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Imperial Judiciary Goes Global
National Review Online ^ | April 03, 2009 | The Editors

Posted on 04/03/2009 12:09:40 PM PDT by neverdem








Imperial Judiciary Goes Global
By the Editors

In 2004, the Supreme Court sowed the seeds for a national-security upheaval when it ruled, in Rasul v. Bush, that war prisoners held outside the United States had a right to challenge their detentions in federal court. Last year, in Boumediene v. Bush, the justices continued the seismic shift, holding that the right they had invented in Rasul — a right extended to aliens whose only connection to the United States is in waging war against it — was somehow rooted in our Constitution.

Thursday, the inevitable earthquake struck as a federal court in Washington took the imperial judiciary global. Though Rasul and Boumediene involved only the detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Judge John D. Bates (a George W. Bush appointee) ruled that alien combatants detained by our military in Bagram, Afghanistan — an active combat zone — are entitled to petition the federal courts for their release.

Let’s be clear about what this means. Judge Bates is saying that, under the Supreme Court’s rulings, the jurisdiction of the federal judiciary extends everywhere in the world, without limitation, and it includes the power to micromanage wars as they are being fought.

Judicial authority had — until about five years ago — been limited to sovereign American territory, but Judge Bates has decided that the courts have the last word wherever our government acts. To say this violates the separation of powers is an understatement. Our system insulates judges from political accountability, and our courts have no institutional competence in war-fighting or foreign policy — tasks assigned to the political branches, which answer to voters. Under this ruling the judges, not the war-fighters, will decide who the enemy is and how he is to be dealt with.

The handwriting for Thursday’s power-grab has been on the wall for five years. The Rasul decision appeared containable at the time. The Supreme Court's 63 majority seemed to constrict its claim of jurisdiction to Guantanamo Bay, based on the unique circumstances of that enclave: Though Cuba retains sovereignty, the U.S. exercises total control, potentially in perpetuity, under a 1903 lease and a 1934 treaty.

Writing in dissent, Justice Scalia presciently observed that, by abandoning American sovereignty as the limit of its jurisdiction, the Court had essentially claimed judicial dominion “over the four corners of the earth.” Scalia reasoned that diplomats’ obtaining control through a lease was no different in effect from a military brigade’s obtaining it by force of arms. The majority had offered no limiting principle. If the Court claimed jurisdiction over Gitmo, there was no reason why “parts of Afghanistan and Iraq” should not be regarded as equal subjects to judicial oversight. The justices, not the commander-in-chief, would be calling the shots.

Congress tried to limit the damage. In response to Rasul’s implausible claim that the federal habeas-corpus statute gave federal courts jurisdiction over Guantanamo Bay, lawmakers amended the statute to make clear that this was not the case. Not to be denied, the Court simply swept that legislation aside. In Boumediene, the justices claimed it was not just a statute but the Constitution — the compact between the American people and their government — that somehow vested alien enemies of the American people with a right to challenge, in the American people’s own courts, their detention by the American people’s military, during a war approved by the American people’s representatives.

Predictably, Judge Bates has taken the next step. He reasoned that if the font of federal court jurisdiction is not U.S. sovereignty but de facto U.S. control, the Bagram military base in Afghanistan, which we firmly control, is no different from Gitmo. And if Boumediene commands that everyone within U.S. court jurisdiction is vested with U.S. constitutional rights, why shouldn’t a prisoner in Afghanistan have the same privileges as a prisoner in Gitmo? Or, by Bates’s logic, as a prisoner in Pittsburgh?

The result? Battlefields are now crime scenes, and the U.S. military will be forced to behave like a team of police investigators. If they want to capture enemy agents rather than kill them, our troops had better carefully rope off the crime scene, meticulously gather the physical evidence, record witness statements, administer Miranda warnings, and make certain a contingent of defense attorneys is available for interrogation purposes. That isn’t how wars are fought.

There was a time when the courts were thought to be a branch of the American people’s government, and when the United States went to war, the courts were part of the national war effort. Today the courts exist not within but above the government. Their goal is not American victory, but global due process. They see the American people and al-Qaeda like any other pair of litigants — equals before the bar of transnational justice. Unfortunately, al-Qaeda has its own ideas about due process, which is why we entrust the fighting of wars to soldiers, not judges.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: alqaeda; bloat; boumediene; imperialjudiciary; rasul; stockpile; stockpilesong
This is the epitome of stupidity.
1 posted on 04/03/2009 12:09:40 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

This is an utter disaster.

Our troops must absolutely shoot to kill. They have no protection under our laws and their enemies have absolute protection from American Courts.


2 posted on 04/03/2009 12:15:59 PM PDT by lonestar67 ("I love my country a lot more than I love politics," President George W. Bush)
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To: lonestar67

Exactly. Our young men and women, if this is all true, need to be told that, before they join the military, and explained as to what can happen to them. They could come under an international court. Would you join under those conditions?


3 posted on 04/03/2009 12:22:28 PM PDT by RC2
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To: lonestar67
Our troops must absolutely shoot to kill.

That's not the problem. They WILL shoot to kill because capturing the enemy will only turn into a legal fiasco. That's one of the outcomes of this decision. U.S. troops need to be able to interrogate captured enemies for intelligence, but these legal shenanigans encourage troops to orient their efforts towards killing rather than capturing enemy combatants.

4 posted on 04/03/2009 12:23:35 PM PDT by Liberty1970 (Democrats are not in control. God is. And Thank God for that!)
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To: neverdem

WTH...we are inviting our own destruction...thank God I don’t have children.


5 posted on 04/03/2009 12:25:51 PM PDT by delphirogatio (I am the indication, not the confirmation; I'm the inclination, the determination)
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To: Liberty1970

I completely agree with your analysis. Its important to understand that those who defend these Court decisions are absolutely encouraging and inciting the killing of innocent people overseas.

It is absurd to blame US troops for any such instances given Court decisions like these.


6 posted on 04/03/2009 1:20:22 PM PDT by lonestar67 ("I love my country a lot more than I love politics," President George W. Bush)
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To: Liberty1970
"U.S. troops need to be able to interrogate captured enemies for intelligence, but these legal shenanigans encourage troops to orient their efforts towards killing rather than capturing enemy combatants."

No problem. Simply question the captured enemy in the field, then kill them all, and let God sort them out.

There is no other possible solution if the purpose of the war is to protect what little remains of this Nation.

7 posted on 04/03/2009 1:59:01 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is another agitator for republicanism like Sam Adams when we need him?)
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To: SuperLuminal
Disarm them, interrogate, then kill them, right?

Our Soldiers and Marines are not animals, and I doubt you could murder an unarmed man, even if it was legal, which it isn't.

8 posted on 04/03/2009 2:16:31 PM PDT by Jacquerie (American public education is a form of child abuse - Mark Steyn)
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To: neverdem
Insanity bookmarked.
9 posted on 04/03/2009 2:51:37 PM PDT by Robert Drobot (Qui non intelligit aut discat aut tace)
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To: Jacquerie
"Disarm them, interrogate, then kill them, right?"

Right!

That is...unless you have another solution.

IAC, a war of survival has never been won by being "nice".

WWII is just one example. According to you, the airmen, sailors, soldiers, and Marines were "worse" than "animals" since, by your definition, the hundreds of thousands of "unarmed" and yet-to-be "interrogated" civilians that were killed should have granted access to the U.S. courts instead.

Wow!...those civilians weren't even conducting acts of terror like suicide bombings, beheadings, etc...

It is clear, at least to me, that George P. was clearly referrencing those with your mindset in his 1917 poem.

10 posted on 04/03/2009 3:31:42 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is another agitator for republicanism like Sam Adams when we need him?)
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To: SuperLuminal

Our guys won’t stare into the eyes of captured, unarmed men and murder them. Neither would you.


11 posted on 04/03/2009 3:53:32 PM PDT by Jacquerie (American public education is a form of child abuse - Mark Steyn)
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12 posted on 04/03/2009 4:37:56 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

bfl


13 posted on 04/03/2009 5:00:29 PM PDT by Delacon ("The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." H. L. Mencken)
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To: lonestar67
Maybe the problem is the people who are bringing these suits.

Remember, Eric Holder was busy bringing similar lawsuits against the Bush Administration before he was nominated as AG.

There is a whole crowd of "Kill America First" lawyers and NGO "cause people" working on this stuff -- the National Lawyers' Guild is one of them, an old Stalinist front that is working on getting Bush and Cheney arrested and dragged off to The Hague.

14 posted on 04/03/2009 6:30:25 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus ("Whatever." -- sinkspur)
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To: neverdem

This information does not encourage the capture of living intel sources(prisoners) in a battle situation.


15 posted on 04/03/2009 7:23:16 PM PDT by Tainan (Where's my FOF Indicator?)
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To: neverdem

Thanks for the ping!


16 posted on 04/03/2009 8:35:47 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Jacquerie

Stop blathering obama-style and give some viable options!


17 posted on 04/04/2009 3:15:10 AM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is another agitator for republicanism like Sam Adams when we need him?)
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To: SuperLuminal
Okay clown. Unlike you, I'll provide a viable option.

Congress should pass a law which requires military commissions to adjudicate the future of the detainees. Congress must also remove appellate jurisdiction from the civilian courts.

18 posted on 04/04/2009 4:24:47 AM PDT by Jacquerie (All Muslims are suspect.)
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To: Jacquerie
"...I'll provide a viable option.

Congress should pass a law which requires military commissions to adjudicate the future of the detainees. Congress must also remove appellate jurisdiction from the civilian courts.

Wow! Now there's a "viable"option if I ever heard one..sarc/

I always thought "viable", at the least, implied some sort of "possibility". Turns out that your "option" wasn't even "viable" when the GOP controlled House, Senate and WH.

Please be sure to forward your proposal to the current occupant of the WH.

19 posted on 04/04/2009 8:57:19 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is another agitator for republicanism like Sam Adams when we need him?)
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To: SuperLuminal

Let me know when you suspect you have another deep thought.


20 posted on 04/05/2009 4:55:26 AM PDT by Jacquerie (All Muslims are suspect.)
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