ebonlock: (Monarch)
ebonlock ([personal profile] ebonlock) wrote2006-06-29 12:00 am
Entry tags:

Rule of law

Wow, I hadn't heard a thing about this:

The Supreme Court today, by a 5-3 decision (.pdf) in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, held that the Bush administration's military commissions at Guantanamo (a) exceed the president's legal authorization given by Congress and (b) violate the law of war, including CommonArticle 3 of the Geneva Conventions which, the Court held, apply to all detainees in any armed conflict, including Al Qaeda members.
[...]
(1) The Supreme Court held [Sec. VI(D)(ii) of the court's opinion] that Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions applies to all detainees captured in military conflicts, including Al Qaeda members or other "enemy combatants," and not merely (as the Administration asserted) to soldiers who fight for established countries which are signatories to the Conventions.

Article 3 requires that detainees be tried by a "regularly constituted court affording all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples," and the Court ruled [Sec. VI(D)(iii)] that the military commissions established at Guantanamo violate that requirement because they are not regularly constituted tribunals but instead are specially constituted courts in the absence of any emergency. Thus, under the Geneva Conventions, any and all detainees captured in armed conflict can be tried only by "a "regularly constiuted court affording all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensible by civilized peoples."
[...]
(3) The Court dealt several substantial blows to the administration's theories of executive power beyond the military commission context. And, at the very least, the Court severely weakened, if not outright precluded, the administration's legal defenses with regard to its violations of FISA. Specifically, the Court:

(a) rejected the administration's argument [Sec. IV] that Congress, when it enacted the 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force in Afghanistan and against Al Qaeda ("AUMF"), implicitly authorized military commissions in violation of the UCMJ. In other words, the Supreme Court held that because the AUMF was silent on the question as to whether the Administration was exempt from the pre-existing requirements of the UCMJ, there was no basis for concluding that the AUMF was intended to implicitly amend the UCMJ, since the AUMF was silent on that question.

This is a clearly fatal blow to one of the two primary arguments invoked by the administration to justify its violations of FISA. The administration has argued that this same AUMF "implicitly" authorized it to eavesdrop in violation of the mandates of FISA, even though the AUMF said absolutely nothing about FISA or eavesdropping. If -- as the Supreme Court today held -- the AUMF cannot be construed to have provided implicit authorization for the administration to create military commissions in violation of the UCMJ, then it is necessarily the case that it cannot be read to have provided implicit authorization for the administration to eavesdrop in violation of FISA.
[...]
Nonetheless, opponents of monarchical power should celebrate this decision. It has been some time since real limits were placed on the Bush administration in the area of national security. The rejection of the President's claims to unlimited authority with regard to how Al Qaeda prisoners are treated is extraordinary and encouraging by any measure. The decision is an important step towards re-establishing the principle that there are three co-equal branches of government and that the threat of terrorism does not justify radical departures from the principles of government on which our country was founded.


I must admit I feel a little tingly after reading this. I think, in a way, this is better than Fitzmas ever could've been.

[identity profile] senatorhatty.livejournal.com 2006-06-29 11:16 pm (UTC)(link)
ARGH. I heard a transcript of Thomas's dissent fromthe bench. Apparently he is really mad that in a time of war the courts have the nerve to try to take away presidental powers as regard the military.

GOD I hate that fucker. The very notion that "because it's a war" the "commander and chief" (as though he knows a GOD DAMNED THING about the military -- but let's leave the specifics aside) should be able to act with impunity, without accountability, makes me sort of sick. We're not govered by a junta, we're governed by a democratically elected official.

MIND YOU, if the country is OK with that asshole acting without accountability, that's great, but they shouldn't be surprised to hear vociferous complaints from those of us who feel that the government works for us.

I feel like punching someone whenever I think about it.

[identity profile] ebonlock.livejournal.com 2006-06-29 11:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I think back to the various and sundry people who pooh-pooh-ed the idea that the Dems should possibly filibuster over something as insignificant as a SCOTUS appointment...and then I too want to punch something. But you just had to know where good old Clarence was going to come down on this one.

But hon, don't read any more news, you're supposed to be blissfully happy this week, not homicidal ;)