In its newly released annual report on the status of human
rights around the world, the U.S. State Department disparages a long list of
nations about their violations of individual freedoms.
The report notes that countries in which power is
concentrated in the hands of unaccountable rulers, whether totalitarian or
authoritarian, continue to be the world�s most systematic human rights
violators. These countries include North Korea, Iran, Burma, Zimbabwe, Cuba,
China, Belarus, and Eritrea.
�We are recommitting ourselves to call every government to
account that still treats the basic rights of its citizens as options rather
than, in President Bush�s words, the non-negotiable demands of human dignity,�
said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in releasing the report.
The authoritarian government in China gleefully responded to
the U.S. censure of its policies with return fire on the Bush administration�s
abysmal record on civil liberties. Things are getting bad when an autocracy
chastises a republic for its human rights abuses and the criticism has merit.
The Chinese condemned U.S. practices of kidnapping, torture, and indefinite
detention without the opportunity for legal challenge. They also pinged the
U.S. government for increased spying on American citizens. Of course, these are
the same abuses that the U.S. government has criticized the Chinese government
of perpetrating. China also cited Martin Sheinin, U.N. special rapporteur on
the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms, as
saying that parts of the U.S. Military Commissions Act violate the Geneva
Conventions.
In 2004, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that habeas corpus --
the ancient right of a prisoner to challenge his or her detention -- could not
be denied to detainees at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo, Cuba, simply because
they were not being held on U.S. territory. Despite this ruling, in late 2006,
the Republican Congress passed, at the urging of President Bush, the
aforementioned Military Commissions Act, which prohibited federal courts from
hearing habeas petitions from prisoners at Guantanamo and elsewhere. The denial
of habeas corpus rights for these prisoners -- despite a February 2007 ruling
by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals upholding the act -- is clearly
unconstitutional. The Constitution clearly states that the writ of habeas
corpus shall not be suspended, except in times of rebellion or invasion --
neither of which applies in this case. In addition, no exception is made for
non-citizens or persons held by the U.S. government outside U.S. territory.
The Chinese criticism has merit. If habeas corpus can be so
denied, the U.S. government can kidnap people off the streets anywhere in the
world, declare them �enemy combatants,� and hold them secretly and indefinitely
without being charged, having access to legal counsel, being able to challenge
their detention, and having a trial. In fact, foreigners have been
kidnapped, sent to foreign countries for torture, and are now rotting in
perpetuity in Guantanamo and other secret prisons around the world. At
Guantanamo, some prisoners have already been held for five years without proper
due process.
Some would say that legal niceties, such as habeas corpus,
impede the war on vile �terrorists.� But for the battle against �al Qaeda� to
succeed, the right people must be apprehended. The purpose of habeas corpus is
to catch mistakes the government might make in detaining the wrong person. A
person accused of a heinous terrorist attack might not be guilty, while the
actual perpetrator runs free and attacks again. And the government snaring the
wrong person is not a rare event -- especially when the U.S. government offered
large monetary rewards for terrorism suspects in the poor nation of
Afghanistan, motivating people to turn in innocents to get the cash. As a
result, a significant number of prisoners at Guantanamo were arrested by
mistake and are not terrorists. Thus, suspects of even the most atrocious
crimes need a court to review their habeas corpus petitions. The U.S. Congress
should pass the bill introduced by Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont and
Republican Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania that would restore habeas corpus
rights for detainees.
The Chinese were also right about President Bush�s flagrant
disregard of the law in conducting domestic spying without court approved
warrants. Again the Bush administration tried to remove a judicial check on
executive branch activities -- a principle at the core of the U.S.
Constitution. Under public pressure, the administration pledged to obtain
warrants, but may still try to minimize judicial scrutiny.
Similarly, the draconian USAPATRIOT Act, pushed through
Congress by the administration during the post-9/11 hysteria, expanded the use
of �National Security Letters.� Using these unconstitutional letters, federal
law enforcement authorities can obtain telephone, e-mail, credit, and financial
records without applying for a court-issued warrant. Even worse, records can be
obtained for people who are not even suspected terrorists. FBI field office
chiefs can approve acquiring the information from anyone, as long as the data
are �relevant� to a terrorism or spy case.
The Justice Department�s own Inspector General recently
found that the FBI was �seriously misusing� the letters and also attempting to
get around even the minimum safeguards against abuse by pleading a dubious �emergency.�
What a surprise, a law enforcement bureaucracy stretching even permissive laws
to expand its power and abuse the liberty of its citizens. This sounds like
something that would happen in . . . well . . . China.
Governments behave much the same everywhere -- they seek to
expand their jurisdiction, authority, and resources with which to exercise it.
What is supposed to make America unique is a government divided into
independent branches, which scrutinize and constrain each other�s power.
Unfortunately, that system of checks and balances has now been seriously
eroded.
Ivan Eland is a Senior Fellow at The Independent Institute,
Director of the Institute�s Center on
Peace & Liberty, and author of the books The Empire
Has No Clothes, and Putting �Defense�
Back into U.S. Defense Policy