<< Hmmmm... I really think we need to ask ourselves what we are really seeking: revenge or justice.
Droning on and on about how we ought to repay evil for evil, transgression for transgression, sin for sin... that's revenge. It's natural to want to avenge those we have tragically lost -- but is it justified?
Whose place is it to decide who a terrorist is, anyway? If I put a towel on my head and pray toward Mecca, do I suddenly become one of them? What if I, being an imperfect human, commit terrorism in lesser forms... say, aggravate someone. At what point do we determine that I am a terrorist worthy of capital punishment or term imprisonment? Justice should decide this -- justice motivated not by fear or anger, but by the moral due universally applicable to all by virtue of their humanity.
Be careful where you point your finger. The United States terrorizes just as much as it destroys terrorism. >>
While I somewhat agree with your last sentence, your remark about putting a towel on your head and then, by assumption, being a terrorist is completely ludicrous. Of course that wouldn't make you a terrorist. Now if you started hoarding plastic explosives and sneaking weapons onto airplanes and making plans to kill tens, hundreds, thousands, etc. of innocent people then, yes, you'd be a terrorist (no matter if you wore a towel, sock, bag, condom on your head).
These people (are they really people considering what they've done?) being held in Cuba are part of one of the most evil organizations ever to roam the face of this planet. Waltzing them through the U.S. justice system will most likely not result in justice being done. I wouldn't shed one single tear if they were all tortured to death over a long time period (say, a month or two).
And, to add on to this and digress a bit. I think the U.S. gov't should seek out and destroy the mafia next.