Bush Administration Continues To Ram Through Military Commissions Despite Obama's Pledge To Dismantle Guantánamo (11/19/2008)
Pentagon Files New Charges Against Alleged September 11 Plotter Despite
Evidence Of Torture
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NEW YORK – In a continued effort to press ahead with the Guantánamo military
commissions at warp speed before the Obama administration can implement its
plans to dismantle them, military prosecutors have filed new charges against
detainee Mohammed al-Qahtani, who is accused of having plotted with the
hijackers in the September 11 attacks. The administration dropped charges
against al-Qahtani in May amidst revelations that he had been tortured and
subjected to coercive interrogation techniques that could make it impossible to
prosecute him with admissible evidence.
President-elect Obama has rejected the military commissions and pledged to
close down Guantánamo. A New York Times article today reported that Pentagon
official Brig. Gen. Thomas Hartmann is planning to brief President-elect Obama's
transition team on the military commission process going forward.
The following can be attributed to Anthony D. Romero, Executive Director of
the American Civil Liberties Union:
"The haphazard nature of the Bush administration's case against al-Qahtani –
first charging him, then dropping the charges, then charging him again – is
emblematic of an ad hoc and unstable system. The Bush administration has backed
itself into a corner by abusing its detainees and sabotaging its own cases
against them. If, as the administration claims, it has reliable evidence against
al-Qahtani – or any other detainees, for that matter – it should prosecute him
in the federal civilian or military court system where real justice can be
served and the results can be trusted. Sham trials, torture and illegal
imprisonment are not worthy of our democracy. "The last thing the
Bush administration should be doing is ramming through the Guantánamo cases and
pursuing new ones in the 11th hour of its administration. It can only be
interpreted as a direct effort to make it as difficult as possible for
President-elect Obama to shut down the shameful Guantánamo system once he takes
office. This is another example of the political motivation behind these unfair
and unconstitutional commissions.
"We trust that President-elect Obama will seek the counsel of a wide range of
experts when determining how to dismantle the Guantánamo debacle, and not just
listen to General Hartmann, who has been widely discredited for exerting
political influence over these prosecutions. The president-elect's team should
also meet with the military and civilian defense teams who are fighting to
expose the injustice of these proceedings through the John Adams Project. If
President-elect Obama receives a full assessment of the deep flaws in this
system, we are sure he will immediately follow through on his pledge to close
Guantánamo and its sham military commissions."
The ACLU, in partnership with the National Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers through the John Adams Project, has retained over 25 civilian lawyers
and legal professionals to assist with representation of several Guantánamo
detainees and partner with the under-resourced military defense counsel.
More information on the John Adams Project is available at: www.aclu.org/johnadams
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