felt it could get away with NOT doing.
My point is that Obama is throwing out a few sound bytes to make it sound like there is a grand change of policy where there really isn't.
POWs typically do not face military tribunals unless engaged in espionage or otherwise violating the loosely defined principles of Just War. Usually, there is an exchange of POWs once hostilities cease. But POWs of the WoT don't fit the classic model, hence the need for Guantanamo...so Obama wants to provide them with more rights under the military tribunal system. Seems like a band-aide to a fairly complex problem.
The problem is often time prisoner capture on the battlefield there are hard any evidence beside they carry a gun. We can't possibly release them so they can potentially kill more of our soldier but we don't have any solid and hard evidence to charge them either. What would you do? Remember, they also don't belong to military of any country and they are a liability if released.
In past wars, if our soldiers encountered a combatant not clearly identified as such, or not clearly serving under the flag of a sovereign nation, they could execute on the spot, no questions asked. Unfortunately, some of these Al Quaida knuckleheads are also a source of intelligence, so we have to hold on to them for a while.
Even terrorists have a right to due process, no matter what I think of them.
Why?