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Subject: Critics' Attack on Tribunals Turns to Law Among Nations
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December 26, 2001

Critics' Attack on Tribunals Turns to Law Among Nations

By WILLIAM GLABERSON

Going beyond claims that the military tribunals authorized by President Bush
would violate civil liberties guaranteed by American law, some experts are
beginning to argue that they would breach international law guaranteeing
fair 
treatment of prisoners of war. Critics of the administration say the
president's order authorizing the tribunals conflicts with treaties like the
Geneva Conventions, which give P.O.W.'s facing charges of egregious conduct
protections that include the right to choose their own lawyers, to be tried
in courts that are independent of the prosecution and to appeal convictions.
None of those rights are assured in the president's order, which opponents
say precludes at least two of them.The critics, among them legal experts
with 
military backgrounds, say the tribunals could create risks for the armed
forces, including the possibility of charges by other countries that
American 
officers who conduct tribunals are guilty of war crimes. "If the U.S.
government is going to pull the wool out from under the Geneva Conventions,
that is going to be serious for our soldiers," said Francis A. Boyle, an
expert on the law of war at the University of Illinois.A central issue,
experts on both sides of a growing debate about the tribunals say, is
whether 
Mr. Bush meant to declare that members of the Taliban, Al Qaeda and other
organizations that support terrorists would not qualify for the protections
given prisoners of war.>

    
The administration has sent contradictory signals on the issue. The Defense
Department has said that those captured in Afghanistan are being provided
the 
humane treatment guaranteed P.O.W.'s by international law. And in an
interview, an administration official who spoke on the condition of
anonymity 
said, "It is not the case that we have abandoned the Geneva Conventions" in
planning for the handling of those subject to trial by military tribunal.But
in remarks on Nov. 29, the president, denouncing those who "seek to destroy
our country and our way of life," described them as "unlawful combatants."
That was the term applied by the Supreme Court in its 1942 decision
upholding 
military tribunals for a group of German saboteurs who had slipped into the
United States. In that ruling, the justices said spies and saboteurs were
violators of the law of war and so were not entitled to prisoner-of-war
protections.Beyond the issue of whether the tribunals themselves would be
lawful is the question of how broadly they should be applied. Critics say
that grouping not only terrorists but also forces of the nations supporting
them as unlawful combatants would invite other countries to so describe any
American troops who were engaged in a campaign that a hostile nation deemed
illegitimate."If we argue it is legal, we are arguing that other sovereigns
� 
Libya, Syria, Iraq, Cuba � could also have tribunals," said Alfred P. Rubin,
a former Pentagon lawyer who is a professor at the Fletcher School of Law
and 
Diplomacy at Tufts University. The administration's supporters say that no
matter what rules the United States adopts in deciding how to try terrorists
and their allies, the niceties of international law would be unlikely to
limit abusive treatment of any Americans captured by some enemy nations. But
the critics say this country long ago decided that compliance with
agreements 
like the Geneva Conventions was in American interests. During the Vietnam
War, several experts noted, American military officials at first refused to
grant captured Vietcong the protections of prisoners of war. But that
decision was quickly reversed, they said, when it became clear that
Americans, too, would become prisoners during the conflict.Much of the body
of international protections accorded warfare's sick, wounded or captured
soldiers is laid out in the Geneva Convention of 1864 and its subsequent
revisions.Although prisoners of war are usually released at the end of
hostilities, international law permits trial of captured opponents under
certain circumstances. (How serious the alleged offense need be is a matter
of debate.) But even those experts who back the administration say the
president's "unlawful combatants" remark suggested that the tribunals would
not comply with the detailed requirements of the prisoner-of-war pact
formally known as the third Geneva Convention, of 1949, Relative to the
Treatment of Prisoners of War."He was making the claim that in the view of
the administration, the standards of Geneva III do not apply," said Ruth
Wedgwood, an international-law professor at Yale and the Johns Hopkins
School 
of Advanced International Studies, who is a defender of the tribunal plan.
Professor Wedgwood said the administration appeared to be laying the
groundwork for arguing that terrorists and their allies are not entitled to
prisoner-of-war protections, although the president's order said any
military 
tribunals would conduct trials that are "full and fair."The administration
official who was interviewed said it would be premature to discuss the new
criticism being directed at the tribunals, since the Defense Department was
still drafting regulations on how they would be conducted. Those
regulations, 
the official said, will comply with international law.The official noted
that 
the president had specified only minimal standards for the tribunals � that
sentences, for instance, must be approved by a two-thirds vote. The official
said the Pentagon could tighten those standards, providing that a death
sentence, for example, require a unanimous vote. But some critics say the
president's order includes so many provisions violating the Geneva
Conventions that it would be difficult for the regulations to meet the
conventions' requirements. Michael J. Kelly, an international-law specialist
at Creighton University School of Law, in Omaha, said a line-by-line
comparison showed many such instances. For example, he said, the president's
assuming the authority to make the final decision on the disposition of each
case is in direct conflict with the third Geneva Convention's provision that
no prisoner be tried by a court that fails to offer "the essential
guarantees 
of independence and impartiality." Further, the convention guarantees
prisoners a right of appeal, while the president's order seems to bar it.
And 
the convention guarantees a defense counsel of the prisoner's choice, where
the president's order, while authorizing defense lawyers, does not say
whether the prisoner can choose his own.Some of the critics, including
Jordan 
J. Paust of the University of Houston Law Center, who has taught at the
Army's military law school, said the president appeared to have concluded
that it was assaults on civilian targets like the World Trade Center that
made the attackers unlawful combatants.The trouble with that analysis, Mr.
Paust said, is that it give terrorists the ability to claim that under
international law, attacks on military targets like the Pentagon and the
destroyer Cole are lawful acts of combat."What the president is doing," Mr.
Paust said, "is legitimizing certain types of terrorism."
    
    
 <A HREF="http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/26/national/26LAW.html";>Click here:
Critics' Attack on Tribunals Turns to Law Among Nations</A>





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