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Published on Wednesday, August 14, 2002 in the
Los Angeles Times  
Camps for Citizens: Ashcroft's Hellish Vision
Attorney general shows himself as a menace to
liberty.
 
by Jonathan Turley 
  
Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft's announced desire for
camps for U.S. citizens he deems to be "enemy
combatants" has moved him from merely being a
political embarrassment to being a constitutional
menace. 

Ashcroft's plan, disclosed last week but little
publicized, would allow him to order the
indefinite incarceration of U.S. citizens and
summarily strip them of their constitutional
rights and access to the courts by declaring them
enemy combatants. 

The proposed camp plan should trigger immediate
congressional hearings and reconsideration of
Ashcroft's fitness for this important office.
Whereas Al Qaeda is a threat to the lives of our
citizens, Ashcroft has become a clear and present
threat to our liberties. 

The camp plan was forged at an optimistic time
for Ashcroft's small inner circle, which has been
carefully watching two test cases to see whether
this vision could become a reality. The cases of
Jose Padilla and Yaser Esam Hamdi will determine
whether U.S. citizens can be held without charges
and subject to the arbitrary and unchecked
authority of the government. 

Hamdi has been held without charge even though
the facts of his case are virtually identical to
those in the case of John Walker Lindh. Both
Hamdi and Lindh were captured in Afghanistan as
foot soldiers in Taliban units. Yet Lindh was
given a lawyer and a trial, while Hamdi rots in a
floating Navy brig in Norfolk, Va. 

This week, the government refused to comply with
a federal judge who ordered that he be given the
underlying evidence justifying Hamdi's treatment.
The Justice Department has insisted that the
judge must simply accept its declaration and
cannot interfere with the president's absolute
authority in "a time of war." 

In Padilla's case, Ashcroft initially claimed
that the arrest stopped a plan to detonate a
radioactive bomb in New York or Washington, D.C.
The administration later issued an embarrassing
correction that there was no evidence Padilla was
on such a mission. What is clear is that Padilla
is an American citizen and was arrested in the
United States--two facts that should trigger the
full application of constitutional rights. 

Ashcroft hopes to use his self-made "enemy
combatant" stamp for any citizen whom he deems to
be part of a wider terrorist conspiracy. 

Perhaps because of his discredited claims of
preventing radiological terrorism, aides have
indicated that a "high-level committee" will
recommend which citizens are to be stripped of
their constitutional rights and sent to
Ashcroft's new camps. 

Few would have imagined any attorney general
seeking to reestablish such camps for citizens.
Of course, Ashcroft is not considering camps on
the order of the internment camps used to
incarcerate Japanese American citizens in World
War II. But he can be credited only with thinking
smaller; we have learned from painful experience
that unchecked authority, once tasted, easily
becomes insatiable. 

We are only now getting a full vision of
Ashcroft's America. Some of his predecessors
dreamed of creating a great society or a nation
unfettered by racism. Ashcroft seems to dream of
a country secured from itself, neatly contained
and controlled by his judgment of loyalty. 

For more than 200 years, security and liberty
have been viewed as coexistent values. Ashcroft
and his aides appear to view this relationship as
lineal, where security must precede liberty. 

Since the nation will never be entirely safe from
terrorism, liberty has become a mere rhetorical
justification for increased security. 

Ashcroft is a catalyst for constitutional
devolution, encouraging citizens to accept
autocratic rule as their only way of avoiding
massive terrorist attacks. 

His greatest problem has been preserving a level
of panic and fear that would induce a free people
to surrender the rights so dearly won by their
ancestors. 

In "A Man for All Seasons," Sir Thomas More was
confronted by a young lawyer, Will Roper, who
sought his daughter's hand. Roper proclaimed that
he would cut down every law in England to get
after the devil. 

More's response seems almost tailored for
Ashcroft: "And when the last law was down and the
devil turned round on you, where would you hide,
Roper, the laws all being flat? ... This
country's planted thick with laws from coast to
coast ... and if you cut them down--and you are
just the man to do it--do you really think you
could stand upright in the winds that would blow
then?" 

Every generation has had Ropers and Ashcrofts who
view our laws and traditions as mere obstructions
rather than protections in times of peril. But
before we allow Ashcroft to denude our own
constitutional landscape, we must take a stand
and have the courage to say, "Enough." 

Every generation has its test of principle in
which people of good faith can no longer remain
silent in the face of authoritarian ambition. If
we cannot join together to fight the abomination
of American camps, we have already lost what we
are defending. 

Jonathan Turley is a professor of constitutional
law at George Washington University.

Copyright 2002 Los Angeles Times
 
http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0814-05.htm




                
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