Obama to approve indefinite detentions
As President Barack Obama struggles with the political backlash from a Congress determined to keep Guantanamo terrorism suspects out of the U.S., his administration is reportedly preparing an executive order that would give him authority to hold prisoners indefinitely without trial, according to weekend media reports.
News of the order was reported by The Washington Post and ProPublica, an independent investigative newsroom, and published Saturday by The Post and later by The New York Times.
It would involve some 90 Guantanamo detainees who are regarded as "too dangerous to release" but who cannot be tried in U.S. criminal courts because evidence against them was gathered by cooperating foreign intelligence services or because it is tainted by the suspects being subjected to harsh interrogation techniques.
The dilemma of what to do with these suspects is threatening to scuttle Obama's pledge to close the Guantanamo Bay (GITMO) prison camp by January 2010.
In one of the few truly bipartisan actions recently taken by Congress, lawmakers of both parties and in both the House of Representatives and the Senate–their eyes fixed firmly on the 2010 elections–have expressed overwhelming opposition to bringing GITMO detainees to the U.S., even to stand trial.
Amid charges of fear-mongering, they voted earlier this month to deny the administration the money it requested to fund the closure of the iconic prison.
But part of Obama's dilemma is that an "indefinite detention" regime would channel the position taken by his predecessor, President George W. Bush, and would also threaten to alienate the left wing of Obama's Democratic Party, including the human and civil rights communities, which hailed the new president's decisions to outlaw torture and shutter Guantanamo.
Civil libertarians and many legal scholars were quick to condemn the idea of indefinite detention.
Jonathan Hafetz, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, (ACLU), told IPS, "It would be highly disappointing if President Obama accepted the false proposition that a system of indefinite detention is either necessary or legal. It is neither."
"The suggestion that the president himself has the prerogative to declare individual enemies and suspend the core protections of the Bill of Rights smacks of the same assertion of sweeping executive power that characterised the last administration and that is antitethical to our basic framework of government," he said.
ACLU National Security Project director Jameel Jaffer told IPS, "To allow the government to imprison terrorism suspects indefinitely without charge or trial would fundamentally alter the character of American democracy. And a preventive detention system would be a human rights disaster whether based on a statute enacted by Congress or an executive order issued by the President."
Michael Ratner, president of the Centre for Constitutional Rights, a legal advocacy group that has mobilised dozens of lawyers to represent GITMO detainees, told IPS, "Prolonged imprisonment without trial is exactly the Guantanamo system that the president promised to shut down. Whatever form it takes–from Congress or the president's pen–it is anathema to the basic principles of American law and the courts will find it unconstitutional."
Some Constitutional scholars were equally outspoken. Professor Francis A. Boyle of the University of Illinois law school told IPS, "The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which the United States is a party, clearly requires that alleged terrorists be given a trial."
He added, "Unlike President Bush, President Obama is a lawyer and used to teach constitutional law. He must know better. The fact that President Obama and his administration are once again continuing the illegal and totalitarian Bush administration policies does not augur well for the future of our republic, its constitution and Bill of Rights, as well as America's commitment to the rule of law."
Opposition to the indefinite detention idea was not limited to the left. Bruce Fein, a well-known conservative who served in the Department of Justice during the Reagan presidency, told IPS, "Indefinite detention without accusation or trial is a terrible idea."
"If the United States government is unable to assemble evidence of guilt - including conspiracy to provide material assistance, which criminalises even unalarming plots in their embryonic stages - with all its staggering resources devoted to counterterrorism, including huge bounties for informants, then the suspect is probably innocent."
And Prof. Brian J. Foley of the Boston University School of Law told IPS, "Indefinite detention based on evidence that cannot be presented in a U.S. court is likely indefinite detention based on unreliable evidence (confessions extracted by torture, hearsay and other un-cross-examined testimony and hunches that may be infected with bias or mistake). Locking up the wrong people will not help us prevent terrorism and indeed might mislead us into believing we have diminished the threat."
But other observers were more cautious. Prof. David M. Glazier of the Loyola Law School in Los Angeles told IPS, "It is hard to judge the legality of the Obama administration proposal because of the vagueness in the reporting."
"The real legal flaw with Guantanamo is not the concept of indefinite detention, but rather the failure to conform it to the law of war. Confinement in prison cells, coercive interrogation, and even routine shackling of prisoners all violate the law of war," he said.
According to The Washington Post, "Civil liberties groups have encouraged the administration, that if a prolonged detention system were to be sought, to do it through executive order." Such an order could be rescinded and would not block later efforts to write legislation.
But CCR's Ratner disagrees. He said, "If the last eight years have taught us anything, it's that executive overreach, left to continue unchecked for many years, has a tendency to harden into precedent."
Nor is this option is not without political risk for Obama; it could anger lawmakers who could see it as an "end-run" around Congressional authority.
Among the few lawmakers publicly opposed to indefinite detention is Wisconsin Democratic Senator Russ Feingold. In a letter to President Obama, he wrote that indefinite detention poses a risk of "establishing policies and legal precedents that rather than ridding our country of the burden of the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, merely set the stage for future Guantanamos, whether on our shores or elsewhere, with disastrous consequences for our national security."
In a May speech at the National Archives, Obama said he was considering indefinite detention for some prisoners. He suggested that it would include congressional and judicial oversight.
"We must recognise that these detention policies cannot be unbounded. They can't be based simply on what I or the executive branch decide alone," he said.
In his May speech, the president outlined five strategies the administration would use to deal with them: criminal trials, revamped military tribunals, transfers to other countries, releases, and continued detention.
On the day Obama took office, 242 men were imprisoned at Guantanamo. Since the inauguration, 11 detainees have been released or transferred, one prisoner committed suicide, and one was moved to New York to face terrorism charges in federal court.
Administration officials told The Washington Post that the cases of about half of the remaining 229 detainees have been reviewed for prosecution or release.
The other half of the cases, the officials said, present the greatest difficulty. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. agreed with an assessment offered during congressional testimony this month that fewer than 25 percent of the detainees would be charged in criminal courts and that 50 others have been approved for transfer or release.