Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
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The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
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Undermining Military Justice
by Scott Horton Its a cliché to say that military justice is to justice as military music is to music. Its also far from fair to the American military. Over the last fifty years, the American military justice model evolved into something thatwhile always short of perfection, as all human worksnevertheless accurately reflects the basic values of a democratic society.
In fact, the American court-martial system has long been something that Americans could be proud of. And more than anything this is thanks to the diligent work and professionalism of the uniformed lawyers who make that system work, the JAG corps.
Within two years of its arrival in Washington, the Bush Administration began to take a crow bar to the American military justice system.
They wanted a new process in Guantánamo, and they had no position
for justice in it. And they wanted the military lawyers to be their
frontmen. As a senior JAG officer explained to me in West Point this
fall: They never asked us for our advice on how to do this. They
instructed us what to do. And we did the best we could to give their
designs at least some modicum of justice. But nobody is happy with the
product.
In fact over the last years we have seen a steady
parade of JAG officers on the public stage protesting what has been
donea demolition derby of traditional values and procedures. Its
destroying our reputation. Why should we be quiet about this? We are
the guardians of an important legacy. Dont we have a duty to that
legacy? Now I know a good many of these men and women, and they are
not a bunch of wild-eyed Bill Kuenstlers in uniform. They are mostly
conservative Republicans. And what propels them is that very
conservatismrespect for traditional values.
Those who have
spoken have been the TJAGsthe seniormost lawyers in each service
branch, who are now about to be rewarded by Congress with a series of
promotions (an extra star)but also defense counsel, judges, and now
the prosecutors. Earlier this year we heard from a highly regarded
prosecutor, Colonel Couch, who described how the mistreatment of
detainees undermined his ability to prosecute. Couch subsequently was
ordered not to appear before Congress and testify (a flagrantly illegal
order, by the way, since it directly challenged Congresss ability to
select and arrange for witnesses to inform it on issues it was
investigating, but par for the course for this Administration). Couch,
like any ethically rigorous prosecutor, knew that this duty was not to
rack up another conviction (the attitude now routinely displayed by the
political-hack prosecutors fielded by the Justice Department across the
country), but rather to do justice.
And now we hear from
Colonel Couchs boss, the head prosecutor at Guantánamo, Colonel Morris
Davis. He has given a couple of interviews and now he has authored a
vitally important editorial in the Los Angeles Times explaining why he
quit. I have been critical of Colonel Davis in the past, but I never
doubted he was a person of integrity, and his actions in the last few
weeks have demonstrated not just integrity, but real courage.
Theres
one key piece of the story that needs some focus. Davis quit when he
was placed directly under the command of the General Counsel of the
Department of Defense, Jim Haynes. Donald Rumsfelds lawyer has been
able to hold his job in the Gates Pentagon, remarkably, though perhaps
understandably since its hard to imagine where he would find other
employment. He is a principal author of the system of official cruelty
and torture; indeed, he presented and secured Rumsfelds signature on a
key document (likely to figure in criminal prosecutions in the future)
authorizing waterboarding and other extreme techniquesand thats just
what has crept into the public record. There is doubtless much more
still in the files, or, more likely, at the bottom of incinerators.
Like a loyal Bushie lawyer, Haynes was directing a series of
convictions to occur to be lined up with the 2008 election cycle. And
rather than accept the complete dishonor that all of this meant, Davis
resigned from his appointment. Here are Daviss key conclusions about
the system he helped to run in Guantánamo:
I was the chief
prosecutor for the military commissions at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, until
Oct. 4, the day I concluded that full, fair and open trials were not
possible under the current system. I resigned on that day because I
felt that the system had become deeply politicized and that I could no
longer do my job effectively or responsibly. In my view and I think
most lawyers would agree it is absolutely critical to the legitimacy
of the military commissions that they be conducted in an atmosphere of
honesty and impartiality. Yet the political appointee known as the
convening authority a title with no counterpart in civilian courts
was not living up to that obligation.
In a nutshell, the
convening authority is supposed to be objective not predisposed for
the prosecution or defense and gets to make important decisions at
various stages in the process. The convening authority decides which
charges filed by the prosecution go to trial and which are dismissed,
chooses who serves on the jury, decides whether to approve requests for
experts and reassesses findings of guilt and sentences, among other
things.
Colonel Davis charts the progressive deterioration and
politicization of the Military Commissions process. He noted that Major
General Altenburg was removed as convening authority and replaced with
a friend and confidante of Dick Cheneys, Susan J. Crawford. Under
Crawford, he notes, the politicization of the process accelerated
dramatically. The final straw was the appointment of Haynes, a man
rejected for a federal judgeship because of his critical role in the
introduction of torture and abuse into the detention systems, as his
command authority. Colonel Davis makes clear that this was a point of
honor to him. And he means honor the way George Washington used the
termwhether we demonstrate fidelity in our conduct to the values we
articulate with our mouths. He writes:
Sens. John McCain and
Lindsey Graham have said that how we treat the enemy says more about us
than it does about him. If we want these military commissions to say
anything good about us, its time to take the politics out of military
commissions, give the military control over the process and make the
proceedings open and transparent.
We know that this White
House provides not moral leadership, but moral bankruptcy and rot. We
need to keep our eyes focused on the Supreme Courtwhich holds the
future of the kangaroo court system at Guantánamo in its hands in the
Boumediene case now under reviewand the Congress, which will again be
allowed to speak to torture and official cruelty in a vote on the
intelligence bill in the coming week. As Colonel Davis makes clear,
whats at stake couldnt be clearer: its a question of honor for the
military, and the country.