GUANTANAMO MILITARY COMMISSION
'Military commissions' are among procedures planned by the U.S. Bush administration to deal with detainees it links to al-Qaeda. On September 28 and September 29, 2006, the US Senate and US House of Representatives, respectively, passed the Military Commissions Act of 2006, a controversial bill that allows the President to designate certain people with the status of enemy combatants thus making them subject to military commissions, where they have fewer civil rights than in regular trials.
The American Bar Association announced that:
"In response to the unprecedented attacks of September 11, on November 13, 2001, the President announced that certain non-citizens (of the USA) would be subject to detention and trial by military authorities. The order provides that non-citizens whom the President deems to be, or to have been, members of the al Qaida organization or to have engaged in, aided or abetted, or conspired to commit acts of international terrorism that have caused, threaten to cause, or have as their aim to cause, injury to or adverse effects on the United States or its citizens, or to have knowingly harbored such individuals, are subject to detention by military authorities and trial before a military commission."[1]
| Contents |
| Supreme Court judgment |
| Comparison with the American justice system |
| The accused |
| The commission members |
| Legal advisors |
| The lawyers |
| See also |
| References |
| External links |
Supreme Court judgment
On 29 June 2006, the Supreme Court handed down its decision[2] in the case "Hamdan v. Rumsfeld" Docket 05-194, with a 5-3 decision for Salim Ahmed Hamdan, effectively declaring that trying Guantanamo Bay detainees under the Guantanamo military commission (known also as Military Tribunal) was illegal under US law and the Geneva Conventions.
Quoting the judgement (Paragraph 4, page 4), "4. The military commission at issue lacks the power to proceed because its structure and procedures violate both the UCMJ (Uniform Code of Military Justice) and the four Geneva Conventions signed in 1949." Ultimately the Supreme Court ruled that President George W. Bush does not have the sole authority to hold tribunals and is required to get authorization to do so from the United States Congress.
With the War Crimes Act in mind, this ruling presented the Bush administration with the risk of criminal liability for war crimes. To address these legal problems, among other reasons, the Military Commissions Act was adopted.
Comparison with the American justice system
The United States has two parallel justice systems, with laws, statutes, precedents, rules of evidence, and paths for appeal. Under these justice systems prisoners have certain rights. They have a right to know the evidence against them; they have a right to protect themselves against self-incrimination; they have a right to legal counsel; they have a right to have the witnesses against them cross-examined.
The two parallel justice systems are the Judicial Branch of the US Government, and a slightly streamlined justice system named the UCMJ (Uniform Code of Military Justice) for people under military jurisdiction. People undergoing a military court martial are entitled to the same basic rights as those in the civilian justice system.
The Guantanamo military trials do not operate according to either system of justice. The differences include:
★ The accused are not allowed access to all the evidence against them. The presiding officers are authorized to consider secret evidence the accused have no opportunity to refute.
★ It may be possible for the commission to consider evidence that was extracted through coercive interrogation techniques before the enactment of the Detainee Treatment Act [3]. However, legally the commission is restricted from considering any evidence extracted by torture, as defined by the Department of Defense.[4]
★ The Appointing Officer in overall charge of the commissions is sitting in on them. He is authorized to shut down any commission, without warning, and without explanation.
★ The proceedings may be closed at the discretion of the Presiding Officer, so that secret information may be discussed by the commission.
★ The accused are not permitted a free choice of attorneys, as they can only use military lawyers or those civilian attorneys eligible for the Secret security clearance.[5]
★ Because the accused are charged as unlawful combatants, former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld stated that an acquittal on all charges by the commission is no guarantee of a release. [6]
The accused
The USA has charged ten detainees:
| Detainee | Charges | Dates | Allegations |
|---|---|---|---|
| David Matthew Hicks | material support for terrorism | ★ captured November 10, 2001 ★ charged August 26, 2004 ★ sentenced March 30, 2007 | ★ translated manuals ★ undertook jihad training ★ helped defend Kandahar and Konduz during the Invasion of Afghanistan |
| Salim Ahmed Hamdan | ★ Osama bin Laden's driver ★ Served as one of Osama bin Laden's bodyguards | ★ charges dismissed without prejudice June 4, 2007 | |
| Ali Hamza Ahmed Sulayman al Bahlul | — | — | |
| Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi | — | — | ★ An Al Qaeda paymaster ★ Ran an Al Qaeda front company ★ Osama bin Laden's driver ★ Served as one of Osama bin Laden's bodyguards |
| Omar Khadr | ★ murder ★ attempted murder ★ aiding the enemy ★ conspiracy | ★ charged on November 8, 2005 - ★ commission appointed December 1 2005 - ★ charges dismissed without prejudice June 4, 2007 | ★ threw a grenade that killed Christopher J. Speer ★ shows how to plant land mines in a video ★ scouted territory occupied by the USA |
| Sufyian Barhoumi | attempted murder | charged on November 8, 2005 | ★ trained al Sharbi and al Qahtani in how to build remote controlled bombs ★ captured together with Abu Zubaydah |
| Ghassan Abdullah al Sharbi | attempted murder | charged on November 8, 2005 | ★ captured together with Abu Zubaydah |
| Jabran Said bin al Qahtani | attempted murder | charged on November 8, 2005 | ★ wrote a training manual on how to build bombs ★ captured together with Abu Zubaydah |
| Binyam Ahmed Muhammad | attempted murder | charged on November 8, 2005 | ★ conspired with "dirty bomber" Jose Padilla |
| Abdul Zahir | ★ conspiracy ★ aiding the enemy ★ attacking civilians | charged on January 20 2006 | ★ threw a grenade that wounded journalists. ★ paymaster for an al Qaeda cell ★ reproduced al Qaeda leaflets ★ captured together with Abu Zubaydah |
Several other detainees may be charged.
The commission members
Initially the identity of the commission members were to be kept hidden, and the commission was to consist consist of a Presiding Officer (a lawyer), four other officers, and one alternate.
The structure of the commission was radically revised in late 2004. The impartiality of five of the officers was challenged, and two of the officers were removed. All five officers of the commission have an equal vote, the Presiding Officer performs the additional role of administering the trial, much as a judge would in a civil trial.
| Peter Brownback | Colonel (retired) | ★ President of the Commissions for David Hicks, Salim Hamdan ★ The only lawyer on the commission. ★ A long time friend of the appointing officer. ★ Brownback was criticized for not being an active member of a state bar. |
| Christopher Bogdan | Colonel USAF | ★ Member of the Commissions for David Hicks, Salim Hamdan ★ Only commission member who was not challenged. |
| R. Thomas Bright | Colonel USMC | ★ Member of the Commissions for David Hicks, Salim Hamdan ★ Challenged because he assembled lists of detainees bound for Guantánamo and executed war plans in Afghanistan. ★ Remains on the commission. |
| Curt S. Cooper | Lieutenant Colonel US Army | ★ Member of the Commissions for David Hicks, Salim Hamdan ★ Admitted referring to the Guantánamo detainees as ''"terrorists"''. ★ Admitted being unfamiliar with the Geneva Conventions. ★ Removed from the commission. |
| Jack K. Sparks Jr. | Colonel USMC | ★ Member of the Commissions for David Hicks, Salim Hamdan ★ Membership was challenged because he lost a subordinate during the attacks of September 11, 2001. ★ Remains on the commission. |
| Timothy K. Toomey | Lieutenant Colonel USAF | ★ Member of the Commissions for David Hicks, Salim Hamdan ★ An intelligence officer who was involved in the capture of suspects in Afghanistan. ★ Removed from the commission. |
| Ralph Kohlmann | Colonel USMC | ★ President of the Commissions for Binyam Ahmed Muhammad and Ghassan Abdullah Al-Sharbi |
Legal advisors
Since the officers forming the tribunal were not lawyers they are provided with a team of military lawyers, who they could call of for advice, and who provided an opinion on their decisions. See particularly Moazzam Begg.
| Teresa M. Palmer | Commander | Legal Advisor to the Office for the Administrative Review of the Detention of Enemy Combatants |
| J.M. McGarrah | Rear Admiral | Director, Combatant Status Review Tribunal |
| James R. Crisfield | Commander | Legal Advisor |
The lawyers
| John D. Altenburg | General (retired) | ★ Appointing authority ★ Will attend all the commissions ★ Has the authority to shut down any commission, immediately, without warning or explanation. |
| Thomas Hemingway | Brigadier General | ★ Legal advisor to the Office of Military Commissions |
| Peter Brownback | Colonel (retired) | ★ Commission President (see above) |
| Ralph Kohlmann | Colonel USMC | ★ Commission President (see above) |
| Fred Borch | Colonel | ★ Chief Prosecutor ★ Leaked memos surfaced that claimed he had bragged about corrupting the fairness of the proceedings. ★ Reported to have claimed the Commission officers were chosen because they could be trusted to convict ★ Reported to have claimed that all the evidence of the suspect's innocence would be classified top-secret, so the defense never learned of it. ★ Resigned his commission. |
| Robert L. Swann | Colonel | ★ Chief Prosecutor following Fred Borch. ★ Requested two of the commission officers be removed because they would be biased in favor of conviction. |
| Dwight H. Sullivan | Colonel USMC Reserve | ★ Appointed to be chief defense counsel ★ Called up from civilian life for this service ★ Worked for the Maryland office of the American Civil Liberties Union in civilian life. |
| Muneer Ahmad | civilian | ★ Defending Omar Khadr ★ Professor of law ★ Pro bono service ★ Described great difficulties put in his path by military authorities. |
| Robert Chester | Colonel | ★ Prosecuting Omar Khadr |
| John Carr | Captain | ★ Appointed to serve as a Prosecutor ★ Requested transfer because the proceeding seemed unjust. ★ Promoted after transfer |
| Morris Davis | Colonel U.S. Air Force | ★ Prosecutor for Omar Khadr |
| Thomas Fleener | Major Army Reserve | ★ Appointed to defend Ali Hamza Ahmed Sulayman al Bahlul ★ Bahlul has consistently insisted on his right to defend himself. |
| William C. Kuebler | Lieutenant Commander U.S. Navy | ★ Appointed to defend Ghassan Abdullah Al Sharbi ★ Al Sharbi insisted on his right to defend himself. |
| John Merriam | Captain | ★ Appointed to defend Omar Khadr |
| Michael Mori | Major USMC Reserve | ★ Appointed to defend David Matthew Hicks |
| Robert Preston | Major | ★ Appointed to serve as a Prosecutor ★ Requested transfer because the proceeding seemed unjust. ★ Promoted after transfer |
| Robert D. Rachlin | civilian | ★ Volunteered to defend Ghassan Abdullah al Sharbi |
| Sharon Shaffer | — | ★ Appointed to defend Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi |
| Philip Sundel | — | ★ Appointed to defend Ali Hamza Ahmed Sulayman al Bahlul ★ Bahlul has consistently insisted on his right to defend himself. |
| Charles Swift | Lieutenant Commander | ★ Appointed to serve as Salim Ahmed Hamdan's defense counsel |
| Carrie Wolf | Captain USAF | ★ Appointed to serve as a Prosecutor ★ Requested transfer because the proceeding seemed unjust. ★ Promoted after transfer |
See also
★ Administrative Review Board
★ Combatant Status Review Tribunal
★ Command responsibility
★ Camp Delta
★ Camp Echo
★ Camp Iguana
★ Camp X-ray
★ court martial
★ Geneva Conventions
★ Guantánamo Bay
★ ''Hamdan v. Rumsfeld''
★ Illegal combatant
★ Jus ad bellum
★ Jus in bello
★ Lawfare
★ Military tribunal
★ Military law
★ War on Terror
★
References
# U.S. military charges Omar Khadr with murder, ''CTV'', November 8, 2005
# Khadr faces military trial, ''Toronto Star'', December 2, 2005
# US brings charges against 10th Guantánamo prisoner, ''Reuters'', January 20 2006
# Three Guantánamo panelists dismissed over bias allegations, ''USA Today'', October 21 2004
# At Gitmo, still no day in court: How feds avoid hearings for terror suspects — despite Supreme Court ruling, ''Newsday'', June 15, 2005
# U.S. prosecutor in Khadr case blasts sympathetic views of Canadian teen, ''CBC'', January 10 2006
External links
★ Official Site
★ Amnesty International
★ John D. Altenburg, Defense Department Briefing on Military Commission Hearings, ''Department of Defense'', August 17, 2004
★ Military Tribunals: Historical Patterns and Lessons, ''CRS Report for Congress'' July 9 2004
★ James Meek, US fires Guantánamo defence team, ''The Guardian'', December 3 2003
★ American Bar Association Task Force on Terrorism and the Law Report and Recommendations on Military Commissions: January 4 2002(PDF)
★ At Gitmo, still no day in court: How feds avoid hearings for terror suspects — despite Supreme Court ruling, Newsday, June 15 2005
★ Leaked emails claim Guantánamo trials rigged Australian Broadcasting Corporation August 1 2005
★ Leaked emails claim Guantánamo trials rigged Australian Broadcasting Corporation August 1 2005
★ UK resident released from Guantanamo, Breaking Legal news, April 1, 2007
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