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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... basskisser wrote: 'The President is Not a Tribunal' Yesterday, in a major blow to the administration, a federal judge ruled that "President Bush had both overstepped his constitutional bounds and improperly brushed aside the Geneva Conventions" when he established military tribunals in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to try detainees as war criminals. The ruling, which put a halt to the tribunal of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, was just the latest in a string of setbacks to the administration's legal approach to terrorism. In June, the Supreme Court ruled that – despite the administration's arguments to the contrary – prisoners were entitled to challenge their status as "enemy combatants" in federal court. The administration has yet to comply with that ruling and plans to fight the ruling handed down yesterday. The Justice Department vowed to immediately appeal the ruling and plans to seek an emergency order to prevent it from being enforced. Without delving into partisan politics, I was glad to see this ruling. If you are trying to convince the world that you are acting out of morality, as we often do, then it is important to act morally, and one of the ways you do this is by honoring international treaties and conventions on matters such as these - even if your opponents do not. BUSH'S POLICIES PUT U.S. SOLDIERS AT RISK: Judge James Robertson's opinion yesterday touched on a basic, but frequently overlooked, reason the Geneva Conventions were ratified by the United States – to protect American soldiers. Judge Robertson wrote that by asserting that the Guantanamo detainees were outside the reach of the Geneva Conventions, the administration weakened "the United States' own ability to demand application of the Geneva applications to Americans captured during armed conflicts abroad." Precisely right. It's only practical to abide by the Geneva Convention when you're fighting an enemy that is a signatory to the agreement, and actually abides by it themselves. Terrorists do not abide by the Geneva Convention, aren't signatories to the agreement, and should not be entitled to its protections...particularly because they themselves don't abide by the accepted "rules of war". |
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