Source: The Guardian
Chris McGreal
Chris McGreal
Barack Obama has abandoned a commitment to veto a new security
law that allows the military to indefinitely detain without trial
American terrorism suspects arrested on US soil who could then be
shipped to Guantánamo Bay.
Human
rights groups accused the president of deserting his principles and
disregarding the long-established principle that the military is not
used in domestic policing. The legislation has also been strongly
criticised by libertarians on the right angered at the stripping of
individual rights for the duration of "a war that appears to have no
end".
The law, contained in the defense authorisation bill that funds the US military,
effectively extends the battlefield in the "war on terror" to the US
and applies the established principle that combatants in any war are
subject to military detention.
The legislation's supporters in
Congress say it simply codifies existing practice, such as the
indefinite detention of alleged terrorists at Guantánamo Bay. But the
law's critics describe it as a draconian piece of legislation that
extends the reach of detention without trial to include US citizens
arrested in their own country.
"It's something so radical that it
would have been considered crazy had it been pushed by the Bush
administration," said Tom Malinowski of Human Rights Watch. "It
establishes precisely the kind of system that the United States
has consistently urged other countries not to adopt. At a time when the
United States is urging Egypt, for example, to scrap its emergency law
and military courts, this is not consistent."
There was heated
debate in both houses of Congress on the legislation, requiring that
suspects with links to Islamist foreign terrorist organisations arrested
in the US, who were previously held by the FBI or other civilian law enforcement agencies, now be handed to the military and held indefinitely without trial.
The law applies to anyone "who was a part of or substantially supported al-Qaida, the Taliban or associated forces".
Senator
Lindsey Graham said the extraordinary measures were necessary because
terrorism suspects were wholly different to regular criminals.
"We're
facing an enemy, not a common criminal organisation, who will do
anything and everything possible to destroy our way of life," he said.
"When you join al-Qaida you haven't joined the mafia, you haven't joined
a gang. You've joined people who are bent on our destruction and who
are a military threat."
Other senators supported the new powers on
the grounds that al-Qaida was fighting a war inside the US and that its
followers should be treated as combatants, not civilians with
constitutional protections.
But another conservative senator, Rand Paul, a strong libertarian, has said "detaining citizens without a court trial is not American" and that if the law passes "the terrorists have won".
"We're
talking about American citizens who can be taken from the United States
and sent to a camp at Guantánamo Bay and held indefinitely. It puts
every single citizen American at risk," he said. "Really, what security
does this indefinite detention of Americans give us? The first and
flawed premise, both here and in the badly named Patriot Act, is that
our pre-9/11 police powers were insufficient to stop terrorism. This is
simply not borne out by the facts."
Paul was backed by Senator Dianne Feinstein.
"Congress
is essentially authorising the indefinite imprisonment of American
citizens, without charge," she said. "We are not a nation that locks up
its citizens without charge."
Paul said there were already strong
laws against support for terrorist groups. He noted that the definition
of a terrorism suspect under existing legislation was so broad that
millions of Americans could fall within it.
"There are laws on the
books now that characterise who might be a terrorist: someone missing
fingers on their hands is a suspect according to the department of
justice. Someone who has guns, someone who has ammunition that is
weatherproofed, someone who has more than seven days of food in their
house can be considered a potential terrorist," Paul said. "If you are
suspected because of these activities, do you want the government to
have the ability to send you to Guantánamo Bay for indefinite
detention?"
Under the legislation suspects can be held without
trial "until the end of hostilities". They will have the right to appear
once a year before a committee that will decide if the detention will
continue.
The Senate is expected to give final approval to the
bill before the end of the week. It will then go to the president, who
previously said he would block the legislation not on moral grounds but
because it would "cause confusion" in the intelligence community and
encroached on his own powers.
But on Wednesday the White House
said Obama had lifted the threat of a veto after changes to the law
giving the president greater discretion to prevent individuals from
being handed to the military.
Critics accused the president of
caving in again to pressure from some Republicans on a counter-terrorism
issue for fear of being painted in next year's election campaign as
weak and of failing to defend America.
Human Rights Watch said
that by signing the bill Obama would go down in history as the president
who enshrined indefinite detention without trial in US law.
"The
paradigm of the war on terror has advanced so far in people's minds that
this has to appear more normal than it actually is," Malinowski said.
"It wasn't asked for by any of the agencies on the frontlines in the
fight against terrorism in the United States. It breaks with over 200
years of tradition in America against using the military in domestic
affairs."
In fact, the heads of several security agencies, including the FBI, CIA,
the director of national intelligence and the attorney general objected
to the legislation. The Pentagon also said it was against the bill.
The
FBI director, Robert Mueller, said he feared the law could compromise
the bureau's ability to investigate terrorism because it would be more
complicated to win co-operation from suspects held by the military.
"The
possibility looms that we will lose opportunities to obtain
co-operation from the persons in the past that we've been fairly
successful in gaining," he told Congress.
Civil liberties groups
say the FBI and federal courts have dealt with more than 400 alleged
terrorism cases, including the successful prosecutions of Richard Reid,
the "shoe bomber", Umar Farouk, the "underwear bomber", and Faisal
Shahzad, the "Times Square bomber".
Elements of the law are so
legally confusing, as well as being constitutionally questionable, that
any detentions are almost certain to be challenged all the way to the
supreme court.
Malinowski said "vague language" was deliberately
included in the bill in order to get it passed. "The very lack of
clarity is itself a problem. If people are confused about what it means,
if people disagree about what it means, that in and of itself makes it
bad law," he said.