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Should Khalid Sheikh Mohammed be set free? Mike Whitney It's a difficult question, but it deserves a serious answer. Here's why.
The only reason the Bush administration has decided to conduct a trial
for Mohammed, the alleged terrorist mastermind of the attacks on September
11, is because they feel confident in the outcome. It's a slam dunk. There's
no chance that the perpetrator of the biggest act of terrorism in American
history will be found innocent. Bush thinks a Mohammed conviction will
be a vindication for his kangaroo courts (Military tribunals) at Guantanamo
Bay as well as reinforce the belief that the president has the inherent
right to arbitrarily imprison anyone he chooses if he brands him an enemy
combatant. It is a cynical power-play meant to increase presidential authority
while further undermining fundamental legal protections. That means that
the so-called tribunals will be choreographed by the Bush public relations
team to rehash 9-11 in as frightening terms as possible invoking the same,
worn demagoguery we've heard for the past six years.
(Article continues below) Bush is no friend of civil liberties or justice. Since he first took
office in 2000, he's waged a persistent and systematic no-holds-barred
attack on the Bill of Rights and the Geneva Conventions. Last week, a
30 page memo authored by senior Justice Department lawyer John C. Yoo
surfaced, showing that the Bush administration worked assiduously to create
a legal framework for justifying the cruel and inhuman treatment of detainees
in their custody. The memo proves that Bush was aggressively seeking legal justification
for the cruel and degrading treatment of prisoners and deliberately circumventing
the law. Yoo, who is nothing more than a Mafia attorney, was paid to dignify
Bush's coercive detainee policies with legal film-flam. He was fully aware
of what he was doing; he was a willing accomplice to a crime. As conservative
pundit, Andrew Sullivan, pointed out on “Hardball” this week,
“The latest revelations on the torture front show the memo from
John Yoo...means that Don Rumsfeld, David Addington and John Yoo should
not leave the United States any time soon. They will be, at some point,
indicted for war crimes.” But what does Yoo's memo have to do with the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed? The law is our only refuge from would-be tyrants like George W. Bush. Sir Thomas More summed it up like this in "A Man for all Seasons": Sir Thomas More: "And when the last law was down, and the Devil
turned round on you, where would you hide, the laws all being flat? This
country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man's laws, not
God's! And if you cut them down do you really think you could stand upright
in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I'd give the Devil benefit of
the law, for my own safety's sake!"
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