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April 20, 2004

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR


America's Prisoners, American Rights


By DAVID COLE

WASHINGTON  Today the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on whether
the United States government can detain foreign nationals held at
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, as "enemy combatants" without charge and without
hearings. Next week the court will hear arguments in similar cases
involving American citizens. Many consider the detention of citizens to
be more dubious legally. But from a constitutional standpoint,
citizenship should not matter.

All three branches of government have treated citizenship as a central
issue. The Bush administration says that it can hold the foreign
detainees, most of whom were captured on the battlefield in Afghanistan,
without any legal limitations because they are noncitizens held outside
American borders. As such, it argues, they have no constitutional rights
and no standing in American courts to challenge their detentions.

Fifty years ago, the Supreme Court seemed to adopt a similar view when
it upheld the indefinite detentions of a German woman and a Hungarian
man at Ellis Island on the basis of secret evidence that they could
neither see nor confront. Because they were foreigners who had not been
admitted to the United States, the court said, whatever process Congress
had provided them was due process. For its part, Congress in 1971 barred
executive detention without explicit statutory authorization but applied
the prohibition only to citizens.

These suggestions that noncitizens have less right to be free than
citizens are ill advised. Some provisions of the Constitution do
explicitly limit their protections to United States citizens the right
to vote and the right to run for Congress or president, for example. The
Bill of Rights, however, does not distinguish between citizens and
noncitizens. It extends its protections in universal language, to
"persons," "people" or "the accused." The framers considered these
rights to be God-given natural rights, and God didn't give them only to
persons holding American passports.

The human-rights revolution of the last 50 years has similarly
identified fundamental rights like the right not to be arbitrarily
detained as extending to all regardless of nationality. Human-rights
treaties ground these guarantees in "human dignity," and Americans have
no monopoly on that.

When one considers the specific right at issue in the enemy combatant
cases the right not to be locked up without a fair process there is also
no good reason to differentiate between citizens and foreigners. From
the prisoner's standpoint, every human being has the same interest in
not being locked up erroneously or arbitrarily. And from the
government's perspective, the security interest in detaining terrorists
is the same whether they are citizens or not.

Every person deprived of his liberty under the authority of the United
States government should have a right to due process. What process is
due may differ depending on the circumstances of detention whether on
the battlefield or far from it. But the nationality of the detainee
ought not affect the calculus.

Finally, there is also good practical reason not to distinguish between
the basic rights of citizens and foreign nationals. While the federal
government has often introduced security initiatives by singling out
foreigners, it has just as often sought to extend those tactics to
citizens later. The suppression of subversive speech, for example, and
race-based detention began as anti-alien measures. But they did not end
there.

It used to take years to extend these tactics to American citizens. But
things are speeding up. Today the Bush administration will defend its
treatment of the Guantánamo detainees on the grounds that they are
foreigners who do not deserve American legal protections. Next week, it
will argue that it has just as much latitude to detain American
citizens. The slippery slope has never been more slick.

David Cole, a professor of law at Georgetown, is the author of "Enemy
Aliens: Double Standards and Constitutional Freedoms in the War on
Terrorism."

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