Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: Fern
I don't see a problem (aside from the obvious flip-flop from 'campaign rhetoric).
Maybe he's gonna treat them as POWs (aside from shooting them for not being in uniform).
And, as usual, I disagree with the typically uninfomed vapid 'talking heads'. The extension of HC/Constitutional rights to foreigners outside the USA in the case of GITMO was a contorted and suspect SCOTUS case involving some BS as concerns the US lease of Cuban terrority, hence that would not seem to apply here no matter how bad Rachel and company would like otherwise.
Fern
The problem is that these people were taken by the US government in other countries and not engaged in combat, then taken to Afghanistan. The ruling referred to wasn't talking about fighters captured in Afghanistan (which might qualify as POWs), but these three.
Consider if China wanted to hold you indefinitely, and were taken there and held with no charge. I don't think you would be pleased, yet that is effectively what is happening here. The difference is that you live in the nation doing the taking.
The Constitution doesn't give you rights, rather
the concept is that ALL people have these rights, and the Constitution is the means by which rights we already have are protected.
Considering the nature and the scope of the ruling, I have to say Obama is wrong here. Taking people prisoner from around the world and locking them in a black hole without a legal reason is wrong. It's the definition of tyranny.
"All people have these rights"?
That's news to me (and the SCOTUS too).
A US citizen has these rights when dealing with the the US government (but not a foriegn country's government when abroad), foreigners on US soil have (some of the Constitutional) rights when here.
These people are neither.
During WWII etc we held many POWs in many different countries (including here) at various prison camps, none had the right of HC. That's why I mention POWs.
If one wishes to view this as a criminal matter, that's a whole 'nother ballgame and one, IMO, in which we are on thin ice.
You say that they are "not engaged in combat", the Obama admin say they are "enemy combatants". Either I'm unfamiliar with some nuanced difference in these seeming similiar terms, or the Obama admin disagrees with you and they were, at least allegedly, engaged in combat (to some extent).
You'll note the article correctly refers to the lawyers as 'human rights lawyers", not 'civil rights lawyers'. There is a difference.
You say:
Consider if China wanted to hold you indefinitely, and were taken there and held with no charge. I don't think you would be pleased, yet that is effectively what is happening here. The difference is that you live in the nation doing the taking.
Yeah, and my Constitutional rights wouldn't be relevent in China either. Presently there are several US citizens held in NK and Iran, we hear nothing of their Constitutional rights or HC. The US Constitution doesn't apply in such cases.
Under these circumstances (enemy combatants held in a foreign country by us) is the military subject to some Constitutional rules? AFAIK, that is an open question; we have no SCOTUS rulings on it.
Fern