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Nicholas Camerota spotted this on the Guardian Unlimited Observer site and thought you 
should see it.

To see this story with its related links on the Guardian Unlimited Observer site, go 
to http://www.observer.co.uk

American cant
The treatment of al-Qaeda and Taliban prisoners by the United States offends a sense 
of justice

 Afghanistan - Observer special
 Terrorism crisis - Observer special  
Peter Beaumont
Saturday January 12 2002
The Guardian


Imagine the scene. A group of alleged Irish terrorists is seized and handed over to 
the British Government by a third country. They are held without access to any 
lawyers. Some are threatened by interrogating intelligence officers. They are told 
that if they don't tell them what they want to know then they might simply 
'disappear'. Some of the men are tortured while being held in prison and forced into 
confessing that they are members of a terrorist organisation. 

These men are drugged and bound and then flown out of the country to an island camp, 
where lawyers are appointed for them but where the normal guarantees of defendants' 
rights do not apply. Those lawyers cannot appeal for their release - no mechanism 
exists - nor can they challenge their extradition or the criteria for it.  

In that island camp, they will face an emergency military tribunal that has the right 
to kill them. Confronted with these gross violations, the international media and 
human rights organisations would rightly be up in arms in protest.  

Yesterday, a group of unidentified men, including a Briton, completed a journey 
identical in almost every detail to the one described above. Manacled, with some 
sedated, they were chained to their seats in the aircraft that delivered them. The 
difference is that this group of 20 men were alleged terrorists with the Taliban and 
al-Qaeda and their destination was the US base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. The 
difference, too, is that what complaint there has been about their treatment has been 
curiously muted.  

The reality of what is happening to the prisoners of Afghanistan is a scandal of 
international proportions. Brutalised, often tortured, these are men who have been 
stripped of their most basic rights under international and US law, rights guaranteed 
at the International Tribunal in the Hague even for the alleged architects of the 
genocide in Yugoslavia and Rwanda.  

In a few deft strokes, the administration of President George W. Bush has dropped a 
'daisycutter' not only on the Geneva Conventions, designed to protect the rights of 
prisoners of war, but also America's own constitutional guarantees for defendants.  

It is possible, even likely, that many of these people committed terrible crimes - 
some many even have had foreknowledge of the attacks of 11 September - but their 
special treatment presupposes a special guilt.  

They are the kind of people, we are assured, after all, by General Richard B. Myers, 
US Chief of the Joint Staffs, who are so 'dangerous that they would gnaw through the 
hydraulic cables' on their transport plane to bring it down.  

It is a description appropriate to an animal, not to a man.  

A few weeks ago, I was in Afghanistan looking for some of these almost mythically 
self-destructive creatures. The first man we tried to see was an elderly Taliban 
official our fixer had come across at an anti-Taliban base in the suburbs of the 
former Taliban stronghold of Kandahar.  

When our fixer saw him, he was being beaten slowly and methodically to death by a 
local warlord. We reached the camp too late. When we arrived, the man who had been 
doing the beating told us that he no longer had any Taliban prisoners. They had buried 
some al-Qaeda fighters that day whom they had killed in the liberation of the city, he 
told us. We asked again about the prisoner. He clarified the situation: 'There are no 
prisoners any longer.'  

It was not an isolated incident. Ten days later, I found myself with a group of 
Western journalists in the office of the governor of the Third Directorate prison in 
Kabul.  

Abdul Qayum, a lean and hard-faced man in his fifties, had been promising for a week 
to let reporters see his prisoners and check on their conditions. He told us he was 
both jailer and the man who leads the interrogations. He told us, too, that he 
regarded the Taliban and al-Qaeda as indistinguishable.  

So how, we asked, does he persuade them to confess? 'We ask them in a friendly and 
Islamic way to confess their crimes,' he explained to us. 'If they do not confess, 
then we use force.'  

If one cannot condone this sort of behaviour, perhaps one can understand it in a 
virtual state, stripped of its institutions and atomised by two decades of war. But 
the role of America and its allies in the maltreatment of the Taliban and al-Qaeda 
prisoners defies comprehension.  

What is most alarming are the potential consequences of those beaten and forced 
confessions in the context of the legal process that has been constructed for the 
al-Qaeda prisoners. For the torture, threats and humiliation of the Taliban and 
al-Qaeda prisoners in Afghanistan's jails pale into insignificance before the cynical 
acrobatics that Geroge Bush's administration has gone through to strip these prisoners 
of their most basic rights to a fair legal process.  

Let's start with the Geneva Conventions. Not the obvious stuff like the proscriptions 
on summary executions (witnessed across the country as the Taliban fell), or torture 
(see above), or the humiliating and degrading treatment (parading prisoners for the 
international media), but the niggly details of legal process.  

Details like the proscription on the handing-over of prisoners of war to a third party 
that is not a party to the war, which America insists implausibly to the International 
Committee for the Red Cross that it is not; in other words, the US claims that it is 
merely assisting the anti-Taliban forces rather than prosecuting a war.  

Or the little detail that insists that those prisoners must be tried by regularly 
constituted courts, not military tribunals constituted under emergency powers.  

If they are combatants - and prisoners of war - acting under orders, then, as the US 
Supreme Court's ex parte Quirin ruling declared in 1942 in the case of a group of 
German saboteurs seized in America in the Second World War, they 'are subject [only] 
to capture and detention as prisoners of war by opposing military forces'.  

But then, say Mr Bush's advisers, including Attorney-General John Ashcroft and Defence 
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, these aren't prisoners of war. These are men who fought 
without uniforms. They bore their weapons in secret for a criminal organisation 
without a formal legal command. They are criminals, they argue, 'unlawful combatants', 
and therefore not covered by the protections of the Geneva Conventions.  

And there lies the source of the Bush administration's greatest contortions. For if 
the prisoners of Guantanamo Bay are not covered by the 'laws of war', then they are 
ordinary criminals. And the rights of ordinary - and even extraordinary - criminals 
are guaranteed by the US Constitution.  

The Sixth Amendment, in case Mr Bush has forgotten, insists that in 'all criminal 
prosecutions' in the United States inalienable rights apply. Those rights include the 
right to a jury trial, a right underlined by case law in the US Supreme Court that 
insists that if the civilian courts are open and functioning then the armed forces 
cannot convene a military tribunal to try offences that fall within the jurisdiction 
of civilian courts.  

So if the prisoners of Guantanamo Bay are not criminals or combatants, what are they?  

They are the examples that America feels it needs to make before the world, condemned 
before the fact by their alleged membership of a criminal association. They are triply 
damned, one suspects, by their nationality, religion and the colour of their skins. 

Copyright Guardian Newspapers Limited

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