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Comment Of Senator Patrick Leahy,
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee,
On The Administration's Executive Order
On Military Tribunals
Nov. 14, 2001
"Because there has been no
consultation with Congress, we are left with more questions than
answers about what the Administration has in mind in taking this
step. We need to understand the international implications of the
President's order, which sends a message to the world that it is
acceptable to hold secret trials and summary executions, without
the possibility of judicial review, at least when the defendant is
a foreign national. Could this put U.S. citizens abroad, including
military personnel and peacekeepers, at grave risk? We also must
take care not to give the court of world opinion the impression
that what we have in mind is victor's justice. We want the
coalition the President has forged to remain at our side for the
long term, not just for the moment. We do not want to make it less
likely that other countries will cooperate with us -- perhaps even
jeopardizing their willingness to turn over suspected terrorists.
"Other questions have to do
with how this fits under our Constitution and legal system. The
President's order covers suspected terrorists arrested here as
well as abroad. In the past and as recently as in the
anti-terrorism bill, the Administration has sought and Congress
has created new criminal offenses specifically aimed at
terrorists, anticipating that they will be charged and prosecuted
as regular criminals, not war criminals. There has been no formal
declaration of war, and in the meantime, our civilian courts
remain open and available to try suspected terrorists. All this
raises questions about whether the President can lawfully
authorize the use of military commissions to try persons arrested
here.
"The way this was handled
also contributes to the rising concern in Congress about this
administration's preference for unilateralism as it promotes
policy changes ranging from restructuring the INS to eavesdropping
on detainees' conversations with their attorneys to this order on
military tribunals. This approach needlessly threatens the unity
that Congress and the Administration have forged since Sept. 11.
We are all in this together, and the spirit of bipartisanship that
has largely prevailed in Congress since Sept. 11 must be
reciprocated by the Administration if it is to endure."
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