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Showing Original Post only (View all)The Harvard Law Record: Indefinite Detention Under the NDAA: the Great Attack on Civil Liberties [View all]
http://hlrecord.org/?p=1451On December 31, 2011, President Barack Obama signed the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) into law. Many of you may not have heard of it because the holidays arent exactly conducive to keeping up with current events, but the NDAA represents one of the most dramatic attacks on civil liberties in this country in many years. While the NDAA contains many routine provisions related to defense spending, there are two particular provisions that should deeply trouble any American concerned with the encroachment upon civil liberties that has been the hallmark of post-9/11 America.
Section 1021 affirms that the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) authorizes detention of anybody whom the President determines was involved in the attacks of 9/11, as well as detention of anybody who substantially supports or is a member of al-Qaeda, the Taliban or associated forces. This detention is authorized so long as the hostilities authorized by the AUMF are ongoing. Of course, because the battle against al-Qaeda may never end, Section 1021 is essentially a de facto authorization of indefinite detention.
Section 1022 states that if an individual is detained under the authority of Section 1021, that person must be held by the military. This mandate does not apply to a citizen or lawful resident of the United States. Put these sections together and a scary picture emerges in which a person accused of being a member of a terrorist group, or even of substantially supporting one, can be detained by the military as long as the United States is at war with al-Qaeda.
This codification of indefinite detention is chilling because it represents how quickly and drastically our nations discourse about civil liberties has changed in just a few years. Fewer than four years ago we elected a president who explicitly and strongly campaigned on closing Guantanamo Bay, the internationally infamous facility in which terrorist suspects were being indefinitely detained. Now that same president is signing a bill codifying some of the practices against which he had so vigorously campaigned. So long as George W. Bush was indefinitely detaining terrorism suspects Democrats could criticize it as representing the worst of the Bush regime and civil libertarians could decry it as a panicked overreaction to 9/11. And while it is true that Obama had long claimed to have the authority to indefinitely detain terrorism suspects prior to the passage of the NDAA, his position could be seen as representing only the viewpoint of one president trying to arrogate power. But now indefinite detention is not a partisan issue, nor can it be described as a panicked reaction or an overreach by a greedy branch of government. Instead, ten years after 9/11, it has been written into our laws by a bipartisan legislature that is codifying the practices of two presidencies from two different parties. Imprisonment without trial, that hallmark of tyranny which seems so anathema to a nation that values freedom and a governmental system based on checks on government and due process, has been written into the laws of this country with shockingly little outcry from the American people.
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The Harvard Law Record: Indefinite Detention Under the NDAA: the Great Attack on Civil Liberties [View all]
stockholmer
Feb 2012
OP
I wonder why in the "debates" the question never came up as if any R-con candidate agreed w Obama
rhett o rick
Feb 2012
#3
The Harvard Law Record: oldest US law school newspaper, among its editors/writers- Barack Obama,
stockholmer
Feb 2012
#5
more background on the NDAA (most anything Lindsey Graham & Joe Lieberman are BOTH for, I'm against)
stockholmer
Feb 2012
#7
Can this new law be used as the basis for denying the extradition of Assange to the US?
proverbialwisdom
Feb 2012
#10
IF Assange is sent here to Sweden for trial (and the dodgy charges are a whole other matter) AND if
stockholmer
Feb 2012
#11
My point was simply something doesn't add up. I'm suspending judgement.
proverbialwisdom
Feb 2012
#12