Kalau nanti Yesus marah gimana.

Kan Bush bilang "crusade" dan melakukan "perintah tuhan" saat nyerang
Irak.

Pak @Yusfik aya-aya wae. Berita gin dikopas lalu spread out.

--- In [email protected], "Jusfiq" <kesayangan.allah@...> wrote:
>
>
> Ide yang bagus..
>
> --
>
> CNN.com
>
> Charge George W. Bush with war crimes?
>
> Washington (CNN) -- Charge George W. Bush with war crimes?
>
> Some Bush critics have for years demanded a prosecution of the former
president. They had hoped that the incoming Obama administration would
put Bush on trial. No luck.
>
> Now they have changed their focus, filing actions in foreign courts.
Last week, these Bush opponents filed an action in Switzerland in
advance of a Bush appearance at a charity fundraiser in Geneva.
>
> Shortly after the filing, the Bush appearance was canceled. Bush is in
no danger of going to a Swiss jail, obviously. But it's important that
all Americans understand: This use of law as a weapon of politics is an
assault upon the basic norms of American constitutional democracy.
>
> American presidents are subject to law, of course: American law.
>
> In the case of torture -- the offense of which Bush's critics accuse
the president -- the relevant law is the War Crimes Act of 1996, which
provides penalties up to the death penalty for abuse of military
detainees.
>
> This law was adopted in conformity with U.S. obligations under the
1986 Convention Against Torture, which called upon all signatory states
to "ensure that all acts of torture are offences under its criminal
law." (It's often said that the convention "bans" torture, but that is
not correct: It creates an obligation on member states to ban torture by
their own nationals.)
>
> In 2001, Bush asked government lawyers: What exactly constitutes
"torture" under U.S. law? Is isolation torture? Sleep deprivation? What
about putting an insect in the cell of a prisoner frightened of insects?
How about waterboarding?
>
> Bush asked those questions precisely because he wanted to comply with
the law. He wanted to go up to the limit of the law, but not beyond.
That's why he wished to know where the limits were found.
>
> The legal answers Bush got -- and the methods his administration used
-- have divided Americans for almost a decade. Republicans lost the 2008
election, and the Obama administration changed policy. Which is how we
decide policy questions in the United States: by elections and
alterations of government.
>
> When it entered office, the Obama administration considered
prosecuting the CIA officers who had done the interrogations. It seems
to have considered legal action against higher-ranking officials, too.
The Obama administration rejected both options.
>
> So when people file actions in Switzerland against Bush, it's not
merely the former president they are targeting. They are targeting the
entire American legal system. They are demanding that Switzerland
override an American decision about which Americans should be prosecuted
for violating an American law.
>
> They want Switzerland to say the following:
>
> "We disagree with your attorney general's interpretation of your War
Crimes Act. We are therefore arresting you in Switzerland for acts you
ordered in the United States against armed military enemies of the
United States.
>
> "We will put you on trial in Switzerland, where none of the
protections of the U.S. Constitution apply. Instead, you will be tried
according to the rules of Swiss law -- even though you had no vote in
the making of that law and have no legal representation in the Swiss
government.
>
> "Admittedly, none of the acts here have any legal connection to
Switzerland at all. None of the people involved are Swiss, neither the
alleged torturers nor the alleged torturees. Our involvement is purely
coincidental; this action could just as easily have been brought in
Luxembourg or Uruguay."
>
> In other words, what the people bringing actions against Bush are
calling for is a new kind of global legal regime in which law is severed
from political representation. Call it human rights without democracy.
>
> The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of David
Frum.
>
>
> Links referenced within this article
>
> filed an action
> http://fidh.org/IMG/pdf/FINAL_7_Feb_BUSH_INDICTMENT.pdf
> was canceled
>
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/george-bush-cancels-swiss-trip-rights-act\
ivists-vow/story?id=12857195
> Convention Against Torture
> http://www.hrweb.org/legal/cat.html
> file actions in Switzerland
>
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/02/06/bush-trip-to-switzerland\
-canceled-amid-threatened-legal-action/?iref=allsearch
>
>
> Find this article at:
>
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/02/14/frum.bush.war.crimes/index.htm\
l?hpt=C2
>
> Click Here to Print
>    SAVE THIS | EMAIL THIS | Close
>  Uncheck the box to remove the list of links referenced in the
article.
>
>
> © 2008 Cable News Network.
>




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