Friday, November 27, 2009

Opinion

Finding a Better Way to Prosecute Terrorists

Glenn Sulmasy says a hybrid judicial process could convict the bad guys and make the U.S. look good

Posted August 28, 2009

At the center of the controversy surrounding the closing of the Guantánamo Bay detention center is what to do with the suspected terrorists once the prison camp shuts in January. Trying detainees before military commissions or in federal courts isn't the solution, argues Capt. Glenn Sulmasy, a professor of law and judge advocate at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. In The National Security Court System, Sulmasy proposes a separate, hybrid court system, overseen by civilians, with detention, trials, and hearings held on U.S. military bases. He recently spoke with U.S. News about his proposal, President Obama, and why appearances matter in the battle against al Qaeda. Excerpts:

Why did you write this book?

I wrote the book predominantly having been a supporter of military commissions at the outset and thinking it was the right way to go. As time went on, it became clear to me that we were trying to jam a square peg into a round hole using these. We've adapted, morphed, and changed strategically in terms of starting the Department of Homeland Security after 9/11. In 2003, we created the director of national intelligence. We had the 9/11 commission, and then tactically we're changing how we're fighting these people, how we applied the surge. One area where we hadn't looked at fresh ideas thoroughly is the law.

What makes military commissions and our federal court system inadequate?

Military commissions, first and foremost, have been used throughout our history for traditional armed conflict where there is a minority of people who don't engage or abide by the Geneva Conventions and the law of war, and therefore we can prosecute them in small numbers. In this case, the war we're fighting, it's reversed. Secondly, . . . perceptions matter in 21st-century warfare, and the reality is that we have been unable to garner international support and domestic support, having human rights organizations like Amnesty [International] refer to Guantánamo, a U.S. military facility, as being the gulag of our times. If we allow the pendulum to swing too far and just use purely civilian courts, we have evidentiary problems, we have issues about juries, how we're going to find unbiased juries to sit in judgment. But perhaps the most important to me is the potential for bleed-over. We would have to relax the evidentiary standards in our civilian courts, and that's a danger because of the bleed-over from using this as an excuse to reduce what we hold dear in our constitutional protections. What's to say if this is a national emergency, the drug war isn't a national emergency?

How would the national security court system you propose solve the dilemma over closing Guantánamo Bay ?

We're using more civilian entities like local police, like the FBI, the CIA alongside the military than ever before. So if you have a hybrid warrior, a hybrid fighter, in a hybrid conflict, it seems natural that we would look to something fresh like a hybrid court system. The debate over Guantánamo Bay is often divided along party lines. We have to move away from the idea of calling those that support the civilian courts soft on terrorism. Similarly, those that are supporting the law of war regime, we shouldn't be calling them war criminals.

Why is closing Guantánamo a good idea?

Guantánamo Bay has never achieved its intended results. The intent, I believe, by the Bush administration was to have rapid trials. When you have only three trials in military commissions over a period of seven years, the support and credibility is eroded, both nationally and internationally.

Why is perception important in dealing with international terrorism and Guantánamo Bay?

We have 24-hour news media that cover everything, people have access to information almost immediately, and it can be spun. We have to be conscious that anything we do in this fight has international implications. We're not fighting against one country. We're fighting against non-state actors that represent over 50 nations, and what we want to be able to do is garner international support. So it's almost beyond perception because it's almost collaborative, working together and sending the signal that we understand that if this is an international fight against terrorism then we need our partners to align with us and join with us. For us to be able to lead in the 21st century, we have to consider the use of our international partners and not just remain locked in an idea of unilateral responses and unilateral decisions.

Reader Comments

Putting terrorists in American jails.

Since Dearborn Michigan is the ISLAM capital of America, It would not be advisable to put any terrorists there. They would surely figure out a way to bust out nearby friends.

If Obama hires anymore "Czars" we won't be able to afford to keep those killers in jail anyway. What is the number of his cronies that he has hired so far, about 44 that I count. Perhaps one of them will ask Hugo Chavez how we should handle prisoners. The FCC "Czar" idiot has already suggested we go to Hugo for advice on communications. Just think of it, Erlichman & Halderman 22 times over.

Scary!!!!

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