- Feb 8, 2001
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SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM: "If you're gonna prosecute anybody in civilian court, our law is clear that the moment custodial interrogation occurs, the defendant, the criminal defendant, is entitled to a lawyer and to be informed of their right to remain silent. The big problem I have is you're criminalizing the war, that if we caught bin Laden tomorrow, we have mixed theories and couldn't turn him over to the CIA, the FBI, military intelligence for an interrogation on the battlefield, because now you're saying he's subject to criminal court in the United States and you're confusing the people fighting this war."
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/vi...n_reading_osama_bin_laden_miranda_rights.html
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One place you do not want confused and muddled directives is on the battlefield. When you are facing an enemy that has sworn to kill you and your comrades, when that enemy has demonstrated an ongoing threat to your cities and your people, when it is likely that enemy has contemporary plans to carry out mass destruction, you do not need the interjection of a politicized "right to silence" to be the first thing communicated upon capture.
Yet that is exactly what Mirandizing, reading "rights" to an enemy combatant upon capture, counseling them to not engage in communication of any sort without an attorney present does.
Imagine this. You are an infantry platoon leader with the 10th Mountain Division clearing a Afghan village on the border of Pakistan. Your scouts report a massing of what looks like enemy on the next ridgeline. You have just captured two heavily armed men.
Do you now:
1. Pull out your Miranda rights card and read to them in English that they have the right to remain silent and the right to the counsel of an attorney, while your translator is hopping from one foot to the other and continuously glancing at the likely counter attack forming up.
2. Start politely interrogating them about what is on the other side of the ridge while per SOP your top sergeant is taking notes as to the time, the place and the circumstances of the questioning on a pre-approved form in triplicate instead of checking the emplacement of the crew served weapons and the depth of the hasty fighting positions.
3. Make sure the detainees have been completely disarmed, put your issue 9mm Beretta M9 under the first one's chin and ask him politely to tell you how many of their buddies are over on that there ridgeline and what he thinks they are about to do.
Now, imagine one of those guys is really tall and Holey Moley! he looks just like OBL! Your translator is waving some documents around that he just found while babbling about the nuclear blast radius mapping with an execution time/date of right about now. And Mr. OBL starts laughing in your face cause he knows that you can't do squat without taking a one way trip to Ft. Leavenworth...
BTW, there is an FBI guy attached to your platoon that has been stumbling along like a cow with a bell on for the past three days as a field ops observer and he is now pulling out his own personal double laminated Miranda card.
Time's up! The first mortar rounds are starting to bracket your position and you are SOL, as are the unfortunate residents of, let's say San Francisco and Washington, DC this time...
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/vi...n_reading_osama_bin_laden_miranda_rights.html
**********************
One place you do not want confused and muddled directives is on the battlefield. When you are facing an enemy that has sworn to kill you and your comrades, when that enemy has demonstrated an ongoing threat to your cities and your people, when it is likely that enemy has contemporary plans to carry out mass destruction, you do not need the interjection of a politicized "right to silence" to be the first thing communicated upon capture.
Yet that is exactly what Mirandizing, reading "rights" to an enemy combatant upon capture, counseling them to not engage in communication of any sort without an attorney present does.
Imagine this. You are an infantry platoon leader with the 10th Mountain Division clearing a Afghan village on the border of Pakistan. Your scouts report a massing of what looks like enemy on the next ridgeline. You have just captured two heavily armed men.
Do you now:
1. Pull out your Miranda rights card and read to them in English that they have the right to remain silent and the right to the counsel of an attorney, while your translator is hopping from one foot to the other and continuously glancing at the likely counter attack forming up.
2. Start politely interrogating them about what is on the other side of the ridge while per SOP your top sergeant is taking notes as to the time, the place and the circumstances of the questioning on a pre-approved form in triplicate instead of checking the emplacement of the crew served weapons and the depth of the hasty fighting positions.
3. Make sure the detainees have been completely disarmed, put your issue 9mm Beretta M9 under the first one's chin and ask him politely to tell you how many of their buddies are over on that there ridgeline and what he thinks they are about to do.
Now, imagine one of those guys is really tall and Holey Moley! he looks just like OBL! Your translator is waving some documents around that he just found while babbling about the nuclear blast radius mapping with an execution time/date of right about now. And Mr. OBL starts laughing in your face cause he knows that you can't do squat without taking a one way trip to Ft. Leavenworth...
BTW, there is an FBI guy attached to your platoon that has been stumbling along like a cow with a bell on for the past three days as a field ops observer and he is now pulling out his own personal double laminated Miranda card.
Time's up! The first mortar rounds are starting to bracket your position and you are SOL, as are the unfortunate residents of, let's say San Francisco and Washington, DC this time...