More

Justice Department Ends "Enemy Combatant" Definition For Gitmo Detainees

NEDRA PICKLER   03/13/09 10:25 PM ET   AP

Detainee Protest

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration said Friday that it is abandoning one of President George W. Bush's key phrases in the war on terrorism: enemy combatant. But that won't change much for the detainees at the U.S. naval base in Cuba _ Obama still asserts the military's authority to hold them. Human rights attorneys said they were disappointed that Obama didn't take a new stance.

The Justice Department said in legal filings that it will no longer use the term "enemy combatants' to justify holding prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

"This is really a case of old wine in new bottles," the Center for Constitutional Rights, which has been fighting the detainees' detention, said in a statement. "It is still unlawful to hold people indefinitely without charge. The men who have been held for more than seven years by our government must be charged or released."

In another court filing Thursday criticized by human rights advocates, the Obama administration tried to protect top Bush administration military officials from lawsuits brought by prisoners who say they were tortured while being held at Guantanamo Bay.

The Obama administration's position on use of the phrase "enemy combatants" came in response to a deadline by U.S. District Judge John Bates, who is overseeing lawsuits of detainees challenging their detention. Bates asked the administration to give its definition of whom the United States may hold as an "enemy combatant."

The filing back's Bush's stance on the authority to hold detainees, even if they were not captured on the battlefield in the course of hostilities. In their lawsuits, detainees have argued that only those who directly participated in hostilities should be held.

"The argument should be rejected," the Justice Department said in its filing. "Law-of-war principles do not limit the United States' detention authority to this limited category of individuals. A contrary conclusion would improperly reward an enemy that violates the laws of war by operating as a loose network and camouflaging its forces as civilians."

Attorney General Eric Holder also submitted a declaration to the court outlining President Barack Obama's efforts to close the Guantanamo Bay detention facility within a year and determine where to place the 240 people held there. He said there could be "further refinements" to the administration's position as that process goes on.

"Promptly determining the appropriate disposition of those detained at Guantanamo Bay is a high priority for the president," Holder wrote.

Elisa Massimino, CEO and Executive Director of Human Rights First, urged the administration to use that opening. "We certainly hope it will use that opportunity to narrow the authority and make a clean break from the policies of the past," she said.

There are some changes in legal principles in Obama's stance. The Justice Department said authority to hold detainees comes from Congress and the international laws of war, not from the president's own wartime power as Bush had argued.

The Justice Department says prisoners can only be detained if their support for al-Qaida, the Taliban or "associated forces" was "substantial." But it does not define the terms and says "circumstances justifying detention will vary from case to case."

Retired Army Lt. Col. Stephen Abraham, a former Guantanamo official who has since become critical of the legal process, said it's a change in nothing but semantics.

"There's absolutely no change in the definition," Abraham said in a telephone interview. "To say this is a kinder more benevolent sense of justice is absolutely false. ... I think the only thing they've done is try to separate themselves from the energy of the debate" by eliminating Bush's phrasing.

On the topic of former administration officials, the Justice Department argued in a filing with the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia that holding military officials liable for their treatment of prisoners could cause them to make future decisions based on fear of litigation rather than appropriate military policy.

The suit before the appeals court was brought by four British citizens _ Shafiq Rasul, Asif Iqbal, Rhuhel Ahmed and Jamal Al-Harith _ who were sent back to Great Britain in 2004. The defendants in the case include former Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld and retired Gen. Richard Myers, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The men say they were beaten, shackled in painful stress positions and threatened by dogs during their time at the U.S. naval base in Cuba. They also say they were harassed while practicing their religion, including forced shaving of their beards, banning or interrupting their prayers, denying them copies of the Quran and prayer mats and throwing a copy of the Quran in a toilet.

They contend in their lawsuit that the treatment violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which provides that the "government shall not substantially burden a person's exercise of religion."

The appeals court ruled against them early last year, saying because the men were foreigners held outside the United States, they do not fall within the definition of a "person" protected by the act.

But later in the year, the Supreme Court ruled that Guantanamo detainees have some rights under the Constitution. So the Supreme Court instructed the appeals court to reconsider the lawsuit in light of their decision.

Eric Lewis, attorney for the four, said Friday that military officials should be subject to liability when they order torture.

"The upshot of the Justice Department's position is that there is no right of detainees not to be tortured and that officials who order torture should be protected," Lewis said.

Last month in another court filing, the Justice Department sided with the Bush White House by arguing that detainees at Bagram Air Field in Afghanistan have no constitutional rights.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration said Friday that it is abandoning one of President George W. Bush's key phrases in the war on terrorism: enemy combatant. But that won't change much for the...
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration said Friday that it is abandoning one of President George W. Bush's key phrases in the war on terrorism: enemy combatant. But that won't change much for the...
Filed by Stuart Whatley  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 489
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (9 total)
12:18 PM on 03/15/2009
VOTE: 2 things which made America a prosperous nation until 2001...
http://www.e-paperview.com/epaper-poll-1.html/
07:14 AM on 03/15/2009
More 'change' from the new messiah, huh? Wow, how you guys have been conned...
08:14 PM on 03/14/2009
I suggest calling them "people who don't do nice things". Kind of warm and cozy, don't you think?

The Obama administration won't take a little time to cut almost 6 billion dollars and 8,000 wasteful items from the spending bill, but it can waste time on what we will call terrorists and murderers.
06:07 PM on 03/14/2009
How about "innocent bystanders?" "Innocent By-killers?"

"Future Democrats?"
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:27 PM on 03/14/2009
they've decided to just go back to calling them what they were originally known as...Republicans!
photo
Bitsko
He of the smoldering eyes
03:59 PM on 03/14/2009
Couldn't we at least include Bush administration officials? No other country has done as much damage since WWII.
01:15 PM on 03/14/2009
"There are some changes in legal principles in Obama's stance. The Justice Department said authority to hold detainees comes from Congress and the international laws of war, not from the president's own wartime power as Bush had argued."

" "Promptly determining the appropriate disposition of those detained at Guantanamo Bay is a high priority for the president," Holder wrote. "

This is a return to the rule of law. A necessary step in determining the appropriate disposition of the detainees. President Obama is keeping his promise to close Guatanamo. This is merely a step in the process. Nothing more. Not a departure from his commitment.
12:42 PM on 03/14/2009
"Enemy Combatant" is used in laws all over the place.

Ignoring it and covering it in liberal mustard won't stand the test of time.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:02 PM on 03/14/2009
Acually enemy combatant is a term historically referring to members of the armed forces of a state with which another state is at war, I never heard it used for any other way until Bush used it to discribe the Guantonamo detainees, Illegal or unlawful combatants is what I would have called them. that would have made more since.
12:28 PM on 03/14/2009
We will now call them "BAD LITTLE BOYS" i hope the media gets it right.
12:27 PM on 03/14/2009
Fascism by any other name would smell as foul.

http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2008/10/16/confess/
03:30 PM on 03/14/2009
Look up Leninism.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brandnewstuff
11:12 AM on 03/14/2009
If an organization ( seeing this is a Global World) the organization, being either Arabic, Jewish, whatever ethincity group that affiliation- procurs torture act the acts of Torture- can be held under The ICC- they deal with case and situtations- thank goodness Congress lifted the Bush Era on the ICC

The USA went rogue on counter-terrorism gaming ( the facts are out) all agents have to go by the rule of laws not exersice forced outside goverance

Something Bush and Co never did took the time to read the Terrorism rule for the ICC- Bush tried to rewite everything - That is a EVIL SOB

WE all know Bush and Co are guilty - and the worse men is Modern American history for a Global world
03:27 PM on 03/14/2009
And Obama & co will give them a pass.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brandnewstuff
11:06 AM on 03/14/2009
the ACLU and THE CCR are not going anywhere and thses issues of even the USA involved in Illegal Military OPS of USA citzens just opened UP- so there is lots of work to do and the release of more Bush Documents will surface soon

It would be good for the public to learn about the White Papers-

The worse americans being paid as agents to attack other Americans with No regaurd to Constitutional laws and from The Fact Finding Mission I have learned

Constitutional Laws and International laws trumph Military Ops working rogue-

No Private Citzen can be tried for being held as "prisoner of war" or "enemy combat" that is why Judical Oversight and Special Prosecutor needed by Eric Holder

If the USA choses not the There is an opening in International Laws
10:57 AM on 03/14/2009
He is only changing the term ..... Like homosexual to gay, black to AA to people of color,,, uberleftistextremistintolerantliberal to progressive
10:49 AM on 03/14/2009
Whats going on here is the United Nations have already started their investigations of Bush and Rumsfeld for torture at Guantonamo Bay, and the Obama administration does'nt want to get caught up in that mess, and rightfully so.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:29 AM on 03/14/2009
U.N.s investigations? Sounds good but unlikely. So were you getting your information from.?
02:14 PM on 03/14/2009
I'll tell you what I know but you have to do your own fact checking, Thur june 23,2005 Geneva, -- U.N.'s human rights investigators said they have reliable accounts of detainees being tortured in Guantonamo Bay but the U.S. would not respond to repeated requests to check conditions there.---tue Jan 20, 2009 U.N.'s speacial torture rapporteur called on the U.S. to pursue former President George W. Bush and Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld for torture of Guantonamo prisoners.---U.N. Rapporteur Scheinin said the U.S. has allowed law inforcement officials from more than a dozen counties to interrogate Guantonamo inmates, those countries included France, Germany, Britain, italy, Spain, and Jordon.---Scheinin said we will not let the U.S. off the hook simply because of the change in administration.---U.N. will scrutinize U.S. counter-terrorism under Obama.
02:15 PM on 03/14/2009
what united nations,you mean the subservants of washington..they should investigate bush and co for the wole package,iraq,afghanistan,lebanon,abu ghraib,guantanamo..each would get life in jail
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
revruc1
10:20 AM on 03/14/2009
I sincerely pray strongly for Obama and support him courageously. Why? He inherited a mess by people that were full of mess. They hid behind, education, and intellect. When it was all over, you wondered what school gave them a degree. They used this country as their own personal business. Rich men that was full of greed at the expense of a nation. War crimes and crimes against humanity will catch up with them. The sad part about it is you have some people that are "Willingly Ignorant." They are so Ignorant that they refuse the truth no matter what. "A fool is born every second." They will hate Obama for trying to do right, rather than hate the one that did wrong....EX: Clinton left us with a surplus, however, the ignorant blame Clinton for the down turn. However, we with wisdom know the truth.
www.heavenn.us
07:17 AM on 03/15/2009
You think Obama is on your side? Sucker. There are none so blind as those who will not see...