September 11 Digital Archive

[MAPC-discuss] On Left and Right, Concern Over Anti-Terrorism

Title

[MAPC-discuss] On Left and Right, Concern Over Anti-Terrorism

Source

born-digital

Media Type

email

Created by Author

yes

Described by Author

no

Date Entered

2001-11-16

September 11 Email: Body



----- Original Message -----
From: <register@washingtonpost.com>
To: <rick@kissell.org>
Sent: Thursday, November 15, 2001 10:28 PM
Subject: A washingtonpost.com article from a washingtonpost.com user


> You have been sent this message from a washingtonpost.com user as a
courtesy of the Washington Post (http://www.washingtonpost.com).
>
> To view the entire article, go to
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37718-2001Nov15.html
>
> On Left and Right, Concern Over Anti-Terrorism Moves
>
> By George Lardner Jr.
>
>
> A growing chorus on the left and the right is accusing the Bush
administration of ignoring civil liberties while leaving the courts and
Congress out in the cold as it aggressively pursues the war on terrorism
here and abroad.
>
> Critics ranging from the solidly liberal People for the American Way
Foundation to conservative Rep. Robert L. Barr Jr. (R-Ga.) are
characterizing recently announced administration plans as ethnic profiling,
power grabbing and overzealous law enforcement.
>
> "Military tribunals, secret evidence, no numbers on how many people the
government is detaining," said Jim Zogby, president of the Arab-American
Institute. "We're looking like a Third World country."
>
> The latest focus of the debate is an order signed by President Bush this
week that empowers him to order military trials here and abroad for
international terrorists and their collaborators.
>
> But other complaints concern Attorney General John D. Ashcroft's decision
to monitor conversations between lawyers and some clients in federal custody
if Ashcroft believes it is necessary to thwart future terrorism; the plan to
question 5,000 foreign nationals who recently entered the country; and the
FBI's visits to hundreds of college campuses to check on the records of
foreign students, mostly from Middle Eastern countries.
>
> Under pressure from the Justice Department, the State Department also has
agreed to slow temporarily the granting of visas to Arab and Muslim males,
ages 16 to 45, from 25 countries so the FBI and INS can conduct security
checks.
>
> The administration has made no apologies, saying the nation is in the
midst of an extraordinary emergency.
>
> "I think it's important to understand that we are at war now," Ashcroft
said earlier this week in defending military tribunals.
>
> Assistant Attorney General Viet Dinh said that the overriding goal of the
Justice Department is to "prevent further terrorist attacks" but that at the
same time it must take care "not to redefine the line between law
enforcement and civil liberties."
>
> Critics in Congress, legal scholars and spokesmen for the nation's Arab
American community have voiced misgivings about the new anti-terrorism laws,
passed last month as the USA-Patriot Act. But they are far more vocal about
what the administration has done since then.
>
> Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) said he
intends to hold hearings on the military tribunals directive and other
recent steps that have been taken without consulting Congress.
>
> "There's a lot of disquiet among both Republican and Democratic senators
who think the rules of law are being turned on their head, and they wonder
what we gain by it," Leahy said in an interview. "I want to know what
security needs are being met, or whether this is action for the sake of
having action when you can't catch people."
>
> House Judiciary Committee members have also called for hearings. Barr said
the administration should have given the new anti-terrorist laws time to
work, then gone back to Congress if they turned out to be insufficient.
>
> "Instead, it seems their attitude is, 'Well, that wasn't enough so we're
going to take more,' " Barr told a reporter. "I'm not sure we can ever
satisfy the federal government's insatiable appetite for more power."
>
> Advocacy groups from both sides of the political spectrum have joined the
debate. Ralph Neas, president of the People for the American Way Foundation,
accused Ashcroft of "waging a relentless assault on civil liberties." Among
the most troubling actions, Neas said, was the order empowering Ashcroft to
violate the attorney-client privilege without a court order.
>
> The Justice Department said the order so far pertains only to 13 people in
federal custody, none of them connected to the Sept. 11 attacks.
>
> "Terrorism isn't the only threat to our way of life," Neas said yesterday.
"We need an attorney general who will stand up to terrorists, but we also
need an attorney general who will stand up for the Constitution and the Bill
of Rights."
>
> Zogby said the administration's emergency measures are already undermining
U.S. credibility abroad, where thousands of Arab men, students, businessmen
and, in some cases, royalty are having visa requests held up for security
checks.
>
> Just back from a trip to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, Zogby
said the fear of U.S. authorities there is widespread.
>
> "Forty percent of the students from the UAE who were in the United States
. . . have already gone home," Zogby said.
>
> Tim Lynch, director of the Cato Institute's project on criminal justice,
said it appears that the president's strong support in public opinion polls
has fostered "an arrogance at the White House." He said officials believe
they can take presidential power "farther than it's gone before."
>
> Lynch was especially critical of the order for military tribunals. They
would be able to impose sentences as severe as death on a two-thirds vote,
hold trials in secret and rely on evidence that would be rejected in a civil
court.
>
> "It undermines the courts, obviously," Lynch said of the order, "and it
undermines Congress because it is essentially legislating action by
presidential edict."
>
> Issued by Bush as commander in chief, the military order directs the
secretary of defense to detain indefinitely any noncitizen who Bush has
"reason to believe" is a past or present member of Osama bin Laden's al
Qaeda terror network, has engaged in international terrorism directed at
U.S. interests or has "knowingly harbored such individuals."
>
> Military tribunals, using whatever standard of proof Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld chooses, then would be able to try those individuals for
"all offenses triable by military commission" -- in other words, offenses
under the laws of war.
>
> "This is absolutely, totally constitutional," an administration official
conversant with the decree said yesterday. "The only ones to be tried will
be foreign enemy belligerents."
>
> That could include an al Qaeda cell member planning more acts of violence,
he said. "If they're hiding and planning acts of violence," he said, "they
are in violation of the laws of war. The U.S. Constitution doesn't protect
them."
>
> Bush's order does not allow for judicial review. Several legal experts
said a little-noticed provision at the end of the directive order also
appears to be an effort by the president to suspend the right of habeas
corpus, which prisoners can use to challenge their detention.
>
> President Franklin D. Roosevelt claimed such authority, without success,
when he ordered a secret military trial of eight Nazi saboteurs during World
War II.
>
> Bush said that "any individual subject to this order shall not be
privileged to seek any remedy . . . in any court of the United States, or
any state thereof."
>
> "The word 'privileged' is the tip-off," said Philip A. Lacovara, a former
deputy U.S. solicitor general. He said he was surprised by the provision
even though he favors military tribunals as the best response to the attacks
of Sept. 11.
>
> "The Constitution sets out only two grounds for suspending the privilege
of challenging one's detention on a habeas corpus petition: one is invasion
and the other is rebellion. Even in the Civil War, the courts were reluctant
to allow President Lincoln to dispense with habeas corpus."
>
> Lacovara added: "It adds another level of controversy to the order."
>
> Dan Bartlett, the White House's communications director, denied that the
order forecloses habeas corpus petitions for noncitizens detained in the
United States for military trials.
>
> During World War II, the Supreme Court reviewed the saboteurs' case
despite Roosevelt's attempts to block their petition for release. The White
House is aware that would probably occur if Bush tried the same thing,
administration officials said.
>
> <em>Staff writers Dan Eggen and Mary Beth Sheridan contributed to this
report.</em>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


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September 11 Email: Date

Friday, November 16, 2001 1:07 AM

September 11 Email: Subject

[MAPC-discuss] On Left and Right, Concern Over Anti-Terrorism

Citation

“[MAPC-discuss] On Left and Right, Concern Over Anti-Terrorism,” September 11 Digital Archive, accessed November 24, 2024, https://911digitalarchive.org/items/show/920.